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The Sensual God

How the Senses Make the Almighty Senseless

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In the Old Testament, God wrestles with a man (and loses). In the Talmud, God wriggles his toes to make thunder and takes human form to shave the king of Assyria. In the New Testament, God is made flesh and dwells among humans. For religious thinkers trained in Greek philosophy and its deep distaste for matter, sacred scripture can be distressing. A philosophically respectable God should be untainted by sensuality, yet the God of sacred texts is often embarrassingly sensual.
Setting experts' minds at ease was neither easy nor simple, and often faith and logic were stretched to their limits. Focusing on examples from both Christian and Jewish sources, from the Bible to sources from the Late Middle Ages, Aviad Kleinberg examines the way Christian and Jewish philosophers, exegetes, and theologians attempted to reconcile God's supposed ineffability with numerous biblical and postbiblical accounts of seeing, hearing, smelling, touching, and even tasting the almighty. The conceptual entanglements ensnaring religious thinkers, and the strange, ingenious solutions they used to extricate themselves, tell us something profound about human needs and divine attributes, about faith, hope, and cognitive dissonance.

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    • Library Journal

      Starred review from October 1, 2015

      This brief yet scholarly and well-informed work by Kleinberg (history, Tel Aviv Univ.; Seven Deadly Sins) overturns abstract and philosophical notions of God as remote and transcendent. Other accounts and traditions, both Scriptural and post-Scriptural, suggest a God that can be seen, heard, smelled, and touched. As Kleinberg demonstrates with verve, the existence and power of God, until recent times, was never in question--it was the meaning of God's reality that was subject to continuing interrogation and discussion. VERDICT A fascinating study of unappreciated aspects of theology and the history of Judaism and Christianity, suitable for academic and church libraries as well as public libraries that serve pastors.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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