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Hardcover Simple Words: Thinking about What Really Matters in Life Book

ISBN: 068484642X

ISBN13: 9780684846422

Simple Words: Thinking about What Really Matters in Life

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Focusing on simplicity and practical applicaton, a rabbi and Talmudic scholar selects out the simple words at the heart of spiritual life, building a practical philosophy of daily living around them.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Simple words with deep meaning

Rabbi Steinsaltz one of the great Torah teachers of our generations here takes fifteen different ' simple words' , words such as nature, friendship, faith and God , and provides insight into their meaning. In doing so he presents his own deeply religious way of seeing the world. This work can be of help and inspiration to all those who are seeking to understand the world in a more meaningful and hopeful way.

Simple things mean a lot...

Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, perhaps best known for his multi-volume translation of and commentary upon the Talmud (currently being published in both Hebrew and English, as well as a few other languages), has put together a wonderfully simple, small, thought-provoking book of spiritual wisdom that promises the careful reader insight into new ways to think, feel, act, and be.Steinsaltz has worked with Talmudic literature (to a very extensive and intimate degree), as well as Hasidic tales and liturgies, and having absorbed the teachings and spirit of this body of literature, has distilled it into simple, useful bits for reflection and illumination.Deceptively simple words, which embrace huge concepts -- nature, good, family, friends, death, God, faith, love -- these are words we use all the time. But what do they really mean? 'Rabbi Steinsaltz explores some of the meanings of these powerful words that are so central to our lives. He transforms each word into a gem, turning it this way, then that, examining it to see more clearly its brilliant facets and what lies behind them.'Perhaps the key to Steinsaltz's way of looking at these terms and concepts is to emphasise the fluid, malleable character -- these are not concepts that are set in stone; their meaning changes as our lives change, as our society changes -- the wisdom from the past must be used as a guide for understanding, but our lives in the present have validity too. That having been said, we owe our ancestors as well as our descendants a debt to carry on the line of tradition in some ways, lest we dishonour our ancestors and rob our descendants of their inheritance.This is a difficult balance, not always the same for each person. Steinsaltz also examines elements of our present culture in unique ways. In his chapter on Hollywood, he discusses Hollywood in terms of being a dreamworld, and a religion that deserves the appellation of being opiate of the masses. 'Being a very self-satisfied religion, Hollywood is not revolutionary; it is even anti-revolutionary. For one thing, Hollywood does not try to change norms, and certainly does not have the presumption to steer them; it merely reflects existing ones.... Hollywood glorifies the status quo, or at least promotes the dreams of Middle America as the best of all possible worlds, and thereby diminishes the possibility for change.'Steinsaltz concludes by a frank and interesting discussion on God, in which he argues for a removal of limitations on God, and a greater understanding of just what it is we are saying when we use the word 'God'. God is, in present culture, often depicted in mostly poetic terms. 'Poetry is wonderful, but we should not expect God to conform to our images. Yet we do. For many people, the image of God is quite clear: a big, white-bearded man sitting on a throne very high in the sky. He has--at least figuratively--a stick in one hand, and a bag of candy in the other, bestowing each on His subjects.'Alas, this is this picture

Extraordinary work

This is a book by a wise man, mystic, scholar. Accessible ruminations about nature, God, love, even masks. I wouldn't have picked it up, because the title seemed so bland, but I saw his name on the cover and knew it wouldn't be bland or simplistic at all, and it wasn't. He looks at life's dilemmas and makes some practical and non-tendentious comments about how to look at life. No preaching here.

simple

The proccess of finding ones way through this messy period we call life can be difficult and dangerous. Modern day authors such as Robert Pirsig and Deepak Chopra have attepmted to help us navigate this trecherous path with minimal success. However, upon reading Rabbi Steinsaltz's work I found that I was able to see life and mankinds place in the world in a whole new light. Rabbi Steinsaltz takes a hard hitting, realistic look at the topics of sex, love, friendship and death to name a few. As opposed to other so called "New Age" authors of our time Rabbi Steinsaltz affords the reader the opportunity for true self exploration revealing both the ugly and beautiful sides of human nature. I would reccomend this book to anyone who has ever dared to pose questions as to the nature and actions of themselves and their fellow men.

Simple words

Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz is one of the greatest jewish scholars alive. I have found, however, that his books are very difficult to read and understand. Simple Words is the first book of Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz that seems to appeal to anyone. It was an easy read but at the same time remained thought provoking and insightful. I would recomend this book to anyone, no matter how scholarly they are.
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