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The Cambridge Companion to Jewish Theology offers an overview of Jewish theology, an aspect of Judaism that is equal in importance to law and ethics. Covering the period from antiquity to the present, the volume focuses on what Jews believe about God and also about the relation of God to humans and the world.
Is God (in) nature? If so, how are we meant to care for the world? Is environmentalism even a Jewish value?
a book for the purpose of furnishing Jewish students with evidence for what he considered the five fundamental teachings of Judaism, viz.: 1. The Existence of God; 2. Incorporeality of God; 3. His Absolute Unity; 4. That God created heaven and earth; 5. That God created the world after His will 5106
and, finally, two important statements on Jewish thought and argument, cast in re-sponse to the Holocaust. Accordingly, I will begin with three founding illustrations of Jewish argument with God in ancient Juda-ism as recorded in the Hebrew Bible. These arguments, I believe, establish the funda-mental metaphysical, theological, axiologi-
The whole Jewish past, not the past of a single family or a local Jewish community, is in a sense part and parcel of the inner experience and identity of every single Jew.
AN INTRODUCTION TO JUDAISM. In this new edition, contemporary Judaism is presented in all its rich diversity, including both traditional and modern theologies as well as secular forms of Jewish identity.
21 paź 2020 · Inspired by the fifteenth century Rabbi Yosef Albo, Lebens provides three principles expressed very briefly in three propositions: (1) The universe is the creation of one God, (2) The Torah is a divine system of laws and wisdom revealed to us by God, and (3) God exercises providential care of His creation, manifest in (among other things) the ...