Ignatz Lichtenstein: Difference between revisions
He was a Neolog Rabbi, not Orthodox. He is buried in a Reform cemetery. |
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{{Short description|Hungarian Orthodox rabbi (1824-1908)}} |
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{{Infobox |
{{Infobox person |
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| name = Ignatz Lichtenstein |
| name = Ignatz Lichtenstein |
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| image = Ignatz Lichtenstein (transparent).png |
| image = Ignatz Lichtenstein (transparent).png |
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| children = Emanuel Lichtenstein, MD <ref>Two Letters; or, What I really Wish. (Translated by Mrs. Baron) Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel. 1887</ref> |
| children = Emanuel Lichtenstein, MD <ref>Two Letters; or, What I really Wish. (Translated by Mrs. Baron) Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel. 1887</ref> |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Ignatz Lichtenstein'''<ref>or Ignác in the ''Magyar Zsidó Lexikon'' (Hungarian Jewish Lexicon) from 1929, in the entry ''Tápiószele'', also known in English as '''Isaac Lichtenstein''' and who wrote under the pen name I. Lichtenstein</ref> (1824 – October 16, 1908<ref>{{cite journal |
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'''Ignatz Lichtenstein''' ([[Hungarian language|Hungarian]]: Lichtenstein Ignác)<ref>This is the way his name is spelled in the ''Magyar Zsidó Lexikon'' (Hungarian Jewish Lexicon) from 1929, in the entry ''Tápiószele''</ref> (1824 – October 16, 1908<ref>{{cite journal |editor=Louis Meyer |year=1909 |title=V. Austria Hungray |journal=The Jewish Era |volume=18 |issue=1 |date=15 January 1909 |page=20 |publisher=Chicago Hebrew Mission |oclc=49314122 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=_X4zAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA20 |accessdate=23 December 2012 |quote=Rabbi Ignatz Lichtenstein died in Budapest in his eighty-fifth year on Friday, October 16th.<!--Written in *January 1909*. Also note that 16 October 1909 was a Saturday, while 16 October 1908 was indeed a Friday.-->}}</ref>), sometimes mistakenly called '''Isaac''' due to his pen name I. Lichtenstein, was a [[Hungary|Hungarian]] [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox]] [[rabbi]] who wrote "pamphlets advocating conversion to Christianity while still officiating as a Rabbi."<ref name=Deutsch>{{cite book |
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|editor=Louis Meyer |
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|title=V. Austria Hungary |
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|journal=The Jewish Era |
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|volume=18 |
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|issue=1 |
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|date=15 January 1909 |
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|page=20 |
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|publisher=Chicago Hebrew Mission |
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|oclc=49314122 |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_X4zAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA20 |
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|access-date=23 December 2012 |
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|quote=Rabbi Ignatz Lichtenstein died in Budapest in his eighty-fifth year on Friday, October 16th.<!--Written in *January 1909*. Also note that 16 October 1909 was a Saturday, while 16 October 1908 was indeed a Friday.-->}}</ref>) was a [[Hungary|Hungarian]] [[Neolog Judaism|Neolog]] [[rabbi]] who wrote "pamphlets advocating conversion to Christianity while still officiating as a Rabbi."<ref name=Deutsch>{{cite book |
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|last=Deutsch |
|last=Deutsch |
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|first=Gotthard |
|first=Gotthard |
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|publisher=Kessinger Publishing |
|publisher=Kessinger Publishing |
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|year=2005 |
|year=2005 |
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|pages=118–119}}</ref> Though he refused to be [[baptism|baptized]] into the [[Christian]] faith his whole life,<ref name=gillet>{{cite book |
|pages=118–119}}</ref> Though he refused to be [[baptism|baptized]] into the [[Christianity|Christian]] faith his whole life,<ref name=gillet>{{cite book |
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|title=Communion in the Messiah: Studies in the Relationship Between Judaism and Christianity |
|title=Communion in the Messiah: Studies in the Relationship Between Judaism and Christianity |
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|first=Lev |
|first=Lev |
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|publisher=James Clarke & Co. |
|publisher=James Clarke & Co. |
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|isbn=0-227-17225-6 |
