Zachor Not Only To Remember

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ZACHOR: NOT ONLY TO REMEMBER

We could begin with "ZACHOR: NOT ONLY TO REMEMBER" is a history of how we started and progressed that includes stories of our Liberators and Survivors in World War II." We could tell you about the many satisfying and joyous times we have as volunteers despite the seriousness of our mission, but that too would only be part of it. We have "grown" our mission. We use the lessons of the Holocaust-- when no one stood up for the Jews-- and apply it to today's victims of social injustice in our own communities. That's what we wanted to tell you.
The Decalogue in Jewish and Christian Tradition

Author: Henning Graf Reventlow
language: en
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Release Date: 2011-06-23
This collection of papers arrives from the eighth annual symposium between the Chaim Rosenberg School of Jewish Studies of Tel Aviv University and the Faculty of Protestant Theology of the University of Ruhr, Bochum held in Bochum, June 2007. The general theme of the Decalogue was examined in its various uses by both Jewish and Christian traditions throughout the centuries to the present. Three papers deal with the origin of the Decalogue: Yair Hoffman on the rare mentioning of the Decalogue in the Hebrew Bible outside the Torah; E. L. Greenstein considers that already A. ibn Ezra doubted that God himself spoke in the Ten Commandments and states that more likely their rhetoric indicates it was Moses who proclaimed the Decalogue; A. Bar-Tour speaks about the cognitive aspects of the Decalogue revelation story and its frame. The second part considers the later use of the Decalogue: G. Nebe describes its use with Paul; P. Wick discusses the symbolic radicalization of two commandments in James and the Sermon on the Mount; A. Oppenheimer explains the removal of the Decalogue from the daily Shem'a prayer as a measure against the minim's claim of a higher religious importance of the Decalogue compared to the Torah; W. Geerlings examines Augustine's quotations of the Decalogue; H. Reventlow depicts its central place in Luther's catechisms; Y. Yacobson discusses its role with Hasidism. The symposium closes with papers on systematic themes: C. Frey follows a possible way to legal universalism; G. Thomas describes the Decalogue as an "Ethics of Risk"; F. H. Beyer/M. Waltemathe seek an educational perspective.