By Zach Mann
In the middle third of the 20th century, most congregational rabbis received some sort of academic training from the seminary where they studied, and some of them also received graduate degrees at American universities. Even as they led congregations, many of these men maintained connections with institutions of higher education. Some taught on a part-time basis at colleges or universities near their synagogues or were invited to do so at the seminary from which they had graduated; others published books and scholarly articles. Few if any of these pulpit scholars remain household names, but they made solid contributions to American Judaism, on the local level and beyond. Among the most important of them was Jacob B. Agus.