Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- PART I JOSEPH G. WEISS AS A STUDENT OF HASIDISM
- PART II TOWARDS A NEW SOCIAL HISTORY OF HASIDISM
- PART III THE SOCIAL FUNCTION OF MYSTICAL IDEALS IN HASIDISM
- PART IV DISTINCTIVE OUTLOOKS AND SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT WITHIN HASIDISM
- PART V THE HASIDIC TALE
- PART VI THE HISTORY OF HASIDIC HISTORIOGRAPHY
- PART VII CONTEMPORARY HASIDISM
- 26 Hasidism: The Third Century
- 27 Differences in Attitudes to Study and Work between Present-day Hasidim and Mitnaggedim: A Sociological View
- PART VIII THE PRESENT STATE OF RESEARCH ON HASIDISM: AN OVERVIEW
- Bibliography
- Index
27 - Differences in Attitudes to Study and Work between Present-day Hasidim and Mitnaggedim: A Sociological View
from PART VII - CONTEMPORARY HASIDISM
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- PART I JOSEPH G. WEISS AS A STUDENT OF HASIDISM
- PART II TOWARDS A NEW SOCIAL HISTORY OF HASIDISM
- PART III THE SOCIAL FUNCTION OF MYSTICAL IDEALS IN HASIDISM
- PART IV DISTINCTIVE OUTLOOKS AND SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT WITHIN HASIDISM
- PART V THE HASIDIC TALE
- PART VI THE HISTORY OF HASIDIC HISTORIOGRAPHY
- PART VII CONTEMPORARY HASIDISM
- 26 Hasidism: The Third Century
- 27 Differences in Attitudes to Study and Work between Present-day Hasidim and Mitnaggedim: A Sociological View
- PART VIII THE PRESENT STATE OF RESEARCH ON HASIDISM: AN OVERVIEW
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
ERNST TROELTSCH's church-sect typology, a well-known attempt to characterize distinct types of religious organization, uses as its point of departure the extent to which Christianity is able to compromise with the material world. Michael Hill has shown that this depends on whether the emphasis is being placed on a radical or a conservative element of Christianity: the church-type organization represents the conservative element, the sect the radical. However, the entire question applies specifically to Christianity and cannot be seen independently of Christian theological values, ideals, and concepts. For this reason, Troeltsch's typology cannot be used directly in the analysis of other religious traditions. This does not mean that the dilemma of conservatism versus radicalism never plays a role in other religions, but it is not necessarily as basic to the understanding of the emergence and development of many non-Christian religious collectivities as it probably is to the understanding of Christianity. In itself, however, the idea that doctrinal systems are marked by inherent contradictions and present their adherents with dilemmas which force them to make choices depending on time and circumstances is one which can undoubtedly provide some insight into non Christian religions as well, including Judaism. An example of this kind of contradiction in Judaism is, in my opinion, the clash between the values of study and work, a clash which has its roots in the more fundamental distinction between the realms of the spiritual and the physical, the sacred and the profane.
I would like to thank my colleagues Mart Bax, Hans Tenekes, and Jojada Verrips for their comments on an earlier version of this chapter. In particular I am grateful to Dr Ada Rapoport-Albert whose numerous suggestions have led to an enormous improvement of both style and content. I am also indebted to the Free University of Amsterdam for subsidizing the translation of the chapter into English by Derek Rubin. Finally I would like to thank the Netherlands Organization for the Advancement of Pure Research for their financial sponsorship of my research in Israel in 1978, upon which the present chapter is based in part.
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- Hasidism Reappraised , pp. 427 - 438Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 1996