Jewish Studies | Today at Elon | 福利亚洲国产精品 /u/news Fri, 29 May 2026 15:17:18 -0400 en-US hourly 1 Elon welcomes 10th class of Multifaith Scholars /u/news/2026/04/29/elon-welcomes-tenth-class-of-multifaith-scholars/ Wed, 29 Apr 2026 13:05:57 +0000 /u/news/?p=1045738
The 10th class of Multifaith Scholars.

Six rising juniors have been named members of the tenth class of Multifaith Scholars, a two-year fellows program for juniors and seniors that offers a closely mentored, experientially rich and intellectually rigorous educational opportunity for students with significant potential.

After a highly selective application and interview process, students are awarded $5,000 annually to support research and study in global contexts connected with religious diversity and multi-religious societies. Students who show great potential as academically curious and socially engaged leaders committed to their own ongoing development and the enhancement of their local and global communities are selected each spring.

鈥淚 am delighted to welcome these six impressive rising juniors into the Multifaith Scholars program and look forward to supporting their compelling projects over the next two years,鈥 said Amy Allocco, director of the Multifaith Scholars program. 鈥淭heir research interests include music and Christian religious experience, linguistic anthropology and the vocabulary of faith, religious diversity in clinical settings, gender and religious roles in Asian art, the intersection of biomedicine and traditional healing practices and the history of Black churches here in Alamance County.鈥

In addition to pursuing their faculty-mentored undergraduate research projects and undertaking academic coursework in religious studies and interreligious studies, the scholars will extend the program鈥檚 ongoing community partnership with the Burlington Masjid. Through the partnership, scholars teach English classes, participate in youth and social events with the local Muslim community, join community garden workdays, volunteer with the food pantry and take part in potlucks and iftar meals during Ramadan.

鈥淚t is wonderful to welcome such a strong class with such diverse academic interests,鈥 reflected Brian Pennington, director of the Center for the Study of Religion, Culture, and Society, which supports the Multifaith Scholars program. 鈥淎s we approach the tenth anniversary of the MFS, it is gratifying to see so many clear signs of the program’s maturity and significance: our largest class ever, the inclusion of seven new faculty mentors, and students majoring in three disciplines never before represented in MFS.鈥

The 2026-2028 Multifaith Scholars

Addison Anderson

Elon student in front of spring foilage.Majors: History, Sociology

Minors: Museum Studies, Public History, and Interreligious Studies

Mentor:聽Amanda Kleintop (History and Geography)

Project Title: History and Memory of Alamance County鈥檚 Black Churches

Proposed Research: Examine the relationship between Alamance County African American churches and local politics in North Carolina from Reconstruction through 1900.

Blair Berenson

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Anthropology

Minors: Jewish Studies, Sociology, Philosophy and Interreligious Studies

Mentors:聽Amy Allocco (Religious Studies) and Devin Proctor (Sociology & Anthropology)

Project Title: An Anthropological Approach to Cross-Generational Shifts in Hindu and Jewish Perspectives of Faith in the US

Proposed Research: Conduct fieldwork in Jewish and Hindu communities in Atlanta to understand how different generations articulate the concept of faith.

Katie Castelo

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Biochemistry

Minors: Neuroscience, Spanish, and Interreligious Studies

Mentor:聽Cathy Quay (Nursing)

Project Title: Bridging Faith and Medicine: Improving Cultural Awareness of Religious Practices in the Healthcare System

Proposed Research: Explore the healthcare industry鈥檚 approach to death and ways it can be more open to diverse religious practices.

Faith Elliott

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Neuroscience

Minors: Expressive Arts and Interreligious Studies

Mentors:聽Lynn Huber (Religious Studies) and Morgan Patrick (Music Theory)

Project Title: Neurotheology: An Interdisciplinary Study into Sacred Music and Feelings of Well-Being

Proposed Research: Examine the historical significance of music and understand and measure the behavioral impact associated with an emotional, transcendent spiritual experience and the well-being that results from listening.

Mariama Jalloh

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Major: Public Health

Minors: Biology and Interreligious Studies

Mentor:聽Sandra Darfour-Oduro (Public Health)

Project Title: Faith, Healers, and Health: How Religious Beliefs and Community Trust Shape Healthcare Decisions in West African Communities

Proposed Research: Examine how religious leaders and traditional healers influence healthcare decisions in communities in Ghana, and how public health programs can partner with these practitioners to improve health education outcomes.

