The Lonely Man of Faith
Joseph B. Soloveitchik
1965
It is not the plan of this essay to discuss the millennium-old problem of faith and reason. I want instead to focus attention on a human-life situation in which the man of faith as an individual concrete being, with his cares and hopes, concerns and needs, joys and sad moments, is entangled. Therefore, whatever I am going to say here has been…
Creator Bio
Joseph B. Soloveitchik
Talmudic scholar and Jewish philosopher Joseph Ber (Yosef Dov) Soloveitchik was born in Pruzhan, Poland, a descendant of a Lithuanian rabbinic dynasty. He received both a traditional and a secular education, earning a doctorate (having written his dissertation on the philosopher Hermann Cohen) in 1931 from the University of Berlin. Upon immigrating to the United States in 1932, Soloveitchik became chief rabbi of the Orthodox community of Boston; he also was a founder of that city’s Maimonides School. In 1941, Soloveitchik succeeded his father as head of the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary of Yeshiva University (RIETS rabbinical school) in New York. Known widely as “The Rav,” Soloveitchik is regarded as one of the leading figures of Modern Orthodox Judaism.
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