A merica lavish Periodical Ceder CLIFTON AVENUR • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO PAGE TARN, DLE I PUFROFTIAT 175,11 4 The Hebraic Mortar Of i the American Republc Inquiry at Historic Sources Illuminates Influence of Judaism on Founders of the Republic. By DR. MORRIS M. FEUERLICHT (Copyright, 1926, Jewish Telegraphic Agency.) (ARON ICU, _ _ • — Johnson, first president of Columbia. Ma- of the seventeenth century. Most no- Seceral of the men mentioned above • • nin individuals' law of the land. Cromwell himself, at time Ilebraists IMMIMilid. Oaten(b orn • sona himself one of the number min- all times exceedingly friendly to the thee and incidents of early Jewish 16621, gives the names of • r • Jews, had in mind a reconciliation of Amenca,Peter isters, who, having graduated and be- dence eti I the Old and New Testament, and the gun their work in England, later "History of the Jews in America," at ui peo,tto,ione:; -c served as ministers in New England. t n lean,,hinutiis el ht esta t io bli shment o i t o i b itsuhotudg:tn p1091o2i,o r p nosoe,ni tsjoau reora tt l; of be tween Ti, these, he adds the names of 110 i11111 the English Puritan throe- ministers, Ilebraists and graduates of c ompendi um or many of these it ems friao,fly". up to the time of its own publication. tird college, in the latter half All this as has been said, happened Within the last year, 1925, Dr. Louis , has publi shed a volumin- England a generation after the I . in ous "Jewish Influence whose on Ch is- elan work, Reform Movements, n- first settlement of the Puritan colo- co in New England. But it is worth anisissmsns , cts of IiStil, not only because the same eluding chapter, "Hebraic Aspe resents an recalling, no which the events under • " American ' ' only the dramatic only momentary peep into the region lof Judaism's actual or potential 1 e- finale, had been operating long before I lationship to the beginning of Amor- in England, but also because it visa- tensel Y Ilehrak rel n: dis table in these lids of names are: John served as president of Harvard. Cotton, Richard 'Mather, John Eliot, The order of studies in "The Lawes Thomas Weide, Henry Punster, of Harvard College" of 1655 required Charles Chimney, Samuel Whiting, that "In the first yea re after admis- Michael Wigglesworth, Thomas Thu- for four(' dayes of the week all rber, Judge Sewall, Increase Mather sion students shall be exercised in the and Cotton 51ather. Later came Ezra studies of the Greek and Hebrew Stiles, president of Yale, also Samuel 11111111111111111111111111ii i i i i i i i i i M111111111111111111[111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIii i iMi i Ii i i ilitli i 1111111111111111111111 (Editor's Note :—It was President Calvin Coolidge, descenda nt e of one of the oldest NewEngland families, who, in his memorabl E ation of the Jewish Community Center in Wash- address at the dedic - I and democracy. extensive, though fa r pertinent f on ront lex- the and political background from whfil ington, D. C., in 1925, vividly brought to the attention of the Amenlcan The most allies the in and "The Puritans Pilgrims of 33 years can public the sentence coined by the historian, Lecky : "The Ile- irh . u nder 1 haustive work on this subject i bete " ha d em er ged, and wh c, braic mortar cemented the foundations of American democracy." of the late Oscar S. Strauso Origin of Republican , t•erm of Govern , other circumstances, they had already „, aansplanted upon the soil of the new The correct' presentation of -this historic fact, significant as it is in history of these United States, the greatest democracy that ever ment in the United States of e llI,T ,T,',d1 world. Indeed, it was the newer Puri- the ica," first published in 1885, f existed, and in the history of the Jewish religion and Jewish liters- 1 ,0 . 1 . tan immigrants of the Cromwellian period that gave the earlier colonists lure, intrigued the best minds, Jewish as well as nun-Jewish scholars b y two later editions, the last in and all unfortunately now out of ' of 1620 an added impetus and strength I statesmen. This problem assumed timely significance and . in - an o f t he to e in the latter s efforts tee es a e i. print. terest to every American Jew on the occasi this year of the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the signing m influence, • : theocratic form of )roverlinit•nt and Old The Case of Judaism's of through its Bible at least, on the Testament mode of life in New Eng- of the Declaration of Independence. Dr. Morris M. Feuerlicht Indianapolis, Ind,, in a paper he read at