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The Jewish Chronicle

A Reform chief rabbinate soon?

A Reform chief rabbinate soon?

September 26, 2008 10:30

By

Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

3 min read

The real threat of the latest call for unity is that signatories will set up their own United Reformed Synagogue


So much has already been written about the Statement of Community Collaboration jointly authored by the Reform, Liberal and Masorti movements that I hesitate to add to the discussion. I do so only because I don't think that the significance of the Statement can be properly understood without taking a long-term view of its origins and meaning. Blame the historian in me if you like.

I cannot believe that the Statement would ever have been issued during the lifetime of Rabbi Louis Jacobs who - whatever his actual title - was in fact the Moro D'asra of the Masorti movement in this country. The Moro D'asra ("The Master of the Place") is the ultimate religious authority, towering over any beis din by virtue of his reputation, learning and charisma. That was the position occupied by the late Rabbi Jacobs within Masorti Judaism in this country.

But Rabbi Jacobs's theology could be located squarely within the minhag Anglia - the theory and practice of the United Synagogue as it existed between its foundation and, say, the end of the Second World War. Divine service at Rabbi Jacobs's New London Synagogue was little different from that of the United Synagogue during that era. His supporters were drawn to him partly for that very reason. On account of his views on the origin of the Torah he may well have been considered a heretic in some quarters. But his rabbinical diplomas - granted by highly reputable Orthodox rabbis in the north of England - were never revoked.

So people who joined the New London Synagogue could believe, and claim with some truth, that they had simply become members of an alternative Orthodox establishment. This is clearly no longer the case. The current move must if it continues result in the birth of the Jewish equivalent of the United Reformed Church, into which, for the greater good of their Calvinist beliefs, a number of non-Anglican churches agreed to sink their remaining differences some 36 years ago. And, viewed from this perspective, such a Jewish equivalent will make Anglo-Jewish "unity" in this country less rather than more likely.