Rabbi Shai Held is Co-Founder, Rosh Yeshiva, and Chair in Jewish Thought at    Mechon Hadar. Before that, he served for six years as Scholar-in-Residence at    Kehilat Hadar in New York City, and taught both theology and Halakha at the    Jewish Theological Seminary. Shai has a PhD from Harvard University with a    dissertation on A J Heschel; his main academic interests are in modern thought    and Religious Zionism. His canon of authors he admires consists of Rabbis    Reines, Kook, Unterman, Reines, Heschel, Soloveitchik, Hartman, and Greenberg.     Two weeks ago, he penned the following op-ed advocating a humanistic    religious Zionism based on Rabbi Unna and Kook and that the Torah has    humanistic and non-humanistic interpretations. It seems to encapsulate his    views. Speaking in 1945, Orthodox Zionist leader Moshe Unna made an impassioned      case for what he called "Jewish humanism." Unna was calling not for humanism      in the sense of putting human beings rather than God at the center of the      universe - a view no religious thinker could embrace - but rather humanism      in the sense of an uncompromising commitment to universal human well-being      and mutual responsibility. Humanistic ideals, Unna emphasized, are      inherently universalistic; they are, he said, "moral and cultural values      that generate a commitment to the world and to humanity."  Unna concluded his talk with a courageous declaration:…"It is crucial to      emphasize the word 'humanism.' It is not enough simply to say 'according to      the Torah,' because from the Torah many different things can be learned.      'The Torah has 70 faces,' and one can even learn from it the obligation to      commit acts of terrorism ... The word 'humanism,' therefore, comes to      explain and clarify which values from among those values found in our      literature we seek to internalize in our educational system." What Unna was      saying is that we cannot pretend to derive our values from a simple,      straightforward reading of Torah, since Torah contains multitudes, and can      be read as advocating universal humanism, on the one hand, and radically      particularistic chauvinism, on the other  The world is not divided between those who read selectively and those who      don't. It is more accurate to say that the real division is between those      who acknowledge that they read selectively, and those who do not - or who,      given their assumptions, simply cannot. Read      the Rest Here. Rabbi Held also composed the    widely circulated prayer after the Asian Tsunami Ruler of Creation, Master of the world:
Have mercy on all those who are      suffering from the raging waters and the storming waves. Have compassion on      Your creatures – From my outside perspective, it seems Held finds the Conservative movement    unable to support a text-based beit midrash culture, but finds much of    contemporary Orthodoxy overly dogmatic and belligerent. I asked him a few    questions to clarify his position and received the following. I wanted him to    speak about his views of Rabbinic authority, but he demurred, wanting to avoid    what he considers overheated polemics in which he thinks no one is persuaded    by positions they don't already agree with. Held reflects the part of Jewish    community that wants an halakhic alternative to the perceived negative image    of Orthodoxy (as he portrayed in his article on Rav Unna,) a community that    Held thinks is hermeneutically closed and increasingly oblivious to moral    challenges. He did not want to discuss the topic directly, hence the broader    discussion below. Questions to Rabbi Held should be kept polite and educated.     1) People are always asking about the denomination affiliation of    Hadar, can you help clarify it for us? To be honest, I find questions about denominational affiliation unhelpful    and unnecessarily confining. I am often reminded of something Professor    Heschel one said. Asked whether he considered himself Orthodox or    Conservative, he replied: "I am not a noun in search of an adjective." Now, we    know there are many people for whom denominations are extremely important and    even constitutive of their identity, and we respect that-- but that is not who    and what we are. We are a community and an institution that is oriented around    Torah and Mitzvot and trying to discern what it is that God wants from us, as    Jews and as human beings. We are proud to have students who come from a range    of backgrounds who have nonetheless found their way to a shared vision and    language of a committed, practicing Jewish life in the contemporary world. I am not interested in being boxed into some small sliver "between    Conservative and Orthodox." I am not sure it's helpful in this day and age to    cut up the Jewish world that way, and I don't want to live in some small    ideological enclave, hermetically sealed from the passions and insights of the    rest of the Jewish world. I am not sectarian: I want to speak to, and learn    from, a broader swath of the Jewish world.  By the way, it's interesting to note that among students at Hadar who    identify with a denomination, more think of themselves as Orthodox than as    anything else. The mode of learning we are committed to at Hadar means believing both that    Torah is Divine and that there is also wisdom and insight to be gained in and    from the broader world. It is a mode of learning and of being religious that    does not ask us to check either our minds or our moral intuitions at the door,    and that learns from people rather than just seeking to convert or be mekarev    them. It's extremely important to us to take hold of Torah in such a way that    I am always open to the possibility of learning from the person in front of    me, and to revising my understandings in light of that encounter. In our    world, there are a whole array of questions-- theological, ethical, and    Halakhic-- that are open-ended, complex, and elusive; we are far more    interested in complexity than in wedge issues and litmus tests. God is far    greater and more expansive than the self-appointed arbiters of authenticity    usually assume. Also, I'm really not sure I know what the words Orthodox and Conservative    mean in this day and age. Does Orthodox refer to Satmar or to Zvi Yehudah?    Does it refer to the Bratzlav of Shuvu Banim, the legal formalism of R. Bleich    or the dynamic Halakha in the tradition of Rav Uziel and Rav Hayyim David    Halevy, the Misnagdic yeshiva world of Rav Eliyashiv or the post-modern    neo-Hasidus of Rav Shagar? How much does this catch-all word "Orthodox" really    tell us? 2) Explain your vision of Mechon Hadar. 3. What has your study of Heschel taught you?  