Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Contents
- Note on Style and Transliteration
- Introduction to the Paperback Edition
- Introduction
- 1 From Heroism to Heterodoxy: The Crisis of a Movement and the Danger to a Faith
- 2 The New Messianism: Passing Phenomenon or Turning Point in the History of Judaism?
- 3 Aborted Initiatives and Sustained Attacks
- 4 The Second Coming: A Rejoinder
- 5 Revisiting the Second Coming
- 6 The Rabbinical Council of America Resolution
- 7 The Council of Torah Sages
- 8 The Spectre of Idolatry
- 9 On False Messianism, Idolatry, and Lubavitch
- 10 Debating Avodah Zarah
- 11 Judaism is Changing Before Our Eyes
- 12 From Margin to Mainstream: The Consolidation and Expansion of the Messianist Beachhead
- 13 Explaining the Inexplicable
- 14 What Must Be Done?
- Epitaph
- Appendix I On a Messiah who Dies with his Mission Unfulfilled: Selected Quotations
- Appendix II The Parameters of Avodah Zarah
- Appendix III Tosafot on ‘Association’ (Shituf)
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Contents
- Note on Style and Transliteration
- Introduction to the Paperback Edition
- Introduction
- 1 From Heroism to Heterodoxy: The Crisis of a Movement and the Danger to a Faith
- 2 The New Messianism: Passing Phenomenon or Turning Point in the History of Judaism?
- 3 Aborted Initiatives and Sustained Attacks
- 4 The Second Coming: A Rejoinder
- 5 Revisiting the Second Coming
- 6 The Rabbinical Council of America Resolution
- 7 The Council of Torah Sages
- 8 The Spectre of Idolatry
- 9 On False Messianism, Idolatry, and Lubavitch
- 10 Debating Avodah Zarah
- 11 Judaism is Changing Before Our Eyes
- 12 From Margin to Mainstream: The Consolidation and Expansion of the Messianist Beachhead
- 13 Explaining the Inexplicable
- 14 What Must Be Done?
- Epitaph
- Appendix I On a Messiah who Dies with his Mission Unfulfilled: Selected Quotations
- Appendix II The Parameters of Avodah Zarah
- Appendix III Tosafot on ‘Association’ (Shituf)
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
THIS BOOK is a memoir, a history, a religious tract. It is an indictment, a lament, and an appeal. It records the shattering of a core belief of a major faith, and the remarkable equanimity with which the standard-bearers of that faith have allowed one of its key pillars to be undermined. This tree has fallen during the last few years not in a deserted forest but in the midst of the madding crowd, yet the multitudes of observers somehow imagine that it continues to stand.
Since the religion in question is my own, I do not write as a dispassionate observer. I write, rather, with the hope that this account will awaken believing Jews from their torpor, alert them to the catastrophe that has befallen their faith, and inspire them to take the simple yet difficult steps needed to transform this moment from a turning point into an episode. To adapt a formulation originally applied to the abortive European revolutions of 1848 and 1849, we still have the opportunity to make this the turning point where Judaism failed to turn. If we do not seize this opportunity, a nearly irrevocable transformation will have been effected, and by the time the truth sinks in, it may well be too late to act.
As I write, two propositions from which every mainstream Jew in the last millennium would have instantly recoiled have become legitimate options within Orthodox Judaism:
1. A specific descendant of King David may be identified with certainty as the Messiah even though he died in an unredeemed world. The criteria always deemed necessary for a confident identification of the Messiah— the temporal redemption of the Jewish people, a rebuilt Temple, peace and prosperity, the universal recognition of the God of Israel—are null and void.
2. The messianic faith of Judaism allows for the following scenario: God will finally send the true Messiah to embark upon his redemptive mission. The long-awaited redeemer will declare that all preparations for the redemption have been completed and announce without qualification that the fulfilment is absolutely imminent. He will begin the process of gathering the dispersed of Israel to the Holy Land. He will proclaim himself a prophet, point clearly to his messianic status, and declare that the only remaining task is to greet him as Messiah.
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- Information
- The Rebbe, the Messiah, and the Scandal of Orthodox IndifferenceWith a New Introduction, pp. 1 - 3Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2008