his most ambitious scholarly achievement, his three-volume study of Rabbinic Judaism, is only now appearing in English.
Abraham Joshua Heschel (1907-1972) was a preeminent scholar, acclaimed spiritual writer, and prophetic activist. He was a professor of ethics and mysticism at Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City. Gordon Tucker is senior rabbi of Temple Israel Center in White Plains, NY, and adjunct assistant professor of Jewish philosophy at Jewish Theological Center, New York. He is the editor and translator of "Heavenly Torah as Refracted through the Generations" by Abraham Joshua Heschel.
"Torah from Heaven," a curious translation of Heschel's original
three volumes "Torah Min Hashamayim" or in his alternate English,
"The Theology of Ancient Judaism," is, perhaps, his masterpiece.
Published over many years in Hebrew, it has now been made available
in clear, idiomatic English (Continuum, 2005). Heschel once told
me, with his uniquely accurate and typical exaggeration, that every
word he wrote was a quotation form classical Jewish literature.
This book comes close to being exactly that. It is an anthology of
viewpoints clustered in two posing constellations... In the 42
years since the first volume of the Hebrew original of Torah Min
Hashamayim appeared we have had time to consider the meaning of
Rabbi Heschel's monumental study of rabbinic dualism. Can the
school of Akiba and that of Ishma'el be ultimately reconciled? Can
a Hegelian synthesis be accomplished? Does Heschel himself prefer
one of the schools to the other? We might have expected that he
would incline to the mystical-transcendent pole, but that does not
seem to be the case. Indeed, he is most eloquent expounding the
human aspect of Torah... Gordon Tucker (and Leonard Levin) have
done a superb job of assembling, editing, abridging, and
translating a huge, not quite-finished manuscript. Others literally
died trying to translate this sprawling masterpiece. There may be
some dissent from the inevitable emissions, some few typos, some
doubts about Tucker's interpretations. But on the whole, the
introductions to each chapter, the explanatory notes on almost
every page (including identifying Heschel's often obscure sources)
are wonderful aids in working through this massive work. Here, now,
the greatest Jewish thinker in American history, the true inheritor
of Polish now, the greatest Jewish thinker in American history, the
true inheritor of Polish Hasidism and German Jewish scholarship,
the friend of Martin Luther King and the Pope, our master and
teacher, Abraham Joshua Heschel, becomes at last, the major
interpreter of classical Judaism. May God, who makes all things
possible, be blessed." - Arnold Jacob Wolf, Current Theological
Writing, 2007
*Current Theological Writing*
"In order to understand the outsized public personality of Heschel,
it is essential to appreciate the underlying source of his
passions; that is, the Jewish tradition as it developed from its
scriptures. And no where are these sources better revealed than in
Heavenly Torah. It is precisely because he was anchored in a
received tradition, with all of its particularities, that he can be
a figure of universal importance."- Matthew LaGrone, Touchstone,
January 2007 Vol. 25 No. 1
*Touchstone*
'This is a work of tremendous significance for understanding
Judaism.'
*Booklist Top Ten Books of the Year in Religion*
"I think of Torah Min Hashamayim, Abraham Joshua Heschel's work on
Rabbinic Theology, as an unfinished symphony. This work is like a
symphony with many movements. Heschel's book is never explicitly
polemical, but it nevertheless remains a passionate protest against
both rigid literalists of Torah and those on the other side who
dismiss the Torah as if it were only poetry. Torah Min Hashamayim
is many things: a dazzling work of scholarship in Rabbinic
Literature, a portrait of the tension between two differing world
views, and more. Gordon Tucker is to be appreciated for having
undertaken this incredibly difficult work of translation and for
having done it as well as it can be done." - San Diego Jewish
Journal, December 2005
"This is a splendid translation of a pivotal work. Tucker and Levin
make the intricacies of Heschel's thoughts understandable to the
reader." -Shamash Book of the Month, July 2006
"Gordon Tucker (and Leonard Levin) have done a superb job of
assembling, editing, abridging and translating a huge,
not-quite-finished manuscript. Others literally died trying to
translate this sprawling masterpiece....on the whole, the
introductions to each chapter, the explanatory notes on almost
every page (including identifying Heschel's often obscure sources)
are wonderful aids in working through this massive work. Here, now,
the greatest Jewish thinker in American history, the true inheritor
of Polish Hasidism and German Jewish scholarship, the friend of
Martin Luther King and the Pope, our master and teacher, Abraham
Joshua Heschel, becomes at last, the major interpreter of classical
Judaism. May God, who makes all things possible, be blessed."
-Judaism, forthcoming in 2005
"Citing patterns that underlay the rabbinical passages, the text of
Heavenly Torah uncovers the intellectual and spiritual riches of
the Talmudic tradition and applies those teachings to the concerns
of the modern age. Heavenly Torah is thus a major addition to the
library of Religious Humanism in our time. Masterfully brought to
the marketplace in a beautiful edition by Continuum Books, who were
also responsible for publishing Jonathan Sacks' masterpiece The
Dignity of Difference, and translated by Gordon Tucker with
precision and tremendous knowledge and skill, Heavenly Torah is a
seminal addition to our library of Jewish studies.... The English
version of the book makes completely transparent the intent and
intellectual context of the original-a matter that has been
simplified not merely by the clear translation of the texts,
citations and footnotes, but by the addition layer of Tucker's own
footnotes and illuminating chapter introductions that make
Heschel's aims wholly clear to the reader-a matter that is
sometimes hard to fully grasp with the dense opacity of the Hebrew
original....the English version of the book functions not merely as
a brilliantly articulated interweaving of rabbinical texts and
ideas, but serves as a general introduction-presented with great
clarity and crystalline intelligibility-for the reader who is
beginning to learn rabbinical texts." -Center for Sephardic
Heritage, 4/6/05
"brilliantly translated...a superb job of assembling, abridging,
and translating a huge, not-quite-finished manuscript...the
introduction to each chapter, the explanatory notes on almost every
page are wonderful aids in working through this massive work."
-Current Theological Writing
*Current Theological Writing*
"...one of the most important books in Jewish Studies." -Jewish
Herald-Voice, November 25, 2004
"This is an ambitious work of tremendous significance, and
indispensable guide to understanding the Torah and- consequently-
the Jewish religion. Not simply for large religious collections,
but for any with active borrowers." -Booklist, November 15,
2004
"Heschel's most important, ambitious, and monumental work....this
translation will best serve academics who do not have complete or
even partial control of Hebrew, it is accessible enough for any lay
reader interested in Jewish theology. A tour de force of gigantic
proportions; recommended for all libraries." -Library Journal,
1/28/05
"The publication of this book, the fruit of over a decade of work,
and coinciding with the 100th anniversary of Heschel's birth
(1905), and his 32nd yahrzeit, is an event!...far more than a
simple translation.... Only on the inside title page do we discover
the names of the editors and translators. This act of generosity on
the part of Rabbis Tucker and Levin must be acknowledged. But of
course, this is entirely Heschel's book, and that is cause enough
for radical amazement." -Sh'ma, January 2005
"...it reveals Heschel's rarely equaled mastery of the entire body
of rabbinic, philosophical and mystical literature, both the
original sources and the secondary literature.... In his tragically
brief lifetime, Heschel represented many role models. He was the
hero of modern Jewish theologians, the father of the new Jewish
spirituality and the eloquent spokesperson for all who were devoted
to repairing our seriously flawed world. These two ‘new' books
speak to his enduring contributions in all of these areas." -The
Jewish Week, 12/24/04
"For those who wish to enter the world of rabbinic exegesis and
theology, Abraham J. Heschel's Heavenly Torah: As Refracted Through
the Generations, is a fine introduction. His masterwork now appears
in English for the first time. It is by any measure an astonishing
accomplishment of historical and theological scholarship. Heschel
knew and loved these ancient texts, and his expositions of them can
help non-Jews to catch the spirit of rabbinic Judaism and to
appreciate the rabbis' reverences for Scripture, their mental
sharpness and their sense for issues that continue to engage both
Jewish and Christian theologians today."- America, March 13,
2006
*America: The National Catholic Weekly*
"This is a work of historical theology, considering two major
schools in Judaism.... This is a book that demands considerable
time and effort, but is well worth it."- Chaim Seymour, Association
of Jewish Libraries: Newsletter, Sep./Oct. 2006
*Association of Jewish Libraries*
"Like Copernicus ... Heschel has set the world on its head ...
Without actually examining the evidence, one can hardly be aware of
how intrinsically valid is Heschel's hermeneutic principle. Without
seeing how thorough and well-disciplined has been his study of
Talmudic literature, one cannot fully appreciate his achievement in
bringing some order and sense to it ... This is clearly a work of
gigantic proportions." —Jacob Neusner
*Blurb from reviewer*
"In Heavenly Torah, a masterwork of dizzying scholarship, the great
sage of our day Abraham Joshua Heschel explores and explicates the
two Jewish theological paths epitomized by these antagonistic yet
complementary approaches to scriptural interpretation and religious
philosophy." - Catholic Library World, September 2005
*Catholic Library World*
"The present translation for the original Hebrew is a fine English
edition of Heschel's most substantive contribution to the study of
early rabbinic literature, with very helpful notes added by the
translator. All libraries serving Judaica and religion programs
will want to purchase this volume. Highly recommended." -Choice,
July 2005
*Choice*
"This excellent translation of all three Hebrew volumes, plus
helpful notes and introductions by the translators, is a great boon
to anyone interested in classical Jewish theology and Heschel's
rethinking of it. This work demonstrates the opposite of Bernard
Lonergan's bon mot about "ideas passed from book to book without
any evidence of having gone through a mind." The theology of the
Rabbis of the Talmud (whose role in Judaism is at least as
important as the role of the Church Fathers in Christianity) comes
alive in this work precisely because it went through Heschel's
great mind...As one who was privileged to be Professor Heschel's
student when he was writing this great work, I rejoice it is now
available to a wider audience. I can well imagine a year-long
course on Judaism using this book alone. It is not only about
Judaism; it is truly from it. It is surely a primary, not a
secondary text, both for Jews and for gentiles, especially for
Christians who too worship the Lord God of Israel and study His
Torah." - First Things, November 2005
*First Things*
"This book is so clearly written and well organized that such need
not be the case...This book is a rich lode of explorations of God's
ways with humanity and humans' ways with God or, to change the
figure, a Schatzkammer, a treasure house of heavenly wisdom."-
Gerard S. Sloyan, Horizons, Fall 2005
*Horizons*
"The translators have skillfully transformed Heschel's complex
study of the doctrine of "Devine revelation," into an accessible
text for students and scholars alike. The translation itself is
clear and avoids archaic renditions of difficult texts.
Importantly, the translators are careful to remain faithful to
Heschel's original Hebrew work. Tucker and Levin
deserve great credit for bringing this brilliant work to the modern
student of Jewish theology, and especially for their masterful
"unpacking" and contextualization of Heschel's Scholarly
argument."- Summer 2006
*Jewish Book World Quarterly Review*
"Heavenly Torah is a deeply learned, eloquent and extensive
demonstration of the richness of a tradition that cannot be
captured by one idea, movement or approach." -The Jewish Week,
September 2005
*Jewish Week Book Page*
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