My favorite books about Judaism
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Topic author - Chief Rabbi
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My favorite books about Judaism
Nine Questions People Ask About Judaism, by Dennis Prager and Joseph Telushkin. A short, spirited articulation of ethical monotheism as the rational essence of Judaism.
Jewish Wisdom by Joseph Telushkin. 90 short chapters exploring issues of ethics, meaning, our relationship to God, the response of an ancient religion to modernity, the Holocaust, and Zionism. Nearly every chapter is a gem. Telushkin writes simply and elegantly, and he has complete command of all the rich sources of Jewish thought. Plus he gets it, and knows how to convey what's meaningful.
The Long Shorter Way and The Sustaining Utterance, by Adin Steinsaltz. Jewish mysticism stems from the Zohar, which is incomprehensible to any but the most learned. The first Lubavitch Rabbi, Shneur Zalman of Liadi, wrote the Tanya to explicate and systemize the Zohar's thought. The Tanya, though, is barely comprehensible to any but the most learned. Steinsaltz, probably the pre-eminent Jewish scholar of our era, wrote these two books as a commentary on the Tanya to make it accessible. It is a profound exploration of God and man and ways of knowing God. These books are not easy reading, but the do merit the work for those interested in learning Jewish mystical understandings of the world and God.
Jewish Wisdom by Joseph Telushkin. 90 short chapters exploring issues of ethics, meaning, our relationship to God, the response of an ancient religion to modernity, the Holocaust, and Zionism. Nearly every chapter is a gem. Telushkin writes simply and elegantly, and he has complete command of all the rich sources of Jewish thought. Plus he gets it, and knows how to convey what's meaningful.
The Long Shorter Way and The Sustaining Utterance, by Adin Steinsaltz. Jewish mysticism stems from the Zohar, which is incomprehensible to any but the most learned. The first Lubavitch Rabbi, Shneur Zalman of Liadi, wrote the Tanya to explicate and systemize the Zohar's thought. The Tanya, though, is barely comprehensible to any but the most learned. Steinsaltz, probably the pre-eminent Jewish scholar of our era, wrote these two books as a commentary on the Tanya to make it accessible. It is a profound exploration of God and man and ways of knowing God. These books are not easy reading, but the do merit the work for those interested in learning Jewish mystical understandings of the world and God.
