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One People? Jonathan Sacks

One People? By Jonathan Sacks

One People? by Jonathan Sacks


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Summary

'A tour de force. Brilliantly documented and skilfully presented ... essential reading for all who wish to establish the basis for a constructive dialogue between the various religious sections in Jewry.' Sidney Brichto, Jewish Chronicle

One People? Summary

One People?: Tradition, Modernity, and Jewish Unity by Jonathan Sacks

One People? is the first book-length study of the major problem confronting the Jewish future: the availability or otherwise of a way of mending the schisms between Reform and Orthodox Judaism, between religious and secular Jews in Israel, and between Israel itself and the diasporaall of which have been deepened by the fierce and continuing controversy over the question of who is a Jew? One People? is a study of the background to this and related controversies. It traces the fragmentation of Jewry in the wake of the Enlightenment, the variety of Orthodox responses to these challenges, and the resources of Jewish tradition for handling diversity. Having set out the background to the intractability of the problems, it ends by examining the possibilities within Jewish thought that might make for convergence and reconciliation. The Chief Rabbi employs a variety of disciplineshistory, sociology, theology, and halakhic jurisprudenceto clarify a subject in which these dimensions are inextricably interwoven. He also explores key issues such as the underlying philosophy of Jewish law, and the nature of the collision between tradition and modern consciousness. Written for the general reader as much as the academic one, this is a lucid and thought-provoking presentation of the dilemmas of Jewish Orthodoxy in modernity.

One People? Reviews

His analysis of contemporary orthodoxy, which constitutes the bulk of the book, is recommended, especially for non-traditional or secular Jews who wish better to understand an observant Jew's perspective on the diverse Judaisms of modernity.
- A. J. Avery-Peck, Choice
We are indebted to Rabbi Sacks for presenting us with a closely reasoned argument helping the modern Orthodox Jew resolve the dilemma of wanting to live with his non-observant neighbours with mutual respect, and at the same time retaining his unqualified commitment to his faith in Tora min Hashamayim and all that that implies.
- Mendell Lewittes, Jerusalem Post Magazine
It is admirable that an Orthodox Chief Rabbi should be searchingwith halachic backingfor ways of uniting all Jewish factions.
- Stefan Reif, Jewish Chronicle
A tour de force. Brilliantly documented and skilfully presented, it looks honestly at the Jewish experience of the past in order to find a resolution to the problems that today threaten the Jewish people with dissolution. Rabbi Sacks asserts in the preface that, in writing about Liberal, Reform, Conservative, and Reconstructionist Judaisms, I have tried to come to terms with positions that are fundamentally not my own. He is, I believe, the first Orthodox rabbi in a position of authority ever to do so, and for this he deserves our praise . . . One People? is essential reading for all who wish to establish the basis for a constructive dialogue between the various religious sections in Jewry . . . for those who truly love Klal Yisrael, his is the only reasonable way forward.
- Sidney Brichto, Jewish Chronicle
His approach marks a refreshing change from those engaged in theological backbiting, and it bears out his desire to seek reconciliation between the different creeds of Judaism . . . Chief Rabbi Sacks is to be praised for opening up the process of reconciliation within Anglo-Jewry in a reasoned and dignified manner.'
- Jonathan Romain, Jewish Chronicle
Sober, realistic, even optimistic. It is also splendidly written, closely reasoned and meticulously documented . . . All of us canand shouldaccept that the Chief Rabbis motives are good.
- John Rayner, Jewish Chronicle
Any sense of deja vu is soon eclipsed by the increased tightness and depth of the argument, apparent not least in the uncanny way in which any counter-argument is either anticipated or raised and dealt with later in the text . . . There is thus scope for much future discussion. This book makes its case against a deftly woven background of the history, sociology, theology and Halakha of the past two centuries. Its argument is brilliantly sustained through its compelling paradoxes which at times illuminate and at times provoke . . . Sacks has confronted the questions which most profoundly trouble contemporary Jewish existence. His book redraws the conceptual field in which the arguments will continue even if it is unlikely to end them. This is no small contribution.
- Michael Gillis, Jewish Quarterly
An intellectual and philosophical feast of scholastic diplomacy. Diplomat par excellence, Sacks seeks to forge bridges over the seemingly unbridgeable chasms separating Orthodoxy, Progressive Judaism and Jewish secularism, as well as within Orthodoxy itself . . . a masterly exercise which, it is hoped, will not fall on the deaf ears of a Jewry too divided to love itself . . . a valiant attempt to occupy the pivotal middle ground of Jewrya stance which demands courage in an age such as ours which favours extremism. Let us hope that all sections of Jewry will accept the hand of friendship and understanding stretched out to them by Sacks so that maybe one day we just might become One People.
- Jewish Telegraph
Jonathan Sacks has had the courage to elaborate a major constituent of his personal credo before the public gaze . . . it is not dispassionately reasoned but is an expression of a devout commitment to the cause of unity . . . Even if Jonathan Sacks has raised more questions than he has answered, if we are prepared to address these questions to ourselves, he has thereby rendered a service to each of us, and so let us hope, to all of us, what he calls the covenantal community, keneset Yisrael.
- Ephraim Borowski, Le'Ela

