Tag: liberal Judaism

  • God Wants To Be Challenged!

    God Wants To Be Challenged!

    Judaism does not demand blind obedience to God’s commands. Quite the opposite: the Tanakh is filled with numerous examples of biblical figures who challenge the perceived injustice of God’s moral order, including Abraham, Moses, Job, Jonah, and Kohelet (Ecclesiastes). Job’s challenge is perhaps the most dramatic and poetic example, and the short video below illustrates Read more

  • There’s No One Right Way To Practice Judaism

    There’s No One Right Way To Practice Judaism

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  • Does the Great Rabbi Akiva Have Feet of Clay? The Oven of Akhnai, Part II

    Does the Great Rabbi Akiva Have Feet of Clay? The Oven of Akhnai, Part II

    The first half of the Talmud’s Oven of Akhnai narrative ends with the death of R. Gamliel, implicitly as punishment for his humiliation of his colleague, R. Eliezer. The deliberate humiliation of another Jew is a grave crime under Jewish law, and when Gamliel ignored God’s warning he was appropriately punished. The conclusion of this Read more

  • Part 2 of My Conversation on the “Design and Religion” Podcast

    Part 2 of My Conversation on the “Design and Religion” Podcast

    I earlier participated in a three-way conversation with Dr. Philip Jones, a retired Presbyterian pastor, and Van Sedita, a Christian layperson (previously posted), regarding the primary themes of my book. There, it became apparent that many of theological tensions that I have found in Judaism were also present in Presbyterianism, including whether it is possible Read more

  • 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

  • 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

  • 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

  • Interview on “Third Opinion” Podcast

    Interview on “Third Opinion” Podcast

    I recently had the pleasure of being interviewed by Mike Deeson, an Emmy-award winning investigative journalist, on the above podcast. It was an open-ended discussion that gave me ample opportunity to describe the main themes of of my book. I appear around the 34th minute of this 56 minute episode. I invite you to listen Read more

  • How Haredi Judaism Became Illiberal

    How Haredi Judaism Became Illiberal

    In Come Now, Let Us Reason Together I present an extended argument that rabbinic Judaism, the iteration that emerged following the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE and reigned until the closing of the (Babylonian) Talmud at the start of the 7th century, was liberal in the classical sense. That is, open-minded, tolerant, Read more