|isbn=0-227-17225-6 |
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|page=206}}</ref> he ultimately |
|page=206}}</ref> he ultimately retired from his Rabbinical post at the age of 68 in 1892 due to failing health.<ref name=Smith>{{cite book |
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|publisher=Hunt & Nation |
|publisher=Hunt & Nation |
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|title=The Gospel in All Lands |
|title=The Gospel in All Lands |
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|last=Smith |
|last=Smith |
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|first=Eugene R. |
|first=Eugene R. |
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|pages=507–508}}</ref> |
|pages=507–508}}</ref> In 1888 he visited by the Scottish minister and evangelist [[Alexander Neil Somerville]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Nagy-Laczkó |first=Balázs |date=3 February 2022 |title='Dr. Somerville's sensational visit to Békés county' (hungarian). Hungarian original: Dr. Somerville szenzációs látogatása Békésben. |url=http://www.barkaonline.hu/ex-libris/8025-dr--somerville-szenzacios-latogatasa-bekesben |journal=[[Bárka]] |language=hungarian |publication-date=}}</ref> And then his biography appeared in the Methodist Episcopal missionary magazine, The Gospel in All Lands, in 1894.<ref name=Smith/> The Jewish historian [[Gottard Deutsch|Gotthard Deutsch]], an editor of the ''[[Jewish Encyclopedia]]'', in an essay published 3 February 1916, mentions him, fallaciously, in the course of refuting a claim by the Chief Rabbi of [[London]] that no rabbi had ever become a convert to [[Christianity]].<ref name=Deutsch/> Followers of [[Messianic Judaism]] mention him as an example of a turn of the 19th century "Jewish believer in Jesus."<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.messianicassociation.org/bio-lichtenstein.htm |
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|title=The Story of Rabbi Isaac Lichtenstein: From an account written over 90 years ago |
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|publisher=The Association of Messianic Congregations}}</ref> Speaking of his first contact with the gospel, he said: "I looked for thorns and gathered roses."<ref name=gillet/> |
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== Bibliography |
== Bibliography == |
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Catalogues of works authored by the Rabbi may make dubious attributions. Deutsch, for example, notes he is confused with a Rabbi [[Jehiel Lichtenstein]] (1831–1912) who worked for a missionary institute in [[ |
Catalogues of works authored by the Rabbi, including this one, may make dubious attributions. Deutsch, for example, notes he is confused with a Rabbi [[Jehiel Lichtenstein]] (1831–1912) who worked for a missionary institute in [[Leipzig]].<ref name=Deutsch/> |
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'''Original German Works:'''<ref name="Rabbi Isaac Lichtenstein 2008">“Introduction to Rabbi Isaac Lichtenstein: Selected Writings” Jorge Quiñónez, (editor) Daniel Lancaster (co-editor). Keren Ahvah Meshihit 2008.</ref> |
'''Original German Works:'''<ref name="Rabbi Isaac Lichtenstein 2008">“Introduction to Rabbi Isaac Lichtenstein: Selected Writings” Jorge Quiñónez, (editor) Daniel Lancaster (co-editor). Keren Ahvah Meshihit 2008.</ref> |
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* ''[http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/Judenthum%20und%20Christenthum.pdf Judenthum und Christenthum]'' [“''Judaism and Christianity''”], (Hamburg: A. Scheibenhuber, 1891?). |
* ''[http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/Judenthum%20und%20Christenthum.pdf Judenthum und Christenthum]'' [“''Judaism and Christianity''”], (Hamburg: A. Scheibenhuber, 1891?). |
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* ''Eine Bitte an die geehrten Leser'' [“''An Appeal to Honored Readers''”], (Budapest, 1893 or 1894), also known as [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/Eine%20Bitte.pdf ''Eine Bitte an das israelitische Volk''] |
* ''Eine Bitte an die geehrten Leser'' [“''An Appeal to Honored Readers''”], (Budapest, 1893 or 1894), also known as [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/Eine%20Bitte.pdf ''Eine Bitte an das israelitische Volk''] |
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* “‘''Zwei Briefe’ oder ‘was ich eigentlich will''’” [“‘''Two Letters’ or ‘What I Really Wish''’”], Saat auf Hoffnung 30 (1893), 9-36. |
* ''[http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/Zwei%20Briefe.pdf “‘''Zwei Briefe’ oder ‘was ich eigentlich will''’”]'' [“‘''Two Letters’ or ‘What I Really Wish''’”], Saat auf Hoffnung 30 (1893), 9-36. |
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* “''Das Blut Christi, ein Nachklang aus dem Midrasch Echa''” [“''The Blood of Christ, an Echo of Midrash Ekhah''”], Saat auf Hoffnung 30 (1893), 229-32. |
