Mario Javier Saban

Mario Javier Sabán (Buenos Aires, 1966), is an Argentinian theologian of Sephardi origin.

Mario Javier Saban
Born(1966-02-12)12 February 1966
Main interests
Origins of Christianity, Jewish philosophy

Early life

Mario Javier Sabán was born on 12 February 1966. He has a B.L. by University of Buenos Aires.

Career

Sabán began his historical investigations about the Jewish origins of the Argentina's traditional families in 1987. His first work, Converted Jews (1990), became a best-seller. In 2002, he migrated to Spain, where he published his book The Judaism of Saint Paul (2003).

On June 2007 he founded the organization Tarbut Sefarad, over which he presides. In March 2008 he obtained a doctorate in Philosophy from the Complutense University of Madrid. In June of the same year he published his doctoral thesis entitled Rambam, the genius of Moses Maimonides, based on his deep study of the Guide for the Perplexed. In September 2008 he published his eleventh work, The Judaism of Jesus, which is an extensive work dedicated to the teachings of Jesus and their natural relation with Judaism. None of Saban's books have been translated into English. Although one is advertised for sale with the title ″The Jewish Roots of Christianity,″ it is actually in Spanish.

Published works

  • Judíos conversos (1990).
  • Los hebreos nuestros hermanos mayores or Judíos conversos II (1991).
  • Los marranos y la economía en el Rio de la Plata or Judíos conversos III (1992).
  • Mil preguntas y respuestas sobre el judaísmo español y portugués (1993).
  • Las raíces judías del cristianismo (1994).
  • El judaísmo de San Pablo (La matriz judía del cristianismo I, 2003).
  • El sábado hebreo en el cristianismo (La matriz judía del cristianismo II, 2004).
  • La matriz intelectual del judaísmo y la génesis de Europa (2005).
  • La cronología del pensamiento judío (2007).
  • Rambam, el genio de Maimónides (Doctoral thesis, 2008).
  • El judaísmo de Jesús (2008).
  • La cábala. La psicología del misticismo judío (Doctoral thesis, 2016).
gollark: To be mathy about this, consider n² + n + 41. If you substitute n = 0 to n = ~~40~~ 39, you'll see "wow, this produces prime numbers. I thought those were really hard and weird, what an amazing discovery".
gollark: Examples do not and cannot demonstrate some sort of general principle, particularly a more abstract one.
gollark: Again, some examples of things needing some sort of balance DO NOT imply it is good or generally necessary.
gollark: This is just an example of "you sometimes need a quantity of something which falls in some interval", not a general proof.
gollark: That seems like just "it's bad because it's something you don't consent to" and also "it's unpleasant", which is I think what we said.

See also

References

  • Sabán, Mario Javier: El judaísmo de Jesús, Saban Editorial, Buenos Aires, 2008.
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