商品簡介
Why have the monotheistic religions failed to produce societies that live up to their ethical ideals? A prominent rabbi answers this question by looking at his own faith and offering a way for religion to heal itself.
In Putting God Second, Rabbi Donniel Hartman tackles one of modern life’s most urgent and vexing questions: Why are the great monotheistic faiths—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—chronically unable to fulfill their own self-professed goal to create individuals infused with moral sensitivity and societies governed by the highest ethical standards? To answer this question, Hartman takes a sober look at the moral peaks and valleys of his own tradition, Judaism, and diagnoses it with a combination of clarity, creativity, and erudition. Hartman argues that monotheism’s record of ethical failure isn’t the result of religion’s evil or of pure human weakness; instead, it’s a tension internal to religious faith. InPutting God Second, Hartman offers a deeply researched and thoroughly humane argument that religious people everywhere should put the ethical treatment of others first—and put God second. For as long as devotion to God comes first, responsibility to other people—God’s true purpose for humanity—will trail far, far behind.
作者簡介
Rabbi Dr. Donniel Hartman is president of the Shalom Hartman Institute and the author ofThe Boundaries of Judaism, coeditor of Judaism and the Challenges of Modern Life, and coauthor ofSpheres of Jewish Identity. He is the founder of some of the most extensive education, training, and enrichment programs for scholars, educators, rabbis, and religious and lay leaders in Israel and North America, and is a prominent essayist, blogger, and lecturer on issues of Israeli politics and policy, Judaism, and the Jewish community.