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Meʼorei haʼAish, fire and…
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Meʼorei haʼAish, fire and flame : insights into the weekly Torah portion (edición 2011)

por Ari D. Kahn

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
1581,368,793 (3.72)3
What was the pre-sin world like, and what is the way of return? How could God have demanded that Avraham sacrifice his son? Why would Yaakov favor Yosef when he saw the jealousy it created? Drawing upon the vast reservoir of rabbinic literature from Talmud to Midrash, from Zohar to the hasidic masters Rabbi Ari Kahn combines the mystical explorations of kabbalah and hasidism with a highly intellectual and broad-minded approach to Torah study. Plumbing the depths of Jewish sources, Rabbi Kahn provides fascinating answers to age-old questions, infusing the parshah with fresh significance. Through provoking questions and intriguing insights, Rabbi Kahn continually inspires us to seek the Godly in our lives.… (más)
Miembro:Arctic-Stranger
Título:Meʼorei haʼAish, fire and flame : insights into the weekly Torah portion
Autores:Ari D. Kahn
Información:Jerusalem New York : OU Press/Gefen, 2011
Colecciones:Early Reader
Valoración:*****
Etiquetas:Ninguno

Información de la obra

Echoes of Eden Insights into the weekly Torah parshiot (Me'orei Ha'aish Fire and Flame: Insights Into the Weekly Torah Portion) por Rabbi Ari D. Kahn

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Mostrando 1-5 de 8 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
As a Christian historical theologian, I approached this book from perhaps different perspectives than its primary audience, the devout Jew seeking exegetical guidance through the weekly Torah portion. Yet, from that perspective, this is a valuable and compelling commentary that opens up the riches of Jewish exegetical traditions. Its value for the Christian, then, is to explore the ways in which the stories of Genesis are constructive of the cultural identity of the People of God, in ways that a strictly Christological approach to Scripture can sometimes miss.

For example, Christian meditations on divine love and its relationship to love of neighbor invariably center on Christ and his summary of the law. Rabbi Kahn engages in the same meditation, but does it through the foundational narrative of Abraham and Isaac. Thus, his insights, which are rooted within the fertile ground of Jewish traditions, offer the Christian new perspectives on God's love for us and our concomitant love for each other.

Rabbi Kahn's contributions extend beyond a simple summary of the deep history of Jewish commentary, as seen for example in his chapters on Adam and Eve. There, he uses the tools of tradition to explore ways in which the creation stories of Genesis can be read in sympathy with modern scientific knowledge about the evolution of the human species. While his suggestions may at times seems strained, they show a mind working hard to renew Scripture's core meanings for a world superficially separated from its roots.

There are a few aspects of the book that make it difficult for the non-Jewish reader, most obviously the extensive use of Hebrew. Usually, passages of Hebrew in the body text are translated; but many lengthy passages in the footnotes are not, leaving their contributions inscrutable to a person who does not know the language. It also takes some time to acclimate to the book's use of traditional Jewish transliterations of familiar names -- Yaakov instead of Jacob, Hava instead of Eve.

Nevertheless, I highly recommend this work to any person looking for new perspectives on Genesis grounded in sound traditions. ( )
  nathanielcampbell | May 24, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
this is the first Jewish devotional I have read, and I can say I am hooked. The emphasis is different from most Christian devotionals, more academic and more designed to provoke thought that piety. I would recommend this book for anyone who wants to broaden their spiriutal horizons. ( )
  Arctic-Stranger | Nov 8, 2012 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
Rabbi Ari D. Kahn’s _Echoes of Eden_ is a series of commentaries on the weekly Torah portions from Sefer Bereishit, or Genesis. I have reviewed a handful of Biblical commentary books at this point, with _Entering Torah_ being the closest to _Echoes of Eden_ so far. Of all of those I’ve reviewed, I recommend Rabbi Kahn’s _Echoes of Eden_ over them all. The midrashim he presents are truly insightful. In his writing Rabbi Kahn not only calls upon the tradition of his own teacher, but of generations of commentary, for a deep view of several different possible interpretations of the text.

