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Song of Teshuvah: Book Four: A Commentary on Rav Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook's Oros HaTeshuvah
Barnes and Noble
Song of Teshuvah: Book Four: A Commentary on Rav Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook's Oros HaTeshuvah
Current price: $36.95
Barnes and Noble
Song of Teshuvah: Book Four: A Commentary on Rav Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook's Oros HaTeshuvah
Current price: $36.95
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This is the only English translation of the esteemed Rav Kook’s book on repentance and self-improvement
Rabbi Abraham Isaac HaKohen Kook’s seminal work on repentance,
Oros HaTeshuvah
, is recognized as a classic of Jewish thought but has, because of its difficult language and its theological depth, remained inaccessible to many. This book presents readers with the original Hebrew text of
with a new translation into English, as well as expert commentary in English from Rabbi Moshe Weinberger. Weinberger draws on his extensive knowledge of Jewish philosophical and inspirational literature to provide profound, moving, and fresh insights into the text, richly explicating the ideas in
in an accessible and clear but not superficial manner. Readers will come away with a firm grasp on the profound truth at the heart of Kook’s classic work: that
teshuvah
—repentance—is not a somber process of self-deprivation but a joyful journey back to God and to the core of each individual. This volume covers chapters 14 through 17 of
and is the final volume in this series.
Rabbi Abraham Isaac HaKohen Kook’s seminal work on repentance,
Oros HaTeshuvah
, is recognized as a classic of Jewish thought but has, because of its difficult language and its theological depth, remained inaccessible to many. This book presents readers with the original Hebrew text of
with a new translation into English, as well as expert commentary in English from Rabbi Moshe Weinberger. Weinberger draws on his extensive knowledge of Jewish philosophical and inspirational literature to provide profound, moving, and fresh insights into the text, richly explicating the ideas in
in an accessible and clear but not superficial manner. Readers will come away with a firm grasp on the profound truth at the heart of Kook’s classic work: that
teshuvah
—repentance—is not a somber process of self-deprivation but a joyful journey back to God and to the core of each individual. This volume covers chapters 14 through 17 of
and is the final volume in this series.