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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... sense of universal mission will be answered with great embarrassment. Indeed, one should refrain from such politically incorrect questions, but on the other hand, one must admit that avoiding the question means covertly avoiding the ...
... sense, Reform Judaism reinterpreted assimilation as a mission to teach humanity the values of humanism, and the right way to implement them in reality. The engagement with the idea of chosenness became even more profound for Reform ...
... sense of the universal message that Judaism is about. The only universal message this generation did experience was, as stated above, the lesson that after the Shoah a nation must rely for its well-being and safety only on itself, not ...
... sense of being “like all other nations” mean for a people that is still different structurally and historically from all other nations in terms of religion, ethics, culture, political establishments, and ways of communicating among its ...
... sense to talk theologically at all— an open question—about God's presence and absence, His existence and nonexistence, and to judge these matters on the basis of what happened to the Jews of Europe in some sort of negative natural ...
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 |