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Imagine you get
stuck in an elevator.
Once assured that assistance is on its
way, you begin to shmooze with the other person with whom you are stuck.
Within minutes you discover you are
both Jewish.
She asks, “What synagogue do you go to?”
And you say, “A
Reconstructionist synagogue.”
And then it happens, the moment so many
Reconstructionists dread:
“Oh! What IS
Reconstructionism anyway?”
Don’t push the “emergency” button!
While not every Reconstructionist
should be responsible for parsing the fine points of the philosophy and
program of Mordecai Kaplan, we should all be able to offer a brief,
fundamental explanation of our own movement. Here is what I have come to
call my “elevator answer.”
- Reconstructionist Judaism, developed
in the writings of Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan, began in the 1930s as the
left wing of Conservative Judaism, and emerged as a separate fourth
movement with the opening of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College
in 1968.
- Reconstructionist Judaism differs
from other approaches in seeing Jewish culture, religion and tradition
as having been created by the Jewish people throughout history, rather
than given by God at Mount Sinai; we see our tradition as having grown
from the ground up, and not from the (mountain-) top down.
- Reconstructionist communities are
characterized by a high degree of participation in communal decision
making, by a spirit of inclusivity and informality, and by a balance
between respect for tradition and responsiveness to contemporary
needs.
Of course there is more to say
— but
let's hope that by then the elevator is moving. |