Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Teapot?

I know that kids come up with unusual names sometimes, but I have no idea why my daughter now insists on calling one of her grandmothers Teapot....

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

pre-Passover Sermon

“What’s in a Name”

Erev Pesach, 2008

Suzanne Brody

[Question: Has denominationalism advanced the creative continuity of Jewish life in America? Are our children heading for a post-denominational period in the early-mid 21st century?]

What’s in a name? Shakespeare said that a rose by any other name would smell as sweet. And he was right. But, would it still be a rose? As we prepare to be redeemed from Egypt once again at tonight’s Passover seder, I am reminded of a well-known midrash found in Leviticus Rabbah. The rabbis ask why Israel merited redemption from Egypt. After all, the rabbis recognized how difficult it must be, even for God, to separate out and redeem a people that has assimilated into the surrounding culture. According to Leviticus Rabbah 23:2, neither the Egyptians nor the Israelites were circumcised, both wore their hair in the same fashion, and both the Israelites and the Egyptians dressed alike. Pulling the Israelites out from among the Egyptians must have been as tricky as plucking a rose from among the thorns. How could God tell them apart? And why would God still consider Israel to be as sweet as a rose if the Israelites had assimilated to such a high degree? A different midrash from Leviticus Rabbah, 32:6, teaches that “Israel was redeemed from Egypt because they did not change their names. They went down there as Reuven and Shimon, and came back as Reuven and Shimon … Also, because they did not change their language — they continued to speak the sacred tongue” (Leviticus Rabbah 32:6).

This question of what differentiates us from others in our surrounding culture is still one facing us today. Tonight at the seder we will talk about the four children, and we will read that the “evil” child who asks “what does this mean to you” excludes him- or herself from the Jewish people and had he or she been there, he or she would not have been redeemed with the rest of us.

But would the rest of us really have been redeemed? Have we met the rabbinic requirement of keeping our names? By this, I am not referring to names like Sarah, Rachel, or David. In talking about keeping our names, I think that what the rabbis really meant was keeping our identities as Jews. We all have many names and labels by which we are known. Have we kept our Jewish labels? Are they a part of how we define ourselves?

We Jews have always had multiple names which have both united and divided us. From the time of the late 1880s, we have called ourselves by denominational labels: Reform, Orthodox, Conservative, Reconstructionist, and Humanist; to name a few. Recently, we have expanded the list of possible names to include non-denominational, post-denominational, and just plain Jewish. The National Jewish Population study conducted in 2000, suggests that perhaps we are starting to move away from associating ourselves with individual denominations within Judaism. Although 81% of the survey respondents with two Jewish parents were raised in a denomination, as adults, only 68% of them identify with one of the four major denominations (Reform, Conservative, Orthodox, and Reconstructionist)[1]. Furthermore, the greatest “denominational” increase actually occurred among the respondents who don’t identify with any of the established denominations at all![2]

Are we abandoning the names that we assumed at the turn of the twentieth century? Sociologist and “survey guru” Steven Cohen describes two main groups of people who eschew denominational labels: the non-denominationalists and the post- or trans-denominationalists. Non-denominationists decline to see themselves as aligned with any of the current major denominations and instead identify themselves as "Just Jewish," "Secular" or "Something else Jewish". Non-denominational Jews often come from intermarried parents and themselves marry non-Jews, perhaps due to their lack of overall Jewish engagement, symbolized by the fact that fewer than 15% of them affiliate with any synagogue of any denomination. According to comparisons between the 1990 and 2000 National Jewish Population Surveys, numbers of such unaffiliated, unengaged Jews are increasing[3].

In contrast, post- or trans-denominational Judaism is appealing to many committed Jews experiencing ideological and stylistic differences with the available denominational options. According to a recent survey of emergent communities, there are more than 80 non-denominationally-affiliated congregations in the United States and Canada that have been founded since 1997. Many of these communities owe their origins and continuity to a single entrepreneurial individual (often a rabbi) or to a small core group of highly educated and motivated individuals[4]. Transdenominational congregations are typically characterized by gender egalitarianism, traditional davening, Hebraic proficiency and eschewal of rabbinic leadership[5]. Yet, Rabbis Art Green and David Hartman are among those who have founded transdenominational seminaries – the Hebrew College Rabbinical School in Boston and The Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem, respectively. There are those who contend that these rabbinical programs, as well as the ones offered by the Academy for the Jewish Religion, a transdenominational seminary in New York, and the Jewish Renewal movement's ALEPH Rabbinical Program in Philadelphia both symbolize and are a product of the weakening of the “traditional” denominations[6].

Author Michael Kress contends that “Jews today define themselves less and less by their denomination, and tend to be more fluid in drifting between them”[7]. Sociologist Dr. Bruce Phillips counters that claim by pointing out that the more Jewish education a person has, the more likely he or she is to identify with a particular denomination.

Names do have power, but only if we know what they mean. I believe that the denominations have each contributed significantly to our Jewish experience, and they have the power to continue to do so for many years yet to come. But the influence of the denominations is only as strong as the education of the affiliated Jews. How can you tell yourself apart from the surrounding non-Jewish culture? How do you know that you are ready to be redeemed this Passover? Have you kept your Jewish name? More importantly, does that name mean anything to you? It is up to each and every one of us to find a way to make our various Jewish names meaningful. Each of us has the capacity to be the “wise child” who learns about even the most minute details of the Exodus from Egypt and the laws of Passover. This year, let none of us be the “evil child” who is left behind. Come to my class on Conservative Judaism this coming Tuesday night. Come learn about your name.

I look forward to seeing all of you and your friends on Tuesday evening, at 7:30 pm here in the sanctuary, and may we all experience our redemption together this Passover. Shabbat Shalom and Hag Sameach.



[1] Kaplan, p. 403

[2] Kaplan, p. 403

[3] Cohen, Steven M. “Non-Denominational & Post-Denominational: Beyond the major movements--two tendencies in American Jewry.” Reprinted with permission from Contact, the Journal of Jewish Life Network/Steinhardt Foundation (Summer 2005). http://www.myjewishlearning.com/history_community/Jewish_World_Today/Denominations/PostDenom.htm

[4] Cohen, Steven M.; Landres, Shawn; Kaunfer, Elie; and Shain, Michelle “EMERGENT JEWISH COMMUNITIES and their PARTICIPANTS: Preliminary Findings from the 2007 National Spiritual Communities Study” Sponsored by The S3K Synagogue Studies Institute & Mechon Hadar

http://www.synagogue3000.org/emergentweb//survey/documents/NatSpirComStudyReport_S3K_Hadar.pdf

[5] Cohen, Steven M. “Non-Denominational & Post-Denominational: Beyond the major movements--two tendencies in American Jewry.” Reprinted with permission from Contact, the Journal of Jewish Life Network/Steinhardt Foundation (Summer 2005). http://www.myjewishlearning.com/history_community/Jewish_World_Today/Denominations/PostDenom.htm

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Tiger Lilly 2

After a few days of not looking so good, I found Tiger Lilly floating at the top of her bowl this morning. Fortunately, Meital didn't think about feeding her before gan today. So, this afternoon, Marcus went to the pet store and bought Tiger Lilly #2. Meital didn't seem phased to find the new fish in a bag inside the bowl. She didn't even notice the fact that Tiger Lilly #2 has more orange than the original. But she did comment that the fish was bigger. Fortunately, she understands that things grow, so it didn't seem to bother her too much.

I, on the other hand, wonder about whether we did the right thing by sneakily replacing her fish and implicitly lying to her by pretending that the new fish is really the same as the old one. Is such lying better than trying to explain death to a 2.5 year old?