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Semitism: The Whence and Whither, ´How Dear Are your Counsels´
Kenneth Cragg
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Description for Semitism: The Whence and Whither, ´How Dear Are your Counsels´
Paperback. Semitism has overtaken itself with the barbarity of a dividing Wall - a scar across a land allegedly 'beloved above all', by both God and People. This title tells a human story of distinctive intimacy with a God, believed to belong with birth, sealed in history and homed in given territory. Num Pages: 214 pages. BIC Classification: HRCM. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 228 x 152 x 13. Weight in Grams: 330.
Semitism is a human story of distinctive intimacy with a God, believed to belong with birth, sealed in history and homed in given territory. These three denominators of tribe, territory and remembered time belong to all human identities, understood as one creation in a single cosmos in the Bible and the Qur'an. Anti-Semitism is a tragic misprision of this long conviction of the Judaic mind, bringing endless suffering to the one, shame and guilt to the other. Its effect has been to make 'those counsels dearer' still, whether in Zionist will to recover and rule territory or in a secular diaspora struggling to know itself. Semitism has overtaken itself with the barbarity of a dividing Wall -- a scar across a land allegedly 'beloved above all', by both God and People
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2005
Publisher
Liverpool University Press United Kingdom
Number of pages
214
Condition
New
Number of Pages
214
Place of Publication
Liverpool, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781845190712
SKU
V9781845190712
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1
About Kenneth Cragg
Kenneth Cragg was first in Jerusalem in 1939, and subsequently became deeply involved in areas of faith between Semitic religions under the stress of current politics. He later pursued doctoral studies in Oxford where he first graduated and became Prizeman' in Theology and Moral Philosophy, and where he is now an Honorary Fellow of Jesus College. He was a Bishop in the Anglican Jurisdiction in Jerusalem and elsewhere in the Middle East, and played ecclesiastical roles in Africa and India. A Certain Sympathy of Scriptures is a companion book to his Readings in the Qur'an (1988; 1999), and more broadly to his Faiths in Their Pronouns: Websites of Identity (2002). Other works by Bishop Cragg, and published by Sussex Academic Press, include: With God in Human Trust -- Christian Faith and Contemporary Humanism; The Weight in the Word -- Prophethood, Biblical and Quranic; and The Education of Christian Faith.
Reviews for Semitism: The Whence and Whither, ´How Dear Are your Counsels´
"A masterful study that demonstrates Cragg's profound knowledge and scholarship of the historical, theological and scriptural sources of Judaism, Christianity and Islam as well as the current conflict in the Middle East. Bold and original, it provides an empathetic reassessment of the Jewish fear of anti-Semitism grounded in the context of European history that culminated in the horrors of the Holocaust and the displacement and suffering of the Palestinian people. Cragg demonstrates his impeccable analytical skills to uncover the manipulation of the fear of anti-Semitism to justify Israeli policies. Profound, enlightening, a must read for anyone concerned with the issue of anti-Semitism and the Middle East conflict."
Yvonne Y. Haddad, Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding, Georgetown University. "Cragg patiently explores the similarities and differences between Christianity and Islam... Crucially, he finds a key difference to be in the relation to political power of the later suras of the Qur'an, at least, and the life and teaching of Jesus... In another life, Kenneth Cragg would be a poet, and the text is dense with poetic allusion... it has a meditative quality that only enhances its call to re-engagement with contemporary Islam."
The Revd Dr Timothy Gorringe, Professor of Theological Studies, University of Exeter.
Yvonne Y. Haddad, Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding, Georgetown University. "Cragg patiently explores the similarities and differences between Christianity and Islam... Crucially, he finds a key difference to be in the relation to political power of the later suras of the Qur'an, at least, and the life and teaching of Jesus... In another life, Kenneth Cragg would be a poet, and the text is dense with poetic allusion... it has a meditative quality that only enhances its call to re-engagement with contemporary Islam."
The Revd Dr Timothy Gorringe, Professor of Theological Studies, University of Exeter.