The Kuzari: The Jewish Faith

[The Jewish Sage’s Creed]

1.11. Accordingly, [the Jewish sage] said to him: I put [my] faith in the God of Abraham, Isaac and Israel who brought the children of Israel out of Egypt with signs and miracles, provided for them in the wilderness, and gave them the land of Syro-Palestine after they had crossed the Sea [of Reeds] and the Jordan [River]…

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The Kuzari or The Book of Rejoinder and Proof in Support of the Humiliated Religion (Kitāb al-ḥujja wa-’l-dalīl fī naṣr al-dīn al-dhalīl) is an imagined discussion between the king of the Khazars and a Jewish sage. The dialogue ranges through aspects of Jewish, Muslim, and pagan religions, and the sage eventually persuades the king to convert to Judaism along with nobles in his kingdom. Based on a purported historical event, The Kuzari enjoyed enormous popularity as a theological defense of Judaism, especially after its translation in 1166 from Judeo-Arabic into Hebrew by Judah Ibn Tibbon (ca. 1120–after 1190). In this excerpt, ha-Levi’s Jewish sage describes the Jewish faith and explains the basis for believing that the Jewish religion comes from God.

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