A Denominational Perspective
The Future of American
Orthodoxy
An examination of the challenges facing Orthodox Judaism in America
By Jonathan D. Sarna
The following article is reprinted with permission from the February
2001 issue of Shma: A Journal of Jewish
Responsibility.
“In the struggle for the soul of
American Jewry, the Orthodox model has triumphed," Samuel G. Freedman
announced in his widely discussed volume titled Jew vs. Jew. Freedman, himself raised as a secularist, is far from
alone in his analysis. In the thirty‑five years that have passed since
Charles Liebman, writing in the American Jewish Year Book, first pronounced
Orthodoxy to be "on the upsurge" and concluded that it was "the
only group which today contains within it a strength and will to live that may
yet nourish all the Jewish world."
Orthodoxy has emerged as the
great success story of late 20th‑century American Judaism. Some of its
leaders proudly proclaim themselves the winners in the race to save American
Judaism, and insist that non‑Orthodox Jews, with their high rate of
intermarriage, will have no Jewish grandchildren and no Jewish future
A View from History
History warns against
triumphalistic claims of this sort. In the post‑Civil War era, Reform
Jews believed that they would define American Judaism. The architect of
American Reform Judaism, Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise, called his prayer book Minhag America and, given the number of
synagogues that moved into the Reform camp in his day, his vision did not seem
farfetched. Many in the mid‑1870s believed as he did that Reform would in
time become "the custom of American Jews."
Of course, with mass East
European Jewish immigration that did not happen and within half‑a‑century
Reform Judaism had stagnated. Conservative Judaism, meanwhile, became the
fastest growing movement on the American Jewish scene and it too enjoyed a
moment of triumphalism, especially in the immediate post‑World War II
era. But its success proved no more long lasting. In recent decades, its
numbers have declined both absolutely and relatively.
The question now is whether
Orthodoxy will follow the same trajectory. History, of course, does not always
repeat itself, but insiders in the Orthodox world know that their movement
suffers from many "dilemmas and vulnerabilities." Indeed a symposium
organized by the Orthodox Union in 1998 spoke of "a sense of triumph mixed
with trepidation." I want to focus on six reasons for this trepidation.
Without discounting any of American Orthodoxy's obvious strengths, anyone who
is seriously interested in the future of American Orthodoxy needs to confront
these issues.
Membership Retention
First of all, Orthodox Judaism in
America has had trouble retaining its members. Indeed, according to a
demographic study by Sergio Della Pergola and Uzi Rebhun, published in the
Orthodox flagship publication, Jewish
Action, Orthodoxy loses more of its members over time than does any other
Jewish religious movement. Even among the younger and supposedly more committed
Orthodox (born 1950‑1970), according to the survey, Orthodoxy retained
only 42 percent of those born into its fold. To be sure, some of these losses
are compensated for by gains of new followers, and Orthodox Jews also enjoy a
higher birthrate than their non‑Orthodox counterparts. Figures from the
2000 National Jewish Population Survey, one suspects, will show an improved
rate of Orthodox retention. Notwithstanding all of these factors, however, the
demographers concluded that, "overall, the size of Orthodoxy does not seem
to be bound to dramatic growth." Considering that not even 10 percent of
American Jews are currently Orthodox, this represents a significant problem.
Leadership
Second, Orthodoxy in America is
suffering from a severe leadership crisis. The greatest of its 20th‑century
leaders--Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, Rabbi Moses Feinstein, and the
Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Schneerson--all have passed from the scene,
and no worthy successors have emerged. Rabbi Aharon Lichtenstein, Rabbi
Soloveitchik’s son‑in‑law and now the Rosh yeshivah of Yeshivat Har
Etzion, in Israel, has recently acknowledged and bemoaned "the current
dearth of first‑rank gedolim
[giants]" in America. "One can think," he writes, "of no
indigenous American gadol certain to
be remembered with wistful awe a century hence ... of no giant majestically
bestriding the contemporary scene and securely moving American Orthodoxy into
the future."
Perhaps for this reason, American
Orthodox Jews increasingly look to Israeli rabbis and yeshivah heads for
direction. When a young American Orthodox Jew speaks of "my rebbe,"
chances are that he is referring to someone in Israel. One cannot help but
wonder, however, whether Israeli Orthodox leaders really understand the
American Jewish scene well enough to exercise leadership here. Historically, at
least, religious movements that cannot count on indigenous leadership to direct
them have not fared well in America--at least, not for long.
Brain Drain?
Third, American Orthodoxy is
experiencing a significant brain drain. It sends its best and brightest to
Israel for long periods of yeshivah study, and unsurprisingly many of them
never return. Even those who do come back and succeed feel a spiritual longing
to return to the Holy Land, and count the days until they can do so. Thus,
Rabbi Shlomo Riskin, one of the most successful American Orthodox rabbis of
recent decades, left his congregation in New York in order to make aliyah to
Efrat. His success at building that community is remarkable, but in the
meanwhile his former congregation grievously declined and American Orthodoxy
lost one of its most dynamic leaders.
