David Fohrman

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David Fohrman



Rabbi David Fohrman lectures internationally on Biblical themes. He heads the Curriculum Initiative of the Areivim Philanthropic Group, and directs the Hoffberger Institute for Text Study. He currently resides in Woodmere, NY with his wife and children, where he also serves as resident scholar at the Young Israel of Woodmere. Rabbi Fohrman's first book, The Beast that Crouches at the Door, was a finalist for the 2007 National Jewish Book Award. In earlier years, Rabbi Fohrman served as a senior editor and writer for ArtScroll's Schottenstein Edition of the Talmud, and taught Biblical themes at the Johns Hopkins University. His recorded lectures are available at rabbifohrman.com. ...more

Average rating: 4.59 · 1,928 ratings · 289 reviews · 14 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Exodus You Almost Passe...

4.62 avg rating — 654 ratings5 editions
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The Beast That Crouches at ...

4.53 avg rating — 606 ratings — published 2007 — 6 editions
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The Queen You Thought You Knew

4.60 avg rating — 400 ratings — published 2011 — 4 editions
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Genesis: A Parsha Companion

4.70 avg rating — 139 ratings2 editions
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Exodus: A Parsha Companion

4.60 avg rating — 68 ratings2 editions
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Leviticus: A Parsha companion

4.38 avg rating — 40 ratings2 editions
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Numbers: A Parsha Companion

4.67 avg rating — 9 ratings2 editions
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The Queen You Thought You K...

4.60 avg rating — 5 ratings
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Schottenstein Daf Yomi Ed T...

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Un éléphant dans la pièce: ...

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More books by David Fohrman…
Quotes by David Fohrman  (?)
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“The second of the Ten Commandments is oddly worded: “Thou shalt not have [allegiance to] any other gods before Me.” The statement seems almost self-contradictory. Here the Torah insists on an absolute devotion to monotheism, faith in the one and only God—and then, in the selfsame statement, the text seems to take for granted the existence of other gods, saying only that we shouldn’t have allegiance to them. But what other gods are there? Isn’t the Torah’s whole point that there is only one? The problem falls away, though, if you go back to the original Hebrew and read it carefully. The second commandment states: “Thou shalt not have [allegiance to] any other elohim before Me.” Just plug in our working definition of elohim, and suddenly it all starts to make sense: the text adjures us not to have allegiance to other “powers” besides God. For, indeed, there are other great sources of power one might choose to worship. The sun is powerful, there’s no denying that. It provides light and heat, and without it, we die. Nevertheless, the second commandment tells us that the sun is off-limits for worship because we may not have allegiance to any power other than the Almighty. As”
David Fohrman, The Exodus You Almost Passed Over

“One of the axioms that most religions, Judaism included, accept about God is that God is good. But those are just words. What does it actually mean to be good? One of the things it means, Luzzatto says, is that one acts to benefit others. If there is no world, though, then there are no others that God can benefit; He exists alone in numinous solitude. God acted to create a world so that there would be other beings existing besides Himself, beings upon whom He could bestow goodness. In short, God created the world because goodness demanded it.”
David Fohrman, The Beast That Crouches At The Door

“If I really have a Creator, then my life is not just the byproduct of cold, blind chance. Someone wants me to be here, brought me into this world, and gave me the wherewithal to make something of myself here on earth. Love seems an entirely fitting response to that.”
David Fohrman, The Exodus You Almost Passed Over

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