Times of Israel What do you get when
you bring together 5,000 of the Reform movement’s faithful for a
conference in sunny San Diego in mid-December?
For pep, there were the spirited prayer
services, the morning-till-night stream of musical performances and
Rabbi Rick Jacobs, the president of the Union for Reform Judaism, or
URJ, who compared the challenges facing the movement to giant waves,
crying “Surf’s up!”
“Big waves require more skill and courage to
ride, but if ridden artfully they enable us to go faster and further
than ever before,” Jacobs said, a giant screen projecting a swell behind
him.
For the intervention, there was session after
session devoted to the challenges facing the movement, especially the
question of how to engage young adult Jews who, by and large, are
steering clear of Reform synagogues.
“I think the Reform movement needs to remember
that no matter how much we double down on great programming, it might
not increase the likelihood that those young people are going to walk
in,” Rabbi B. Elka Abrahamson, a Reform rabbi who is president of the
Wexner Foundation, said in a conference session focused on the recent
Pew Research Center survey of US Jewry.
“I think that’s really hard for this gathering
to keep in mind because we are the people who love what we do, and we
just think if we do more of it and do it better and do it more often and
do it faster that they’re going to come,” said Abrahamson.[...]
Reform membership is dwindling, synagogues are struggling to secure
their bottom lines and, as Jacobs noted at the last biennial, 80 percent
of Reform Jews are “out the door” by the end of high school. Many never
return: Fewer than half of Reform parents have their children enrolled
in some kind of Jewish youth, camp or educational program, the Pew
survey showed.
I don't know, maybe they should try truth? Young people seem to like that much more than schizophrenia.
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