Beyond Confessional Constraints: A Discursive Analysis of Bloomer’s Theological Project and Contemporary Approaches to Kabbalah

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Julian Ungar-Sargon MD PhD

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Published: 2 September 2025 | Article Type : Research Article

Abstract

This study provides a comprehensive critical analysis of Brother Gilbert (Athol) Bloomer’s 2013 theological corpus, examining his ambitious attempt to synthesize Jewish mystical traditions with Catholic sacramental theology through what he terms “heretical kabbalah.” Drawing on contemporary scholarship in Jewish mysticism, religious studies methodology, postcolonial criticism, and interfaith theological dialogue, this analysis evaluates Bloomer’s four major works against the methodological standards established by post-Scholem Kabbalah studies.
While Bloomer’s extensive academic credentials and unique Hebrew Catholic identity enable remarkable insights into hidden Jewish dimensions of Catholic mysticism—particularly his innovations in “converso hermeneutics” and his controversial Frankist hypothesis—his confessional commitment to Catholic orthodoxy ultimately constrains his interpretive horizons in ways that prevent genuine encounter with Jewish mystical alterity.
The study demonstrates how Bloomer’s approach reproduces traditional supersessionist patterns despite sophisticated rhetorical innovations, subordinating Jewish sources to predetermined Christian theological categories. Through comparative analysis with contemporary academic approaches (Wolfson, Idel, Magid, Fishbane) and alternative therapeutic appropriations of kabbalistic sources developed by Julian Ungar-Sargon, this research illuminates broader methodological challenges facing interfaith theological engagement.
The analysis reveals how confessional constraints prevent authentic theological dialogue while pointing toward possibilities for “critical participation” that could honor both scholarly rigor and existential engagement without apologetic reduction. Using figures like Jonathan Eybeschutz as test cases for theological courage, the study argues that future mystical theology requires post-traditional approaches that allow ancient sources to transform rather than merely confirm contemporary assumptions. This work contributes to ongoing debates about the relationship between scholarly objectivity and religious commitment while establishing new frameworks for evaluating contemporary appropriations of mystical traditions.

Keywords: Jewish mysticism, Kabbalah, interfaith theology, Hebrew Catholicism, confessional constraints, converso mysticism, Frankist movement, theological methodology, postcolonial criticism, religious studies, Sophiology, tzimtzum, therapeutic spirituality, Jonathan Eybeschutz, critical participation.

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Julian Ungar-Sargon MD PhD. (2025-09-02). "Beyond Confessional Constraints: A Discursive Analysis of Bloomer’s Theological Project and Contemporary Approaches to Kabbalah." *Volume 7*, 4, 64-79