I have tremendous reverence for him, and see it as an enormous privilege to    have spent years studying one of the true giants of the spirit. I'll mention    just a few ways he's impacted me here: 2) Another important lesson I learned from Heschel-- and it has been    extremely important to me from the time I was in yeshiva until the present    day-- is the impassioned rejection of what he famously termed "pan-Halakhism,"    the idea that Judaism simply is Halakha. Heschel never tired of showing that    such an approach is both spiritually deadening and false to the sources of    Jewish tradition. One who claims to have Halakha but not Aggada in fact has    neither. Religious behaviorism (think of Leibowitz, for example) is a    falsification of Torah and its preoccupation with the duties of the heart, the    cultivation of virtue, and the importance of theology and (traditionally)    metaphysics. 3) Heschel's critique of modernity (and here there are obvious echoes of    Heidegger) is essentially that modern people are focused on what he calls    "expediency," or using the world for our own ends. Torah, in contrast, asks us    not just to manipulate but also to appreciate; the best antidote to a culture    of expediency is a return to wonder. For Heschel, then, Torah's preoccupation    with wonder is not an esthetic concern, but a radically ethical one-- unless    we can overcome our propensity to turn everything (and everyone) into a tool    for our own benefit, we will eventually bring the world to total destruction    and devastation. The animating principle of Jewish ethics and spirituality is    the quest for self-transcendence-- that is, the realization that I am not the    center of the universe, and that "something is asked of us." One of the    primary and paradoxical meanings of self-transcendence, by the way, is that we    find the meaning of our lives by getting over ourselves; I find my own purpose    by dedicating myself to a purpose that is far greater and more enduring than    myself. 4. How has the thought of Rav Soloveitchik influenced your    thought? R. Soloveitchik's preoccupation with human agency and creativity has been    enormously influential for me; his utter rejection of quietism and passivity    helped me see the Jewish tradition and the life of faith in new and deeper    ways. The notion that we are called upon to be authors of our own destiny, and    that we have a distinct purpose assigned to us by God. In addition, the notion    of being an agent, being active and rejecting passivity, gave me incredibly    inspiring theological language in which to understand Zionism, without the    messianic overlay that has led to such theological, political, and moral    difficulty. I find R. Soloveitchik's idea of prayer as self-redemption masterful--    first, he shifts the center of gravity away from "what will God do in response    to my prayer"" to "what will ideally happen to me in the very act of praying    before God?" And second, he introduces the extremely powerful and challenging    notion that speech equals dignity-- and even more radically, that it equals    redemption (ge'ulat hayahid). It's also an amazing display of hermeneutical    virtuosity-- weaving an extremely compelling theological idea out of an    ostensibly straightforward Halakhic source (the obligation lismokh geulah    litefilah). 5. Besides Heschel and Soloveitchik, which Jewish thinkers    influenced you?  R. Yitz Greenberg's insistence that we take the infinite dignity of every    human being seriously and that we bring this Torah with us as we stare at a    broken and pain-ridden world is something I carry with me every day of my    life-- it's part of what I mean when I talk about refusing to purchase our    faith by shutting our eyes to the world. Adderabba, what it means to have    faith is to live with the chasm between what Judaism teaches-- the infinite    value of every human being, and reality as we face it-- life is cheap and    human beings are expendable. Living with that tension is at the very heart of    a life of authentic faith. Martin Buber in many ways anticipates and critiques the narcissism of a    great deal of contemporary spirituality. This is part of what he means when he    emphasizes "encounter" rather than "experience"-- whereas the former is about    me and an other, the latter is ultimately only about me and my own inner    world. The way I like to describe this is that much of the time in human    relationships there is no me and you, there is only "me and the way you make    me feel." In that case, I may flatter myself that I am having deep spiritual    experiences, but in fact I am only pleasuring myself (see Buber's "Religion as    Presence" lectures). In some ways, Rav Amital's critique of some aspects of    neo-Hasidism is an obvious parallel. One enduring interest is the work of the Jesuit theologian Karl Rahner, who    insists that there is no secular pre-religious reality (no ungraced nature),    but that human beings are always already oriented towards the transcendent.    There are really interesting parallels in this regard between his thought and    Heschel's. I have also been deeply influenced by the Vietnamese Buddhist monk Thich    Nhat Hanh, whose clarity about mindfulness and what it entails has been an    enormous challenge and comfort to me in my own life, and whose words have also    shaped my understanding of what it means to be a teacher and a pastor. His    words have also enabled me to see things in Jewish sources, especially but not    exclusively Hasidic ones, that I had missed before (the extent of Rebbe    Nachman's emphasis on kindness to oneself, for example).  7. What are your thoughts on Pluralism? To my mind, the deepest problem with the pluralism of thinkers such as John    Hick is the presumption that he has a "view from nowhere" (his, you might say,    is a "pluralism from nowhere"), that he can stand outside and above all    particular religious traditions and point to the universal core they all    purportedly share. I share most contemporary philosophers' suspicion of the    plausibility of such a view. More, as a religious person, I'm more interested    in what people can find ways to embrace while standing inside of their own    religious traditions, rather than presuming to transcend them. I worry about a    pluralism that ends up making a claim virtually no actual believer would    recognize, let alone embrace.  WordPress.com | Thanks for flying with          WordPress! Trouble clicking? Copy    and paste this URL into your browser: http://subscribe.wordpress.com       
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Subj: [New post]    An Interview with Rabbi Shai Held          
            
