It’s Time to Build in Jerusalem
For reasons religious, historical, and strategic.
May 15, 2020
Kabbalah, the “ancient Hebrews,” and Europe’s most famous Jewish heretic.
Ten years ago, researchers discovered in the Vatican archives a rare manuscript of Benedict Spinoza’s Ethics, which had come into the possession of the Roman Inquisition in 1667 because of its theologically suspicious content. While the Church banned the book much as, decades earlier, the Amsterdam Jewish community had expelled the philosopher for his unorthodox opinions, the 18th-century German intellectual Novalis would later proclaim Spinoza “a God-intoxicated man.” In England, Spinoza’s work would later appeal to the secular proto-Zionist novelist George Eliot as well as the religious conservative Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
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Login or SubscribeFor reasons religious, historical, and strategic.
Would Linda Sarsour or Rashida Tlaib move to a “liberated Palestine”?
The practical challenges of “negating the exile.”
Kabbalah, the “ancient Hebrews,” and Europe’s most famous Jewish heretic.
“The ever-resounding links of the golden chain.”