Book Cover
E-book
Author Kraemer, David Charles

Title Responses to suffering in classical rabbinic literature / David Kraemer
Published New York : Oxford University Press, 1995

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Description 1 online resource (xiii, 261 pages)
Summary The existence of suffering poses an obvious problem for the monotheistic religions. Why does an all-powerful, benevolent God allow humans to suffer? And given that God does, what is the appropriate human response? In modern times Jewish theologians in particular, faced with the enormity of the Holocaust, have struggled to come to grips with these issues. In Responses to Suffering, David Kraemer offers the first comprehensive history of teachings related to suffering in classical rabbinic literature. Beginning with the Mishnah (c. 200 CE), Kraemer examines traditions on suffering, divine justice, national catastrophe, and the like, in all major rabbinic works of late antiquity. Bringing to bear recent methods in the history of religions, literary criticism, canonical criticism, and the sociology of religion, Kraemer offers a rich analysis of the development of attitudes that are central to and remain contemporary concerns of any religious society
Analysis Suffering
Judaism Doctrines
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 249-254) and indexes
Notes Print version record
Subject Suffering -- Religious aspects -- Judaism.
Rabbinical literature -- History and criticism
RELIGION -- Judaism -- Theology.
Rabbinical literature.
Suffering -- Religious aspects -- Judaism.
Lijden.
Gerechtigheid.
Rabbijnse literatuur.
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 1429405910
9781429405911
1280527366
9781280527364