* “''Das Blut Christi, ein Nachklang aus dem Midrasch Echa''” [“''The Blood of Christ, an Echo of Midrash Ekhah''”], Saat auf Hoffnung 30 (1893), 229-32. |
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* [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/Judenspiegel.pdf ''Judenspiegel''] [“''The Jewish Mirror''”] (Vienna: L. Schoenberger, 1896). |
* [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/Judenspiegel.pdf ''Judenspiegel''] [“''The Jewish Mirror''”] (Vienna: L. Schoenberger, 1896). |
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* J. Lichtenstein. ''Judaism and Christianity'' (translated from the German by Margaret M. Alison) (Edinburgh: Morrison & Gibb, 1893). [Translation of 4.] |
* J. Lichtenstein. ''Judaism and Christianity'' (translated from the German by Margaret M. Alison) (Edinburgh: Morrison & Gibb, 1893). [Translation of 4.] |
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* [ |
* [https://archive.org/details/appealtojewishpe00lich ''An Appeal to the Jewish People''] (Translated by Mrs. [?] Baron). [London]: The Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel (H. C. T. I., 1894). [Translation of 5.] |
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* "''Letter from Rabbi Lichtenstein'',” The Jewish Era 4:4 (Oct. 1895), 76. |
* "''Letter from Rabbi Lichtenstein'',” The Jewish Era 4:4 (Oct. 1895), 76. |
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* [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/Two%20letters.pdf ''Two Letters’ or ‘What I Really Wish''], (translated by Mrs. [?] Baron) (London: The Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel (H. C. T. I., 189?). [Translation of 6.] |
* [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/Two%20letters.pdf ''Two Letters’ or ‘What I Really Wish''], (translated by Mrs. [?] Baron) (London: The Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel (H. C. T. I., 189?). [Translation of 6.] |
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'''Original Hungarian Works:''' |
'''Original Hungarian Works:''' |
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* [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/?p=1775 ''Két levél vagy Amit én tulajdonképpen akarok''] [“''Two Letters; or, What I Really Wish''”] |
* [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/?p=1775 ''Két levél vagy Amit én tulajdonképpen akarok''] [“''Two Letters; or, What I Really Wish''”] |
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* [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/K%C3%A9relem%20a%20zsid%C3%B3%20olvas%C3%B3khoz.pdf ''Kérelem a zsidó olvasókhoz''] [“''An Appeal to the Jewish People''”] |
* [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/files/K%C3%A9relem%20a%20zsid%C3%B3%20olvas%C3%B3khoz.pdf ''Kérelem a zsidó olvasókhoz''] [“''An Appeal to the Jewish People''”] |
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'''Translations into French:''' |
'''Translations into French:''' |
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* ''Le Miroir Juif'' [“''The Jewish Mirror''”] |
* ''Le Miroir Juif'' [“''The Jewish Mirror''”] |
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* ''Points de Contact, Discours par le Rabbin Lichtenstein'' [“''Points of Meeting between Jewish and Christian Doctrine: the Law and the Gospel''”] |
* ''Points de Contact, Discours par le Rabbin Lichtenstein'' [“''Points of Meeting between Jewish and Christian Doctrine: the Law and the Gospel''”] |
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'''Translation into Italian:''' |
'''Translation into Italian:''' |
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* מיין בקשה, פון הרב י' יצחק ליכטענשטיין [“''An Appeal to the Jewish People''”] |
* מיין בקשה, פון הרב י' יצחק ליכטענשטיין [“''An Appeal to the Jewish People''”] |
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== |
== References == |
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{{wikisource author|Ignatz Lichtenstein}} |
{{wikisource author}} |
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{{Commons category|Ignatz Lichtenstein}} |
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{{Commons category|Books by Ignatz "Isaac" Lichtenstein}} |
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<references/> |
<references/> |
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* [http://www.messianicassociation.org/bio-lichtenstein.htm Online biography] |
* [http://www.messianicassociation.org/bio-lichtenstein.htm Online biography] |
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* [http://www.lcje.net/bulletins/2003/71/71_03.html Introduction to The Collected Writings of Rabbi Isaac Lichtenstein] |
* [http://www.lcje.net/bulletins/2003/71/71_03.html Introduction to The Collected Writings of Rabbi Isaac Lichtenstein] |
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* [http://vineofdavid.org/remnant_repository/isaac_lichtenstein/ English and German works (11)] as PDF in the Remnant Repository of [http://vineofdavid.org/ Vine of David] |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110810034143/http://vineofdavid.org/remnant_repository/isaac_lichtenstein/ English and German works (11)] as PDF in the Remnant Repository of [http://vineofdavid.org/ Vine of David] |
