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From Defender to Critic
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15 March 2012

A Vital, Living Judaism Can Be Found When the Voice of the Past Engages Modern Experience
"[This] synthesis of tradition and modernity is not a philosophy meant to serve as the platform for a new movement or institution, but a process of living experience among individuals and communities that choose to adopt its angle of vision. It is a process that demands constant introspection and renewal and cannot be branded or co-opted by any formal or official frame of reference. It stands separate from all expressions of institutionalized Judaism, as it never knows what new forces it will absorb as it moves into the future."
—from the Introduction
Dr. David Hartman, the world's leading modern Orthodox theologian, presents his own painful spiritual evolution from defender of the rule-based system of Jewish law to revolutionary proponent of a theology of empowerment, one that encourages individuals and communities to take greater levels of responsibility for their religious lives. In this daring self-examination, he explains how his goals were not to strip halakha—or the past—of its authority but to create a space for questioning and critique that allows for the traditionally religious Jew to act out a moral life in tune with modern experience.
In achieving this synthesis of tradition with the sensibilities of contemporary Judaism, Hartman captures precisely what creates vitality in living Judaism and charts the path to nurture its vitality forever.
—Jewish Media Review
Introduction: From Loving Defender to Loving Critic: An Intellectual Autobiography
Part I: The Spirituality of Halakha: Early Essays
1. The Joy of Torah
2. The Body as a Spiritual Teacher: Learning to Accept Interdependency
3. Democratizing the Spiritual: The Risks and Rewards of Halakha
4. Embracing Covenantal History: Compassion, Responsibility, and the Spirituality of the Everyday
5. Creating a Shared Spiritual Language: The Urgency of Community and the Halakhic Roots of Pluralism
6. Conquering Modern Idolatry: Building Communities of Meaning around Shared Aspirations
7. Learning to Hope: A Halakhic Approach to History and Redemption
Part II: Abraham's Argument: Reclaiming Judaism's Moral Tradition
8. Abraham's Argument: Empowerment, Defeat, and the Religious Personality
9. A Covenant of Empowerment: Divine Withdrawal and Human Responsibility
10. Mishpachtology: Judaism as a Family System
11. Custom and Innovation: Stepping Beyond the Parameters of the Past
12. My Daughter Is Not My Mother: Rethinking the Role of Women in Traditional Judaism
13. Hillel’s Decision: Subjective Piety as a Religious Value
14. Halakha as Relationship: Toward a God-Centered Consciousness
15. Among Abraham’s Children: The Confrontation of the Particular with the Universal
Notes
Bibliography
Index