Harold Kushner

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Harold S. Kushner is a prominent American rabbi aligned with the progressive wing of Conservative Judaism. Born in Brooklyn, Kushner was educated at Columbia University and later obtained his rabbinical ordination from the Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) in 1960. The same institution awarded him a doctoral degree in Bible in 1972. Kushner has also studied at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, taught at Clark University and the Rabbinical School of the JTS, and received six honorary doctorates. He served as the long time congregational rabbi of Temple Israel in Natick, Massachusetts for twenty-four years and belongs to the Rabbinical Assembly.

He is the author of the immensely popular book on liberal theology, When Bad Things Happen to Good People, which was widely read not just in Jewish circles, but became a best seller due to its adoption by many liberal Protestant Christians as well. This book deals with questions about God, Omnipotence and Theodicy.

Kushner has written a number of other popular theological books, such as How Good Do We Have to Be?, To Life! and many others. In collaboration with the late Chaim Potok, Kushner co-edited Etz Hayim: A Torah Commentary, the new official Torah commentary of the Conservative movement, which was jointly published in 2001 by the Rabbinical Assembly and the Jewish Publication Society. His Living a Life That Matters became a best seller in the fall of 2001. His most recent book, The Lord Is My Shepherd, was a meditation on the Twenty-Third Psalm released in 2003.

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