The Impact of the Holocaust on Jewish TheologyNYU Press, 1 cze 2007 - 320 The theological problems facing those trying to respond to the Holocaust remain monumental. Both Jewish and Christian post-Auschwitz religious thought must grapple with profound questions, from how God allowed it to happen to the nature of evil. |
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... requiring Jews to remain uninvolved in the social, cultural, and political life of the surrounding secular culture. But the dialectics of the conflict eventually brought each of the groups, in its own way, to reclaim the idea of ...
... require that if in our discussion of the relation of God and history we want to give theological weight to the Holocaust, then we must also be willing to attribute theological significance to the state of Israel. Just what weight one ...
... requires no great feat of the imagination to imagine a world in which there was less evil. As to the second question, it increasingly seems to me that it would have been preferable, morally preferable, to have a world in which “evil ...
... requires another look. It has been asserted that the value judgment that is implicitly being invoked here [in the Jobean thesis] is that one who has attained to goodness by meeting and eventually mastering temptations, and thus by ...
... requires this two-sidedness, then we have to reject Cohen's revisionism because it fails to address the full circumstance of the reality of revelation and God's role in it. Alternatively, if Cohen's description is taken at face value ...
Spis treści
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Part II The Holocaust and the State of Israel | 209 |
About the Contributors | 301 |
Index of Names | 305 |
Index of Places | 309 |