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Creating an Ethical Jewish Life: A Practical Introduction to Classic Teachings on How to Be a Jew

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A handbook of Jewish ethical values and literature. Life as an art form―an invitation to Jewish ethical living. “It is the human task to complete God’s unfinished artistic masterpiece―the human person.”
―from the Introduction The classic texts of Jewish ethical literature―works little-known to most of us―are now readily available for personal study. This one-of-a-kind book brings the genre of Jewish ethical literature from its origins in the ancient and medieval worlds, straight into our 21st-century lives. An invitation into a history rich with wisdom and guidance, Creating an Ethical Jewish Life offers traditional texts, clear explanations, and ways for us to use them in our lives. Rabbis Sherwin and Cohen highlight a wide variety of classic texts, including the Zohar, The Holy Letter, The Path of the Upright by Moshe Hayyim Luzzatto, Duties of the Heart by Bahya ibn Pakudah, and Nachmanides’ Commentary on the Torah. These timeless texts are combined with the authors’ insightful commentary to address the ultimate human moral issue, the most intimate personal How can I best live the life God has entrusted into my care? With expertise and passion, Sherwin and Cohen show us how these unusual texts not only inform―but can transform our lives. Explores how Deal with ego • Be wise • Be healthy • Employ wealth • Die • Behave sexually • Believe in God • Thank God • Love God • Study the Torah • Repent • Treat one’s parents • Parent • Speak about another • Be Philanthropic

336 pages, Paperback

First published February 1, 2001

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Byron L. Sherwin

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963 reviews28 followers
September 16, 2015
This book is a set of essays discussing Jewish literature (mostly from the Middle Ages)on a variety of ethical and theological issues. Most of the book was well written but told me little I had not read elsewhere.

I note two exceptions to this. On the positive side, the chapter on charity skillfully pointed out some of the differences between Jewish and Christian ethics: the Christian ethic of charity is more ambitious but has not always institutionalized support for the disadvantaged as consistently as has Jewish law. On the negative side, the book's discussion of medieval Jewish medical writings doesn't seem particularly relevant to ethics or useful to modern readers, since even the most advanced medieval medicine is fairly questionable by modern standards.
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