Ryleigh Rouse

Elon student in front of spring foilage.

Majors: Art History, Religious Studies

Minors: Museum Studies and Public History and Asian Studies

Mentor:聽Kirstin Ringelberg (Art History)

Project Title: Religion鈥檚 Impact on Japanese Women: Through an Art Historical Lens

Proposed Research: Employ art as a lens to examine how religion shaped gender perceptions and Japanese women鈥檚 roles.

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Geoffrey Claussen honors mentor with special journal issue /u/news/2026/02/25/geoffrey-claussen-honors-mentor-with-special-journal-issue/ Wed, 25 Feb 2026 14:54:01 +0000 /u/news/?p=1040161 Directory portrait of Geoffrey Claussen wearing a navy blazer and blue button-up shirt
Geoffrey Claussen

Geoffrey Claussen, professor of religious studies, Lori and Eric Sklut Professor in Jewish Studies and chair of the Department of Religious Studies at 福利亚洲国产精品, edited a special issue of the Journal of Jewish Ethics honoring his long-time mentor, Louis Newman.

Newman, the John M. and Elizabeth W. Musser Professor of Religious Studies, Emeritus, at Carleton College and former dean of academic advising and associate vice provost for undergraduate education at Stanford University, is one of the world鈥檚 leading scholars of Jewish ethics and one of the founders of Jewish ethics as an academic field. He was the founding president of the Society of Jewish Ethics and founding coeditor of this journal.

In his editor鈥檚 introduction to the special issue, Claussen recounts how studying with Newman at Carleton College first kindled his interest in Religious Studies and Jewish Studies and eventually inspired him to also become a scholar of Jewish ethics.

In the issue, thirteen scholars engage, respond to and build on Newman鈥檚 work. Claussen鈥檚 article in the journal is titled 鈥淟essons in Intellectual Honesty and Humility: Studying Jewish Ethics with the Guidance of Louis Newman.鈥

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Holocaust survivor details family鈥檚 escape in Holocaust Remembrance Day event /u/news/2026/02/13/holocaust-survivor-details-familys-escape-in-holocaust-remembrance-day-event/ Fri, 13 Feb 2026 20:45:46 +0000 /u/news/?p=1038714 Holocaust survivor Alexander 鈥淟ex鈥 Silbiger says that, in the years following his family鈥檚 escape from Nazi-occupied Holland during World War II, he rarely thought about the experience, let alone wanted to share it with others.

鈥淚t happened so long ago during my early childhood. It had no bearing on my present life. My parents almost never talked about it. Few of my friends were even aware,鈥 said Silbiger. 鈥淏ut then I became aware it was happening again in Rwanda, Bosnia, Sudan, Myanmar, again, again and again. And eventually, as hatred and antisemitism certainly, began spreading, even in the United States, I decided I needed to come out and tell my story.鈥

And that鈥檚 what Silbiger did in a packed Turner Theatre on Feb. 12, part of 福利亚洲国产精品鈥檚 Holocaust Remembrance Day Speakers Series. Elon has hosted Holocaust survivors annually for more than nine years. Funding has enabled Professor Max Negin and his Holocaust Journey course to collaborate with Jewish Life, the Jewish Studies department, and the Truitt Center for Religious and Spiritual Life.聽The speaker event was made possible through sponsorship from the Levy Family P鈥26.

A man in a suit speaks into a microphone at a podium in a lecture hall, addressing an audience.
Benji Stern ’26 introduces Holocaust survivor Alexander “Lex” Silbiger during the Holocaust Remembrance Day observance in Turner Theatre on Feb. 12, 2026.

Benji Stern, co-president of Elon Hillel, introduced Silbiger by reflecting on his experience in the Holocaust Journey study abroad course, which takes students through tours of concentration/extermination camps, ghettos, and discussions with Holocaust scholars and survivors.

鈥淚t was a profound and emotional experience that brought me face to face with both the history and the human suffering of the Holocaust,鈥 said Stern, who discussed reading the Mourner鈥檚 Kaddish prayer at a memorial during the experience. 鈥淲ith a slightly broken voice, I pulled up the words on my phone, and together, we recited them. In that moment, a shared moment, Jews and non-Jews standing shoulder to shoulder, I felt something that I’ll carry with me forever. The moment was special because all of us participated, not only Jewish people remembering, but that collective act of remembrance reminds us that we’re all connected.鈥

In May 1940, Silbiger, now in his 90s, was just 5 years old when Nazi Germany invaded the Netherlands.

