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
Appendix II - The Parameters of Avodah Zarah
- 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
Avodah Zarah, which I have defined as the formal recognition or worship as God of an entity that is in fact not God, has played an important role in this book. I have argued that Chabad theology utilizes language capable of leading to avodah zarah, which is possible even in the context of an essentially monotheistic theology, and that this step has in fact been taken by people who function in the central institutions of the movement. While I hope that the fundamental points were established in the body of the work, they demand a more careful treatment that will do at least some justice to their delicacy and complexity.
I noted in Chapter 1 that very early in the Rebbe's tenure, he asserted on a single occasion that a rebbe is ‘the Essence and Being [of God] placed into [areingeshtelt in] a body’ and that once the expression came to public attention at a much later date, it led Rabbi Schach and others to level the accusation of avodah zarah. It was in response to these attacks that Avraham Baruch Pevzner published Al hatzadikim (On the Righteous) in 1991, where he compiled and analysed an imposing list of mainly hasidic sources to defend this formula. As far as I can determine, the work, published by the House of the Union of Chabad Hasidim (Beit Agudat Ḥasidei Ḥabad) in Kfar Chabad, emerged out of circles at the heart of the Lubavitch community, where it is widely respected as a standard explication of the Rebbe's remarks. In addressing its theology, then, I will be engaging a mainstream work of considerable influence. This excursus is by no means a diversion into the exotic byways of Chabad.
Since any discussion of ‘the Essence and Being of God placed in a body’ and what this might mean must take place against the background of the Jewish rejection of the Christian doctrine of the Incarnation, we must first look at the standing of that belief in Jewish law and theology. Classical Christianity affirms that the second person of a triune God took on flesh in Jesus of Nazareth.
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- The Rebbe, the Messiah, and the Scandal of Orthodox IndifferenceWith a New Introduction, pp. 159 - 174Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2008