A Bridge between Worlds: The Legacy of Rabbi Joseph H. Hertz https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/religion-holidays/2015/02/a-bridge-between-worlds-the-legacy-of-rabbi-joseph-h-hertz/

February 6, 2015 | Benjamin Elton
About the author:

Born in Slovakia, educated at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America (JTS), and ordained by leading Orthodox rabbis, Joseph H. Hertz served posts in Manhattan, upstate New York, and Johannesburg before becoming chief rabbi of the British Empire. A fierce critic both of both Reform Judaism and of an Orthodoxy closed off to the modern world, he was also an ardent and outspoken Zionist. Today, Hertz is known mainly for his edition of the Pentateuch, to which he also contributed a commentary. Benjamin Elton writes:

[Hertz’s] Pentateuch and Haftorahs was part of his wider project of promoting an intelligent, traditional Judaism. As well as being interesting and informative, it was profoundly polemical. Its primary target was biblical criticism. . . . Hertz held that “Judaism stands or falls with its belief in the historical actuality of the Revelation at Sinai,” and set about to demolish the claim that the Pentateuch was a composite, human work. . . . His Pentateuch also took aim at the idea that Greek and Roman civilization are to be admired, and that Christianity had made an important moral contribution to the world. . . . Anything positive in Christianity came, according to Hertz, from its Jewish roots.

[But] the Pentateuch is also important for its moderate stand on many issues. Hertz was unconcerned by the theory of evolution. . . . He happily quoted from non-Jewish as well as Jewish authors, declaring that “‘accept the truth from whatever source it comes’ is a sound rabbinic maxim.” This attitude is the counterpoint to Hertz’s anti-Christianity, because it reveals his respect for the spiritual and religious lives of non-Jews.

Read more on Institute for Jewish Ideas and Ideals: http://www.jewishideas.org/articles/bridge-across-tigris-chief-rabbi-joseph-herman-hert