A History of Judaism - Martin Goodman

(Jacob Rumans) #1

572 notes to pp. 468–80



  1. Pittsburgh Platform, paragraphs 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8; see W. Jacob, The Changing
    World of Reform Judaism (Pittsburgh, 1985). 16. On the Central Conference of
    American Rabbis, see Meyer, Response, passim; D.  Philipson, ‘Message of the
    President’, Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Congregation of the Central
    Conference of American Rabbis, Yearbook of the Central Conference of Ameri‑
    can Rabbis, 18 (Baltimore, 1908), 145 - 6. 17. H. Cohen, Der Begriff der Religion
    in System der Philosophie (Giessen, 1915); J. Melber, Hermann Cohen’s Philoso‑
    phy of Judaism (New York, 1968); J.  Lyden, ‘Hermann Cohen’s Relationship to
    Christian Thought’, JJTP 3.2 (1994), 279- 301. 18. On Formstecher, see Gutt-
    mann, Philosophies of Judaism, 308 - 13. 19. On Samuel Hirsch, see N. Rotensteich,
    Jewish Philosophy in Modern Times (New York, 1968), 120 - 36. 20. A. Fried-
    lander, Leo Baeck (London, 1973); L. Baker, Days of Sorrow and Pain: Leo Baeck
    and the Berlin Jews (New York, 1978). 21. On Rosenzweig, see N. Glatzer, Franz
    Rosenzweig: His Life and Thought (Indianapolis, 1998) and P. Mendes- Flohr, ed.,
    The Philosophy of Franz Rosenzweig (London, 1988). 22. P. Vermes, Buber
    (London, 1988). 23. On the impact of adult education on assimilated German
    Jews, see N. H. Roemer, Jewish Scholarship and Culture in Nineteenth‑Century
    Germany: Between History and Faith (Madison, Wis., 2005); on American
    Reform, see M. I. Urofsky, The Voice that Spoke for Justice: The Life and Times
    of Stephen S. Wise (Albany, NY, 1982); D. Polish, Renew our Days: The Zionist
    Issue in Reform Judaism (Jerusalem, 1976); Columbus Platform, paragraphs 16,



    1. On Abba Hillel Silver, see M. Raider, Abba Hillel Silver and American
      Zionism (London, 1997). 25. Judah Magnes cited in ‘Holocaust Theology’, in
      A. Berlin and M. Grossman, eds., The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion,
      2nd edn (New York and Oxford, 2011); on Holocaust theology, see S. Katz, ed.,
      The Impact of the Holocaust on Jewish Theology (New York, 2007); M. Buber,
      The Eclipse of God (London, 1952); on Emil Fackenheim, see S. Portnoff et al.,
      Emil L. Fackenheim: Philosopher, Theologian, Jew (Leiden, 2008). 26. E. Levi-
      nas, Talmudic Readings, 440; on Levinas, see E. Levinas, The Levinas Reader, ed.
      S. Hand (Oxford, 1989); A. Herzog, ‘Benny Levy versus Emmanuel Levinas on
      “Being Jewish” ’, MJ 26 (2006), 15– 30. 27. On Regina Jonas, see K. von Kel-
      lenbach, ‘ “God Does Not Oppress Any Human Being”: The Life and Thought of
      Rabbi Regina Jonas’, LBIYB 39 (1994), 213 - 25; E. Klapheck, Fräulein Rabbiner
      Jonas: The Story of the First Woman Rabbi (San Francisco, 2004). 28. National
      Jewish Population Survey 2000 ‑ 2001 (2003); on the World Union for Progressive
      Judaism, see Meyer, Response, 335 - 53; on contemporary developments within
      Reform Judaism, see W. G. Plaut, The Growth of Reform Judaism: American and
      European Sources: 50th Anniversary Edition, with Select Documents, 1975 ‑ 2008
      (Philadelphia and Lincoln, Nebr., 2015).




Chapter 18: Counter- Reform



  1. On the banquet, see L. Sussman, ‘The Myth of the Trefa Banquet: American
    Culinary Culture and the Radicalization of Food Policy in American Reform
    Judaism’, AJAJ 57 (2005), 29 - 52; M.  Stanislawski, A Murder in Lemberg:

Free download pdf