Ignatz Lichtenstein

Hungarian Orthodox Rabbi
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroHungarian Orthodox Rabbi
A.K.A.I. Lichtenstein Isaac Lichtenstein
A.K.A.I. Lichtenstein Isaac Lichtenstein
PlacesHungary
isRabbi Writer
Work fieldLiterature Religion
Gender
Male
BirthHungary
Death16 October 1908
The details

Biography

Ignatz Lichtenstein (1824 – October 16, 1908) was a Hungarian Orthodox rabbi who wrote "pamphlets advocating conversion to Christianity while still officiating as a Rabbi." Though he refused to be baptized into the Christian faith his whole life, he ultimately resigned his rabbinate in 1892. A biography of him appeared in the Methodist Episcopal missionary magazine The Gospel in All Lands in 1894. The Jewish historian Gotthard Deutsch, an editor of the Jewish Encyclopedia, in an essay published 3 February 1916, mentions him in the course of refuting a claim by the Chief Rabbi of London that no rabbi had ever become a convert to Christianity. Followers of Messianic Judaism mention him as an example of a turn of the 19th century "Jewish believer in Jesus." Speaking of his first contact with the gospel, he said: "I looked for thorns and gathered roses."

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