This volume is about Latter-day Saints learning from Jews and the Jewish experience. This book is unique. It is not a traditional interfaith dialogue where the goal is to learn from each other. Rather, Latter-day Saints seek to give Jews the microphone, so to speak, and let them talk about themselves on their own terms. Only then do Latter-day Saint respond, and not with the goal of establishing areas of agreement or disagreement but as an opportunity to learn from Jews. This book turns to the wisdom of Jews and Judaism to inform, inspire, and enhance the lived religious experience of Latter-day Saints.
The Learning of the Jews brings together fifteen scholars, seven Jewish and eight Latter-day Saint, with a combined academic experience of over four hundred years. The volume is structured around seven major topics, two chapters on each topic. A Jewish scholar first discusses the topic broadly vis-à-vis Judaism, followed by a response from a Latter-day Saint scholar. The seven topics include scripture, authority, prayer, women and modernity, remembrance, particularity, and humor. The intention is that the reader will not only learn a great deal about Judaism and the Jewish experience while reading this volume but also use what they learn to enhance their own cultural and religious experience.
Contents:
Introduction
- Trevan G. Hatch and Leonard J. Greenspoon
1a. Approaching Scripture: Insights from Judaism
- Gary A. Rendsburg
1b. Maturing Latter-day Saint Approaches to Scripture
- Ben Spackman
2a. Neither Prophet nor Priest: Authority and the Emergence of the Rabbis in Judaism
- Peter Haas
2b. What’s the Church’s Official Position on Official Positions? Grappling with “Truth” and “Authority”
- Trevan Hatch
3a. Approaching God: A Jewish Approach to Prayer
- Peter Knobel
3b. Approaching God: Jewish and Latter-day Saint Prayer and Worship
- Loren D. Marks and David C. Dollahite
4a. Women and Judaism in the Contemporary World: Tradition in Tension
- Ellen Lasser LeVee
4b. Modern Mormon Women in a Patriarchal Church
- Camille Fronk Olson
5a. Faith as Memory: Theologies of the Jewish Holidays
- Byron L. Sherwin
5b. Memory in Ritual Life9
- Ashley Brocious
6a. Sacrality and Particularity: Jews in an Early Modern Context9
- Dean Phillip Bell
6b. Building Sacred Community: A Response to Dean Phillip Bell
- Andrew C. Reed
7a. It’s Funny, But Is it Jewish? It’s Jewish, But Is It Funny? An Understated Overview of Jewish Humor
- Leonard Greenspoon
7b. Why We’ll Probably Never Have Grouchos of Our Own (But Maybe a Seinfeld)
- Shawn Tucker