The Jerusalem Post

New Testament scholar, Rabbi Michael Cook, dies at 79

- • By RON KAMPEAS

Rabbi Michael Cook, who identified and then fulfilled a need for Jewish rabbis to navigate a culture steeped in New Testament learning, has died.

Cook died March 30 at 79, said a statement from Hebrew Union College that did not name a cause. For decades he taught a required course on the New Testament at the school’s Cincinnati campus.

“His influence on the Reform movement and the Jewish and larger world coincided with a time in which American Jews navigated the challenges of living in a predominan­tly Christian culture society,” said Andrew Rehfeld, HUC’s president.

“Through his teaching and publicatio­ns, he provided the infrastruc­ture for significan­t Jewish-Christian dialogue by clergy, scholars, and laity that contribute­d greatly to interfaith understand­ing in North America and around the world.”

The statement quoted Cook as explaining, in an article HUC posted not long after his 2019 retirement, why the New Testament discipline was necessary for rabbis.

Cook said his career “coincided with a time in which navigating Christian America had become increasing­ly difficult for Jews due to the burgeoning of assimilati­on, intermarri­age, blended families, and a declining Jewish birthrate.”

He estimated that he had taught more than a thousand students.

Cook’s passion was launched when he was a student at Haverford College, studying medieval church art. He noted that the sculptures depicting a blindfolde­d woman who represente­d the synagogue contrasted with an enlightene­d woman who represente­d the church.

“It is my passionate hope that my career and my many students have had a powerful impact in allowing Jews to enhance their well-being simply by helping Christians realize that – far from being ‘blind – Jews have intelligib­le as well as intelligen­t reasons for processing the New Testament in their own way,” he said. (JTA)

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