鈥淎t first, the life of the Jews under the occupation, while certainly unpleasant, did not appear to be life-threatening,鈥 said Silbiger, who said there was a false sense of security but also rumors of the mistreatment of Jews in Eastern Europe. 鈥淛ews had lived in Holland for many centuries, they had made important contributions to its economy and its culture and become a really valued part of the nation. Dutch people would never let their fellow citizens be mistreated in this manner. No one could begin to conceive the eventual role of the Nazis to extinguish the life of every Jew in Holland.鈥

an older speaker stands at the front of the room facing rows of seated students during a formal presentation or remembrance event.
Holocaust survivor Alexander “Lex” Silbiger speaks during the Holocaust Remembrance Day observance in Turner Theatre on Feb. 12, 2026.

Everything changed when Silbiger’s parents hatched a plan to escape from the Nazi-occupied territory. His mother woke him up and told him they were going on 鈥渁 trip to the country.鈥

鈥淚 was surprised because I had not been told anything about this beforehand, and because of the (Nazi travel) restrictions, we had not been traveling anywhere,” he said. 鈥淲e sneaked across the border to Belgium. Once we arrived there, I learned we were not going back home until the Germans were gone from Holland. Suddenly, without preparation, this 6-year-old was cut off from all of their friends, his stories, everything else.鈥

The family, including Silbiger鈥檚 older brother, adopted aliases and traveled through France across the demarcation line to southern France, down to Spain, before eventually traveling by boat to the Gibraltar Refugee Camp in Jamaica. His father used diamonds, hidden in an old smoking pipe, to help keep them afloat financially throughout the year-long journey.

鈥淐onditions may not have been so much worse than in a summer camp, except you were forced to stay there for an indefinite length of time, perhaps even several years,鈥 said Silbiger of the refugee camp. 鈥淥n the other hand, our lives were no longer in danger and, for that, we were grateful.鈥

An older man sits at the front of a lecture hall holding papers as he speaks beneath a projected slide reading 鈥淭he Silbiger Family in Holland, December 1941,鈥 accompanied by historical family photographs labeled 鈥淗ermi鈥 and 鈥淟ex.鈥 The setting suggests a Holocaust remembrance or historical presentation.
Holocaust survivor Alexander “Lex” Silbiger speaks during the Holocaust Remembrance Day observance in Turner Theatre on Feb.12, 2026. Photos of his family are displayed behind him.

Silbiger鈥檚 father鈥檚 engineering skills eventually helped the family get to the Dutch Carribean island of Cura莽ao and, following the end of the war a few months later, they were able to return to Holland 鈥 but it looked much different. Their home in The Hague was still standing, but had been gutted, and his grandparents were taken to a concentration camp in Poland, where they were murdered.

鈥淚 still have fond memories of my grandparents, who lived only a few blocks from us,鈥 said Silbiger. 鈥淭he thoughts of their last days and final moments continue to haunt me.鈥

His parents decided to return to Cura莽ao, where Silbiger finished high school before attending college in the United States. He later married a U.S. citizen, relocated to Germany for a time, and eventually resettled in Durham, North Carolina, where he was a professor at Duke University. Silbiger has since worked to spread awareness of the danger of religious hatred, including in 鈥淥ur Great Escape: The story of a Dutch family’s flight from persecution (1942-1943).鈥 He encouraged the audience on Thursday night to have compassion for anyone escaping their homeland in search of a better life.

鈥淭hey have the same hopes, the same desires, same needs, they are like you and me,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e must open our hearts (鈥or) these people, some who entered the country illegally because they didn鈥檛 have proper papers. Then again, neither did we. We entered France illegally. If we hadn鈥檛 done that, I wouldn鈥檛 be here to tell my story.鈥

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Geoffrey Claussen鈥檚 work republished in Jewish ethics collection /u/news/2025/12/16/geoffrey-claussens-work-republished-in-jewish-ethics-collection/ Tue, 16 Dec 2025 14:21:32 +0000 /u/news/?p=1035469 An article by Geoffrey Claussen, professor of religious studies, Lori and Eric Sklut Professor in Jewish Studies and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies, has been republished in a new collection of essays on Jewish Ethics.

