This is a highly comprehensive introduction to the Talmud, the age-old
storehouse of Jewish wisdom. Bokser covers the long history of the
Talmud, from its origin in the Babylonian exile, its growth through the
five centuries after the Roman destruction of the Temple, and the later
persecution of the Talmud. The book covers a number of high-level
topics, including social ethics and personal morality, with numerous
examples from the Talmud. Ben Zion Bokser was one of the major
Conservative rabbis of America. He stressed the Rabbinic sages and the
Talmud as the source of Judaism. "This is not an uncommon impression and
one finds it sometimes among Jews as well as Christians - that Judaism
is the religion of the Hebrew Bible. It is, of course, a fallacious
impression. Judaism is not the religion of the Bible." Bokser affirms
revelation, but revelation is always framed in humans by man. "Man
receives a divine communication when the divine spirit rests on him, but
man must give form to that communication."