Reform Launches a Worship Revolution
More Hebrew,
rituals, and joyful participation called for at 1999 Orlando Biennial.
By E.J. Kessler
In 1999, Reform
leaders issued a new platform, The Pittsburgh Platform, that encourages Reform
Jews to study Hebrew and Torah, observe Shabbat, and recognize the importance
of mitzvot (sacred obligations). The
following article reports the launch of new worship initiatives intended to
promote these goals. It is reprinted
with permission from The Forward.
If Rabbi Eric Yoffie [President of the Union of American
Hebrew Congregations, the umbrella organization representing congregations
affiliated with the Reform movement] has his way, Reform synagogues will be
featuring more singing, movement and Hebrew in their services and Reform
children will be saying prayers such as the Sh'ma at bedtime.
Those suggestions were part of several initiatives launched
by the president of the Union of American Hebrew Congregation in a Sabbath
sermon at the group's [December 1999] biennial convention last week in Orlando.
Describing liberal Jewry as "the least worshipful of peoples in North
America," he called for a "revolution" in worship that would
bring "two‑day‑a‑year Jews" back to their empty
pews.
The worship and family initiatives are the latest step in
Reform's drive to embrace more of Jewish tradition and ritual, veering away
from the "high‑church" Protestant style of worship and
comportment that marked classical Reform Judaism in America. Last year [May
1999], the movement's Central Conference of American Rabbis adopted a platform,
"A Statement of Principles for Reform Judaism," that embodied some of
these leanings, even if it was diluted owing to opposition from some classical
elements, mainly in the South and Midwest. The new initiatives signaled a further
retreat for this classical Reform tendency, which seemed muted at the
convention. Even so, Rabbi Yoffie took the precaution of casting his
"revolution" as a "return" to Reform tradition.
"Our
movement came into being as a liturgical revolution," Rabbi Yoffie told
the 5,000 conventioneers assembled at the Dolphin Hotel at Disney World,
"Reform Judaism did not begin with ethics, social justice or personal
autonomy; it was a reaction to the chaos and mechanical mumbling of the
then-dominant form of Jewish prayer. Worship reform was the very heart of early
Reform Judaism; classical Reform Jews, then as now, brought a deep earnestness
to issues of prayer."
Yet he described a
situation of urgency in many synagogues, which he said had stagnated in their
practices and had flagging attendance. "A 27‑year‑old rabbi,
newly ordained from the Hebrew Union College [Reform rabbinical seminary], will
often look out at her congregation on erev
shabbat and realize that she is the youngest person there by several
decades. Why has this happened?" Rabbi Yoffie asked, urging the 900 Reform
synagogues to create a partnership of rabbis, cantors and laity to launch a
searching self‑evaluation of their worship practices. Such an effort, he
said, should lookto include
"music that is participatory, warm and accessible," "children...
[whose] simple faith and playful eagerness will help‑to breathe new life
into our prayer” and more Hebrew, "the great democratic tool of Jewish
worship, the vehicle that opens the gates of prayer."'
"We do not want to be rabbis who are spiritual
imperialists, insisting that worship is ours alone," he said. "We do
not want to be cantors who are operatic obstructionists, intent on performance
at the expense of prayer, and we do not want to be lay people who are
conscientious objectors, objecting to everything that is not as it was."
Rabbi Yoffie also announced an agreement with Synagogue
2000, a nondenominational institute that takes an eclectic approach to worship
revitalization, to induct 15 more Reform congregations into its program. Led by
an educational expert from the Conservative movement, Ron Wolfson, and a Reform
liturgist, Rabbi Lawrence Hoffman, Synagogue 2000 has already involved a number
of Reform synagogues in its programs.
Many practices associated with the movement for worship
revitalization were already on display at the convention, which was coordinated
by a UAHC staffer who is also a Synagogue 2000 faculty member, Rabbi Daniel
Freelander. The 5,000 assembled Jews linked arms as they sang hymns for the
Sabbath on Friday evening, and strangers sitting side by side greeted each
other. People stood during the misheberach
prayer and called out the names of those who needed healing as the rabbi
conducting the service swept his arm out over the congregation.
Rabbi Freelander said the convention was a
"laboratory" at which he could prove the worthiness of new worship
styles to "naysayers" and that the conventions had evolved over the
last several years to be more participatory, "The reality is a lot less
threatening than the idea," he said, adding, "for our classical
Reformers, who feel most alienated, they felt validated."
At Saturday morning services, an almost biblical spectacle
occurred when, in honor of the 20th anniversary of Reform's initiative to step
up outreach to and conversion of gentiles in the Reform Jewish orbit, all the
participants who had converted because of that initiative were called to the
Torah. Some 200 individuals streamed out of the audience and ascended the
podium, swamping the area, as the president emeritus of the UAHC, Rabbi
Alexander Schindler, intoned a blessing. Several references were made from the
podium to "the biennial at Sinai."
It was, as one participant was heard to say, as if "the
'60s generation has taken over the movement." Musicians strummed guitars
on the podium and in the halls; men and women wore multicolored yarmulkes and
prayer shawls, beribboned sachets passed from hand to hand during the blessing
on spices that was said as part of a Havdalah service marking theclose of the Sabbath.
This being Disney World, children were much in evidence, and
Rabbi Yoffie’s Saturday speech seemed designed to appeal to the many young
parents in the audience. He launched “a campaign to ensure that no Jewish child
in America goes to bed without reading a Jewish book, listening to a Jewish
tape, watching a Jewish video, or playing a Jewish computer game.” He referred
to the Sh’ma, the credo of faith, which many Jews recite at bedtime, and he
said, “making bedtime Jewish time is not a new insight; it is as old as the
Torah itself. If we offer [children] Jewish stories and the regularity of
ritual, particularly at bedtime, we will connect them with Torah, fortify their
moral moorings and create sacred memories that are certain to endure.”
Segueing to Reform’s social action agenda, Rabbi Yoffie
called for more gun control, eliciting the greatest applause of the morning
when he called the National Rifle Association “the criminals lobby” for
supporting “the right of any crook or wife beater to buy almost any weapon at
almost any time, no questions asked.” On the question of religious pluralism in
Israel, he asked [then] Prime Minister Barak “to oppose legislative Judaism in
any form.”
Convention participants, UAHC staffers and Reform lay
leaders interviewed at the convention appeared to embrace the worship and
childhood initiatives. It will be hard work, but it will get done,” the new
chairman of the UAHC’s board of trustees, Russell Silverman, said. The
associate director o the UAHC department of religious living, Rabbi Sue Ann
Wasserman, acknowledged that such changes are “threatening. There are some
rabbis, some cantors, some lay leaders who’ve come to like it the way it is,”
but she said that changes address “a deep-seated need that everyone seems to be
having to connect to the spiritual.”
E.J. Kessler is a
staff writer for The Forward.