Faith and Reason: A Jewish and Philosophical Basis

Furthermore, some religious claims are stronger than others. The claim that there is a God who created the universe and revealed his will to mankind is much stronger than, for example, the claim that there was a worldwide flood somewhere between the Stone Age and the early Near Eastern Bronze Age. Then again, the existence of a Creator who revealed himself is much more central to religion than that of a historical flood, especially when one considers exegetical explanations that account for geological and historical evidence and don't affirm a worldwide flood. But this is for a different article.

In conclusion, I think that modern philosophy of religion and natural theology make a strong case for faith. These disciplines are not only compatible with Judaism but have had, and still have, great Jewish contributors. Faith need not be blind; the evidence itself can lead one to faith. Religion can not only be reasonable, but can be guided by reason. A reasoned faith can be the foundation stone upon which we build our further worship of God, blessed is he.

7/13/2016 4:00:00 AM
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