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Journal ArticleDOI

One God, Two Powers, and the Rabbinic Rejection of Subordinationism

David Michael Grossberg
- 18 Jan 2022 - 
- Vol. 53, Iss: 3, pp 405-436
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TLDR
This article showed that although the rabbinic literature frequently polemicizes against perceived deviant theologies, it refrains from explicit expressions of God's unity and distancing all other beings from God's sole sovereignty.
Abstract
This article furthers our understanding of rabbinic theology through an examination of its characteristic modes of expression. I demonstrate that although the rabbinic literature frequently polemicizes against perceived deviant theologies, it refrains from explicit expressions of God’s unity. This disinclination derives from the target and intent of rabbinic theological polemic. The rabbis’ opponents were not Christian binitarians who believed in multiple divine persons, but what I will refer to as Jewish subordinationists who believed in created divine agents through which God acts in the world. The rabbis were therefore less concerned with the ontological nature of God’s unity than they were with distancing all other beings from God’s sole sovereignty. My work provides additional textual support for the growing scholarly consensus that Jewish proponents of Logos theologies were among the rabbis’ earliest opponents, but it challenges the current convention that interprets these theologies in a primarily Christian binitarian context.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Ancient Synagogue: The First Thousand Years

TL;DR: The first thousand years of the ancient synagogue are covered in this article. But the authors focus on the early period of the synagogue and do not consider the early Roman period, the early Byzantine period, or the Byzantine period.
BookDOI

God in Translation

Mark S. Smith