Authors: David Novak
ISBN-13: 9780195072730, ISBN-10: 0195072731
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Date Published: April 1992
Edition: 1st Edition
University of Virginia, Charlottesville
An examination of the Jewish-Christian relationship from a philosophical and theological viewpoint. Novak says that there is justification for a new relationship between Judaism and Christianity from within the Jewish religious tradition, and that this relationship is possible without triumphalism or relativism.
Some Jewish traditionalists are opposed to a dialogue between Jews and Christians; it is to these Jews especially that Novak directs this philosophical justification for seeking a common ground between the two faiths. Yet general readers, whatever their religion, will find many strands of the argument of considerable interest. A rabbi and a professor at City University of New York, Novak surveys the theological wrangling between Jews and gentiles through the centuries. He ponders Jews' attempts to reconstruct a Jewish Jesus, assesses the threat that modern secularism poses to both faiths, and updates Jewish thinkers such as Maimonides and German translator Franz Rosenweig, one of the first 20th-century Jews to embark on a sustained dialogue with Christians. Delving deeply into scriptural, rabbinical and secular philosophical sources, Novak promotes mutual tolerance and understanding between the two faiths with the goal of helping each to fulfill its separate destiny and redemptive vision. (Sept.)