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Judaism

A vision of God for the twenty-first century

The neo-Chasidic ideas of ‘one of the most important contemporary religious thinkers'

August 12, 2010 10:09
120810 artgreen

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

4 min read

Radical Judaism – Rethinking God and Tradition
Arthur Green
Yale University Press, £16.50

One might have thought that in this hectic world of constant crises and urgent moral dilemmas there were better things to do than theology. Why waste time thinking about God?

Paul Tillich, who survived the trenches of the First World War and became perhaps the most eminent Protestant theologian of the 20th century, would have disagreed. He described faith as "the state of being ultimately concerned" and observed that we all have such concerns, be they religions, or the idols of nationalism or success. What we believe defines our values; therefore it matters. The God or gods we put our faith in quietly determine the course of our life, even if we have not clarified to ourselves who or what they are. Therefore, if we care about what it is for which we ultimately live, theology matters.

Arthur Green is a scholar of Jewish mysticism; Radical Judaism is the third in a series of compelling and accessible books which express his understanding of what it means to be a committed Jew today. He is also the rector of the Boston Hebrew College, a unique post-denominational centre for training rabbis.