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This article dealt with the irony that confronts any investigation into the conceptualisation of
morality in Judaism: much of contemporary scholarship promotes the Strong Dependence
Theory where God is considered the prime source of morality − yet an empirical analysis of
classical rabbinic literature indicates a leaning more towards the Weak Dependence Theory
which considers human beings the source for morality. Somehow, scholarship seems to
overlook this textual evidence. On the other hand, that same contemporary scholarship has no
problem in accepting absolute and complete human autonomy in the area of Jewish religious
law or Halacha. This study questioned why humans are comfortably accepted as the primary
determinants of religious law but not of morality – and argued for a return to the original
Weak Dependence Theory to maintain moral efficacy. It included an examination of an extreme
historical test case for rabbinic morality concerning how the rabbinic world dealt internally
with the moral implications of major rabbis who had fled the Holocaust.
INTRADISCIPLINARY AND/OR INTERDISCIPLINARY IMPLICATIONS : While this literature study was
conducted from an orthodox rabbinic perspective, it adopted a descriptive and evaluative
methodology based on academic, rabbinic and historical sources.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILITY : Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data were created or analysed in this study.
Special Collection: Morality in history.
Research on this article commenced in 2022 when Gavin Michal was completing his Master’s Dissertation and invited to present a paper on the Conceptualisation of Morality in Judaism at the ProMores Conference at the University of Pretoria, Faculty of Theology and Religion, on 12 September 2022.