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Laws of the Spirit (Stanford Studies in Jewish History and Culture)

✍ Scribed by Ariel Evan Mayse


Publisher
Stanford University Press
Year
2024
Tongue
English
Leaves
426
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The compelling vision of religious life and practice found in Hasidic sources has made it the most enduring and successful Jewish movement of spiritual renewal of all time. In this book, Ariel Evan Mayse grapples with one of Hasidism's most vexing questions: how did a religious movement known for its radical views about immanence, revelation, and the imperative to serve God with joy simultaneously produce strict adherence to the structures and obligations of Jewish law? Exploring the movement from its emergence in the mid-1700s until 1815, Mayse argues that the exceptionality of Hasidism lies not in whether its leaders broke or upheld rabbinic norms, but in the movement's vivid attempt to rethink the purpose of Jewish ritual and practice. Rather than focusing on the commandments as law, he turns to the methods and vocabulary of ritual studies as a more productive way to reckon with the contradictions and tensions of this religious movement as well as its remarkable intellectual vitality. Mayse examines the full range of Hasidic texts from the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, from homilies and theological treatises to hagiography, letters, and legal writings, reading them together with contemporary theories of ritual. Arguing against the notion that spiritual integrity requires unshackling oneself from tradition, Laws of the Spirit is a sweeping attempt to rethink the meaning and significance of religious practice in early Hasidism.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Style Guide
Introduction
1. Thinking Matters: Mind, Body, Action
2. Wrestling with God’s Word: Text, Study, Practice
3. Dwelling with Connection: Ritual, Commandment, and the Everyday
4. God-Making: Connectivity and Revelation
5. Thine Own Self: Individual, Community, Leadership
6. The Ever-Changing Path: Renewal and Diversity
7. Once and Future Commandments: The Torah Before Sinai and the End of the Mitsvot
Conclusion: Mysticism, Orthodoxy, and Renewal
Notes
Bibliography
Index


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