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Thinking about God : Jewish views / Kari H. Tuling.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, (c)2020.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780827618480
  • 9780827618466
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • BM610 .T456 2020
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part 1. Is God the Creator and Source of All Being-Including Evil? -- 1. What Does It Mean to Say That God Created the World? -- 1.1. A Biblical View: In the Image of God -- 1.2. From the Liturgy: God Renews Creation Day by Day -- 1.3. A Rabbinic View: The Trouble with Angels -- 1.4. A Medieval View: Ibn Pakuda's Logical Analysis -- 1.5. A Modern View: Green's Divine Helpmate -- 1.6. A Modern View: Kushner's Sermon -- 1.7. Summary of Views
1.9. Intended Role of Humanity -- 2. How Does Evil Exist in a World with a Good God? -- 2.1. A Biblical View: Romping in the Garden of Eden -- 2.2. From the Liturgy: The Soul You Have Given Me Is Pure -- 2.3. A Rabbinic View: The Impulse to Good and the Impulse to Evil -- 2.4. A Medieval View: Maimonides on Adam's Sin -- 2.5. A Modern View: Cohen on God's Holiness -- 2.6. A Modern View: Kushner on Bad Things That Happen -- 2.7. Summary of Views -- 2.8. The Question of Free Will -- 2.9. Why Does God Allow Evil to Exist?
3. Is God Like a Person? -- 3.1. A Biblical View: Moses Asks to Behold God's Presence -- 3.2. From the Liturgy: Forgiveness and God's Body -- 3.3. A Rabbinic View: Where Is God's Place? -- 3.4. A Medieval View: Maimonides and the Attributes of Action -- 3.5. A Modern View: Buber's Dialogic Approach -- 3.6. A Modern View: Green's Non-Dualism -- 3.7. Summary of Views -- 3.8. Thinking of God as a Person -- 3.9. Imagining a Personal God vs. Imagining God as an Impersonal Force -- 4. Does God Have a Gender?
4.2. From the Liturgy: Our Father, Our King -- 4.3. A Rabbinic View: God's Fire and the Patriarchy -- 4.4. A Medieval View: Scholem Explains the Rise of the Shekhinah -- 4.5. A Modern View: Plaskow's Feminist Critique -- 4.6. A Modern View: Adler and the "Pudding Stone" -- 4.7. A Modern View: Falk's Poetic Rewrite -- 4.8. Summary of Views -- 4.9. Implications of Masculine Images of God -- 4.10. Rethinking the Meaning of Traditional Texts with Male Imagery -- 5. What Does It Mean to Declare God Is One?
5.2. From the Liturgy: The Shema and Its Blessings -- 5.3. A Rabbinic View: A Deathbed Shema -- 5.4. A Medieval View: Maimonides' Meditation -- 5.5. A Modern View: Schneerson's Explicit Mysticism -- 5.6. A Modern View: Soloveitchik Is Ever the Rationalist -- 5.7. A Modern View: Schachter-Shalomi's Embodied Prayer -- 5.8. Summary of Views -- 5.9. The Meaning of Bearing Witness to God's Oneness -- 5.10. Praying as One (Community) -- Part 3. Does God Redeem-or Might God Not Redeem? -- 6. Does God Intervene in Our Lives?
Subject: "Investigating how Jewish thinkers from the biblical to the postmodern era have approached questions about God-e.g, "Is God like a person?," "Is God good?," "Does God redeem?"--And highlighting interplays between texts over time, Tuling elucidates many contradictory and sophisticated ways to think about God in Jewish tradition"--
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Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction BM610 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available on1159163138

Includes bibliographies and index.

Cover -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part 1. Is God the Creator and Source of All Being-Including Evil? -- 1. What Does It Mean to Say That God Created the World? -- 1.1. A Biblical View: In the Image of God -- 1.2. From the Liturgy: God Renews Creation Day by Day -- 1.3. A Rabbinic View: The Trouble with Angels -- 1.4. A Medieval View: Ibn Pakuda's Logical Analysis -- 1.5. A Modern View: Green's Divine Helpmate -- 1.6. A Modern View: Kushner's Sermon -- 1.7. Summary of Views

1.8. Meaning of the Seven-Day Creation Narrative -- 1.9. Intended Role of Humanity -- 2. How Does Evil Exist in a World with a Good God? -- 2.1. A Biblical View: Romping in the Garden of Eden -- 2.2. From the Liturgy: The Soul You Have Given Me Is Pure -- 2.3. A Rabbinic View: The Impulse to Good and the Impulse to Evil -- 2.4. A Medieval View: Maimonides on Adam's Sin -- 2.5. A Modern View: Cohen on God's Holiness -- 2.6. A Modern View: Kushner on Bad Things That Happen -- 2.7. Summary of Views -- 2.8. The Question of Free Will -- 2.9. Why Does God Allow Evil to Exist?

Part 2. Does God Have a Personality-or Is God an Impersonal Force? -- 3. Is God Like a Person? -- 3.1. A Biblical View: Moses Asks to Behold God's Presence -- 3.2. From the Liturgy: Forgiveness and God's Body -- 3.3. A Rabbinic View: Where Is God's Place? -- 3.4. A Medieval View: Maimonides and the Attributes of Action -- 3.5. A Modern View: Buber's Dialogic Approach -- 3.6. A Modern View: Green's Non-Dualism -- 3.7. Summary of Views -- 3.8. Thinking of God as a Person -- 3.9. Imagining a Personal God vs. Imagining God as an Impersonal Force -- 4. Does God Have a Gender?

4.1. A Biblical View: What Does Gender Have to Do with It? -- 4.2. From the Liturgy: Our Father, Our King -- 4.3. A Rabbinic View: God's Fire and the Patriarchy -- 4.4. A Medieval View: Scholem Explains the Rise of the Shekhinah -- 4.5. A Modern View: Plaskow's Feminist Critique -- 4.6. A Modern View: Adler and the "Pudding Stone" -- 4.7. A Modern View: Falk's Poetic Rewrite -- 4.8. Summary of Views -- 4.9. Implications of Masculine Images of God -- 4.10. Rethinking the Meaning of Traditional Texts with Male Imagery -- 5. What Does It Mean to Declare God Is One?

5.1. A Biblical View: Hear, O Israel -- 5.2. From the Liturgy: The Shema and Its Blessings -- 5.3. A Rabbinic View: A Deathbed Shema -- 5.4. A Medieval View: Maimonides' Meditation -- 5.5. A Modern View: Schneerson's Explicit Mysticism -- 5.6. A Modern View: Soloveitchik Is Ever the Rationalist -- 5.7. A Modern View: Schachter-Shalomi's Embodied Prayer -- 5.8. Summary of Views -- 5.9. The Meaning of Bearing Witness to God's Oneness -- 5.10. Praying as One (Community) -- Part 3. Does God Redeem-or Might God Not Redeem? -- 6. Does God Intervene in Our Lives?

6.1. A Biblical View: Hannah Prays for a Son

"Investigating how Jewish thinkers from the biblical to the postmodern era have approached questions about God-e.g, "Is God like a person?," "Is God good?," "Does God redeem?"--And highlighting interplays between texts over time, Tuling elucidates many contradictory and sophisticated ways to think about God in Jewish tradition"--

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