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Paperback The Search for God at Harvard Book

ISBN: 0345377060

ISBN13: 9780345377067

The Search for God at Harvard

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Book Overview

A NEW YORK TIMES NOTABLE BOOK OF THE YEAR In 1985 Ari L. Goldman took a year's leave from his job as a religion reporter for The New York Times and enrolled in the Harvard Divinity School. What began... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Memoir and Spiritual Biography

Ari Goldman, a New York Times Religion reporter, proposes a sabbatical leave to his editors. He wants to study at Harvard Divinity School for one year to improve his perspective on world religions, and add depth and knowledge to his articles concerning religion for the newspaper. When he arrives at Harvard, in the mid-1980s, he is surprised to find an eclectic mix of students, from all the major religions, debating about major issues of the day. His view of Harvard's Divinity school as uppity, straight-laced ministers is challenged with every new student he meets. Goldman discusses his own religious life and spiritual memoirs. A yeshiva-educated Orthodox Jew, Goldman struggled in college with his career interests and his religious training. How could one keep kosher in a foreign country? How could one keep Sabbath when a huge news story breaks? There are chapters in the book describing the major religions and the courses that Goldman took at the Divinity School to help him understand each. There are also chapters discussing Women in Religion, Orthodoxy, and other issues that modern religions encounter. Goldman's writing style is very readable (no doubt because of his journalism background) and he writes with spirit. He does not hesitate to discuss trials and struggles that the people at the Divinity School have, or things that he struggles with himself.

Fascinating

The first time I read _The Search for God at Harvard_, I could not put it down until the end. I was enthralled. I have turned many people, including ministers, onto this book and have yet to receive less than favorable comments.Ari Goldman tells a story of Orthodox Judaism, journalism, academia, and personal exploration. On sabatical from his job as religion writer for the New York Times, Goldman spends a year studying other religions at Harvard Divinity School. The people he introduces us to in this book are real and rivetting, but none moreso than Ari Goldman himself. His book is genial but very honest. I believe it took real courage for him to share this story with the public.This book provides an interesting taste of comparitive religion. As a Protestant Christian, I was grateful for the chance to glimpse other religions (and my own) through Orthodox Jewish eyes. This is a gentle yet powerful tale of one man's intellectual and spiritual adventure which holds lessons for all of us. I can't do this book justice in a review...it' too deep and beautiful. Please have the pleasure of reading it for yourself.

Amazing story of Orthodox Jew Studying Other Religions

I expected this story to be merely a recitation of "what grad school was like for me". Boy, was I happily surprised! I was raised in an Orthodox environment myself, and the author does a great job of relating what that is like, the good and the bad, and even showing that there are differences among the Orthodox. (However, I was shocked at his revelation that the Orthodox engage in pre-marital sex - this has not been my experence!) At any rate, he does a fantastic job showing how he not only learned about other religions at Harvard, but was moved by them. In particular, I loved his explanation of how he actively searched for (and ultimately found) a class on Christianity that explained the passion of Christians for their religion, rather than just some intellectual lectures on the New Testament. Another thing that floored me was his openness about his personal life: how his parents' divorce devastated him, and how he wrestled with pondering how he could pursue journalism while keeping all the tenets of Orthodox Judaism (it was his mother who was his biggest support!). I also loved how Orthodox Judaism was a way of life for him, and that he was so secure in it, that he really could go to Harvard and throw himself into the study of other religions. If you are curious about religions, this is an absolute must-read.

A great read

I stumbled on this book by chance and found it very, very interesting. Anyone who is interested in Harvard, religion and/or journalism will love this book. Ari Goldman has a real flair for storytelling. He paints a wonderful picture of his childhood, growing up in an Orthodox Jewish family, and explains the struggles he faced in keeping his faith while pursuing a career in journalism. Read this book!

Informative, cogent, and enjoyable to read

I found Ari Goldman's book to be highly enjoyable and hard to put down. As a Christian, it helped me better understand Judaism, and it was refreshing to see someone like Goldman who stood by his religious convictions (e.g. Sabbath observances, dietary practices) while still actively interacting in society. It was also nice to see that the religion reporter from the New York Times would be willing to take a year's sabbatical in order to better understand the other religions he is asked to cover for his job. In a way, this work is like a book of comparative religions, only reported from a personalized viewpoint (which makes it eminently more readable than the dry, "objective" and depersonalized accounts so often offered to us in our book world.) Highly recommended.
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