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The Biblical View of Man
 
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The Biblical View of Man [Hardcover]

Leo Adler (Author), Daniel R. Schwartz (Translator)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

9657108969 978-9657108963 September 15, 2007
The Biblical View of Man argues cogently that the Bible is more about human beings than about God, and insists that in the biblical view, what human beings need is not so much wisdom or grace but rather their own free will to fulfill the obligations that a loving God has bestowed upon them in order to allow them to prove and improve themselves. The Biblical View of Man was originally published in German by Ernst Reinhardt Verlag in 1965, and appears now in English for the first time.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

In The Biblical View of Man, the late Rabbi Dr. Leo Adler produced a rare and moving account of how the Hebrew Bible views the human condition under the sovereignty of God. Erudite, profound and inspiring, it is marvelous that this work is now available to an English readership through the superb translation of Professor Daniel Schwartz. Adler reminds us compellingly that the Bible is not man's book of God but God's book of mankind. This is a work that deserves to be widely read by Jew and non-Jew alike. --Sir Jonathan Sacks, Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the British Commonwealth

What can this work, written in German in 1965, offer today's reader, or today's educator? As previously stated, the author possesses the ability to craft a philosophy of Judaism, which is at once thoughtful and intellectually stimulating, while at the same time religiously sincere and spiritually uplifting. In addition, its message is one whose articulation, sadly, often gets lost in the current dialogue about what it means to be a truly religious Jew - that the major objective is personal character and behavior, and the rest is commentary. --Mali Brofsky, Lookstein Digest

In this recently translated work, Leo Adler argues cogently that the Bible is a book about human beings rather than a book about God. He maintains that it is both realistic enough to know that people can sin knowingly, but also optimistic enough to teach that God has given them both the choice and the ability to do right. --Jewish Book World

About the Author

Rabbi Dr. Leo Adler (1915 1978), whom the upheavals of the twentieth century took from seminary studies in Germany to study in the Mir Yeshiva in Lithuania and then in Shanghai, spent the last quarter-century of his life as rabbi of the Jewish community of Basel, Switzerland. During that period he also earned a doctoral degree in modern philosophy and wrote several books in German on Jewish tradition and religious thought. The Biblical View of Man brings together perspectives that were nurtured by Jewish culture, by philosophical inquiry, by his own study of the Bible, and by his manifold experiences in a troubled world.

Daniel R. Schwartz is a professor in the Department of Jewish History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 141 pages
  • Publisher: Urim Publications (September 15, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 9657108969
  • ISBN-13: 978-9657108963
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.7 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,118,131 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is thought provoking, July 17, 2009
This review is from: The Biblical View of Man (Hardcover)
The Biblical View of Man
By Leo Adler
Translated by Daniel R. Schwartz
Urim Publications, 2007, 114 pages
ISBN: 978-965-7108-96-3


Reviewed by Israel Drazin



The Biblical View of Man contains Rabbi Dr. Leo Adler's view of what the Bible teaches about people. Rabbi Adler published the original in German in 1965. He served as a rabbi of the Jewish community of Basel, Switzerland, and received a doctoral degree in modern philosophy. Daniel R. Schwartz, who translated the book, is a professor of Jewish History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Shimon Gesundheit, who wrote a Forward, is a lecturer at the same university.

The Bible focuses on humans not God
Rabbi Adler's understanding of the Bible could be summarized as rational thoughts mixed with the mystical. His states that people, not God, are "the focus of biblical consideration." He notes that throughout "the ages, Jewish intellectual endeavor focused...upon human beings and their responsibilities vis a vis their fellow humans and God, not upon contemplation about the essence of Divinity."

God created evil
He becomes mystical when he writes that "God created neither a whole world nor a half world; He created two half worlds, one filled with light and blessing, the other with darkness and curse." People, he asserts, are also, like the world, "dualistic," containing both good and evil. Man has "two souls...within his breast.... It was for man's benefit that God created evil, so that man could choose good and thereby earn his own merit." Adler does not explain why God thought that people should earn merit.
One might disagree with Rabbi Adler and say that the world is good, but people can misuse it and produce evil, such as when they overeat. This is the view of Moses Maimonides (1138-1204).

The use of reason is alien to Judaism
Adler rejects the Maimonidean view (although he does not mention the philosopher) that people should use reason. He argues that humans cannot depend upon reason. It is overvalued. It is a notion that has "lost sight of man's manifold and contradictory nature." Judaism, according to Adler, is "completely opposed to that of philosophy." Philosophy, he insists, is an alien and destructive disease that the Jews caught from the Greeks.

