Theology

Christian Wiese

Wissenschaft des Judentums und protestantische Theologie im wilhelminischen Deutschland

Ein Schrei ins Leere?

['Wissenschaft des Judentums' (The Study of Judaism) and Protestant Theology in Wilhelminian Germany. A »Cry into the Void?« By Christian Wiese.]

unveränderte eBook-Ausgabe 2024; Orginalausgabe 1999; 1999. XXV, 507 pages.

Schriftenreihe wissenschaftlicher Abhandlungen des Leo Baeck Instituts 61

eBook PDF
ISBN 978-3-16-163592-2
Open Access: CC BY-SA 4.0
Sponsored by: Bundesministerium des Innern und für Heimat
Published in German.
The struggle of Jewish Studies in Germany for its academic integration during the 'Second Reich' was part of an intensive argument over the conception of Judaism on the part of liberal Protestant theology and religious studies. Living in a time of aggravated anti-Semitic agitation, Jewish scholars were especially sensitive to the anti-Jewish patterns of thought of Christian theologians, whom they challenged in what has always been the Christians' own sacrosanct domain – the interpretation of the Old and the New Testament. Thus the Jewish scholars were insisting that Christian theologians finally take note of both Jewish biblical exegesis and the Jewish depiction of the pharisaic and rabbinical Judaism, that they accept Jewish scholars as their academic equals and overcome their distorted images of Jewish religion and ethics. Christian Wiese analyzes these scholarly debates in the context of their time and shows how Protestant theologians reacted to the Jewish challenge.
The struggle of Jewish Studies in Germany for its academic integration during the 'Second Reich' was part of an intensive argument over the conception of Judaism on the part of liberal Protestant theology and religious studies. Living in a time of aggravated anti-Semitic agitation, Jewish scholars were especially sensitive to the anti-Jewish patterns of thought of Christian theologians, whom they challenged in what has always been the Christians' own sacrosanct domain – the interpretation of the Old and the New Testament. Thus the Jewish scholars were insisting that Christian theologians finally take note of both Jewish biblical exegesis and the Jewish depiction of the pharisaic and rabbinical Judaism, that they accept Jewish scholars as their academic equals and overcome their distorted images of Jewish religion and ethics. Christian Wiese analyzes these scholarly debates in the context of their time and shows how Protestant theologians reacted to the Jewish challenge.
Authors/Editors

Christian Wiese Geboren 1961; 1982–89 Studium der ev. Theologie und Judaistik in Tübingen, Bonn und Jerusalem; 1990–93 Aufbaustudium Judaistik in Heidelberg; 1993–97 Vikar und Pastor in Bonn, Ordination; 1997 Promotion; 1997–99 Wiss. Mitarbeiter am Salomon Ludwig Steinheim-Institut für deutsch-jüdische Geschichte an der Universität Duisburg; seit Sommer 1999 wiss. Assistent für Judaistik an der Universität Erfurt.
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0253-8069

Reviews

The following reviews are known:

In: Judaica — Jg.57 (2001) Nr.2, S. 137ff. (Roland Deines)
In: The Jewish Quarterly Review — XCII (2002), H.3–4, S. 306ff (Alan Levenson)
In: Das Historisch-Politische Buch — Jg.48 (2001), H.2, S. 221f. (Matthias Stickler)
In: FAZ — (29.5.2000), Nr. 124, S. 57 (Prof. Niewöhner)
In: Auskunft — Jg.20 (2000) Nr.3, S.255ff (Rainer Hering)
In: Jahrbuch zur Liberalismus-Forschung — Jg.12 (2000), S. 323f. (Matthias Wolfes)
In: Simon-Dubnow-Institut für jüd. Ge- — Nr.II (2000), S. 49ff. (Susanne Plietzsch)
In: Frankfurter Judaistische Beiträge — 2001, H.28, S. 184ff (Dr. M. Morgenstern)
In: Oekumenischer Wegweiser Dresden — (2000), Nr. 2, S. 31
In: Zion — 2002, S. 556f (Dr. Wassermann)
In: EAJS Newsletter — (2000), Nr. 8, S. 40–42 (Rüdiger Bender)
In: Archiv für Hess.Gesch.u.Altertumsk. — Jg.58 (2001), S. 440f. (J.Friedr.Battenberg)
In: Nexus Reviews — (2000), Nr. 26, S. 238–240 (Rena Fuks-Mansfeld)
In: Theologische Literaturzeitung — Jg.125 (2000), H.12, S. 1291ff. (Kurt Nowak)