Theological and Philosophical Premises of Judaism, Paperback / softback Book

Theological and Philosophical Premises of Judaism Paperback / softback

Part of the Judaism and Jewish Life series

Paperback / softback

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Classical Judaism imagined the people Israel's situation in three aspects to be unique among the nations of the earth.

The nations lived in unclean lands contaminated by corpses and redolent of death.

They themselves are destined to die without hope of renewed life after the grave.

They were prisoners of secular time, subject to the movement and laws of history in its inexorable logic.

Heaven did not pay attention to what they did and did not care about their conduct, so long as they observed the basic decencies mandated by the commandments that applied to the heirs of Noah, seven fundamental rules in all.

That is not how Israel the holy people was conceived.

The Israel contemplated by Rabbinic Judaism lives in sacred space and in enchanted time, all the while subject to the constant surveillance of an eye that sees all and an ear that hears all and a sentient being that recalls all.

Why the divine obsession with Israel? God yearned for Israel's love and constantly contemplated its conduct.

The world imagined by the Rabbis situated Israel in an enchanted kingdom, a never-never-land and conceived of God as omniscient and ubiquitous. Here Neusner shows that in its generative theology Rabbinic Judaism in its formative age invoked the perpetual presence of God overseeing all that Israelites said and did.

It conceived of Israel to transcend the movement of history and to live in a perpetual present tense.

Israel located itself in a Land like no other. And it organised its social order in a hierarchical structure ascending to the one God situated at the climax and head of all being.

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