THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS A New Paperback Is a Fine Handbook on Judaism By RICHARD C. HERTZ (Editor's note: Rabbi Hertz is rabbi emeritus of Temple Beth El and dis- tinguished professor of Jewish studies at the University of Detroit.) I have long been search- ing for a brief handbook about Judaism and the Jewish people for my stu- dents in a course I teach on "Introduction to Judaism: An Ecumenical Approach." A new book, "Judaism — An Eternal Covenant," by Howard R. Greenstein (For- tress Press), is just the key. It is written for both Jews and non-Jews who want an- swers to the basic questions of Judaism — its beliefs, its practices and customs, its holidays and its concerns. That is the easy part to understand. Much harder is an analysis of the inter- relationship between the religion of Judaism and the Jewish people. Many Jews, and many non-Jews, do not understand that Judaism, though primarily a religion, is not exclusively so. Christians vaguely realize that Christianity has its roots in Judaism, but few can explain the nature of those Jewish origins or their impact upon the newborn faith- community centered around Jesus and or- ganized by Paul.. For Jews as well as for Christians, how Judaism became the religion of the Jewish people and was cemented by the Covenant is something of a mystery. Not all Jews accept the reli- gious component of their identity. Still, they are Jews, committed to the Jewish past and the ideals of the Jewish future. "Peoplehood" is a word Christians find difficult to comprehend; even Jews often misunderstand its inner meaning. The spiritual context of the con- cept is imbedded in the word "Covenant," the agreement or contract between God and the Jewish people cemented at Sinai. Simply stated, it means a compact was forged between God and theJewish people if they in turn will obey the statues commanded by God and written in the Torah. This agreement made of the Jews a "chosen people," chosen not for special privilege but rather for spe- cial responsibility, a model for others to emulate in their search for truth and goodness. Greenstein, a Reform rabbi with a PhD from Ohio State University, now serving a congrega- tion in Jacksonville, Fla., has written a splendid handbook on the mean- ing of that Covenant, the multiplicity of its in- terpretations, and the major components that impact on the Jewish people today. He was commissioned by Carl Herman Voss, well known friend of the Jewish people and editor for Fortress Press, to bring out a triad of books on Judiasm, Catholocism and Protestantism. Howard Greenstein speaks for Judaism. He has taken the traditional com- ponents of God, Torah and Israel and applied their theological and theoretical ideas to the Covenant. In a remarkably brief composite of words and ideas, the author has summed up the very essence of the tradi- tional God-concept of ethi- cal monotheism, including the problem of evil in recog- nizing the reality of God. Greenstein says that to understand Judaism, one must understand what Torah means, not simply in its limited sense as the first five books of the Bible but rather in its larger scope. Torah refers to the entire domain of Jewish learning as a discipline and as a storehouse of values, the re- pository of all Jewish learn- ing from earliest times to our own. Torah in practice applies the ethics of Judaism to everyday life. "Mitzva" is the way to do that, every de- liberate act which enables a person to approximate di- vine activity. Mitzva is the way to holiness. The author identifies What can dignify or enhance the meaning of life. His explanations of the Sabbath, the Holy Days, the major pilgrim festivals as well as his de- tailed explanations of the life-cycle events- from birth to death, all illumi- nate the Jewish way of life. Greenstein's discussion of "Israel: The People" is espe- cially relevant in its modern context. It is impossible to understand the meaning of the most catastrophic event in all Jewish history, the Holocaust, without under- standing the centrality of the Jewish people. He defines the Holocaust as encompassing the period from Jan. 30, 1933, when Hitler became Chancellor of German, to May 5, 1945, when the Nazis surren- dered. The term Final Solu- tion is traced from the Wannsee Conference in Be- rlin in 1942, when the Nazis detailed their plans to liq- uidate physically all the Jews of Europe. But "Israel" is not only a term that has identified the Jewish people. It is the name of the land sacred to that people since time im- memorial. What is difficult for non-Jewish lay people to understand is that profound fidelity to the covenant linking God and Torah to Is- rael, both to people and to land. No other religion has that combination. The closest parallel might be the Catholic connection to the Vatican as an inde- pendentjurisdiction over a small parcel of land in Rome. For Jews, the claim to inheritance of Is- rael, the land, is a matter of history. Religious, RABBI HERTZ ethnic and historic roots in a parcel of land made precious by centuries of love are thus interwoven with belief and practice that. makes God, Torah and Israel a unique fab- ric. But what of today? The latter part of the book is devoted to four fact-full chapters, each outlining the main positions and prac- tices of Reform Judaism, Conservative Judaism, Re- constructionist Judaism and Orthodox Judaism. While precise in defining each interpretation, the author himself concludes that these variables in in- terpreting the Covenant are becoming increasingly blurred. A generation and more ago, the lines were sharper and more distinctive. Moreover, many young people today are finding the distinctions between the movements "less significant if not trivial." Mixed marriage is likewise a subject of grave concern to all groups, though the prob- lem today is not so much how to prevent it as how to cope with it. Greenstein's epilogue deals with the contempor- ary concerns for all Jews who want to preserve the Covenant. Along with in- termarriage and assimila- tion is the alarmingly low birthrate among American Jews. Anti-Semitism too con- stantly `simmers beneath the surface of the Jewish agenda, diverting immense sums of time and moeny from otherwise more prod- uctive means of furthering Jewish identity. But by far the most criti- cal item on the agenda for preserving the Covenant is American Jewry's commit- ment to the state of Israel. For Jews in the Diaspora, says Greenstein, "Israel has served variously as a source of identity, peoplehood, pride and dignity, as a potential haven or a spiritual center, and for many others as a surrogate for Judaism, if not a secular religion." Greenstein adds: "Jews in America cannot depend for their own spiritual vitality upon a vicarious, sentimental af- finity for an independent secular Jewish state." Judaism must remain, in spite of any adversities, an eternal Covenant. This paperback volume of only 160 pages is packed with information that will help the American Jew or non-Jew understand the meaning of the. 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