          An Interview with Rabbi Shai Held          
              
        
   
Look, O Lord, and see their distress; Listen, God, and      hear their cries.
Strengthen the hands of those who would bring relief,      comfort the mourners, Heal, please, the wounded.
Grant us wisdom and      discernment to know our obligations,
and open our hearts so that we may      extend our hands to the devastated.
Bless us so that we may walk in Your      ways,
"compassionate ones, children of compassionate ones."
Grant us the      will and the wisdom to prevent further disaster and death;
Prevent plague      from descending upon Your earth, and fulfill Your words,
"Never again shall      there be another flood to destroy the earth."
Amen. So may it be your      will.
First,    we wanted to create an institution of learning that is truly intellectually    open, that takes secular culture and Western philosophy and academic Jewish    studies seriously, but never forgets that it is, first and last, a religious    institution, a Mekom Torah, that teaches the Divine Torah. Second, we wanted    to build a community that is unapologetically egalitarian, that is committed    to women and men participating equally in both Torah and Tefillah, but without    thereby diluting religious passion. Egalitarianism as an authentic and    unabashed understanding of what it means to take Tzelem Elohim seriously in    the modern world. Third, we wanted to build a place of learning that taught    and embodied the notion that the culmination of the religious life is the    commitment to hesed-- Vehalakhta BiDerakhav as a commitment both to concrete    actions (The Gemara in Sotah) and to the cultivation of virtue (Midrash Sifre    Devarim). (That's why every student who is at the yeshiva for longer than a    week becomes a volunteer at the local senior citizens' home-- not as an    extracurricular activity of some sort, but as one of the culminating features    of what it means to learn Torah.)
1) Heschel's genius, in my view, is    that he sought to couple Halevi's personalism with Rambam's universalism-- he    spoke of a God who cares, who is deeply personal, and/but who loves all of    humanity and not just the Jewish people. For Rambam, the central event in    Jewish theology is creation; worshipping the God of creation enables Rambam to    be a universalist of sorts. R. Yehudah Halevi, in contrast, worships the God    of history, Exodus and Sinai. The strength of this approach is that Halevi    maintains a God who cares, who is involved in human life, and who can be    engaged personally; the strength of Rambam is his universalism. I use the    Rambam-Halevi dichotomy not so much as a historical claim, but more as a    heuristic one similar to the distinction Rabbi David Hartman has drawn again    and again over the years.
6. Which Non-Jewish    thinkers influenced you?
My decades-long engagement with Christian    theology has taught how important it is for theology to talk and be about    love. To be clear: it is not because this is a Christian importation into    Judaism, but because it lies at the very heart of Torah itself, and yet    somehow (American?) Jews have lost the ability to talk about it, and    presumably to feel it. The daily liturgy is fundamentally about a claim that    God loves us and has therefore given us Torah (Ahavah Rabbah Ahavtanu) and    that we are then called upon to reciprocate that love (VeAhavta). I like to    think of Torah as about three loves-- love of God, love of neighbor, and love    of the stranger. We need to become far less abashed about internalizing and    teaching this language. After all, Rabbi Akiva tells us straight out that "God    loves you" (Haviv Adam Shenivra Betzelem). 
The more I    studied Christian theology over the years, the more I took it seriously, the    harder I realized pluralistic theology really is. I want to emphasize that I    am opposed to cheap and easily purchased versions of pluralism that    effectively say that all religions are at bottom the same. There is a sad    propensity among many liberal thinkers ironically to flatten and efface    difference in the name of celebrating it. I say this not out of disrespect for    Christianity, but on the contrary, out of deep respect for it: I want to take    theological and metaphysical claims seriously rather than simply eliding    them.
 
             
           
           
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