About Jonathan Sacks

Jonathan Sacks was Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth. Educated at the University of Cambridge, he was formerly Principal of Jews College, London, and 1990 BBC Reith Lecturer.

Table of Contents

Preface
Note on Transliteration and Place Names
Abbreviations

1 The Crisis of Contemporary Jewish Thought
Babel Inverted * Interpeting the Holocaust * The Significance of Israel * Understanding Peoplehood * Strategies of Jewish Thought * Beyond Pessimism and Optimism
2 The Birth of the Adjectival Jew
Secularization and the Persistence of Religion * Accommodation or Resistance? * The Jewish Experience of Modernity * The Adjectival Jew * Judaism and Denomination * Denomination and Mutual Misunderstanding * The Secularization of Unity * Orthodoxy and Jewish Unity * A Religious Idea in a Secular Age
3 Orthodoxy, History, and Culture
Conserving the Covenant * Interpeting Change * Developments and Variations * Torah as Code or Culture * Dual Sensibilities * Derekh eretz: Jewish or Secular? * Principle and Policy
4 Orthodoxy and Jewish Peoplehood
English and French Models of Emancipation * Eastern Europe * East European Echoes * The Hungarian and German Experience * Consequences of Secession * Contrary Forces
5 Tradition and Diversity
Aggadic Pluralism * Alternative Interpretations * The Search for Authority * Halakhic Universalism * The Search for Stringency * Moderation as a Religious Norm * Beyond Sectarianism
6 Inclusivism Halakhic
Inclusivism * Inclusivism: The Rationale of Covenant * The Cognitive Impact of Social Change * Inclusivity and the Desire to be Included * Inclusivism and Post-Holocaust Theologies
7 A Collision of Consciousness
Pluralism and Tradition * The Social Context of Pluralism * Halakhic Argument, Halakhic Decision * Pluralism or Inclusivism? * The Modern Self * The Traditional Jewish Self * The Autonomous Self and Judaism * Integrity and Function * Integrity and Tradition * The Paradox of Integrity
8 Schism?
Rosenzweig and Fackenheim * Hirschensohn and Kook * Two Jewries? * Resolutions * A Divided Unity
9 The Future of a People
The Rejection of Rejection * An Idea in Crisis * Against Convental Dualism * The Third Crisis * Pluralism, Exclusivism, Inclusivism * Inclusivist Imperatives

Bibliography
Index

Additional information

GOR003486872
9781874774013
1874774013
One People?: Tradition, Modernity, and Jewish Unity by Jonathan Sacks
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Liverpool University Press
1993-03-01
272
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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