Repentance in Deed and Word (Shalom Carmy)

Episode Summary

We all desire repentance, forgiveness, and reconciliation. But these concepts are complicated, and seeing them from a Jewish perspective on biblical law can provide a fresh perspective to non-Jews. In this episode, the discussion of repentance and forgiveness continues with Rabbi Shalom Carmy and Dru Johnson. They distinguish between the action of repentance and the intention of repentance and question whether you can really reconcile without both. They also consider group forgiveness, and whether any one member of a group can facilitate reconciliation on behalf of the group. Growing in these practices, and doing them biblically, requires sustained and frequent reflection on their significance.

Shalom Carmy is Assistant Professor of Jewish Philosophy and Bible at Yeshiva University. He specializes in biblical interpretation and modern Jewish thought, and writes for several religious and Jewish publications. He previously wrote “And God Saw Their Deeds”: Biblical Repentance in Action (and Less So in Feeling) for The Biblical Mind.

Chapters

    • 0:00 Actions versus words

    • 3:32 Repentance and forgiveness for groups

    • 7:00 Forgiveness in the Holocaust

    • 13:03 Commanding repentance

    • 17:28 Yom Kippur

    • 20:39 Regret, confession, and resolve

    • 26:17 Progressing in repentance

    • 28:08 The inner experience of reconciliation

    • 32:27 What is real forgiveness?

Transcripts are AI generated and are not guaranteed to correctly reflect the content of the podcast.
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Rabbi Shalom Carmy

Rabbi Shalom Carmy teaches Jewish studies and philosophy at Yeshiva University, where he is Chair of Bible and Jewish philosophy at Yeshiva College. He is also the editor of Tradition, the theological journal of the Rabbinical Council of America; an affiliated scholar at Cardozo Law School; and a member of the Erasmus and Dulles Forums. He is an expert on biblical theology and interpretation; modern Jewish thought (with an emphasis on Rabbis Soloveitchik and Kook); religious Zionism; liberal arts and religion; the interface of traditional Talmud study, modern scholarship, and theology; and the life of the thinking religious individual.Rabbi Carmy has twice been Professor of the Year at Yeshiva College and received the Baumol Teaching Award. He publishes regularly in Tradition, Torah uMadda Journal, First Things, and others. Find his publications on YAIR: Yeshiva Academic Institutional Repository.

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