The Promise and Limits of Doing Scriptural
Reasoning on a Christian Rabbinic Text
Steven Kepnes Colgate University
Wolfson's explication of Kemper's hermeneutic genius has a thankful,
scholarly tone that allows Jews to read what intrinsically is a difficult text
for a Jew to read -- the text of a Jewish apostate to Christianity. Reading
this text is not unlike reading many New Testament texts which reinterpret
torah texts as prefigurations of Christianity and make arguments for Christian
supercessionism.
But Wolfson helps Jewish readers to fight through the difficulties to an
appreciation of the sheer hermeneutical boldness and creativity of Kemper. And
through this appreciation he even reclaims Kemper as a Jew. In spite of
his conversion to Christianity, in his mode of argumentation Kemper remained
faithful to his rabbinic training. The move that Wolfson makes here to
look at the mode or form of rabbinic argumentation as a
mark of Jewish uniqueness is one that Jewish textual reasoners have been making
for a while. We see it in other works by Wolfson, as well as in the works of
Jewish texts scholars and philosophers such as Boyarin, Fishbane, Fraade,
Halbertal, and Handelman. This is the attempt to display the unique techniques
of rabbinic midrashic and legal reasoning and to present the special
philosophical, literary, and theological presuppositions that underlie rabbinic
hermeneutics. Peter Ochs has presented us with the most elegant and
sophisticated presentation of the logic of scriptural and rabbinic textual
reasoning in his new book, Peirce, Pragmatism, and the Logic of
Scripture. The consequence of these works has been that we have been able
to compare rabbinic textual reasoning to other forms of scriptural reasoning in
meetings of this group. Additionally, we hope that scriptural reasoning will be
applied to contemporary religious and secular life to uplift it morally and
spiritually.
Usually Jewish scriptural reasoners choose Jewish rabbinic texts as their
objects of study. But by choosing a Christian rabbinic text Wolfson
pushes us to see the promise and perhaps some of the limits of what we are
doing. The promise is that we, as Jewish, Christian, and Moslem scriptural
reasoners, can further see and appreciate hermeneutical genius and be brought
together through that appreciation. The limit is that the act of appreciation
is bought through an act of abstraction out of content to pure form. My hope,
however, is that the positive appreciation of rabbinic hermeneutics will be a
condition for trust-building between Jews and Christians which will allow us at
some point in the future to address the difficult content issues of
the Christian hermeneutics of prefiguration and supercessionism.
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