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Medieval Literature II: Maimonides

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

Release Date: 05/29/2025

Don Quixote I: The First Modern Novel show art Don Quixote I: The First Modern Novel

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

The first modern novel employs humor and satire to explore what it means to be an individual. To help us in our survey of Don Quixote, we’ll focus on the following questions: How does Don Quixote both mock the past and emphasize the value of tradition? Even if Don Quixote is objectively mad, how do his wild imaginings critique modernity? What are we to make of and learn from Don Quixote’s insistence that he knows exactly who he is? Recommended Reading: Cervantes, Miguel. . Trans. Edith Grossman. New York: Ecco, 2015. 

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Italy and the Jews: A Vital Center for Isolation and Integration show art Italy and the Jews: A Vital Center for Isolation and Integration

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

The Jewish communities of Renaissance Italy were unusual in their interactions with their Christian neighbors. As we explore this topic, we’ll find answers to the following questions: Why did early Renaissance Italian humanists turn to Jews to inspire Christian thought? In what ways were the Jews involved in developing the Renaissance culture of Italy? How did the Jews of this period lay the groundwork for the development of the modern Hebrew language?

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Shakespeare the Bard: A Man for the Ages show art Shakespeare the Bard: A Man for the Ages

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

For good reason, Shakespeare is one of the most famous and most influential writers of the English language. To help us unpack that topic, we’ll explore the following questions: In contrast with the greatness of man to be found in Hamlet, how does the relative bleakness of Macbeth resonate with a listener? Of all the bard’s plays, what makes As You Like It a good one to introduce students to Shakespeare? Can The Merchant of Venice be understood in a way that is sympathetic to Jews?

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Shakespeare's Hamlet: The First Modern Play show art Shakespeare's Hamlet: The First Modern Play

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

Arguably Shakespeare’s greatest play, Hamlet will catapult us into the modern era of literature. To unpack that notion, we’ll explore the following questions: In what sense does Hamlet have a foothold in both the classical and modern eras? How does Hamlet grapple with the Biblical, covenantal tension between man’s significance, on the one hand, and insignificance, on the other? Why is Hamlet’s conversation with his conscience an answer to Machiavelli? Recommended Reading: Shakespeare, William. . New York: Simon & Schuster, 2012. Folger Shakespeare Library.

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Montaigne and Shakespeare: The Rise of the Individual show art Montaigne and Shakespeare: The Rise of the Individual

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

Modernity continues to emerge with the writings of Montaigne and Shakespeare. On today’s episode, Rabbi Rocklin will help us address the following questions: Why did Montaigne love history as a tool to understand the human character? How does Montaigne’s approach to education diverge from his contemporaries’ such that we might recognize his approach in today’s world of education? What sets Shakespeare’s plays apart from his contemporaries’ and makes his works relevant throughout the centuries? Recommended Reading: Barzun, Jacques. . New York: Harper Perennial, 2001.

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Kabbalah: Mysticism and Science show art Kabbalah: Mysticism and Science

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

The study of Kabbalah—Jewish mysticism—will play an outsized role in shaping not only Western thought but even modern science. To explore the topic, we’ll turn to the following questions: What is Kabbalah and why did it become important, as an area of study, for Christian thinkers and scholars? How does Kabbalah further develop the notion of human agency? What role did Kabbalah play in the development of modern science? Recommended Reading: Coudert, Allison P. . Oregon: Pickwick Publications, 2024.

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Swords, Spurs, and Gunpowder: A History of Religious Wars show art Swords, Spurs, and Gunpowder: A History of Religious Wars

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

The amount of bloodshed that took place following the Protestant Reformation is staggering. As we try to make sense of the religious wars, we’ll explore the following questions: What role did chivalric virtues play in bolstering Protestantism in France? Why did local Catholics in the Low Countries oppose an inquisition against Protestants? How did the Treaty of Westphalia, which recognized Protestantism as legitimate, differ from the Peace of Augsburg a century earlier?

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Rifts and Splits: Calvinism, Anglicanism, and Counter-Reformation show art Rifts and Splits: Calvinism, Anglicanism, and Counter-Reformation

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

In the aftermath of the Protestant Reformation, religious Europe continued to splinter. On today’s episode, Rabbi Rocklin will answer the following questions: How did John Calvin’s views of free will and predestination lead to a culture in which hard work and monetary success was seen as valuable? How does Anglicanism occupy a middle ground between Lutheranism and Calvinism? Over the course of the Council of Trent, how did the Catholic Church clarify its doctrine in response to Luther’s criticisms?

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Erasmus: Humanist and Reformer show art Erasmus: Humanist and Reformer

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

Erasmus was arguably the greatest scholar and foremost humanist of the Northern Renaissance. As we learn more about him, we’ll explore the following questions: How was Erasmus’ Greek language scholarship foundational to the Protestant Reformation? What were Erasmus’ basic criticisms of the Catholic Church? How did those critiques differ from Luther’s? Why is it still important to read Erasmus today, despite his fundamental character flaws? Recommended Reading: Shepherd, Victor. . Canada: Regent College Publishing, 2008.  Reverend Dr. Victor Shepherd’s website:

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Europe in Crisis: The Struggle for the Church show art Europe in Crisis: The Struggle for the Church

The Pillars: Jerusalem, Athens, and the Western Mind

Political turmoil swept across Europe in the wake of the Protestant Reformation. To help us expand the topic, Rabbi Rocklin will answer the following questions: How did Luther’s approach to religious reform encourage a rise in centralized power? Why was it necessary to divide the Holy Roman Empire in the Peace of Augsburg? How did Rashi, an eleventh century Jewish scholar, indirectly influence Luther’s interpretation of scripture?

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More Episodes

Maimonides arguably was the greatest philosopher of the twelfth century. Today, Rabbi Rocklin will help us unpack his legacy and address the following questions:

  1. Why was Maimonides’ codification of Jewish law so monumental? How did his system of codification diverge from the Talmud?
  2. How did Maimonides’ Guide to the Perplexed help push western philosophy forward?
  3. Why was The Guide to the Perplexed banned by some Jewish rabbis? Why was the ban ultimately lifted?