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Celia Deutsch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Celia M. Deutsch is an American religious sister, academic, educator, writer, and Old Testament scholar. She is a professor at Barnard College and serves on the Christian Scholars Group on Christian-Jewish Relations.

Personal life

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Deutsch was raised[where?] in the Roman Catholic faith of her mother, although her father was Jewish. She did not know her father was Jewish until she asked him a question one day and he told her: "I wasn't baptized. I'm a Jew and Jews don't baptize their children".[1] After reading an article about the Sisters of Notre Dame of Sion,[2] she paid them a visit in St. Louis, Missouri. She entered the order at the end of that year[when?], after graduating from high school.

Affiliations

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Deutsch is active in numerous professional organizations and is a member of the Society of Biblical Literature Early Jewish and Christian Mysticism Group. She also serves as a consultant to the Interfaith Center of New York and is a member Neighbor to Neighbor (Jews, Christians, Muslims collaborating in the Flatbush/Midwood neighborhood of Brooklyn.[3] She has worked and lectured in Canada, Italy, Israel, and Great Britain.

Writings

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  • Deutsch, Sister Celia M., Lady Wisdom, Jesus, and the Sages: Metaphor and Social Context in Matthew's Gospel (Trinity Press, 1996)

References

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  1. ^ The Jewish Week article on Sister Celia Deutsch Archived 2009-09-09 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Charism Stories: Celia's Story". Sisters of Notre Dame of Sion.
  3. ^ "Profile: Celia Deutsch, Research Scholar". Barnard College.
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