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A Living Covenant: The Innovative Spirit in Traditional Judaism

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This interpretation of Jewish teaching by one of today's leading thinkers in the Jewish world will appeal to all people seeking to understand the relationship between the idea of divine demand and the human response, between religious tradition and modernity.
The Judaic tradition is often seen as being more concerned with uncritical obedience to law than with individual freedom and responsibility. In A Living Covenant, Hartman challenges this approach revealing a Judaism grounded in a covenant-a relational framework-informed by the metaphor of marital love rather than that of parent-child dependency. This view of life places the individual firmly within community. Hartman shows that the Judaic tradition need not be understood in terms of human passivity and resignation, but rather as a vehicle by which human individuality and freedom can be expressed within a relational matrix.
"With passion and erudition, David Hartman argues for a version of Judaism that is at once faithful to the tradition and fitted to the requirements of modernity. He writes like Jacob wrestling with the angel, and the result, for the reader, is an exhilarating experience." --Michael Walzer, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
"This deep philosophical treatise-filled with new, nuanced interpretations of Torah and Talmud-reads like a novel that one cannot put down until reaching the very last page." --Judith Hauptman, Rabbi Philip R. Alstat Associate Professor of Talmud, The Jewish Theological Seminary; author of Rereading the Rabbis: A Woman's Voice
"I learned much from this book, and I appreciate its theo-logical courage and originality." --Harold M. Schulweis, Rabbi, Cong. Valley Beth Shalom, Encino, Calif.; author of For Those Who Can't Believe

368 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1985

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David Hartman

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
318 reviews21 followers
June 21, 2013
I can hear my teacher's voice as I read his words and recall his Torah.

This is incredible Torah, and unbelievably relevant in today's Jewish world (and beyond). Though we wrote it decades ago (and I read much of it then) it is incredibly fresh and pertinent today.

I look forward with great anticipation to studying my teacher's Torah further with my teachers, his children and his students at the Institute he established in memory if his father, Shalom Hartman, in the weeks ahead.
Profile Image for Jeffrey (Akiva) Savett.
629 reviews34 followers
April 22, 2024
Gets better every time. It's so interesting to revisit Hartman, and through him, Soloveitchik and Leibowitz after all these years. I agree with some things more, disagree with other things a lot. Essential Jewish philosophy of the first order.
177 reviews
April 20, 2016
Not a book for a beginner in theological reading, but for someone who wants to understand the basics of Rabbi David Hartman's religious thought.
8 reviews1 follower
March 1, 2020
I am strictly a lay person with no background in Judaism other than that of the average participant in Jewish ritual and tradition.It seems to me that Hartman is attempting to rescue the relevance of Judaism, ( Torah and Talmudic discourse) for contemporary Jews.In raising issues he is both affirming tradition and questioning it.His approach is religious but he does not eschew secular approaches to meaning and normativity.He wants members to be active rather than passive recipients of tradition and is trying to blend tradition with innovation which requires freedom from the hegemony of text and "tradition".It is regrettable that he didnt live to finish the work because he was exceptional in his effort to explore and affirm his understanding of tradition and innovation. A philosophical approach is rare in contemporary Jewish religious commentary. That takes courage.I found it helpful that Hartman raises issues that thinking Jews are attempting to address in their own lives and practices. The book hinges on comparison and contrasts between three seminal Jewish thinkers: Soloveichik,Leiberman and Maimonides.Hartman examines what he sees as the flaws in Soloveichik's "Lonely Man of Faith" and Leibowitz's reiteration and practice regardless of meaning or insight.Issues raised by Hartman are autonomy versus conformity to received doctrine;metaphysical versus human priorities in considering the normative;repressive versus emancipatory trends in Jewish practice and understanding;the compatibility of secular versus religious approaches to received tradition from Sinai;the expunging and restoration of individuality in practice and insight;the mindlessness of reiterative practice versus the importance of experience and history;the pathology of solipsism, ( "the lonely man of faith") versus intersubjectivity and reaching out to others; the tensions between "Creation" and creativity; and the tensions between divine rule and rationality, (Maimonides).Each one of these issues would deserve a tome unto itself, although his approach is integrative.It seems to me that Hartman despite his criticism of Spinoza does not see humanism as inimical to Judaism. I admire Hartman for challenging authoritarian and hegemonic approaches to tradition, practice and identity and his challenging of insular approaches to Jewish continuity.
Profile Image for Charles Cohen.
1,026 reviews9 followers
February 8, 2018
I really like the idea of a covenantal relationship with God - something that changes and evolves, but is still based in a shared understanding of history and value. It's a rare sage that bases his radical philosophy in text and primary sources, but that's what makes Hartman so amazing.
Profile Image for Craig Bolton.
1,195 reviews86 followers
September 23, 2010
A Living Covenant: The Innovative Spirit in Traditional Judaism by David Hartman (1998)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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