Milton Steinberg

1903–1950

Milton Steinberg was a well-known and influential Conservative rabbi in the United States in the 1930s and 1940s. Born in Rochester, New York, he received a Ph.D. in philosophy from Columbia University and was ordained at the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1928. After leading a congregation in Indianapolis for five years, he was appointed rabbi of the Park Avenue Synagogue in New York City in 1933, where he remained until his untimely death. He was greatly influenced by Mordecai Kaplan, although he was critical of Reconstructionism for its lack of philosophical attention to God. His historical novel As a Driven Leaf (1939), which examines tensions between religion and philosophy through the life of the second-century heretic Elisha ben Abuyah, has never been out of print.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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The Making of the Modern Jew

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For a half-millennium the Jew, rejected by the world, had secluded himself within ghetto walls, unconcerned with what lay without. But the day came when the world…

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As a Driven Leaf

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Toward the end of the first century, in the spring of the last year of the reign of the Emperor Vespasian, two entries were made in the Roman archives of the district of Galilee. The first…