Faith After the Holocaust
TitreFaith After the Holocaust
Auteur
Call number296.3/0027
N° d'objet02745ii
Lieu de publicationOxford, England
EditeurOxford University Press
Année de publication
2007
Paginationpp462-489
MatérielArticle
ISBN9780195300154
NotesArticle from the book 'Wrestling with God' pp462-489
Description
In this essay the author seeks to defend God after Auschwitz. Beginning with the premise that the Holocaust is not unique, that the Jewish people have "had innumerable Auschwitzes," he returns to classical responses to the "problem of evil" and, while acknowledging that the Holocaust was "an injustice countenanced by God" nevertheless seeks to explain the Holocaust by combining two arguments. The first appeals to the notion that there are times when God mysteriously and inexplicably - and without any obvious human cause such as sin - turns His face away from man. The second argument recycles the seminal doctrine of "free will."