Fr. 23.90

Awakenings - American Jewish Transformations in Identity, Leadership, and Belonging

English · Hardback

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Description

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"An assessment of the challenges facing the American Jewish community, and a vision of this community's future"--

List of contents










Foreword by Rev. Kaji DousaIntroduction: Diaspora Aglow
Part 1: Purpose Petrified
  Chapter 1: Peddling Nostalgia as Salvation
  Chapter 2: The Authenticity Trap
  Chapter 3: Edifice Rex
  Chapter 4: Power Dynamics
Part 2: Transformations
  Chapter 5: Blessings and Curses
  Chapter 6: Prominence and Vulnerability
  Chapter 7: Israel and Diaspora
  Chapter 8: Sharing Power
  Chapter 9: Connecting Identities
  Chapter 10: Creative Destruction
Part 3: Renewing
  Chapter 11: Spiritual Renewal
  Chapter 12: Reclaiming Practices
  Chapter 13: Connecting from Afar
  Chapter 14: Praying with Our Feet
  Chapter 15: Studying as Sacred Practice
Part 4: The Unfolding Awakening
  Chapter 16: Reaching
  Chapter 17: Being
  Chapter 18: Belonging
  Chapter 19: Joining Together
  Chapter 20: Feeling at Home
  Chapter 21: Leading
Conclusion: Co-creating a New Center
Appendix 1: A Call to Action
Appendix 2: A Brief History of Jewish Awakenings
Afterword by Dr. Eboo Patel






About the author










Rabbi Joshua Stanton is
the Spiritual co-Leader of East End Temple in New York and Senior Fellow of
CLAL, the National Center of Learning and Leadership. Together with Rabbi Benjamin Spratt he writes a column for Religion News Service. 


Summary

"Strong debut . . . this nuanced portrait of the state of American Judaism proffers a cogent vision of how to revitalize the faith." --Publisher's Weekly

Why are religious organizations on the decline? What changes have caused many of them to lose touch with modern spiritual needs? What does it take to remain relevant in today's world? Rabbis Joshua Stanton and Benjamin Spratt take on these and other critical questions facing religion today. And they have answers that are frank and yet surprisingly upbeat.
Nearly every facet of American Jewish life--and of American religious life in general--faces both disruption and great prospects for renewal. In every corner of our community, Jewish identity, wisdom, ritual, and power are being remixed and reimagined. As centralized authority declines, American Judaism moves and grows in a multitude of directions.

As technology reduces the importance of geographic boundaries, new opportunities for connection and new modes of exercising power emerge. New mixtures of ancient Jewish practice and modern needs are beginning to shape the renewal of American Judaism, widening access to Jewish wisdom and ritual, transforming Jewish consumers into Jewish co-creators, and building new networks of Jewish belonging.
The initial purposes that inspired much of the American Jewish infrastructure are now falling victim to their own success.
An emphasis on nostalgia and authenticity encourages us to mythologize the past and narrow our awareness of the present. A focus on buildings and centralized power by much of American Judaism reflects the realities of a century ago.
In understanding what keeps these organizations mired in the past, we can unearth a new purpose to unify the American Diaspora and guide it toward a new golden age.


The Foreword by Rev. Kaji Dousa, Senior Pastor of Park Avenue Christian Church, asks what a Black pastor can add to the work of two white rabbis, and the answer is that "cherished thinking needs a hard look everywhere. Particularly as we rightly orient our resources to protecting the good, to eliminating poverty that need not exist, to eradicating the hatred that threatens the very existence of our people--we need to look, together. Blacks and Jews and those living in the intersections therein will only survive and thrive with the survival and thriving of each other. So, of course, it makes sense that we will awaken, together."

The Afterword by Dr. Eboo Patel, Founder and President of Interfaith Youth Core cites the story of Rabbi Akiva, who "did not mourn when he saw the ruins of the Temple but rather was delighted. 'We always knew these stones must come down. In order to move forward, this had to fall apart first. Now we can begin.' All of our religions have history and theology like this. I think about the emergence of everything from Catholic orders to Sufi tariqas--renewal movements that changed the map of entire religions. We are at that same point again. Rabbis Stanton and Spratt propose we meet the moment with the generosity and power that are at the heart of all our religions. Their work gives me confidence that we can."

Product details

Authors Rabbi Benjamin Spratt, Joshua/ Spratt Stanton, Rabbi Joshua Stanton
Assisted by Rev Kaji Dousa (Foreword), Dr. Eboo Patel (Afterword)
Publisher Behrman house incorporated
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 02.08.2022
 
EAN 9781681150895
ISBN 978-1-68115-089-5
No. of pages 192
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Religion/theology > Practical theology
Social sciences, law, business > Ethnology > Ethnology

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology of Religion, RELIGION / Institutions & Organizations

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