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Author Voss, Rebekka, author.

Title Disputed messiahs : Jewish and Christian messianism in the Ashkenazic World during the Reformation / Rebekka Voss ; translated by John Crutchfield
Published Detroit : Wayne State University Press, [2021]
©2021

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Description 1 online resource (xiii, 335 pages) : illustrations
Contents Christian perceptions of Jewish messianic hope -- Asher Lemlein between apology and polemics -- Jewish and Christian messianisms: cultural transfer and realpolitik -- Epilogue: the entanglement of Jewish and Christian messianism in the Ashkenazic world during the reformation
Summary Disputed Messiahs: Jewish and Christian Messianism in the Ashkenazic World during the Reformation is the first comprehensive study that situates Jewish messianism in its broader cultural, social, and religious contexts within the surrounding Christian society. By doing so, Rebekka Voß shows how the expressions of Jewish and Christian end-time expectation informed one another. Although the two groups disputed the different messiahs they awaited, they shared principal hopes and fears relating to the end of days. Drawing on a great variety of both Jewish and Christian sources in Hebrew, Yiddish, German, and Latin, the book examines how Jewish and Christian messianic ideology and politics were deeply linked. It explores how Jews and Christians each reacted to the other's messianic claims, apocalyptic beliefs, and eschatological interpretations, and how they adapted their own views of the last days accordingly. This comparative study of the messianic expectations of Jews and Christians in the Ashkenazic world during the Reformation and their entanglements contributes a new facet to our understanding of cultural transfer between Jews and Christians in the early modern period. Disputed Messiahs includes four main parts. The first part characterizes the specific context of Jewish messianism in Germany and defines the Christian perception of Jewish messianic hope. The next two parts deal with case studies of Jewish messianic expectation in Germany, Italy and Poland. While the second part focuses on the messianic phenomenon of the prophet Asher Lemlein, part 3 is divided into five chapters, each devoted to a case of interconnected Jewish-Christian apocalyptic belief and activity. Each case study is a representative example used to demonstrate the interplay of Jewish and Christian eschatological expectations. The final part presents Voß's general conclusions, carving out the remarkable paradox of a relationship between Jewish and Christian messianism that is controversial, albeit fertile. Scholars and students of history, culture, and religion are the intended audience for this book
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Messiah -- Judaism.
Judaism -- Relations -- Christianity.
Christianity and other religions -- Judaism.
Reformation.
Ashkenazim -- Europe, Eastern -- History -- To 1500
Reformation.
Ashkenazim
Christianity
Interfaith relations
Judaism
Messiah -- Judaism
Reformation
Eastern Europe
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Crutchfield, John, translator
ISBN 9780814341650
0814341659