Lonely Man of Faith

Joseph B. Soloveitchik
The Lonely Man of Faith is the finest and simplest representation of the thoughts on the meaning of the life of faith amid the many struggles of the modern world.

Fusing the existential acuity of Kierkegaard with the wisdom of the Old Testament,  Orthodox rabbi Soloveitchik has produced a timeless spiritual guide for men and women of all religions. In this soaring, eloquent essay,  ``The Rav,'' as he is known, investigates the essential aloneness of the person of faith, whom he deems a misfit in our narcissistic, technologically oriented, utilitarian society. Using the story of Adam and Eve as a springboard, Soloveitchik explains prayer as ``the harbinger of moral reformation'' and probes the despair and exasperation of individuals who seek to redeem existence through direct knowledge of a God who seems remote and unapproachable. Although the faithful may become members of a ``convenantal community,'' their true home, he writes, is ``the abode of loneliness'' as they shuttle between the transcendent and the mundane.

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