In the beginning was Uriel da Costa. Then came Baruch Spinoza.

A mercurial recusant born in 1585 in Porto, Portugal, da Costa was a Catholic scion of prosperous Portuguese crypto-Jewish Conversos who relocated first to Hamburg, then to Amsterdam, a mercantile and tolerant city where Jews thrived. Well versed in Christianity, da Costa embraced Judaism, then renounced it, finding as much fault with his new faith as he had done with his old one. He especially took umbrage at regimented rabbinical rules and rituals, which he saw as bereft of spirituality and perversions of the Torah.

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