Moses Maimonides on Job's Happiness and the Riddle of Divine Transcendence

Authors

  • N. Verbin Tel-Aviv University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24204/ejpr.v8i4.1759

Abstract

The paper explores the nature and role of divine transcendence in Maimonides by focusing on the figure of Job as he is understood by him. In the first part, I discuss Maimonides’ diagnosis of Job’s suffering. In the second, I focus on Maimonides’ analysis of the nature of its defeat, and the manners in which that defeat involves the mediation of divine transcendence and hiddenness. In the third, I discuss some of the difficulties involved within the picture presented in the second part, namely, Maimonides’ seeming commitment to two incompatible conceptions of divine transcendence. I argue that the incompatible accounts need not be harmonized since the Guide of the Perplexed is not a textbook that attempts to provide a doctrine concerning the nature of divine transcendence and its relation to the world. Rather, its purpose is to present a riddle, the great riddle of divine transcendence, around which Jewish life, as he understands it, is built. This riddle, for Maimonides, cannot be solved or dissolved; rather, it has to be recognized and embraced.

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Published

2016-12-22

How to Cite

Verbin, N. 2016. “Moses Maimonides on Job’s Happiness and the Riddle of Divine Transcendence”. European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 8 (4):125-41. https://doi.org/10.24204/ejpr.v8i4.1759.

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Section

Research Articles