Category: General

  • Judaism is Open-Minded and Pluralistic

    Judaism is Open-Minded and Pluralistic

    There is a famous Talmudic story that I believe does not get enough attention, as it exemplifies Judaism’s liberal (old, classic sense) character. It recounts (b. Eruv. 13b) that there was a three-year halakhic (legal) dispute between the academies of Hillel and Shammai, two great sages who emerged in the immediate aftermath of the Second Read more

  • A Shocking Talmudic Story: the Sages Overrule God!

    A Shocking Talmudic Story: the Sages Overrule God!

    One of the most famous and frequently discussed stories in the Talmud is known as the “Oven of Akhnai.” This narrative is set in the first or second century of the common era at the great yeshiva in Yavneh (now northern Israel), established to preserve Judaism following the fall of the Second Temple. While the Read more

  • God Only Listens to Rachel’s Plea

    God Only Listens to Rachel’s Plea

    There is an astonishing narrative in Midrash Rabbah Lamentations (a classic Jewish source)1 regarding God’s decision to allow the Jewish people to return from Babylonian exile and rebuild the holy Temple in Jerusalem. This midrash, probably written in the fifth century CE, illustrates the transcendent value that Jewish theology places on moral autonomy. It builds Read more

  • The Torah as Feminist Text

    The Torah as Feminist Text

    In Chapter 6 (“The Fractious Canon”) of my Come Now, Let Us Reason Together I examine the Torah’s treatment of gender roles. While noting that this text’s cultural setting in the late Bronze Age requires men to hold leadership roles, I describe numerous instances in which women justifiably act contrary to their husbands or leaders’ Read more

  • The Coming Jewish Schism Over Zionism

    The Coming Jewish Schism Over Zionism

    Until recently most Jewish congregations viewed a commitment to Zionism as an essential aspect of “authentic Judaism.” To be clear, I am using “Zionism” in its most abstract sense, to mean simply that the Jewish people are entitled to a state in their ancestral homeland, not tied to any particular borders, governance, economic structures, etc. Read more

  • Why Did God Give Us Horrible Commandments?

    Why Did God Give Us Horrible Commandments?

    I recently posted a very short video on Facebook that attempts to explain in very broad terms why the Torah includes grossly immoral laws and commandments, such as genocide and capital punishment for a variety of victimless crimes. I devote an entire chapter of Come Now Let Us Reason Together to this subject, but I Read more

  • New Podcast Discussion: Innovation and Authority

    New Podcast Discussion: Innovation and Authority

    How can religion innovate without surrendering its authority and continuity Read more

  • Come Now, Let Us Reason Together: the Movie

    Come Now, Let Us Reason Together:                       the Movie

    They say a picture is worth a thousand words. If so, you should really dig this video, which I believe provides a compelling one-minute summary of my book. Check it out! https://drive.google.com/file/d/1rtxV9D7AlB8qNKSKH8tY8-OlQUH-UK8F/view Read more

  • Why Does the Torah Anthropomorphise God?

    Why Does the Torah Anthropomorphise God?

    Anyone who has read the Torah knows that it often describes God in human terms. Thus, it refers to God as “angry” “remembering,” or “stretching out his arm.” In most of these cases I believe it is due to the inherent inability of finite human beings to accurate describe the thoughts and actions of an Read more

  • Appearance on Prof. Alon Ben-Meir’s Podcast, “On the Issues.”

    Appearance on Prof. Alon Ben-Meir’s Podcast, “On the Issues.”

    Rabbinic Judaism was liberal, in the older sense, at its core. It was blown off course in an illiberal direction during the Geonic era. The Jewish Enlightenment gave birth to liberal movements, but the isolated Haredi communities remained oppressive and authoritarian. This has had profound, negative repercussions for Israeli culture and politics. Read more