It is this attitude that there is no single, authoritative way to read Torah that was most welcome. That he specifically highlights this fact, and shows how Rabbis have disagreed over interpretations for centuries was even more so. Beyond this, Rabbi Kahn’s willingness to examine what might appear to be unorthodox readings of the text was both refreshing and enlightening.

For those looking to understand Torah from a Jewish perspective, or indeed multiple Jewish perspectives, I cannot recommend _Echoes of Eden_ enough. ( )
  JSKupperman | Jan 4, 2012 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
In many ways, the book of Genesis is one of the most esoteric books of the Bible. On the surface, Genesis appears to be a simple narrative of the origins of the Jewish people, beginning with the creation of the world until the beginning of the Egyptian exile. However, a careful reader will quickly recognize that a great deal of explanation is needed to make sense of much of the narrative. This is true not only for the early chapters of Genesis, which deal with obviously difficult topics (such as the creation of the universe, the original sin, Noah and the flood, etc.) but also for the later narratives about the Patriarchs and their families. Stories that, at first glance, appear to be quite simple, such as the tales of sibling rivalry between Jacob and Esau or Joseph and his elder brothers, quickly become far more complex, even incomprehensible, when read with a more careful eye.

In his recent book, Echoes of Eden, Rabbi Ari D. Kahn attempts to shed light on many of these difficult topics, through a series of essays working through the entire book of Genesis. Towards this purpose, Rabbi Kahn marshals a broad host of traditional commentaries and midrashic sources (including a number of important kabalistic works), many of which are not well known. Indeed, much of the value of Rabbi Kahn’s work is precisely in the sources that he quotes. Even experienced scholars will find a number of gems here that they were unaware of previously. In addition, Rabbi Kahn provides a number of valuable original insights. I was particularly impressed by an insight that Rabbi Kahn gives over from his teacher, Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, in the essay, “The Universal and the Particular.” Rabbi Soloveitchik notes that, in Genesis 22:5, when Abraham and Isaac separate from the two young men accompanying them to complete their journey to the “binding of Isaac”, Abraham tells the young men that he and Isaac would “go yonder and worship and return to you.” Rabbi Soloveitchik explains that these last words indicate that the religious experience would not be complete until Abraham returned and shared his experience with others. As Rabbi Kahn goes on to explain, this is an important aspect of all Jewish spirituality, that while we may need to separate ourselves from others at times to achieve spiritual heights, we must ultimately bring these experiences back with us to those we “left behind”. On a cosmic scale, this is the role of the Jewish people relative to the world as a whole.

Unfortunately, however, despite these virtues, the book suffers from a number of major flaws that severely undermine its usefulness, especially for readers who are not equipped to study the original sources that Rabbi Kahn cites. First of all, it should be noted that many of the sources that he quotes in his footnotes are quoted in the original Hebrew without translation. This is a major loss for those readers who are not literate in Hebrew. However, a far more serious problem is that the book’s presentation of these sources is often inaccurate and misleading. Many of the translations are substantively erroneous, frequently in matters directly relevant to the discussion. Sources are often cited as stating or supporting ideas that are not to be found in the original material. In some cases this appears to have been the result of a misunderstanding of the material, itself a serious problem. However, in most cases, it seems as if the author is unjustifiably reading his own original ideas into the sources. While, in themselves, many of these insights may be legitimate, the attempt to give them a false pedigree is very problematic. Errors of this sort abound throughout the book, in some cases the errors are minor (but irritatingly elementary - as in his commentary on Genesis 27:1 that Isaac enjoyed the aroma of the meal that Jacob had brought to him, when the verse states that he smelled Jacob’s garments!), and in other cases the errors are very substantial, fundamentally undermining the validity of the entire essay.

Even when the author’s presentation of a source is correct in substance, the tone of his presentation may be very discordant with the intent of the original source. As an example, the author quotes, in Hebrew, a commentary of Rabbi Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin (d. 1893) that states that because Abraham was so deeply immersed in theological and philosophical thought, his father was the one who initially led the family in their travels. In English, the author gives Rabbi Berlin’s commentary a rather different tone, saying that Abraham “was a luftmensch – his head was in the clouds”, which has a rather derogatory tone that is completely absent from the original commentary.

