Jacob B. Agus

Jacob B. Agus (November 8, 1911 – September 26, 1986) was a Polish American liberal Conservative rabbi and theologian who played a key role in the Conservative Rabbinical Assembly.[1][2]

Life

Jacob Agus was a leading thinker of the Conservative movement's liberal wing, heading Rabbinical Assembly committees on the sabbath, prayerbook, and ideology of the Conservative movement. He was also a rabbi of Beth El Congregation in Baltimore, Maryland, and a promoter of interfaith communication – which he referred to as "dialogue" or "trialogue."[3][4]

Agus (the family name was originally Agushewitz), was born in Poland in 1911 and his family emigrated to the United States in 1927. He attended the Talmudic Academy, New York, graduating in 1929, received his BA from Yeshiva College in 1933, and received semicha by Moshe Soloveichik at the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary of Yeshiva University in 1935.[5] In 1940 he received a PhD in Jewish Thought from Harvard University and married Miriam Shore the same year.[4] His older brother was Irving A. Agus, who taught medieval Jewish History at Yeshiva University.

Agus's rabbinic career included Congregation Beth Abraham, Norfolk, Virginia, 1934–1936; Temple Ashkenaz, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1936–1940; Agudas Achim North Shore Congregation, Chicago, 1940–1942; and Beth Abraham United Synagogue Center, Dayton, Ohio, 1942–1950. In 1945, Agus formally affiliated with the Conservative movement by joining the Rabbinical Assembly. In 1950 he became the rabbi of Beth El Congregation in Baltimore, where he remained for thirty years, retiring in 1980.[4]

As an influential member of the Conservative movement's Rabbinical Assembly, where he was active in the Committee on Jewish Law and Standards, chaired the Prayer Book Committee (1952–1956) and worked to define Conservative Jewish ideology through a series of conferences, committees and other gatherings, including the Continuing Conference on Conservative Ideology (1956–1963). With Morris Adler and Theodore Friedman he co-authored the 1950 Responsum on the Sabbath that allowed Conservative Jews to use electricity and drive on the Sabbath.

For more details of his role, see Conservative Halakha and Committee on Jewish Law and Standards

He taught at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, St. Mary's Seminary and Ecumenical Institute (where he was also a founder of the Interfaith Roundtable), and at both Temple University and Dropsie College in Philadelphia.[4]

In 1965 Agus accepted an invitation to teach at the Seminario Rabinico Latinoamerico in Buenos Aires. He remained in Argentina for two months, then traveled to Brazil where he spent two weeks lecturing under the auspices of the American Jewish Committee and the Brazilian Institute for Culture and Information. In Latin America Agus developed continuing ties with students and colleagues – among them Marshall Meyer, then director of the Seminario. These ties are documented by correspondence in this collection.[4]

In addition to his rabbinical and scholarly work, Agus adopted the cause of interfaith and interracial relations, dubbing his forays into Jewish/Christian and Jewish/Christian/Muslim relations "dialogue" and "trialogue." He also served on the boards of the Baltimore National Council on Christians and Jews, and the predominantly African-American Morgan State University, also in Baltimore.[4]

Professor Steven Katz has summed up his work as follows: "a remarkable American Rabbi and scholar, illuminating Agus' commitment to Jewish people everywhere, his profound and unwavering spirituality, his continual reminders of the very real dangers of pseudo-Messianism and misplaced romantic zeal, and his willingness to take politically and religiously unpopular stands."[6]

Interfaith

Agus was one of the principle of theologians of American Jewish-Christian dialogue. He developed a dual covenant theory based on the thought of Franz Rosenzweig. He envisioned a symbiosis of the two religions.[7]

Rosenzweig’s view was remarkable, in that, the Christian community was engaged in fulfilling Israel’s mission. The people Israel are like the sun; the Christian community was the effluence of Divine rays permeating the nations with the spirit of monotheism. The boundary line between Judaism and Christianity was not along the plane of intellectual thought, since the divine being could only be caught figuratively or symbolically within the meshes of human reason.[8]

If the Bible is God-given, it follows that both Israel and Christendom, which are based on the Bible, are divinely ordained religious communities; in both these groups there is an eternal “we” which through common prayer for the Kingdom, acquires eternity for its members and also hastens the final redemption of the world….both are, in a real sense, revealed religions and each one, in itself, is only part of the truth.[9]

Modern philosophies

Agus presented Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook as a paradigm of a modern Jew, despite the latter's kabbalah, and fundamentalist halacha. Agus saw him as sanctifying modern change.[10]

Works

References

  1. Conservative Judaism: Our Ancestors to Our Descendants By Elliott N Dorff, especially chapters 2 and 4
  2. Mordecai Waxman, ed., Tradition and Change (New York: Burning Bush Press, 1958)
  3. Staff. "JACOB B. AGUS", The New York Times, September 30, 1986. Accessed April 6, 2009.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Jacob Agus (1911–1986), Papers, Jewish Theological Seminary of America. Accessed April 6, 2009.
  5. Katz, Steven T. "American Rabbi", via Google Books, New York University Press, 1997 ISBN 0-8147-4693-4. Accessed April 6, 2009.
  6. http://www.nyupress.org/books/American_Rabbi-products_id-40.html
  7. Agus, Dialogue and Tradition; The Challenges of Contemporary Judeo-Christian Thought, 66.
  8. Agus, Dialogue and Tradition; The Challenges of Contemporary Judeo-Christian Thought, 492–493.
  9. Agus, Modern Philosophies of Judaism, 193.
  10. Katz, American Rabbi, page 34

Bibliography

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