the recent session of the founding of the American Republic, : land. This Wan the purpose of teeth Central Conference of American Rabbis, gave On exhaustive and and as made out by Mr. Straus, is the Pilgrims at Plymouth and the Pur- successfully established, according tie tans of Massachusetts Bay. While scholarly, but none the less popular, presentation of the influence of the late M. Emile de Laveleye, emi- the former had come primarily to se- Judaism on the founders of the republic.) f • er s h 'pin their own es am I p rofessor • rare freedom se vei rent Belgian public'st the • latter had come, (ostensibly ity of liege. General ' • . only claim, at best, to po in t ou t the at the Un i •vers The Sesqui-Centennial of American need of a more intensive and extensive I historians also, like Lerky, Fiske and waY a ' • mmer •btl company, but en re- " Independence this year provides a fit- 1,,,,,, equally frank in ality to " found ' a theocratic common- study than, unfortunately, has thus ethers , h ave ting though somewhat belated oppor- fer been given it, of a highly impor. conceding such influence. The now , wealth , in the words elf Fiske, "like tunity for studying the relationship, tot and fascinating phase of Jewish frequently quoted passage of lax•ky's• 1 if any, between that important event and secular history'. Up to this time The Hebraic Mortar Cemented the that mod before of old the days children of their Israel forward in the in world history and Judaism. Did the available material and sources I Foundations of American Democrac Y' hearts conceived the desire for a king. Judaism, as an historical religion, as is a typical expression of the common- But while the leaders of these earlier sparsely h• utilized. • eel ver,het. theological and ethical system pro- have been codonists, especially Governor William Graetz, world historian of modern iy_,,,,eut fessing to be world-wide in its scope and inn-' Bradford and Elder William Brew- , Jewry and expositor of the various 1 order r to learn the ' spirit In j and application, exert any influence e currents of Judaism as they have tent of Judaism. s infl ence on t e steer, were Ilebraists of a sort and upon the founding and the founders flowed into the diverse lives and phi- I ifouniheirs of the Ament lovers of the Old Testament, it was founding u of the American Republic; and if so, o I ever losophies of modern civilized peoples, is n cessary , it period of English his; the Puritans who came Inter than nt uring the Crowellian pe- to what extent? has only a few rather dubious words caner reached the 11620 and clueing to that brief i If there was indeed any such in- to say about the progress of the Jew thooriyg when Puritanism , ro- riot that gave form and permanency They fluence, the facts were obviously sig- in America, and none fit all about the height t of its power, (luring the I e •ti , fN • . nificant in the philosophy of general role of Judaism in the dramatic un- tectorate, 1653-1659. Thi s was a full) were tor the most t part men of supe- as well as in that of Jewish history, fielding of the new Ilipoidic. generation after the Puritan and Pit- ates intellect, of either English- Oxford and should long since have afforded The American Jewish historical So- grim Colonies of New England. But rise education i gradui and 1111111 1111111111111111111111ffilatiammunin period when ) Chris- 51111111 our American Jewish scholarship a ciety, organized in 1602, has published it was during this perned operating that the trained or Cam eridge, n a per of particularly inviting field for early in- --- -- 30 volumes of admirable and in- sae m religious influences' — vestigation. With a full consciousness valuable source materials generally, Hn contemporaneously i d, in a political : of his own only too patent limitations, but dealing in large, if n not in major found their chief an New England the writer cannot pretend that this part, with a Wide Variety nf trait- I and military sense at least, supreme , paper will prove to have met the in- mentary items of a name or less per- I expression in the mother country. vitation even superficially. It can " Officially, England had seen noJews — -- !within its -borders since their banish- ment by Edward I., in 1290. It seemedi , to know none other than the type pre- sented in Shakespeare's "Merchant of Venice," and Marlowe's "Jew of Mal- ta." Puritanism, the erstwhile) and es- pecial victim of persecution by Crown I and Established Church, was now in : the ascendant under the leadership of Oliver Cromwell. The Puritans' were - a Bibliolatrous people; they