I just finished the great novel "36 Arguments for the Existence of God: A Work of Fiction" by Rebecca Newberger Goldstein. (She's going to be speaking at the San Diego Jewish Book Fair on Monday Nov. 15.) The book is a funny satire on American academic (or Jewish academic) life. The main character, Cass Seltzer, is called an "atheist with a soul." In the novel he writes a book about the psychology of religious belief, but it is the appendix to the book that makes him famous. It is a series of thirty-six arguments for the existence of God that he then refutes. The arguments are all found in the end of the novel.
As a rabbi, I am often asked about God, especially by people exploring Judaism. I think they take if for granted that a religious person is supposed to believe in God, but I think what people are really asking me is what it means to believe in God. What is belief for a contemporary Jew? What is contemporary Jewish faith? I hope to explore what it means to me in the next few posts.
Equality After October 7
5 weeks ago
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