The collection, edited by Jonathan K. Crane, Emily Filler, and Mira Beth Wasserman, is titled 鈥淢odern Jewish Ethics Since 1970: Writings on Methods, Sources, and Issues鈥 and published by Brandeis University Press as part of the Brandeis Library of Modern Jewish Thought.

Claussen鈥檚 article, 鈥淢usar in a White Supremacist Society: Arrogance, Self-Examination, and Systemic Change,鈥 was first published in 2021 in 鈥淣o Time for Neutrality: American Rabbinic Voices from an Era of Upheaval,鈥 edited by Michael Rose Knopf with Miriam Aniel.

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Geoffrey Claussen authors chapter on Jewish approaches to war /u/news/2025/11/19/geoffrey-claussen-authors-chapter-on-jewish-approaches-to-war/ Wed, 19 Nov 2025 21:53:09 +0000 /u/news/?p=1033776 A chapter authored by Geoffrey Claussen, professor of religious studies, Lori and Eric Sklut Professor in Jewish Studies, and chair of the Department of Religious Studies, was published in the volume 鈥淛udaism in 5 Minutes,鈥 edited by Sarah Imhoff.

Judaism in Five Minutes provides an accessible and lively introduction to common questions about Jews and Judaism. Claussen鈥檚 chapter, titled 鈥淲hat Does Jewish Tradition Say 福利亚洲国产精品 War?鈥 explains how 鈥淛ews in diverse historical contexts have constructed a wide range of Jewish traditions about war, framing their ideas with reference to Jewish identities, histories, and texts.鈥

The volume was published by Equinox Publishing as part of the 鈥淩eligion in 5 Minutes鈥 series. More information about the volume can be found .

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Geoffrey Claussen co-authors chapter on moral character and Jewish philosophy /u/news/2025/11/17/geoffrey-claussen-co-authors-chapter-on-moral-character-and-jewish-philosophy/ Mon, 17 Nov 2025 15:51:09 +0000 /u/news/?p=1033598 A chapter co-authored by Geoffrey Claussen, Lori and Eric Sklut Professor in Jewish Studies and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies at 福利亚洲国产精品, and Christian B. Miller, A. C. Reid Professor of Philosophy at Wake Forest University, was published in “The Routledge Companion to Jewish Philosophy.”

The chapter is titled 鈥淐haracter and Musar,鈥 and explores diverse Jewish approaches to questions about moral character, especially within the genre of 鈥渕usar literature鈥 focused on character and virtue.

Claussen is the author of books focused on moral character, including Modern Musar: Contested Virtues in Jewish Thought and Sharing the Burden: Rabbi Simhah Zissel Ziv and the Path of Musar. Miller is the author of books focused on character including Moral Character: An Empirical Theory and Character and Moral Psychology.

“The Routledge Companion to Jewish Philosophy” brings diverse perspectives to bear on the key topics, problems, and debates in Jewish philosophy and philosophical theology. The 37 chapters were written by an international team of experts from different traditions in philosophy and beyond.

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Geoffrey Claussen named co-editor of Journal of Jewish Ethics /u/news/2025/09/29/geoffrey-claussen-named-co-editor-of-journal-of-jewish-ethics/ Mon, 29 Sep 2025 16:22:33 +0000 /u/news/?p=1028924 Geoffrey Claussen, professor of religious studies, Lori and Eric Sklut Professor in Jewish Studies and chair of the Department of Religious Studies at 福利亚洲国产精品,聽has been named co-editor-in-chief of the Journal of Jewish Ethics.

The Journal is the scholarly journal of the Society of Jewish Ethics, of which Claussen is a past president. Published biannually by the Penn State University Press, the journal publishes outstanding scholarship in Jewish ethics, broadly conceived. It serves as a location for the exchange of ideas among those interested in understanding, articulating and promoting descriptive and normative Jewish ethics. It aspires to advance dialogue between Jewish ethicists and ethicists working through other religious and secular traditions.

Claussen joins Emily Filler of Drew University as co-editor of the journal. He previously served as an associate editor and has been a member of the journal鈥檚 editorial board since 2015.

Claussen joined the Elon faculty in 2011 and was named Lori and Eric Sklut Emerging Scholar in Jewish Studies in 2012. He has served as chair of the Department of Religious Studies since 2018 and was named Lori and Eric Sklut Professor in Jewish Studies in 2023.