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* The biography of [http://en.messianicjudaismwiki.com/wiki/Isaac_Lichtenstien Isaac Lichtenstien] on [http://en.messianicjudaismwiki.com/ Messianic Judaism Wiki] |
* The biography of [https://web.archive.org/web/20120425061536/http://en.messianicjudaismwiki.com/wiki/Isaac_Lichtenstien Isaac Lichtenstien] on [https://archive.today/20121205213430/http://en.messianicjudaismwiki.com/ Messianic Judaism Wiki] |
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* [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/?p=2247/ English works] and [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/?p=2237/ German works] and [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/?p=1664/ Hungarian works] of the rabbi |
* [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/?p=2247/ English works] and [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/?p=2237/ German works] and [http://www.izrael-immanuel.net/?p=1664/ Hungarian works] of the rabbi |
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{{Authority control|VIAF=30420215}} |
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{{authority control}} |
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<!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] --> |
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{{Persondata |
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|NAME=Lichtenstein, Ignatz |
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|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Lichtenstein, Isaac; Lichtenstein, I.; Lichtenstein, J. |
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|SHORT DESCRIPTION=Hungarian Orthodox Rabbi |
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|DATE OF BIRTH=1824 |
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|PLACE OF BIRTH=[[Hungary]] |
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|DATE OF DEATH=October 16, 1909 |
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|PLACE OF DEATH= |
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}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Lichtenstein, Ignatz}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lichtenstein, Ignatz}} |
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[[Category:1824 births]] |
[[Category:1824 births]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:1908 deaths]] |
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[[Category:19th-century Hungarian |
[[Category:19th-century Hungarian writers]] |
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[[Category:19th-century writers]] |
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[[Category:Hungarian writers]] |
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[[Category:Religious writers]] |
[[Category:Religious writers]] |
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[[Category:Hungarian missionaries]] |
[[Category:Hungarian Christian missionaries]] |
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[[Category:Hungarian Orthodox rabbis]] |
[[Category:Hungarian Orthodox rabbis]] |
Latest revision as of 07:28, 17 November 2024
Ignatz Lichtenstein | |
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Born | 1824 |
Died | October 16, 1908 |
Occupation | Rabbi of Tápiószele Hungary (1857-1892) |
Children | Emanuel Lichtenstein, MD [1] |
Ignatz Lichtenstein[2] (1824 – October 16, 1908[3]) was a Hungarian Neolog rabbi who wrote "pamphlets advocating conversion to Christianity while still officiating as a Rabbi."[4] Though he refused to be baptized into the Christian faith his whole life,[5] he ultimately retired from his Rabbinical post at the age of 68 in 1892 due to failing health.[6] In 1888 he visited by the Scottish minister and evangelist Alexander Neil Somerville.[7] And then his biography appeared in the Methodist Episcopal missionary magazine, The Gospel in All Lands, in 1894.[6] The Jewish historian Gotthard Deutsch, an editor of the Jewish Encyclopedia, in an essay published 3 February 1916, mentions him, fallaciously, in the course of refuting a claim by the Chief Rabbi of London that no rabbi had ever become a convert to Christianity.[4] Followers of Messianic Judaism mention him as an example of a turn of the 19th century "Jewish believer in Jesus."[8] Speaking of his first contact with the gospel, he said: "I looked for thorns and gathered roses."[5]
Bibliography
[edit]Catalogues of works authored by the Rabbi, including this one, may make dubious attributions. Deutsch, for example, notes he is confused with a Rabbi Jehiel Lichtenstein (1831–1912) who worked for a missionary institute in Leipzig.[4]
Original German Works:[9]
- Der Talmud auf der Anklagebank durch einen begeisterten Verehrer des Judenthums [“The Talmud on the Dock by an Inspired Worshipper of Judaism”], Heft I (Budapest, 1886).
