Non­fic­tion

Judaism: The Basics

Jacob Neusner
  • Review
By – November 14, 2011

Jacob Neusner’s Judaism: The Basics is any­thing but basic. It is not an intro­duc­to­ry work about Judaism, nor will some­one with­out more than pass­ing famil­iar­i­ty with Judaism and its sources ful­ly appre­ci­ate what he is attempt­ing. Pro­fes­sor Neusner is best known for his stud­ies in rab­binic Judaism and the Tal­mu­dic peri­od. He has con­tributed a vast library of crit­i­cal stud­ies in this field both as an his­to­ri­an and as a lit­er­ary ana­lyst. In this vol­ume he seeks to artic­u­late the the­ol­o­gy of some of Judaism’s most cher­ished beliefs and prac­tices. His approach is inter­est­ing and makes a great deal of sense as far as rab­binic Judaism is con­cerned. When he ven­tures far afield into the medieval and mod­ern peri­od, he fal­ters. As a very basic intro­duc­tion to think­ing with­in a the­o­log­i­cal frame­work it works for about two thirds of the way. 

Neusner describes Jews as a com­mu­ni­ty of fate. Some are eth­nic, nation­al­is­tic, or sec­u­lar, they share a com­mon his­to­ry and cul­ture, they form a social enti­ty, but that is not a reli­gious com­mu­ni­ty. They are still Jews, but they are denied the author­i­ty to define Judaism the reli­gion. Judaism accord­ing to Neusner is not what Jews believe. It is not pub­lic opin­ion, but reli­gious doc­trine. Reli­gious tra­di­tion is not some­thing made up as you go along.” He there­fore divides the Jew­ish com­mu­ni­ty into Jews and Judaists, i.e. those who prac­tice the religion. 

Reli­gion accord­ing to Neusner is defined by the nar­ra­tives that touch the heart, which then have an impact on the faith­ful. Judaism, he writes, is act­ing out the behav­iors and beliefs of the key sto­ries in the Torah. It is how the liv­ing embody the past. Judaism through its nar­ra­tive trans­forms dif­fer­ence into des­tiny.” He choos­es five pow­er­ful Jew­ish prac­tices to illus­trate his take on Jew­ish the­ol­o­gy: the Passover seder, the Days of Awe, mar­riage, cir­cum­ci­sion, and eat­ing a meal. His inter­pre­ta­tions are inter­est­ing, well informed and well thought out. For some­one with basic knowl­edge of Judaism, this vol­ume is a good intro­duc­tion to Jew­ish the­ol­o­gy, or at least one person’s under­stand­ing of that theology. 

The entire Bib­li­cal peri­od is sum­ma­rized in three pages, and Neusner jumps errat­i­cal­ly from the medieval peri­od to the 18th cen­tu­ry. He nev­er explains how Kab­bal­ah reached Poland from Spain and he errs when he says that Hasidism took place with­in nor­ma­tive Rab­binic Judaism. His treat­ment of Reform Judaism is also flawed. Reform did not/​does not nec­es­sar­i­ly regard as sacro­sanct laws that go way back,” and res­ur­rec­tion is not real­ly in the Reform and Con­ser­v­a­tive prayer books. In Reform prayer books, pas­sages refer­ring to the res­ur­rec­tion have either been delet­ed or inter­pret­ed as refer­ring to immor­tal­i­ty of the soul. The Hebrew text may be there, but in trans­la­tion as Mas­ter of life and death” the mean­ing is clear­ly not what was orig­i­nal­ly intended. 

Pro­fes­sor Neusner likes to use his own trans­la­tions of tra­di­tion­al texts, but they are often incor­rect. His cri­tique of the Mish­na as a doc­u­ment of imag­i­na­tion and fan­ta­sy, small-mind­ed, picayune, dull and rou­tine” is bizarre. The expla­na­tion giv­en for the prob­lem of evil is sim­plis­tic and over­ly pious, ignor­ing Mai­monides, Cresques, Ger­son­ides and oth­ers, and eth­i­cal monothe­ism describes Abra­ham per­haps but not God. 

There are moments when great ideas are left still­born. Israel’s pow­er to repent, which con­cil­i­ates God to restore Eden on the Sab­bath, is an idea wor­thy of expan­sion. He also miss­es the oppor­tu­ni­ty to explain that Sab­bath work” has noth­ing to do with servile labor. Chris­tian­i­ty and Islam will be the world empires at the end of days, but they are referred to awk­ward­ly as Rome and Iran. 

There are flash­es of bril­liance and felic­i­tous usage of lan­guage to con­vey a les­son. So eat­ing a meal invokes the nar­ra­tive of cor­po­rate Israel.” “…the entire reper­toire of sto­ries is rehearsed on the hum­ble and pri­vate occa­sion of eat­ing lunch.” Judaism: The Basics is worth a read.

Wal­lace Greene, Ph.D., has held sev­er­al uni­ver­si­ty appoint­ments, and cur­rent­ly writes and lec­tures on Jew­ish and his­tor­i­cal subjects.

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