this is turning into a great discussion, isn't it? a real argument
le'shem shamayim.
But you aren't being open to just taking on some of the element of the previous format. If you were open to that, then both Reform and Conservative Judaism as well as Reconstructionism would have to be accomodated. Even Jewish humanism bears important similarities with its predecessors. You're taking on the old format and calling it normative.
i'm obviously not explaining myself very well. perhaps this would be easier if i explained precisely why i think my definition of "normative" is necessarily linked to pre-haskalah judaism and what made judaism such an paradoxically sustainable anomaly in this environment. which means i'm going to have to talk about why the haskalah is so problematic for me nowadays.
When all of Judaism was strictly halachic, before the haskalah, we as a people saw all of these issues from one angle (not that everyone shared the same views, but that our views were limited.)
that assumes that the haskalah was unlimiting. from our post-modern perspective, i can't really agree with that 100%.
After the enlightenment took full force, we could not return. The haskalah, in my mind, was just as important as the revolutionary work of Rambam or of the sages of the mishna.
i agree it has been epoch-making of the same order as the destruction of the Temple. we are now in a similar period to the first couple of centuries after this. the question is really who is going to be yohanan ben zakkai? who is going to be yehuda ha-nasi? not necessarily even individuals, or groups, but maybe groups of groups, or tendencies. more importantly, are we with the tannaim, or are we proto-christians,
minim,
kutim, hellenisers, qumranis, gnostics, sadducees, or
'amei ha-aretz?
So to not acknowledge the importance of the haskalah by not putting all forms of Judaism on equal terms, I don't think that can work.
but you're assuming the answer by means of a
fait accompli or, dare i say it, "facts on the ground". i don't accept that from artscroll, "torah judaism", the
kiruv movement, haredi sects or the settlement movement. why have i suddenly got to accept it from the denominationalists? i'm not going to get sucked into the equation of a denominational approach with the idea of "70 faces of Torah". so what actually can i accept and what can i not accept?
i suppose for me this is bound up with the idea of *authority*. it is authority that impels me to accept halakhah as binding, so the question must therefore be what i understand to be authority. and that's not a simple thing. it is bound up, for example, with something like motivation. there are, imho, correct motivations and mistaken ones (that is, assuming that nobody actually wants to harm judaism) and i am sorry to say that at least one of the motivations behind the *original* haskalah thinking was mistaken - to try and make judaism palatable and acceptable to european society.
i also think it was as mistaken during the haskalah as it was in the 10th century to try and subordinate judaism to the categories of reason - something over which ibn ezra in particular takes the gaonim to task. the haskalah had its idols no less than the time of the mishnah - namely, progress, science, reason, inalienable human rights, liberty and in particular the nation-state. and all of these, though extremely important and good (like sunlight) can become idolatrous (as rambam was perceptive enough to point out) and warped.
it is precisely the genius of judaism that it DEDUCED THESE CONCEPTS FOR ITSELF - and potentially workably, too, from (at least mostly) its own resources. it was a *huge* mistake to consider that judaism a) did not produce these or b) contradicted them in any meaningful fashion. thus, the "orthodox" innovations of hirsch *just as much* as those of the nascent reform movement were doomed from the beginning. because they were wrong, the *reaction* against them (as exemplified by, for example, the chatam sofer and the zionists, that's what i mean by a short-circuit) was equally misguided. this, imho, is how we get to the sorry state of affairs we find ourselves in today.
in short - WE GOT THE HASKALAH TOTALLY WRONG. and everything we have tried to do since then to reconcile the differences it created has been doomed to failure because we have failed to rectify the mistakes that were made in germany in the C18th/19th. because of this, i believe that certainly the UK and US reform movements and much of the conservative and orthodox world are now more or less where the karaites were in the C10th - impelled to invent their own
d'rabbanan because they had rejected what was already there.
so, what next? my approach to creating a normative judaism must include what is correct *in essence* about all the movements and address the *problems* that they were created to solve.
Do you extend this to halachah? What do you apply it to?
with the proviso that i am by no means an expert in halakhah, i would apply it to that which causes injustice and harm, as it says:
tzedeq, tzedeq tirdof - "justice, justice you must pursue." this means where injustices have been committed both internally and externally -
agunah, the palestinians, homosexuality, racism,
herems, sinat hinam, we must construct viable and valid ways to approach them and leave no stone unturned in doing so. personally i think part of this could involve r. steinsaltz's experiment in constructing a court of 71 - let's see if the idea of "kosher pheasant" can be established and then move onto the harder stuff.
But it could be that I am confused as to whether or not you would apply flexibility and innovation to halachah.
the simple answer is that i would. the more complicated answer is a jumping-off point for what i suppose are critical success factors for jewish innovation or renewal or whatever you want to call it, here are 10 that i think must be considered when making the changes we need to make:
1. sustainability - in other words, the future effects must be indefinitely beneficial, or they must be explicitly limited
2. targeting - it must be clear whether something is intended for *everyone*, or whether it is aspirational, or whether it is for a scholarly or pious elite
3. convincingness - there must be a demonstrably compelling argument that can be made
4. communicablility/understandability - this is not the same as simplicity, but it is closer to clarity
5. justice - this means the avoidance of harm and the maintenance of equity and impartiality, not always favouring one or the other group or outcome
6. passion - abstract, overly intellectual solutions satisfy the head without the heart; nobody can live without food and music
7. cultural anchoredness - part of the genius of judaism is its ability to import that which is best about the cultures it interacts with, whether this is intellectual, emotional or traditional
8. acceptability and actionability - by which i mean practicality and implementability; theoretical solutions (no irony intended) are no good to anyone but theorists
9. authoritativeness and trustworthiness - in the end, we have to trust someone - rabbis, historians, commentators, archaeologists, scientists, politicians; we have to believe they understand what they're doing and they're not lying to us. if something is demonstrably false, it is unreasonable to expect it to get support
10. halakhic validity - again, there are many ways to how this is achieved, but the important thing here is not really consensus, but interoperability - open standards, as it were. to expect all standards to be
bada"tz is to create exclusive enclaves of purity - and the whole point of judaism is that it is designed to cope with diversity - a portfolio religion, if you will.
the interview you have posted is absolutely *fantastic*. although i would perhaps not have designed all of the solutions the same way as they have, or with the same outcomes, i see the process as a halakhic one. in fact, i'd like to discuss the interview at length with you; perhaps we need another thread for this, though?
i don't know if you've read eliezer berkovits and david hartman at all, but these guys (and my own rav, as well as the sephardic approaches) are what enable me to consider myself as within the halakhic mainstream (or orthodoxy, if you prefer to call it that, although it seems to me there's a big hinterland between that and where you are)
b'shalom
bananabrain