The purpose of divine commands
People need God's commands, not reason. They need to believe in God and let themselves "be led by God." Thus, Judaism is neither theology that stresses belief, nor anthropology that focuses on people; it is more than either; it is a religion that stresses "faithfulness," which Adler defines as the duties that belief in God imposes upon people, the divine laws. By "faithful," he means "steadfast," "unfailing" and "unfaltering" in observing the divine commands.

Social consciousness
Adler demonstrates through many examples that the primary biblical goal is social consciousness, fairness, justice, mercy and equality, all oriented to help improve fellowship, responsibility and society. Adler defines the Hebrew word tzedek, which is traditionally translated as "justice," as "love." Thus, he reads the command of Deuteronomy 16:20 "tzedek tzedek shall you pursue" not as a requirement for judicial justice, but as the obligation that humans should show love.

Surrendering one's self to God
Adler promotes the mystical notion of self surrender to God, the creation of a new self, an unparalleled humility, "total submission to God," "complete subordination to God," where the individual selves "cease to exist." He recognizes that the notion of "belief" is alien to Judaism. The word is not in the Hebrew Bible. Rather than belief, Adler advocates this selfless reverence of God, this "deepest alliance with God."

Being holy means separating oneself
How does a person achieve alliance with God? "Man never approaches the Godly so clearly as in the self-sanctification which the Bible requires of him." What is "self-sanctification"? Adler explains that the Hebrew kodesh, generally translated as "holy," actually means separate. Thus when God is described as kodesh, the Bible is stating that God is altogether separate from humanity, there is a chasm between people and God, God is not imminent, God is transcendent.
Thus when Leviticus 19:2 states the human obligation, "You shall become holy for I, the Lord your God, am holy" (the italics are in Adler's book), the Torah, according to Adler, acknowledges the "full baseness of man" and encourages a separation from that baseness, and "seeks to bring man to the realization that all his behavior must be directed toward God."

Divine grace
Can people "become holy" by their own efforts? Adler answers, "Complete holiness (is) a quality of character which man cannot achieve by himself.... That which man begins God completes by giving man the spirit of holiness as a gift." He quotes the Babylonian Talmud, Yoma 39a, to prove that this concept of divine grace is Jewish. The Talmud states: "He who hallows himself, God hallows him greatly." However this statement could mean that although people may not do much, God will reward them as if they did a great deal.

Summary
In summary, Adler offers an interesting and thought provocative opinion of what he understands the Bible to require from people. Some readers will agree with his assessment. Others may dislike his mystical understanding of total surrender and total disengagement from earthly matters. However, all readers will benefit by being intellectually stimulated by reading his book.


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5.0 out of 5 stars The Biblical view of Man- as guide to a life of righteousness, October 28, 2007
This review is from: The Biblical View of Man (Hardcover)
In his introduction to this work Professor Shimon Gesundheit (Hebrew University,Jerusalem) considers the question of whether there is such a subject as Jewish Theology. He finds the originality of Rabbi Adler's approach in his providing an answer to this question through centering on Biblical Anthropology. The understanding of God given in the Bible as Adler sees it is given so that Mankind can understand truly his own nature and task in the world. This approach, pioneering at the time, would influence key figures of contemporary Jewish thought,as Abraham Joshua Heschel and Rav Joseph Dov Ber Soloveitchik.
The author, Rabbi Adler was for the last twenty- two years of his life the Rabbi of the Jewish community of Basel Switzerland. In searching to find an understanding of the Biblical conception of Man he focuses on Man's search for Justice through proper and responsible use of his freedom. He teaches that Biblical Revelation and Law provide the means to work toward attaining this ideal of Justice.
Adler contrasts the Biblical view as he understands it with the Christian view whose focus is on original sin overcome only through Grace, and with the Greek view whose focus is on rational understanding exclusively. As Adler understands the Biblical view of the world Man's reason alone is not enough, and it is the commandments of God which provide the basis for Man's making a life of freedom and justice.
In the course of his exposition Adler analyzes concepts such as Tzedek, Mishpat, Ttzedakah, Anava, Yirat Hashem.Rabbi Adler also considers briefly apocryphal literature and the Biblical concept in relation to later periods of Jewish history.
Originally written in German the translation done by Prof.Daniel Schwartz (Hebrew University,Jerusalem) reads exceptionally well.
A small but profound work its appearance in English is cause for celebration.
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