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Preparing for the Jewish high holidays: Give up on spiritual formulas and let God give you a bath /u/news/2025/09/10/preparing-for-the-jewish-high-holidays-give-up-on-spiritual-formulas-and-let-god-give-you-a-bath/ Wed, 10 Sep 2025 18:04:12 +0000 /u/news/?p=1026988 When I look at the world today, I see many things I wish I could repair. I see climate destruction, inadequate care for the vulnerable, and the erosion of kindness, respect, and curiosity in our polarized public discourse.

In the Jewish calendar, we are well into the season of teshuvah, translated both as 鈥渞epentance鈥 and 鈥渢urning back.鈥 It is a heartbreaking time for deep reflection on our individual and collective moral failures.

In this week鈥檚 parsha, Ki Tavo, Moses instructs the Israelites on the curses and blessings that God will bestow upon them based on whether they follow God鈥檚 commands. These passages present a system of spiritual physics based upon our behavior. If we do x, we will receive y. If we obey God鈥檚 commands, we will be blessed (). If we sin, we will be cursed ().

Those of us with lived experience know that the reality of sin, punishment, merit, and reward is more complicated than our parsha鈥檚 formula. First, it does not explain how those who commit egregious moral transgressions still prosper in this world. Second, it implies that any evil that befalls the faithful is a natural consequence of immoral behavior, rather than the inexplicable tragedy we know it to be. Finally, this formula can give us a false sense of control over our lives, leading us to disappointment.

Rashi points to a more complicated way of understanding our parsha. One of the blessings the Israelites will receive for obedience is in : 鈥淏lessed shall you be in your comings and blessed shall you be in your goings.鈥 teaches that this verse means that your exit (goings) from this world should be like your entry (comings) into this world 鈥 without sin, belo鈥 cheit (cf. ).

This interpretation raises two important questions. First, Biblical Hebrew has a rich vocabulary for describing sin. Cheit does not describe a severe transgression or rebellion 鈥 instead it connotes missing the mark. How can it be that any human being can live without sometimes falling short?

Second, this interpretation reveals a logical contradiction. The reward for following God鈥檚 commands is sinlessness. How can it be that the reward, sinlessness, precedes the behavior that merits the reward?

This week鈥檚 parsha presents an incomplete picture of sin, punishment, merit, and reward because it does not include teshuvah. If the blessings and curses from our parsha describe spiritual physics, teshuvah is all about spiritual metaphysics.

Engaging in the practice of teshuvah is not simply acknowledging our wrongdoings, making amends with those we have harmed, and committing to live differently in the future. These actions are fundamental components of teshuvah, but there is something much deeper going on.

Millennia ago, David modeled for us the heart-transforming nature of teshuvah. In Psalm 51, he acknowledges his sins, transgressions, and iniquities in a litany of confessions. He asks that God give his soul a good scrub: 鈥淲ash me thoroughly of my iniquity, and purify me of my sin鈥 (). He then asks God to create his heart anew, much like a newborn: 鈥淔ashion a pure heart for me, O God; create in me a steadfast spirit鈥 (). He then teaches that 鈥淭rue sacrifice to God is a contrite spirit; God, You will not despise a contrite and crushed heart鈥 ().

David teaches that the most important component of teshuvah is a broken heart. The breaking of our heart center is what allows the divine flow to wash over us from within and purify us from sin. Teshuvah is heart-breaking and ego-busting. We have limited to no control over this aspect of the process 鈥 we cannot purify our own hearts.

Despite our lack of control, our divine bath doesn鈥檛 end with our feeling refreshed. Instead, we must become active participants in our own teshuvah, working to repair relationships with those we have harmed and committing to live differently in the future.

For Ashkenazi communities, the prayers of start this Saturday night. Sephardic communities have already been saying these prayers since the beginning of the Hebrew month of Elul. These prayers are an invitation to go deeper and let our hearts break with our pain for the world and our own individual and collective culpability.

My prayer for us all this year is that we experience the mystical power of teshuvah purifying us from within. And I pray that our purified hearts strengthen us in our renewed commitment to work for a better world in the coming year.

Views expressed in this column are the author鈥檚 own and not necessarily those of 福利亚洲国产精品. The original article appears in聽.

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Geoffrey Claussen publishes on ethics of war /u/news/2025/09/09/geoffrey-claussen-publishes-on-ethics-of-war/ Tue, 09 Sep 2025 15:23:19 +0000 /u/news/?p=1026790 Geoffrey Claussen, professor of religious studies, Lori and Eric Sklut Professor in Jewish Studies and chair of the Department of Religious Studies at 福利亚洲国产精品, recently published two articles addressing ethical concerns with the ongoing Israeli military campaign in Gaza.

