The author offers a bold Jewish view of Jesus, facilitating serious dialog that has not always been possible in the past because of difficulties in Christian Jewish relations.
I accept the resurrection of Jesus not as an invention of the community of disciples, but as an historical event." When a leading orthodox Jew makes such a declaration, its significance can hardly …
silence has shrouded the subject of Jesus in Hebrew life over the past two thousands years, including periods when the very mention of his name was forbidden. The deification of a man was long hel…