Tag Archives: Bernard Schwartz
Men Worth Remembering
Men Worth Remembering Michael Wyschogrod was a theologian, philosopher and doer of quiet deeds of rescue for many, me included. Last Monday night, his colleagues organized a memorial meeting for him at Baruch College of The City University of New … Continue reading →
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Tagged 92nd Street Y, Abraham, apostasy, archives at Y, archivist, Authenticity, Barbara Fisher, Bernard Schwartz, bigotry, Christendom, composure, converts, courtship, deicide, duties to parents, duties to self, escape from the Nazis, essayists, ethical monotheism, falling in love, father-daughter relation, filial piety, German guilt, God's love for Jews, God's love for the Jewish people, God's reality, having time, Henry and Rachelle Rosenthal, Henry M. Rosenthal, Holocaust, imagination of the heart, impersonal love, incarnation, innocence, intellectual memoir, Jesus, Jesus of Nazareth, Jewish identity, Jews for Jesus, journal keeping, life assignment, life task, life vocation, Lionel Trilling, Literary Center at Y, literary critics, living spiritually, living truthfully, loving heart, male friendship, Messianic Jews, Nazi executioners, opinion shapers, original sin, parent-child obligation, parent-child relation, passionate love, Pauline theology, personal equilibrium, personal genius, personal love, philosophy students, Poetry Center at Y, politics of religion, popes, practical realism, Presbyterians, realism, sense of reality, sense of self, Shoah, spirituality, survivor's testimony, survivor's witness, The Jewish people, The White Rose, theology of contempt, Trilling biographer, Trinitarian doctrine
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