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The Messianic Idea in Judaism: And Other Essays on Jewish Spirituality
Gershom Scholem
Schocken
, 1995 - 408 pages
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Discourse on Messianic Judiasm
The large majority of this book discusses the rise and fall of messianism through the medieval period and how it affects
Judaism
today. There are also
other
essays
present that discuss the history of the Star of David symbolism and the mystical golems.
The author presents the case of how Sabbatianism and Hasidism influenced the
messianic themes
that are prevalent in today's Judiasm. Some of the more interesting readings cover the notion of Sabbatianism and its transformation to a sect that believes in a messiah that pointed the way to redemption through sin as a result of its heretical leadership.
Identifying some of the religious inadequacies of Sabbatianism and how they gave rise to Hasidism and the notion of a messianism that focuses on self and personal redemption, the author presents a plausible argument worthy of serious debate for years to come.
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Messianism, Antinomianism, and Jewish Spirituality
Gershom Scholem, recognized as one of the foremost academic scholars of
Jewish mysticism
of the 20th century, presents here an excellent series of
essays exploring
the crises caused by fits of messianism in
Judaism
, especially the Sabbatian crisis.
The essays include:
Toward an Understanding of the
Messianic
Idea
in Judaism- details the concept of the messiah (mosiach) in the Hebrew exoteric traditions throughout history.
The Messianic Idea in Kabbalism- explores the origins of kabbalistic messianism in Isaac Luria and how this paved the way for Sabbatai Zevi.
The Crisis of Tradition in Jewish Mysticism- discusses the antinomian tendencies of messianic movements (esp. in the Sabbatians and post-Sabbatians, such as the Frankists and the Donme) and how Jewish law is abridged by proclamations of a new law, which is further advanced in the next essay,
Redemption through Sin- a more thorough look at antinomianism in Judaism, and how it stems from the idea of Spiritual Torah vs. Written Torah.
Further essays explore the Donme movement in greater detail, takes a look at a rare Sabbatian will from a Sabbatian who lived in New York in the 1800's, further essays on Hasidism and it's retort to Messianism, as well as the mystical aspects of Devekut (Hasidic "Cleaving to God"), and further essays in Jewish scholarship and an essay on the birth of the Star of David as a Jewish symbol.
Highly recommended to all parties interested in more advanced scholarship in Kabbalah and Jewish Heresy.
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Jews gone wild
The first half of this book discusses the evolution and decay of the Sabbatai Zevi messianist movement: not just of its birth (discussed in more detail in Scholem's book Mystical Messiah) but also of its slow decay. (For readers unfamiliar with Zevi, a brief summary: in the mid-1660s, Jews throughout the world came to believe Zevi was the Messiah; after being threatened with execution by the Ottoman Empire, Zevi converted to Islam. Nevertheless, some Jews continued to believe in him until the 19th century).
Scholem proposes two possible causes for the survival of Sabbatianism after Zevi's apostasy. First, 17th-century kabbalah (the
Jewish mystical
tradition) saw
Messianic renewal
not just as a nationalist rebirth of a Jewish state, but as a more spiritual process transforming all of creation, ultimately leading to Messianic deliverance. Scholem speculates that kabbalism made it easier for Jews to trust their own personal experiences over historical reality; as a result, some Jews could not admit "that their own personal experience had been false and untrustworthy." Moreover, many Jews had left countries (most notably Spain) where they were forced to practice
Judaism
in secret; thus, they found it easy to believe that Zevi was doing the same.
Scholem also addresses the Sabbatians' split-up into multiple factions. "Moderate" Sabbatians continued to follow halacha (Jewish law) believing that they were bound to do so until Messianic deliverance reappeared. But more radical Sabbatians either followed Zevi's lead by apostasizing, and/or by secretly rejecting halacha (Jewish law). The radicals believed that since the Messiah had come, the commandments of the Torah were abrogated, based on the
idea
of a "mystical Torah" of absolute freedom predating creation. Some radicals even suggested that Zevi (or even later Sabbatian leaders) was an incarnation of God. But as the memories of Zevi grew fainter and fainter, Sabbatianism decayed; some Sabbatians assimilated into Christianity and Islam, while in the 19th century,
others embraced
secularism or Reform Judaism.
Like Sabbatians, Hasidim embraced mysticism. But they focused on individual redemption rather than universal social redemption, thus reducing the temptation to expect imminent messianic deliverance. Scholem also points out that both Sabbatians and Hasidim embraced the concept of leaders "descending in order to rise" into the world of the less-holy. Where Sabbatians saw the "descent" of their Messiah as apostasy or as violations of halacha, Hasidim saw their rebbes "descending" into the realm of the mundane by teaching and leading their flock (rather than engaging in solitary communion with the Divine).
Most of the last third of the book is less interesting than Scholem's
essays
on Sabbatianism and Hasidism; to a greater extent than the first few, they focus on issues which require a very high level of cultural literacy (such as a book review of a now-obscure book, or a discussion of Martin Buber's German translation of the Torah). A fortunate exception is Scholem's essay on the Star of David; he shows that the hexagram was not a purely Jewish symbol until the 14th century, when the Jews of Prague placed it on a flag (perhaps because its use on magical amulets was then common). The symbol did not spread to eastern Europe until the 19th century, when the emancipated Jews of Europe wanted to show their respectability by having a symbol in their synagogues as simple to understand as the Christian cross.
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