Search For Spirituality Emanu-El scholar-in-residence critiques Reform Judaism. JENNIFER FRENKEL AND JORDAN MAGIDSON Special to the Jewish News liv hen first asked to interview Rabbi Lawrence Kushner in anticipation of his visit to Temple Emanu-El as its scholar-in-residence, we expected to engage in a stimulating conversation on Jewish theology and mysticism. After all, he is well known as one of the Reform movement's leading scholars and visionaries and the author of more than 12 books on Judaism and spirituality. In this, we were not disappointed. He was insightful and clear and presented his views in a no-nonsense, matter-of-fact way. But he did surprise us with his many contradic- tory, and often critical, views — many which fly in the face of typical Reform dogma. Rabbi Kushner, a native Detroiter, was ordained from Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati in 1969. "I have always been fascinated in the idea of truth and the nature of life," the rabbi said. "And through this, I was drawn to mysticism. Rabbi Kushner recalls being at a service at Temple Emanu-El in Oak Park when it occurred to him what the role of a rabbi real- ly meant. Rabbi Kushner "I remember looking at all the rabbis on the bimah and thinking that rabbis get paid to think about the meaning of life and to help others think about it as well," he said. "Rabbis get to be with people on occasions when life gives them a whack on the head. Being a rabbi seems like the best job in the world. If rab- bis listen more than they talk, they can help peo- ple. Rabbi Kushner has seen the Reform movement evolve since his childhood. He grew up in what he calls a classically Reform household, a household that went to temple on Shabbat, fasted on Yom Kippur and ate bacon for breakfast. "Reform Judaism in my lifetime has made a dramatic turn toward the right: he explains. "Take kashrut [dietary laws], for example. Reform people tend to follow kashrut more now, and when I was growing up, most Reform Jews didn't know what that meant. Rabbis openly ridiculed Jordan Magidson is a senior at Michigan State University majoring in English and journalism. Jennifer Frenkel is a recent MSU graduate currently applying to Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. Both are graduates of Temple Emanu-El in Oak Park 3/12 2004 62 kashrut and seriously consid- ered having Shabbat services on Sunday morning." Hunger For Tradition But since that time, things have changed. According to Rabbi Kushner, Reform Jews are feeling a hunger to return to the traditions and spirituali- ty that are inherently Jewish. Still, he fears the Reform movement is shallow and vacu- ous. "Reform Judaism is not very deep," he said. "Where are our great Reform thinkers? Where is our Reform litera- ture? If you remove the idea of tikkun olam [repair of the world] and prophetic Judaism, then the Reform movement is very thin." He also worries the Reform movement has removed itself from the spiritual teachings of Jennifer Frenkel and Jordan Magidson Torah and that many of its scholars think that they are everything is an expression of God. smarter than Torah. "Free will does not exist," he said. "You don't "Torah is many layers of editing, but it is also an have to like it; it is just the way life is. Free will is a expression of God," he said. "If you miss the conundrum. We all have an illusion of free will, but unique, sacred and supreme importance of Torah, it that is all it is, an illusion. We're not robots, but we is like going to the movies with a paper bag over believe we run our lives more than we do. When we you head — you miss the whole point. It is very are younger, we think we are making all the deci- powerful, and you have to assume that it is more sions, but when we are older, we look back on our Divine than its creators. It is not enough to believe lives and see how everything fell into place." that Torah is 'Divinely inspired.' I think that that is While Rabbi Kushner often is critical of the a cop-out." Reform movement, he also acknowledges its virtues, He suggests we look to the Chasidim for inspira- including the acceptance of patrilineal descent and tion and to learn how to bring spirituality back into our lives. One way, he says, is to live in the continu- the welcoming of intermarried families. "It has always been our movement that has been ous presence of the Divine. He believes we can on the edge," he said. "Sometimes, we do stupid achieve this by doing mitzvot. things, and sometimes wise." ❑ "My teacher, Arnold Jacob Wolf, told me, There is one Judaism, and it is Orthodoxy, but all Jews are Reform.' Reform Judaism made a mistake in letting Rabbi Kushner will be the Hamburger Scholar people choose which commandments and mitzvot in Residence the weekend of March 19-20 at to follow. People should do whatever they can, and Temple Emanu-El. At 8 p.m. March 19, he'll that's better than the alternative --- which is noth- speak at erev Shabbat services on "Invisible ing." Lines of Connection: When God Makes a "If you drive on Shabbat, make it for the sake of Surprise Appearance in Ordinary Events." Shabbat, not the sake of picking up your dry clean- On March 20, he will lead a study at 1 ing," he said. p.m. on "Zohar: A Creative Exploration of a According to Rabbi Kushner, there are three Great Mystical Text." On Sunday at 9:30 a.m., views of God: that God controls everything; that He he will discuss the "Sinai Revelation Re- controls nothing; and that He is everything. The Imagined." Temple Emanu-El, (248) 967- rabbi believes God can be found in everything: the 4020. sun, the ocean, a cell phone or a textbook. God doesn't control or make something happen, rather .