I just came across this short youtube clip and it made me think of BB's recent comparison of Reconstructionism to Jewish humanism:
YouTube - RRC & Kaplan: Rabbi Jacob J. Staub
On God as "the Power that makes for salvation" Staub quotes Kaplan as saying that "[it is not a] rational explanation... [but rather is] meant to be a rational method of indicating where to look for that inexpressible, indescribable and incomprehensible mystery we name God... that we should not look for that mystery in the astronomical, or the physical dimension of the universe, nor in miracles which are only myths, but to that striving in man by which, when we are at our best, we aim to transcend or metamorphoze ourselves. That is the striving for salvation."
While a Kaplanian conception of God is clearly some sort of reconstruction, I would suggest that it is very robust and very God-centered. As Staub interprets it, if I understand him correctly, Kaplan is speaking only of the types of tendencies that should inform our epochal reconstructions or recontextualizations of religious truth: namely, those places of growth or striving for greatness in human endeavors and the human psyche. These are not the locations of God but more or less the places that most point toward God. It is hard to say whether this is inevitably dualistic. It only seems to speak to the types of internal or external events that lead in the direction of holiness and not so clearly to God's nature. This isn't to say that it doesn't speak to God's nature but that I'm not sure it limits God so much as it takes a quietistic approach to the issue of God's nature by placing its focus upon moments where we reach for self-transcendence.
I'm personally not entirely satisfied even by this answer perhaps because it seems somewhat evasive in its eloquence of larger problems but I'm also not broadly familiar with Kaplan's religious thought. Most of what I would call Kaplanian might more appropriately be called post-Kaplanian, influenced as it is by more recent developments in the Jewish community or co-opted by a larger and less daring mainstream (in this case the Reformists despite Kaplan's origin in the Conservative movement and Orthodoxy, and the more similar ideals of religious life found between the Conservative and Reconstructionist movements) which inevitably wishes to reframe his ideas so that they are in greater agreement with its own principles and thus simplify a more rigorous theology.
Mainly I want to point out the difference between this and a Judaized humanism that rejects God entirely and consequently rejects traditional liturgy almost entirely. I do also think it might be worthwhile to speak to some of the strengths and weaknesses of Kaplan's approach. But from this passage alone that would prove difficult.
Thoughts?
YouTube - RRC & Kaplan: Rabbi Jacob J. Staub
On God as "the Power that makes for salvation" Staub quotes Kaplan as saying that "[it is not a] rational explanation... [but rather is] meant to be a rational method of indicating where to look for that inexpressible, indescribable and incomprehensible mystery we name God... that we should not look for that mystery in the astronomical, or the physical dimension of the universe, nor in miracles which are only myths, but to that striving in man by which, when we are at our best, we aim to transcend or metamorphoze ourselves. That is the striving for salvation."
While a Kaplanian conception of God is clearly some sort of reconstruction, I would suggest that it is very robust and very God-centered. As Staub interprets it, if I understand him correctly, Kaplan is speaking only of the types of tendencies that should inform our epochal reconstructions or recontextualizations of religious truth: namely, those places of growth or striving for greatness in human endeavors and the human psyche. These are not the locations of God but more or less the places that most point toward God. It is hard to say whether this is inevitably dualistic. It only seems to speak to the types of internal or external events that lead in the direction of holiness and not so clearly to God's nature. This isn't to say that it doesn't speak to God's nature but that I'm not sure it limits God so much as it takes a quietistic approach to the issue of God's nature by placing its focus upon moments where we reach for self-transcendence.
I'm personally not entirely satisfied even by this answer perhaps because it seems somewhat evasive in its eloquence of larger problems but I'm also not broadly familiar with Kaplan's religious thought. Most of what I would call Kaplanian might more appropriately be called post-Kaplanian, influenced as it is by more recent developments in the Jewish community or co-opted by a larger and less daring mainstream (in this case the Reformists despite Kaplan's origin in the Conservative movement and Orthodoxy, and the more similar ideals of religious life found between the Conservative and Reconstructionist movements) which inevitably wishes to reframe his ideas so that they are in greater agreement with its own principles and thus simplify a more rigorous theology.
Mainly I want to point out the difference between this and a Judaized humanism that rejects God entirely and consequently rejects traditional liturgy almost entirely. I do also think it might be worthwhile to speak to some of the strengths and weaknesses of Kaplan's approach. But from this passage alone that would prove difficult.
Thoughts?