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‘The principle is to be inclusive. We want to put a welcome sign on the Beit Din’

As they prepare to unite as Progressive Judaism, Liberal and Reform rabbis are discussing where their practices need to converge

June 15, 2025 11:33
Edinburg Admission Ceremony.jpg
Liberal Beit Din head Rabbi Mark Solomon welcomes new converts at his Edinburgh synagogue
4 min read

It will be another few months before the embryonic Progressive Judaism, born of the union of the Movement for Reform Judaism and Liberal Judaism, will formally take its place among British Jewry’s denominations at the beginning of 2026. A few legal and administrative niceties remain to be cleared before the new movement, whose birth was approved by members of the two synagogue bodies at special meetings last month, is fully up and running.

But while MRJ and LJ agree on principles, their practices are not identical. When the head of the Liberal Beit Din Rabbi Mark Solomon returns from sabbatical in Australia, he will resume talks with his Reform counterpart Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain to discuss some of the differences.

There are no longer substantial divergences, as there were 40 years ago when merger was last floated. Reform then used matrilineal status to determine who was a Jew, whereas the Liberals were willing to accept the child of a Jewish father and non-Jewish mother. The Reform youth movement was Zionist, whereas the Liberals were not; now both belong to the worldwide Progressive Zionist movement, Netzer.

Reform have followed the Liberals in recognising equilineal descent, conducting same-sex marriages and enabling rabbis to give a blessing at mixed-faith wedding ceremonies. Romain recalls that when he and Solomon first started talking about details, they found “our practices were much more closely aligned than we thought. That is one of the reasons the merger succeeded, we are already on the same page. I was pleasantly surprised by how little we are going to have to do to bring the two systems together.”