A related problem is the author’s tendency to unjustifiably jump to conclusions that are unsupported by the sources and, in many cases, to then present these conclusions as settled fact. For example, in his essay on the wife of Noah, “Na’amah”, he asserts early on that “Noah’s wife could only be Na’amah [the sister of Tubal-cain].” Yet the midrash explicitly states that this was a matter of debate and that the Rabbis believed the wife of Noah to have been a different woman with the same name. Later, when the author quotes this very midrash, it is erroneously translated to say that the rabbis agreed with the identification of the sister of Tubal-cain with the wife of Noah and the debate was only about her moral character.

In other cases, the author takes what would otherwise be a valid insight and carries it too far. Thus, the author asserts that, although Abraham erected numerous altars, “he never brought an offering upon them.” He bases this assertion on the fact that, in several locations, when Scripture tells us that Abraham erected an altar, it does not mention any offerings (with the exception of the binding of Isaac). While this is a valid textual insight (not restricted to Abraham), it does not support the author’s conclusion, which he presents as self-evident. On the contrary, the commentaries, quite reasonably, take it for granted that Abraham offered sacrifices upon these altars (that is what altars are for, after all). Later in the same essay, the author actually quotes a commentary by Nachmanides that explicitly contradicts this assertion, but the quote is not translated into English.

Finally, I felt that many of the essays were written in a confusing manner, without a clear presentation from the beginning to the conclusion. The essays often feel unfocused and meandering, as if the author got sidetracked from his initial point and went off on a tangent and never quite found his way back. Many of the essays suffer from poorly presented reasoning, as if important steps were omitted or insufficiently stressed, so that the reader is unsure how he got from one point to the next. Many of the essays seem rather pointless, where a great amount of effort is expended to bring us to an anticlimactic conclusion that is not particularly interesting or meaningful. For example, in the essay, “Clothes Make the Man”, the author goes on for twelve pages, citing a number of interesting sources, but comes to no meaningful conclusion except that “clothing” symbolizes sin. And what, exactly, are we supposed to do with that?

I suspect that most of the problems with this book are due to the essays being based upon oral lectures that Rabbi Kahn delivered to different audiences over a few years. The dynamic nature of such, often partially extemporaneous, oral lectures generally cannot be simply transcribed into print. Such material needs to be very carefully worked over (and, often, completely rewritten), by the author himself with the help of competent proofreaders. The failure to do this can cause even a highly competent scholar to appear incompetent.

While Echoes of Eden has some valuable insights, I cannot recommend it to anyone who is not able and ready to work through the essays critically and to research all of the sources that are quoted. The reader cannot simply rely on the author’s presentation of the sources as reliable. It is my hope that future volumes of this work will be handled more carefully (as well as, hopefully, a revised edition of this first volume), as I believe that Rabbi Kahn has a great deal to offer. ( )
  LazerA | Dec 17, 2011 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I've been reading this book in conjunction with the weekly Torah portions, so I haven't fully finished it yet. I have found it to be a very interesting commentary on the book of Genesis. It is definitely written for people immersed in Torah study and Jewish tradition, particularly those from an Orthodox background. Rabbi Kahn did some excellent work here, but the book would benefit from some editing and tightening of writing style overall. While I do not ascribe to very many Orthodox interpretations of Torah, I am finding Echoes of Eden to be an interesting addition to my studies. ( )
  prettypearls | Dec 7, 2011 |
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What was the pre-sin world like, and what is the way of return? How could God have demanded that Avraham sacrifice his son? Why would Yaakov favor Yosef when he saw the jealousy it created? Drawing upon the vast reservoir of rabbinic literature from Talmud to Midrash, from Zohar to the hasidic masters Rabbi Ari Kahn combines the mystical explorations of kabbalah and hasidism with a highly intellectual and broad-minded approach to Torah study. Plumbing the depths of Jewish sources, Rabbi Kahn provides fascinating answers to age-old questions, infusing the parshah with fresh significance. Through provoking questions and intriguing insights, Rabbi Kahn continually inspires us to seek the Godly in our lives.

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