Mending a Frail Humankind : Remedial Hermeneutics and Messianic Anthropology in Joseph Soloveitchik Cover Image

Mending a Frail Humankind : Remedial Hermeneutics and Messianic Anthropology in Joseph Soloveitchik
Mending a Frail Humankind : Remedial Hermeneutics and Messianic Anthropology in Joseph Soloveitchik

Author(s): Chiara Carmen Scordari
Subject(s): Jewish Thought and Philosophy, Contemporary Philosophy, Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology, Eastern Orthodoxy, Hermeneutics
Published by: Instytut Slawistyki Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Keywords: Jewish philosophy; Joseph Soloveitchik; philosophical anthropology; cultural resistance and resilience;

Summary/Abstract: This essay focuses on Joseph Soloveitchik’s re-semantization and renewal of the Jewish concept of messianism. In his view, the idea of Messiah is personified and, at the same time, deferred, as an allegory for ceaseless and ever-changing transformations, both individual and communitarian. Biblical personae endowed with a messianic impulse, such as Abraham, Esther, Mordecai, Tamar, and Ruth, are seen by Soloveitchik as eschatological and metahistorical figures, co-redeemers and co-creators with God, and models with whom human beings may identify. In this framework, particular attention will be paid to Soloveitchik’s conception of midrashic hermeneutics, as an always open process of individual and collective self-knowledge and self-redemption; and to the dialectical opposition between “revealed world” and “hidden world” as the constitutive element of Soloveitchik’s vision of the humanity-to-come.

  • Issue Year: 2022
  • Issue No: 11
  • Page Range: 1-15
  • Page Count: 15
  • Language: English