- Mein Zeugnis [“My Testimony”], Heft II (Budapest: Hornyánszky, 1886).
- Die Liebe und die Bekehrung [“Love and Conversion”], Heft III (Budapest, 1886).
- Judenthum und Christenthum [“Judaism and Christianity”], (Hamburg: A. Scheibenhuber, 1891?).
- Eine Bitte an die geehrten Leser [“An Appeal to Honored Readers”], (Budapest, 1893 or 1894), also known as Eine Bitte an das israelitische Volk
- “‘Zwei Briefe’ oder ‘was ich eigentlich will’” [“‘Two Letters’ or ‘What I Really Wish’”], Saat auf Hoffnung 30 (1893), 9-36.
- “Das Blut Christi, ein Nachklang aus dem Midrasch Echa” [“The Blood of Christ, an Echo of Midrash Ekhah”], Saat auf Hoffnung 30 (1893), 229-32.
- Judenspiegel [“The Jewish Mirror”] (Vienna: L. Schoenberger, 1896).
- “Welche Anknüpfungspunkte findet die evangelische Verkündigung bei den Juden?” [“Which Connecting Factors do Protestant Doctrines find with Jewish Doctrines?”] in Gustaf Dalman (ed.), Die allgemeine Konferenz für Judenmission in Leipzig, abgehalten vom 6. bis 8. Juni 1895, (Leipzig,1896), 40-55. [Series: Schriften des Institutum Judaicum in Leipzig, No. 44-46]; later reprinted by “The Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel” in London as Begegnungspunkte zwischen Juden und Christen: Gesetz und Evangelium [“Points of Meeting between Jewish and Christian Doctrine: the Law and the Gospel”.] (London: H.C.T.I., 1902).
- “Ein Weihnachts- und Neujahrsgruß an alle Neugeborenen im Herrn” [“A Christmas and New Year Greeting to all the Born Again in the Lord”], Saat auf Hoffnung 36 (1899), 5-9.
- Ein Geheimniss aus dem Talmud [“A Secret from the Talmud”], (Vienna: L. Scnberger, 1900).
- “Ein Weihnachts- und Neujahrsgruß für die auserwählten Kinder des Lichtes” [“A Christmas and New Year Greeting for the Elect Children of the Light”], Saat auf Hoffnung 37 (1900), 35-40.
- “Ein Neujahrsgruß für die Neugebornen im Herrn zum Heilsjahre 1902” [“A New Year Greeting for the Born Again in the Lord in the Year, 1902”], Saat auf Hoffnung 39 (1902), 5-8.
Translations into English:[9]
- J. Lichtenstein. Judaism and Christianity (translated from the German by Margaret M. Alison) (Edinburgh: Morrison & Gibb, 1893). [Translation of 4.]
- An Appeal to the Jewish People (Translated by Mrs. [?] Baron). [London]: The Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel (H. C. T. I., 1894). [Translation of 5.]
- "Letter from Rabbi Lichtenstein,” The Jewish Era 4:4 (Oct. 1895), 76.
