Authors: Harold S. Kushner
ISBN-13: 9781400040568, ISBN-10: 1400040566
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Date Published: August 2003
Edition: 1ST
Harold S. Kushner is Rabbi Laureate of Temple Israel in Natick, Massachusetts, where he lives. His books include The Lord Is My Shepherd, Living a Life That Matters, and How Good Do We Have to Be?
Rabbi Harold Kushner believes that the Twenty-third Psalmperhaps the most memorable and cherished chapter of the Bibleoffers spiritual riches that can change a person’s life. He has found that these simple, beautiful verses, full of honesty and optimism, have an almost magical power to comfort and calm. The psalm does not pretend that life is ever easy, but it offers a masterful guide to living in the world with faith and courage. Drawing on over forty years of his own thinking, on other biblical scholars, and on history, Kushner gracefully demonstrates how this sustaining work can help us cope with every aspect of life, from mundane jealousies to the death of a loved one to unimaginable tragedies of global proportions.
Many people regard the 23rd Psalm as one of the most familiar and comforting passages in the Bible. Rabbi Kushner, bestselling author of the spiritual classic When Bad Things Happen to Good People, looks to the psalm as a microcosmic statement about God-its 57 Hebrew words, he says, present "an entire theology" about life and loss. The psalm begins in a place of perfect peace-the psalmist lacks for nothing, and is tended perfectly by God the shepherd-but that peace is shattered by "the shadow of death." Going phrase by phrase through the psalm, Kushner tackles serious questions: what does it mean to lack for nothing? Where is God when we suffer? Some of his interpretations are quite fresh and interesting; for example, "the straight paths" in which God leads the psalmist are anything but straight, he claims, noting that the Hebrew is more accurately rendered "roundabout ways that end up in the right direction." Ultimately, that phrase's message is about trusting God when the way does not seem straightforward. The psalm is not Pollyannaish, but realistic: as Kushner points out, the psalmist has enemies, has known failure and has probably lost a loved one. He draws heavily on rabbinic Judaism, but also references popular culture (including Woody Allen films), Freud, Michelangelo and other diverse sources. Kushner writes well and engagingly, and his tone will make readers feel personally welcomed into the rabbi's study for a comforting one-on-one chat. (Aug. 28) Forecast: Knopf plans a first printing of 150,000 copies for this brief and reassuring piece of consolation literature by one of America's foremost rabbis. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
First Words | 3 | |
1 | A Psalm of David | 5 |
2 | The Lord Is My Shepherd | 14 |
3 | I Shall Not Want | 28 |
4 | He Makes Me to Lie Down in Green Pastures | 37 |
5 | He Leads Me Beside the Still Waters | 45 |
6 | He Restores My Soul | 57 |
7 | He Guides Me in Straight Paths for His Name's Sake | 72 |
8 | Though I Walk Through the Valley of the Shadow of Death | 85 |
9 | I Will Fear No Evil for Thou Art with Me | 100 |
10 | Thy Rod and Thy Staff, They Comfort Me | 112 |
11 | Thou Preparest a Table Before Me in the Presence of Mine Enemies | 125 |
12 | Thou Anointest My Head with Oil | 135 |
13 | My Cup Runneth Over | 145 |
14 | Surely Goodness and Mercy Shall Follow Me All the Days of My Life | 156 |
15 | And I Shall Dwell in the House of the Lord Forever | 164 |