One can think of literally dozens
of similar examples: remarkable Orthodox men and women who might have
transformed American Jewish religious life but preferred to cast their lot with
Zion. This may be terrific from an Israeli perspective, but can a movement that
sends its most illustrious sons and daughters there truly expect to triumph
here?
Confronting Modernity
Fourth, American Orthodoxy is
deeply divided over the issue of how to confront modernity. There is nothing
new about this: Jeffrey Gurock has shown that the tension between
"accommodators" and "resisters" in Orthodox life dates back
to the 19th century. Parallel debates have animated many other American
religious movements. Indeed, such debates have also often proved salutary: each
side checks and balances the excesses of the other.
The problem is that, in the
absence of broadly respected leaders, the fault lines between modern and right‑wing
Orthodox Jews have deepened. In one particularly vitriolic attack, Rabbi Elya
Svei, a prominent member of the right‑wing Agudat Israel, characterized
Yeshiva University's President Norman Lamm as "an enemy of God" --a
charge that he subsequently refused to retract. More broadly, Modern Orthodox
Jews--including, recently, Senator Joseph Lieberman--have found themselves
written out of Orthodoxy altogether by some right‑wing critics. No wonder
that Professors William B. Helmreich and Reuel Shinnar, in a recent analysis,
described Modem Orthodoxy as "a movement under siege."
The question, however, is not
whether Modern Orthodoxy will survive--in fact, it retains thousands of
adherents. The question is whether Orthodoxy itself can survive as a single
movement or whether, like so many Protestant denominations that have faced
similar challenges, it will ultimately polarize so far as to crack. The fact
that Orthodox Judaism, unlike its Conservative and Reform counterparts, does
not have any strong institutional ties binding all of its factions together
makes the danger of such a schism all the greater.
The Challenge of Feminism
Fifth, American Orthodoxy faces
sweeping challenges from contemporary feminism. Jewish Action calls this
“perhaps the most explosive issue facing Orthodoxy" and wonders
aloud whether it "will estrange feminists and their supporters from the
rest of Orthodoxy." In many communities, the answer would seem to be yes.
So‑called "women's issues"--whether, for example, women may
organize separate prayer groups on a regular basis, or dance with the Torah on
Simchat Torah, or celebrate ritually the bat mitzvah of their daughters, or
wear tallit [prayer shawl] and tefillin [phylacteries]--divide Orthodox
synagogues one from another in many of the major communities where Orthodox
Jews live, and have divided many synagogues internally as well.
Indeed, it can be argued that
these issues are to contemporary Orthodoxy what debates over mixed seating and
the height of the mehitzah [physical
separation between men and women in the synagogue] were to an earlier
generation. Those issues turned out to be defining ones for Orthodox Judaism;
in time, synagogues with mixed seating had to stop calling themselves Orthodox.
Will the women's issues today prove similarly divisive? The heated rhetoric on
both sides hardly hints at the possibility of compromise. The question, as
Orthodoxy ponders its future, is whether "the most explosive issue facing
Orthodoxy" will ultimately blow up, fragmenting American Orthodoxy in the
process.
Scandals and Credibility
Finally, American Orthodoxy is
currently mired in several ugly scandals that have undermined the credibility
of some of its foremost lay and professional leaders. The mystery surrounding
missing tape recordings of Rabbi Soloveitchik's lectures has already tarnished
several reputations. Meanwhile, the far more serious scandal surrounding the
alleged sexual misdeeds of a charismatic figure in the National Council of
Synagogue Youth along with the alleged widespread cover‑up that allowed
him to maintain his job for years, accusations against him notwithstanding,
threaten the credibility of the entire Orthodox Union. So far, the impact of
these scandals has been circumscribed. The long‑term damage to the
movement, however, may prove more far‑reaching, just as the scandals
involving television evangelists did untold damage to the fortunes of
Evangelical Protestantism.
Taken together, all of these
"dilemmas and vulnerabilities" demonstrate that the Orthodox model
has not triumphed in America. The question instead is whether Orthodoxy's
unexpected rise will be followed by an equally precipitous decline. Such cycles
are familiar in religion, just as they are in economics, but they are by no
means inevitable. In the end, Orthodoxy's future will actually depend upon its
own actions. Will it confront the challenges that it faces, or will it discover
only in retrospect that success blinded it to the internal problems that
ultimately proved its undoing?
Jonathan D. Sarna is the Joseph and Belle R. Braun Professor of
American Jewish History at Brandeis University.