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A surprising claim by Tucker Carlson becomes the unlikely starting point for a serious discussion about messianism.
After Carlson suggested that the war in the Middle East is being driven by Jewish dreams of rebuilding the Temple—and even blamed Chabad for pushing the United States toward war—Rabbis Yitzchok Adlerstein and Simi Lerner step back to examine the deeper question: what role does messianic belief actually play in Judaism?
The conversation explores the difference between destructive and constructive messianism. From the apocalyptic ideology of Iran's ruling clerics to the Jewish belief in a future perfected world, they ask how powerful religious ideas can inspire both noble visions and dangerous distortions.
Along the way they discuss Chabad's messianic roots, the historical trauma of false messiahs, the prophetic vision of a redeemed world, and why Judaism insists that human moral action must play a role in shaping the future.
Is messianism a dangerous fantasy—or an essential source of Jewish hope?
To read Professor Marc Shapiro's three articles on Rabbi Steinman and the Messiah, click here, here, and here.
Join Rabbi Adlerstein's Thursday night Zoom Maharal shiur at 8:30 Israel time.
Make sure to check out Rabbi Lerner's podcast Judaism From Within.
By Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein5
88 ratings
A surprising claim by Tucker Carlson becomes the unlikely starting point for a serious discussion about messianism.
After Carlson suggested that the war in the Middle East is being driven by Jewish dreams of rebuilding the Temple—and even blamed Chabad for pushing the United States toward war—Rabbis Yitzchok Adlerstein and Simi Lerner step back to examine the deeper question: what role does messianic belief actually play in Judaism?
The conversation explores the difference between destructive and constructive messianism. From the apocalyptic ideology of Iran's ruling clerics to the Jewish belief in a future perfected world, they ask how powerful religious ideas can inspire both noble visions and dangerous distortions.
Along the way they discuss Chabad's messianic roots, the historical trauma of false messiahs, the prophetic vision of a redeemed world, and why Judaism insists that human moral action must play a role in shaping the future.
Is messianism a dangerous fantasy—or an essential source of Jewish hope?
To read Professor Marc Shapiro's three articles on Rabbi Steinman and the Messiah, click here, here, and here.
Join Rabbi Adlerstein's Thursday night Zoom Maharal shiur at 8:30 Israel time.
Make sure to check out Rabbi Lerner's podcast Judaism From Within.

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