Includes bibliographical references (pages 179-191) and index.
Contents
Introduction: Uncovering Jewish-Christian Dialectic in History; 1. From the Outside Looking In: Franz Rosenzweig's Construction of a Jewish Theology in Light of His Ambivalent Encounter with Christianity; 2. Hans Joachim Schoeps's "Critical-Protestant" Theology: A Jewish-Christian Amalgamation; 3. Beyond Borders: Richard Rubenstein's Critique of Judaism in Relation to Christianity after the Holocaust; 4. Between Dialectic and Dialogue: Irving Greenberg's Organic Model of the Jewish-Christian Relationship; Epilogue: Jewish-Christian Relations in a Multicultural Society; Notes.
Summary
Marc A. Krell analyses the theologies of four 12th-century Jewish thinkers: Hans Joachim Schoeps, Franz Rosenzweig, Richard Rubenstein and Irving Greenberg, who have constructed theologies based on their interaction with Christian thought and culture.
Local Note
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