- Torah min Hashamayim Ba-aspaklaria shel Hadorot (Theology of Ancient Judaism), and: Heavenly Torah as Refracted through the Generations
I am unaware of any other scholar of the twentieth century besides Abraham Joshua Heschel who contributed to the theological understanding of the four pivotal periods of pre-modern Jewish existence: Biblical, Rabbinic, Medieval-Philosophic, and Kabbalistic-Hasidic. The first two warranted major books. For the Biblical period, The Prophets articulates the Divine pathos of the Most Moved Mover’s involvement in the affairs of man. For the Rabbinic period, Torah Min HaShamayim BeAsplaqariah Shel HaDorot, traces the internal dialectic of Jewish theology throughout its history. This is Heschel’s magnum opus, for it presents the understanding of the woof and warp of Judaism which informs his writings on contemporary theology. Heschel not only had an overarching thesis about Rabbinic Judaism, but adopted the strategy of exegeting it from within by writing it in Hebrew in native categories. Many of the subsections are titled with Rabbinic quotations. This reflects his understanding of the intersect between language and thought, for as words and language inform thinking so do categories structure thought. The distinctiveness of Heschel’s contribution can be gauged by comparing his chapter headings with three other major works on Rabbinic thought.
Solomon Schechter, Aspects of Rabbinic Theology.
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1. Introductory
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2. God and the World
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3. God and Israel
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4. The Election of Israel
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5. The Kingdom of God (Invisible)
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6. The Visible Kingdom (Universal)
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7. The Kingdom of God (National)
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8. The “Law”
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9. The Law as Personified in the Literature
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10. The Torah in its Aspect of Law (Mizwoth)
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11. The Joy of the Law
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12. The Zacuth of the Fathers. Imputed Righteousness and Imputed Sin
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13. The Law of Holiness and Law of Goodness
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14. Sin as Rebellion
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15. The Evil Yezer: The Source of Rebellion
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16. Man’s Victory by the Grace of God, over the Evil Yezer Created by God [End Page 225]
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17. Forgiveness and Reconciliation with God
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18. Repentance: Means of Reconciliation
George Foot Moore, Judaism in the First Centuries of the Christian Era:
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Introduction
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1. Historical
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2. The Sources
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Part I: Revealed Religion
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1. Nationality and Universality
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2. The Scriptures
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3. The Unwritten Law
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4. The Perpetuity of the Law
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5. The Synagogue
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6. The Schools
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7. The Conversion of Gentiles
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Part II: The Idea of God
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1. God and the World
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2. The Character of God
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3. Ministers of God
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4. The Word of God. The Spirit
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5. Majesty and Accessibility of God
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Part III: Man, Sin, Atonement
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1. The Nature of Man
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2. Sin and its Consequences
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3. The Origin of Sin
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4. Ritual Atonement
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5. Repentance
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6. The Efficacy of Repentance
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7. Motives of Forgiveness
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8. Expiatory Suffering
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Part IV: Observances
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Part V: Morals
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Part V1: Piety
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Part VII: The Hereafter
Ephraim Urbach, The Sages: Their Concepts and Beliefs [Hebrew], ET: The Sages: The World and Wisdom of the Rabbis of the Talmud,
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1. The Study of the History of the Beliefs and Concepts of the Sages.
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2. The Belief in One God
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3. The Shekhina—The Presence of God in the world
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4. Nearness and Distance—Omnipresent and Heaven
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5. The Epithet Gevura [Might] and the Power of God
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6. Magic and Miracle
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7. The Power of the Divine Name
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8. The Celestial Retinue
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9. He Who Spoke and the World Came into Being [End Page 226]
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10. Man
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11. On Providence
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12. The Written Law and the Oral Law
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13. The Commandments
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14. Acceptance of the Yoke of the Kingdom of Heaven, Love and Reverence
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15. Man’s Accounting and the World’s Accounting
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16. The People of Israel and its Sages
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17. On Redemption
Abraham Joshua Heschel, Torah Min HaShamayim BeAspaqlariah Shel HaDorot. (The chapter numbering follows Heavenly Torah as Refracted through the Generations.)
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