- Two Letters’ or ‘What I Really Wish, (translated by Mrs. [?] Baron) (London: The Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel (H. C. T. I., 189?). [Translation of 6.]
- “What Connecting Links Does the Proclamation of the Gospel Find with the Jew?” [translated by Mrs. E. R. Kinglinger] The Jewish Era 5:1 (Jan. 1896), 1-3; 5:2 (April 1896), 37-42. [Translation of 9.]
- The Jewish Mirror (London: H. C. T. I., 1897). [Translation of 8.]
- The Points of Contact between Evangelical and Jewish Doctrine: An Address, Delivered at Leipsic [sic] (Translated from the German by Mrs. [David] Baron) (Northfield, England: H. C. T. I., 1897). [Translation of 9.]
- “A New Year’s Greeting to the Elect Children of Light,” The Jewish Era 7:2 (April 1898), 37-39.
- The Blood of Christ. H. C. T. I. (1903). [Translation of 7.]
- “A New Year’s Greeting from Rabbi Lichtenstein,” The Jewish Era 12:1 (Jan. 15, 1903), 1-3.
Original Hungarian Works:
- Két levél vagy Amit én tulajdonképpen akarok [“Two Letters; or, What I Really Wish”]
- Kérelem a zsidó olvasókhoz [“An Appeal to the Jewish People”]
- Zsidók tükre [“The Jewish Mirror”]
Translations into French:
- Le Miroir Juif [“The Jewish Mirror”]
- Points de Contact, Discours par le Rabbin Lichtenstein [“Points of Meeting between Jewish and Christian Doctrine: the Law and the Gospel”]
Translation into Italian:
- Uno specchio giudaico, o le scritture riguardanti il messia [“The Jewish Mirror”] (Traduzione della traduzione Inglese dell'originale Tedesco. Firenze : Tip. Fattori e Puggelli, 1914.)
Translation into Yiddish:
- מיין בקשה, פון הרב י' יצחק ליכטענשטיין [“An Appeal to the Jewish People”]
References
[edit]- ^ Two Letters; or, What I really Wish. (Translated by Mrs. Baron) Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel. 1887
- ^ or Ignác in the Magyar Zsidó Lexikon (Hungarian Jewish Lexicon) from 1929, in the entry Tápiószele, also known in English as Isaac Lichtenstein and who wrote under the pen name I. Lichtenstein
- ^ Louis Meyer, ed. (15 January 1909). "V. Austria Hungary". The Jewish Era. 18 (1). Chicago Hebrew Mission: 20. OCLC 49314122. Retrieved 23 December 2012.
Rabbi Ignatz Lichtenstein died in Budapest in his eighty-fifth year on Friday, October 16th.
- ^ a b c Deutsch, Gotthard (2005). Scrolls: Essays on Jewish History and Literature and Kindred Subjects V1 and V2. Kessinger Publishing. pp. 118–119. ISBN 1-4179-5217-2.
- ^ a b Gillet, Lev (2002). Communion in the Messiah: Studies in the Relationship Between Judaism and Christianity. James Clarke & Co. p. 206. ISBN 0-227-17225-6.
- ^ a b Smith, Eugene R. (1894). The Gospel in All Lands. New York: Hunt & Nation. pp. 507–508.
- ^ Nagy-Laczkó, Balázs (3 February 2022). "'Dr. Somerville's sensational visit to Békés county' (hungarian). Hungarian original: Dr. Somerville szenzációs látogatása Békésben". Bárka (in Hungarian).
- ^ "The Story of Rabbi Isaac Lichtenstein: From an account written over 90 years ago". The Association of Messianic Congregations.
- ^ a b “Introduction to Rabbi Isaac Lichtenstein: Selected Writings” Jorge Quiñónez, (editor) Daniel Lancaster (co-editor). Keren Ahvah Meshihit 2008.
External links
[edit]- Online biography
- Introduction to The Collected Writings of Rabbi Isaac Lichtenstein
- English and German works (11) as PDF in the Remnant Repository of Vine of David
- The biography of Isaac Lichtenstien on Messianic Judaism Wiki
- English works and German works and Hungarian works of the rabbi