loved and read their Bibles not only as the basis of their religious philosophy but also as the final arbiter and guide) of : their political action. Not man, but, God alone, could be a king. A these.' racy Was their ideal of government. In the execution of their political pro- ' gram, as well as in defense of their I general position in the premises, they • insistently appealed to the Old Testa- ment for proof and argument. The New Testament was completely ig- nored. The hardy soldiers of Crom- well's army, as they read their Bibles in the nightly vigils of the battle- field, and fighting as they believed they were an unholy alliance of a faithless king and a persecuting nobility and priesthood, could find in the New Tes- tament story no models or figure's com- parable to the warriors and heroes of the Old Testament. Thus was aroused' A vivid and widespread interest in thel people of the Old Testament and their' curious persistence. The Puritans were eager tee sec and know more about this strange people who already in that ancient day had I i had exper ences so similar to their' own. Their interest was fed by pule- lished letters, addresses and pamphlets of Manasseh ben Israel in Holland, I who, sensing the situation across the ' channel, pleaded for the re-admission' CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS of the Jews into. England. The lit- erary and exegetical study of the Old I Testament grew ever more intensive; the study of Hebrew expanded, and 1 -- extraordinary number of Christian I • ex Me"iithie llehrai sts finarished• ' • 2 pectations were re-born and re-empha- , ••• 105 s EMI LI %. 110 111Miii • sized. Groups of visionaries, under wIllk a variety of names, like Covenanters, IN Fifth Monarchy Men, Lev, ' lennarians or Ultra-Republicans, were busy making propaganda for their mil-i lenial creeds with precisely the same arguments—and even greater clamor I —as are being used by the Pastor Russellites and International Bible Students' association of our own cur- rent period. Fanciful explanations of the Lost Ten Tribes, and the ingath-1 ering of the scattered remnants of I sure icing Israel from all corners of 11651 WOODWARD at WEBB E, the earth as a necessary preliminary tee the. advent of the Messiah. were, of 1 Bigger and Better Bargains in Used Cars. course, an integral part of all such I progra ms. Na tense and general was the Jew. I e Them sl hinterest of this period of English a s T he y Mak c.ctro ILla Wlik history—by no means devoid of Christ- 1M IMIAWs.‘7 ala W °logical motives, however—that the WISMEMIVIIM Iall 11101011 proposal was seriously made by some of Cromwell's officers that the Cowl eil of State be composed of 70 mem- bers to accord with the number of the ancient Jewish Sanhedrin. In the Short or Barebones parliament was a mem- ber, General Thomas Harrison, an FOR Anabaptist, whose party advocated the' introduction of the Mosaic law as the I * , . 1(;t1 11 ' .5 051TC1111115 sasami n """1"" "11111111 111111111111111111111 3-1:101A MARBLESTONE FLOORING CORPORATION Mooring Contractors TERRAZZO TILE & COMPOSITION Garfield 9160 .................. ii11111111 I „„ii i i1111111111111111111111111111111111ii i i i i i iIIIII11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111ii i i i i nli i i COMPETITION IN WORDS A Happy New Year To You One who goes into the market to buy a motor car today is naturally confused. He has read the words best and greatest so often that they have ceased to be convincing. be Where all is best, he reflects, there can no best. Thousand-dollar cars have been described to him in ten-thousand dollar language. And vice versa. He finds himself the target in a war of adjec- tives; the helpless victim in a gigantic com- petition of words. And so he is forced to rely on chance —the advice of friends — or his own limited experience. Dodge Brothers, Inc., have never participated in this verbal competition. They are content with the position they have long maintained in the far more vital compe- tition of honest value. They have continued steadily to improve their product, not only in comfort and beauty, but basically—beneath the body and hood where fundamental values lie. Yet they have not unduly stressed each betterment that has marked the steady prog- ress of their motor car toward a higher perfection. And when economic conditions or greater sales have permitted them to reduce prices without reducing quality, they have an- nounced the fact without excessive emphasis. Unexaggerated truth is not spectacular. But THOMAS J. 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