Both articles consider how virtue-centered Jewish traditions (musar) may provide resources for responding to calls to justify the mass killings of innocent civilians.

The first article was published in the “Journal of Jewish Ethics” (vol. 9, no. 2). The article is titled and focuses on those four virtues.

The second article, 聽focuses more narrowly on virtues of justice and compassion. It was published in “Sources: A Journal of Jewish Ideas” (vol. 5, no. 1), the journal of the Shalom Hartman Institute.

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Recent flooding in North Carolina through a Jewish lens /u/news/2025/07/21/recent-flooding-in-north-carolina-through-a-jewish-lens/ Mon, 21 Jul 2025 14:27:26 +0000 /u/news/?p=1022173 Growing up, July was a time of ease. Days were long and warm. There was no school. I have fond memories of beach trips, mountain trips, pool time, summer camps and watermelon. Nowadays, as the effects of the climate crisis have become more pronounced, summer has begun to feel more ominous.

Maor Greene, associate chaplain for Jewish Life

The Jewish calendar understands the three weeks between the 17th of Tammuz and 9th of Av as a time of intense mourning, when we remember the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem. Because of my childhood experiences, I used to have trouble associating destruction with summer. Not this summer.

During a late June heatwave, I used our local river 鈥 the Eno River 鈥 as a mikveh. On the Fourth of July, my family and I enjoyed a pool day with splash contests, coin-diving, and a greased watermelon competition. Two days later, our region, like Texas, was inundated in a . Flooding has happened throughout human history. However, with the onset of climate change, the intensity and frequency of flooding has dramatically increased, including just this week in the New York area.

The flooding killed several people including a member of our synagogue. It severely damaged homes, roads, and properties. Our local pool was eight feet underwater. The Eno River has been contaminated from leaked sewage and other pollutants. Riverside trails are closed indefinitely as officials evaluate the damage. I don鈥檛 know the next time I will be able to immerse in the Eno River safely.

It has felt like the three weeks started early.

On this first Shabbat of the three weeks, we will read a special haftarah: . Jeremiah was sent by God to warn Judah and Jerusalem of their impending destruction. He had the unenviable task of proclaiming to the people that their lives were about to rupture in ways they could not imagine.

In , God tells Jeremiah,

See, I appoint you on this day
Over nations and kingdoms:
To uproot and to pull down,
To destroy and to overthrow,
To build and to plant.
I used to read Jeremiah as a failed prophet. He was sent to warn Judah and Jerusalem of their impending destruction. Despite his warnings, they did not repent. Jerusalem was destroyed and its leaders taken into exile.

These days, I read Jeremiah differently. It may be that the destruction Jeremiah was tasked with proclaiming was unavoidable. Jeremiah was appointed to tell the truth of the devastation that would befall Jerusalem and to encourage people to find a way to live beyond it. It was never within Jeremiah鈥檚 power to avert disaster.

From this perspective, Jeremiah was a wildly successful prophet. He correctly proclaimed doom and hope. He did not deny the truth of the traumatic events facing Jerusalem. But as they unfolded, he was also able to give people hope amid the destruction of everything that they had ever known.

If you transpose the book of Jeremiah onto our times, Jeremiah could be prophesying about the climate crisis. We have all heard the warnings from climate scientists, and yet we have so far been unable to avoid barreling towards irreparable harm to our planet. Jeremiah鈥檚 language of 鈥渦proot鈥 and 鈥減ull down鈥 doesn鈥檛 even feel like a metaphor when surveying destruction from flooding.

However, Jeremiah doesn鈥檛 just proclaim uprooting, pulling down, destroying, and overthrowing. Jeremiah also encourages Judeans to build and plant. He encourages resilience in the face of unspeakable tragedy. He encourages hope amidst despair.

Before destruction comes, it is hard to imagine or prepare for it. But after destruction comes, it can be hard to find hope.

The season of the three weeks is an invitation to find a dynamic balance between hope and despair. Not only can we imagine destruction on a scale we have never seen, we can also imagine what it might look like to build, plant, and thrive after the unimaginable has occurred.

Views expressed in this column are the author鈥檚 own and not necessarily those of 福利亚洲国产精品. The original article appears in聽.

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