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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... universal mission for humanity became for the majority of Jews a meaningless pretense. Putting the question whether Jews still think of their people in terms of chosenness on the level of ritual and dogma, the answer would be positive ...
... universal message that makes the continuity of its existence important to humanity? Is there a possibility that individual Jews who succeeded in reintegrating themselves socially and nationally into the normal life prevailing in the ...
... universal undertaking that at one and the same time would normalize the Jewish people and would make it “a light unto all the nations.” This may explain the fact that on the brink of the Second World War almost all the movements within ...
... universal ethical values. The commandment to make a second Shoah impossible was for him a commandment to all humanity “to mend the world.” But asking the practical question of how humanity should achieve this goal, taking into account ...
... 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 on any ...
Spis treści
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3 | |
Part II The Holocaust and the State of Israel | 209 |
About the Contributors | 301 |
Index of Names | 305 |
Index of Places | 309 |