Recent studies have demonstrated that there is a great spiritual openness among young people. However, many among the next generation feel disenfranchised with organized religion and the established Jewish community. Those who desire to affiliate, and practice their spirituality within a communal context, are still often left feeling marginalized and out of place. There is a sense of not knowing exactly where we fit in.
Today’s young people are much more informed than any prior generation. We are also quite complex. A quick cross-examination reveals a broad spectrum of young Jews who do not fit nicely into any one category. There are observant, but progressive Jews. Jews who keep kosher - but do so with an eco-mindedness, buying only organic kosher free-range meats. There are secular atheists who belong to Jewish organizations because they deeply care about tikkun olam, social justice, and Jewish continuity. And there are also young Jews who feel connected to traditional Judaism, but find themselves challenged by their internal struggle over gender roles and expectations within the religious community.
There are no perfectly fit boxes for today’s diverse Jewish community. Young Jews are not cookie cutter images. And because young Jews, like myself, do not fit nicely into any specific category(ies), it often leaves us feeling marginalized to a degree in every circle we are a part of.
Beginning in 2003, the Higher Education Research Institute (HERI) at UCLA began a major, multi-year research project examining the spiritual development of undergraduate students on college and university campuses.[1] The study is designed to enhance understanding of how college students conceive of spirituality, the role it plays in their lives, and how colleges and universities can be more effective in facilitating students’ spiritual development.[2] The research determined that the majority of students on college campuses consider themselves “spiritual,” interested in spirituality, and open to non-critical and open-minded dialogue.[3]
Among Jewish students surveyed, the research supports what many of us have already understood about young non-affiliated and educated Jews. According to HERI’s website:
There are at least two clear-cut clusters of religious preferences. The first—including Mormons, 7th Day Adventists, Baptists, and “other Christians”—is strongly spiritual, religious, and religiously/socially conservative and expresses little Religious Skepticism. The second—including Unitarians, Buddhists, Hindus, Episcopalians, Eastern Orthodox and Jewish students—tends to score low on religiousness and high on Religious Skepticism, Ecumenical Worldview, Ethic of Caring, and Charitable Involvement (emphasis added).[4]
Young Jews today are skeptical of religion, and religious observance, but care deeply about social and community issues. They are looking to affiliate and partner with other Jews, just not necessarily always religiously. Young educated Jews are looking to belong and make a difference in the world around them. They are also looking for answers, but don’t want to be told what to do. Young people are in dire need of guides and mentors who can nurture them along the path of life. They desire communities in which they are both welcomed and needed. Young people also seek a context in which they are free enough to sometimes push the envelope a little.
We need to reach out to fellow young Jews who are seeking to connect to G-d and Yiddishkeit, and recognize each of our own potentials to contribute a different voice to the continuing conversation on Jewish life. For when people are valued, they become open. We need to reach into one another, and create safe, spiritual, and creative congregations that truly address the needs of young people today. We must be a Messianic Judaism that is able to powerfully impart meaning into peoples’ lives and show young people the value of Jewish spirituality. We must become a Jewish renewal movement that is focused on Yeshua, and his ethos of a social gospel.
Joshua... nice post and many good points.
One thing that we have to keep in mind, is that since we, as Jews in America, have so many different and at time contentious viewpoints, it will not be possible to accommodate for them all within a context of any one particular congregation or even denomination. To try to be all things to all people based on personal preferences is futile - it means not having focus.
Of course, all this doesn't mean that we should not love fellow Jews who have embraced a particular social or political agenda (and now seek to incorporate it into their form of Judaism)that we may not subscribe to.
However, my idea of Judaism is not necessarily to seek to conform to or accommodate current worldly ideals or chase after social fads or celebrity causes, but to transcend them all - to be holy. Yeshua refused to get drawn into the political or social wranglings of his day - but he loved His People.
Gene-
Thanks for your comment. You may, however, be reading a little too much into the blog.
I am actually one of the first people who would recognize that we cannot be all things to all people.
However, I DO want to emphasize that our Movement has spent far too much time pointing the finger at all the people who are not in our congregations, instead of creating congregations Jewish people would want to come to.
Joshua,
How do you propose making our congregations places Jewish people want to come to?
Hi Ovadia,
Thanks for your comment. I have responded to your question with a new post today. And to read some of our previous thoughts - you can look under the label "practical suggestions" (on the lower right hand column under "Stuff we write about).
Or you can go to the link below:
http://yinonblog.blogspot.com/search/label/practical%20suggestions
Cheers!