Communings of the Spirit

The Journals of Mordecai M. Kaplan, Volume 1: 1913-1934

Edited by Mel Scult

Cloth - 9780814325759
Price: $39.95s

Paper - 9780814331163
Price: $21.95s

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Published 2001
Size: 6 x 9, Pages: 672

Subjects: Jewish Studies: Thought

Series: American Jewish Civilization Series

Co-Publisher: Reconstructionist Press


Description

Mordecai M. Kaplan (1881-1983), founder of Reconstructionism, is the preeminent American Jewish thinker and rabbi of our times. His life embodies the American Jewish experience of the first half of the twentieth century. With passionate intensity and uncommon candor, Kaplan compulsively recorded his experience in his journal (some 10,000 pages).
This first volume of Communings of the Spirit covers Kaplan's early years as a rabbi, teacher of rabbis, and community leader. Kaplan, who trained rabbis for half a century, gives us an inside picture of life at the Jewish Theological Seminary, the center of Conservative Judaism in America. He records his masterful weekly sermons, which were attended regularly by his students. With unflinching candor, he reveals his successes and failures, uncertainties and self-doubts. Undeterred by attacks on his radical beliefs, he never wavered in the pursuit of a more dynamic Judaism.

Co-published with Reconstructionist Press

Author(s)

Mel Scult is a professor emeritus of Judaic Studies at Brooklyn College and a professor emeritus of history at City University of New York, Graduate Center.

Other Books by Mel Scult: Judaism Faces the Twentieth Century: A Biography of Mordecai M. Kaplan,

Reviews

"Communings of the Spirit is a wonderful book to dip in and out of, to feel the power of a fine thinker, well educated in Jewish, American, and Western thought, to get a sense of where American Judaism was in his day as a way to look at it in out own."

— American Jewish World


"Reading Mordecai Kaplan's diaries is like standing over the shoulder of a brilliant and troubled man as he struggles to define his emerging philosophy of Judaism, while at the same time attempting to conceal from disapproving eyes the heterodox views he was formulating.

— Rabbi Ira Eisenstein, Founder and First President, Reconstructionist Rabbinical College