Poh,
I think that one of the difficulties with this type of discussion is that we're witnessing a transition within the Jewish community away from denominationalism. I don't think this means that the denominations are going to disappear but that the lines that divide are becoming much fuzzier and what we're left with will feel much less institutionalized. But my sense of the community is that most people don't strongly identify with a denomination anymore. They might identify with a community and that community may identify with a denomination but that is a different matter.
That's a very good and very difficult question. We could say that the mitzvot are central, but the mitzvot are understood differently in different communities and are related to in different ways. The central things seem to me to be the Jewish cycles of the week, month and year, Torah study and a willingness to wrestle with the meaning and relevance of tradition. I'm not sure there's any movement whose ideals exclude any of the above. Conclusions and methodologies however may vary.
I've been trying my best to follow these dialogues and now I am really lost. I tried to chart everything on a grid from left to right (left = liberal right = conservative) and then tried to list all the primary tenents of each. But when I started seeing reform-renewal, conservative-renewal, renewal-renewal, plan old renewal I knew this started to look like a fractal of some sort (probably not a good reference, but that is what comes to mind).
I think that one of the difficulties with this type of discussion is that we're witnessing a transition within the Jewish community away from denominationalism. I don't think this means that the denominations are going to disappear but that the lines that divide are becoming much fuzzier and what we're left with will feel much less institutionalized. But my sense of the community is that most people don't strongly identify with a denomination anymore. They might identify with a community and that community may identify with a denomination but that is a different matter.
what do you see as the common denominator in all of the various forms of Judiasm.
That's a very good and very difficult question. We could say that the mitzvot are central, but the mitzvot are understood differently in different communities and are related to in different ways. The central things seem to me to be the Jewish cycles of the week, month and year, Torah study and a willingness to wrestle with the meaning and relevance of tradition. I'm not sure there's any movement whose ideals exclude any of the above. Conclusions and methodologies however may vary.