Elastic Reform Judaism and the Pittsburgh Platform
This sermon (Devar Torah) was delivered in July 1999 at
Temple Beth Am, Seattle, Washington
Tonight, I want to discuss with you "Elastic Reform Judaism" and compare it
with the Pittsburgh Platform, recently (May 1999) published by the
CCAR.
Normally, I would go through the platform and through Elastic Reform point by
point, comparing and contrasting as I went along. This style of my own
thought dates back to 1970 when I studied english under Myra Geotz, who was a
brilliant teacher of english and is now selling real estate in Bellevue.
What is "Elastic" Reform Judaism?
"Elastic Reform Judaism" is the idea that Jews can pick and choose what
Judaism means and what laws they will follow. This idea my father
attributes to Buddy Williams, although Mr. Williams has credibly denied any
knowlege of this school of thought. Its most ardent advocate is my 14
year old son, Daniel, who has uses it to justify not attending Sunday
school. I am sure that this was not the intent of my father, who is a
brilliant physician, a learned man, and my good friend.
Although I am not a learned Jew, it is, or was, my aspiration that my children
might become learned Jews. At first, I attributed the problem to simple
adolescent rebeliousness. When I was my son's age, I myself once argued
that Section 11 of
Article 1 of the Washington constitution, the first
amendment of the United States constitution, the declaration of
independence, and the Magna
Carta all endowed me with the same right to avoid Sunday School. I
was stupid: the man I was arguing with at the time was Fred Tausend, who was
President of the Washington State Trial Lawyers association, and arguably one
of the finest lawyers in the state.
I have discussed this situation with some of my friends; some of whom are
Orthodox. Their comments were insightful:
- You are criticizing your son, Jeff, yet you yourself know not what you
believe, nor what your movement stands for. Consider the CCAR website, thou sluggard, and become
wise
- Elastic Reform is not an oxymoron, but rather it's redundant,
repetative, and a tautology1.
- The Torah requires that you teach these commandments to your children
(which is actually next weeks Torah portion), so they need not go to
religious school if you will teach them yourself.
To be a Jew in America these days, one must know three
alphabets: the normal alphabet used by everybody, the Hebrew alephbet, and the
soup of letters used by organizations. The Central Conference of
American Rabbis (CCAR) got together in May of 1999 and created a
platform, a statement of beliefs, which I have arranged for you to have on the
handout. This platform is an update of the Centenary
Perspective, which was released on the 100th anniversary of the founding
of UAHC, the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. The platform is
divided into a preamble, and sections on God, Torah, and Israel.
There are some sections of the Pittsburgh Platform that
please me and my knee-jerk liberal tendencies. For example,
We are an inclusive community, opening doors to Jewish life to people of all
ages, to varied kinds of families, to all regardless of their sexual
orientation, to (gerim), those who have
converted to Judaism, and to all individuals and families, including the
intermarried, who strive to create a jewish home.
I wish that the platform took an explicit stand on the question of patrilineal
descent; perhaps that was too politically radical. I am concerned that
Israel might not recognize Sarah and Daniel as Jews under the Law of
Return. Daniel does not recognize himself as a jew. The neo Nazis
do recognize him as a Jew. It would be ironic, wouldn't it, if, after
all the work that they have done, that the Israelis might turn them over to
persecutors?
Comparing Elastic Reform and the Pittsburgh Platform
Elastic reform and the Pittsburgh Platform are remarkably similar. In
particular, the following paragraph strikes me as very similar to the ideas of
elastic reform:
We are committed to the ongoing study of the whole array of (mitzvot)
and to the fulfillment of those that address us as individuals and as a
community. Some of these (mitzvot), sacred obligations, have
long been observed by Reform Jews; others, both ancient and modern, demand
renewed attention as the result of the unique context of our own
times.
This paragraph suggests that there is some method by which individual Jews can
choose which commandments they will follow. However, this paragraph does
not get Daniel off the hook, because it also calls for study. And, for
fourteen year old boys, that means Sunday school on tuesday nights.
So, for example, Daniel has been engaging in his adolescent rebellion by
eating pork in my face at every opportunity. While this is upsetting to
me at one level, there is another way to think about it which only those people who actually come to the service and
hear the sermon will find out about. Heh, heh, heh. Daniel has a
web browser... he will read this, but he won't get it. But Daniel hasn't murdered anybody, he hasn't stolen
anything insofar as I know, he is truthful, he is genuinely brilliant and can
be a joy to argue with and a valuable and agreeable companion when the urge
hits him. Perhaps, at this stage in his life, Dayenu. If
somebody had told me, a quarter of a century ago, that I would someday
volunteer to lead a service here (with my parents and my wife here, no less),
I would not have believed them. Clearly change is possible, one should
keep the door open to change, and both the Pittsburgh Platform and Elastic
Reform support the idea of change.
Sometimes, when you look for something, you find something else.
I have been doing a lot of reading, thanks to The Internet. One of the
things that came to me as I have re-read some of these great works of
literature and law (yes, I went back and reread Section 11 of Article 1
of the Washington constitution, the first
amendment of the United States constitution, the declaration of
independence, and the Magna
Carta ). The internet is wonderful: Martin Buber has
been dead since 1965 and even he has an official web page (In Germany, no
less, and remarkably, in English). I have come to the conclusion
that we discuss some of the Great Ideas in terms of what matters to us
personally. In the past, I have tried to argue questions from the point
of view of what is best for the greatest number. I am beginning to think
that maybe this isn't the best tack to take. Perhaps I ought to think
more in terms of the effect of and on the individual. For me, this is a
significant change in my thinking about social policy: why not treat the
people within a society as if they were individuals? As a reflection of
that thinking, tonight I have discussed some of my thinking about Reform
Judaism and what we believe in terms of my parents and my children. I
know most of you, and I have a lot of respect for your opinions. I would
appreciate from you some feedback: what do you think of these ideas?
1. The fact that this comment is also redundant and
repetative obviously escaped its author
This sermon was delivered 16-July-1999 at Temple Beth Am, Seattle, Washington
USA.
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