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Overview""What Am I Missing?"" Illuminates the difficult life lesson that everyone is missing something in their lives. This truth includes six significant characters of the Hebrew Bible: Abraham and Rachel; Moses and Miriam; and David and Esther. Using texts from the Hebrew Bible as our source of interpretation, we search for the meaning of 'what-is-missing' in each of them and ourselves. These challenges provoke questions that have no simple answers and stimulate us to reflect on being a human with purpose and hope today. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Joseph A Edelheit , Tony JonesPublisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers Imprint: Wipf & Stock Publishers Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 0.60cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.150kg ISBN: 9781725259027ISBN 10: 1725259028 Pages: 120 Publication Date: 27 February 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsRabbi Edelheit guides us through the Hebrew Bible as if we are living in it. Through scholarship, jeremiad, and memoir, he patiently explains how we Jews 'read' it. He introduces us to great biblical characters and ordinary contemporary strangers who seem to mysteriously pass through his life with their flaws, injuries, prayers, and lessons. If you're a Jew and know someone who is Christian, for the love of God, give them this book. --Lawrence Kushner, Scholar-in-Residence, The Congregation Emanu-El, San Francisco In this rich and easily accessible book, Rabbi Joseph Edelheit takes a simple question--'what am I missing?'--and shows how it illuminates the lives of famous biblical characters as well as our own struggles with modern society. Despite their many virtues, Abraham, Rachel, Miriam, Moses, David, and Esther are all missing some important feature of Jewish existence. But their stories have important lessons to teach us about what it means to be human, to deal with uncertainty, to live in a pluralistic society, and to be satisfied with who we are. This is a book that needs to be read and re-read to appreciate its many valuable insights. --Kenneth Seeskin, Professor of Philosophy and Philip M. and Ethel Klutznick Professor of Jewish Civilization, Northwestern University Rabbi Edelheit guides us through the Hebrew Bible as if we are living in it. Through scholarship, jeremiad, and memoir, he patiently explains how we Jews 'read' it. He introduces us to great biblical characters and ordinary contemporary strangers who seem to mysteriously pass through his life with their flaws, injuries, prayers, and lessons. If you're a Jew and know someone who is Christian, for the love of God, give them this book. --Lawrence Kushner, Scholar-in-Residence, The Congregation Emanu-El, San Francisco In this rich and easily accessible book, Rabbi Joseph Edelheit takes a simple question--'what am I missing?'--and shows how it illuminates the lives of famous biblical characters as well as our own struggles with modern society. Despite their many virtues, Abraham, Rachel, Miriam, Moses, David, and Esther are all missing some important feature of Jewish existence. But their stories have important lessons to teach us about what it means to be human, to deal with uncertainty, to live in a pluralistic society, and to be satisfied with who we are. This is a book that needs to be read and re-read to appreciate its many valuable insights. --Kenneth Seeskin, Professor of Philosophy and Philip M. and Ethel Klutznick Professor of Jewish Civilization, Northwestern University In What Am I Missing? Rabbi Edelheit brings new and profound insights into a wide variety of intellectual and psychological issues of the human condition. Readers of all disciplines and students of life will find hope and power in this breathtaking examination of the difficult and redemptive truths of our lives. As a professor of Jewish theology, I was moved by his examinations of biblical characters and the ways in which their struggles mirror our own and how they can mentor us in our lives today. What a treasure this book is! --Rachel Sabath Beit-Halachmi, Senior Fellow, Kaplan Center for Jewish Peoplehood This book is a gift. Had I only had this book, I would have been far richer for it. And I can attest that what I experienced in friendship and mentorship is what is in abundance in this brilliant and crucially important book. We will all miss many great gifts in our lives, but please don't miss What Am I Missing? --Doug Pagitt, Founder and Former Pastor, Solomon's Porch, Minneapolis Joseph takes us on a journey interweaving important characters of Torah and his own life and the lessons we learn or don't learn by seeking out what we think we need or what society tells us we need. . . . Joe reminds us that we need to stop our fast ride through life and gather what is offered to us and to learn from it. A perfect read as we all travel through life's joys and travails and take ancient lessons into our contemporary life. A must-read for all searchers, learners, and life's active participants. --Marilyn Price, storyteller, author, and educator Rabbi Joseph Edelheit has provided us with a deeply engaging and provocative text on how six biblical figures--Abraham, Moses, Miriam, Ruth, David, and Esther--teach us how to understand our own human limitations and how to work to overcome them. This is an extraordinarily thoughtful discussion that shows us how we can work to perfect ourselves by asking the right questions to reveal what is missing in our own lives. --Pekka Sinervo, Professor of Physics, University of Toronto; President, Canadian Council for Reform Judaism Author InformationJoseph A. Edelheit served as a rabbi in Reform synagogues for thirty years, earned a doctorate in Christian theology, and retired as an Emeritus Professor of Religious and Jewish Studies. He has served as a prison chaplain, on a Presidential Advisory Council for HIV/AIDS, created a multi-faith orphanage in rural India for children with HIV/AIDS, and removed five swastikas constructed into the original 1931 façade of a Catholic cathedral in rural Minnesota. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |