Reconstructionism and the Rejection of Chosenness
According to
Reconstructionism's founder, the idea of chosenness divides peoples from each
other and should be rejected, not reinterpreted.
By Richard A. Hirsh
Reprinted with
permission from The
Reconstructionist (September 1984).
Among the many distinctive ideas of Reconstructionism, the
most fundamental is the belief that Judaism is the humanly created and
naturally developed product of the Jewish people. Classical Reconstructionism
(i.e., the work of Mordecai M. Kaplan and his immediate disciples) sought to
reinterpret rigorously the essential elements of Jewish civilization under the
rubric "Judaism without supernaturalism."
God was no longer to be conceived of as a supernatural
being, but as a power or process operative in and through the natural world,
made manifest most clearly in human conscience. Torah was no longer to be
conceived of as a supernaturally revealed body of law and literature, but as
coterminus with the totality of Jewish civilization created by humans and
subject to evolution. Finally, the people Israel was no longer to be conceived
of as a supernaturally "chosen" people, but as a naturally evolving
social group whose unique identity exists solely in relation to its unique
culture.
Of the many changes introduced into Jewish thought in the
modern period, the Reconstructionist deletion of the endorsement of and
reference to the idea of the chosen people has been among the most
controversial. Continued resistance to this change indicates a need to reexamine
the rationales invoked on its behalf.
It should be noted that other contemporary Jewish
ideologies, notably Reform and Conservative Judaism, have evidenced varying
degrees of discomfort with the concept of chosenness, and felt a need to offer
apologetic arguments for its retention.
In The Future of the
American Jew (1948), Mordecai Kaplan indicates the four basic rationales
commonly invoked for that purpose.
Genetic Chosenness
The first rationale is that Jews are, by virtue of heredity,
superior in the fields of religion and ethics, having what the noted Reform
theologian Abraham Geiger once called a "native talent for religion."
The essential fallacy of such an argument is that it
presumes that Jewish identity is in some way biological and/or genetic. It thus
completely ignores both the multiethnic character of the Jewish people and the
significance of conversion. Having struggled to gain acceptance of the concept
of peoplehood as the appropriate
category of Jewish corporate identity, Reconstructionists clearly would not
advocate retaining the concept of chosenness based on a misunderstanding of
that category. (Unfortunately, there persists in Jewish life today a vulgar
version of the heredity argument which manifests itself in such undertakings as
calculating the number of Nobel prize winners who are "Jewish.")
Innovators of Ethical Ideals
A second rationale for retaining the idea of chosenness
which Kaplan rejected was that Jews were the first people to manifest the
essential religious and ethical ideas which have since been adopted as the
basis of Western civilization.
Viewed historically, this claim is untenable as an absolute,
since the contributions of Greek and Roman civilization, for example, as well
as those of the European Enlightenment, were of significance as well. If
anything, comparative religious and cultural studies support a superficial
commonality with regard to ethical concepts which transcend civilizational
lines. Even if, however, one grants that certain crucial moral insights have
derived from the experience of the Jewish people, that would not be sufficient
ground on which to stake the claim to chosenness.
The Most True Religion
A third argument made in favor of the "chosen
people" is that Judaism represents the highest form (i.e., the truest
form) of religious belief.
As Kaplan notes, this may constitute a sufficient rationale
for an Orthodox believer. The majority of modern Jews, however, accept a
developmental model of Jewish religion, and thus cannot claim for it the category
of "truth," which presumes a static, rather than a fluid, entity. The
fact that a given stage of Jewish religion manifested certain ethical insights
does not mean that those insights were always present, nor does it guarantee
that they will always be accepted.
While not endorsing a totally relativistic ethical system,
the evolutionary conception of Jewish religion indicates that ethical postures
are subject to continual refinement and reassessment. It would thus be
difficult to isolate one specific stage of
Jewish religion and point to it as the highest
form of religion; consequently, a convincing argument for chosenness cannot be
based on this rationale.
Jewish Mission
The final argument which achieved currency especially,
although not exclusively, in Reform circles, is that Jews have a
"mission" of spreading ethical monotheism, and that it is for this
purpose that they have been chosen. This rationale might preserve the idea of
election but runs the risk of creating a subtle but real intolerance for other
faiths which, by definition, remain "incomplete." In a curious
reversal of historical doctrinal disputation, the "mission theory"
seems to imply that there is "no salvation outside the synagogue."
Furthermore, as Kaplan notes, the "mission" of Israel,
as defined by modernists, does not correlate with the election of Israel as
understood in Jewish tradition. Finally, even those who adhere to this notion
are manifestly reluctant to undertake any real missionizing on behalf of Jewish
ethical monotheism, although the recent call by a prominent Reform rabbi for
"outreach to the unchurched" may represent an attempt to
resurrect the mission theory.
Discomfort With Chosenness
The very fact that such apologetic arguments are put forth
indicates discomfort on the part of many modern Jews with the implications of
chosenness, as it is traditionally understood.
Classical Reconstructionism rejected the attempt to
reinterpret chosenness precisely because, in Kaplan's words, "by no kind
of dialectics is it possible to remove the odium of comparison from any
reinterpretation of an idea which makes invidious distinctions between one
people and another."
Thus, in the prayerbooks of the Reconstructionist movement,
references to the doctrine of chosenness were eliminated in favor of
alternative formulations which advocated a sense of vocation (as in the phrase substituted in the blessing before
reading the Torah, "who hast brought us nigh to thy service…" (asher kervanu la‑avodato [instead
of the traditional asher bahar banu
mi-kol ha-amim, "who hast chosen us from amongst the nations"]).
It is worth noting that Kaplan might have, on logical and
rational grounds alone, declared the entire issue to be moot; a non‑personal
God conceived of as a power or process could not "choose" anyone. Yet
Kaplan's essential argument was made on moral and pragmatic grounds.
Morally, the assumption of a predetermined, supernaturally
bestowed and permanent superiority was not in keeping with humanistic concerns
and in fact hindered the attempt to emphasize the common human needs to which
every religion responded. Pragmatically, invocation of such phrases as "He
hath not made us like the pagans of the world, nor placed us like the heathen
tribes of the earth…" [from the Aleinu
prayer] was not conducive to the fostering of intergroup goodwill which
Reconstructionism maintained should be a goal of all religions.
Rabbi Richard A. Hirsh
is the Executive Director of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association and
the editor of The Reconstructionist.