Mordecai Kaplan: Founder of Reconstructionist
Judaism
An examination of
the philosophy of one of the twentieth century's most prominent Jewish
thinkers, Mordecai Kaplan (1881-1983).
By Robert M. Seltzer
Reprinted with
permission from Jewish People, Jewish
Thought
(Pearson Education).
[Mordecai]
Kaplan was born in 1881 in the small town of Svencionys, in the Lithuanian
district of the Jewish Pale of Settlement in tsarist Russia. At the age of
eight he came to the United States with his family. Kaplan's early religious
education was traditional, but he attended public school and Columbia
University where he absorbed a modern critical approach to religion and to the
Bible. After ordination from the Jewish Theological
Seminary in 1902, Kaplan served as rabbi of an Orthodox
synagogue in New York until, in 1909, he was appointed dean of the newly established
Teachers Institute of the Seminary and soon afterwards also made professor of
homiletics, midrash, and philosophies of religion. During his more than fifty
years on the faculty of the Seminary, he attracted a devoted student following
and, at the same time, maintained an extensive involvement in Jewish communal
activities.
In 1917 he became leader of the first synagogue to
incorporate a broad range of cultural and recreational activities into its
program. After a split developed in the congregation over his innovative views,
he and his supporters left to organize the Society for the Advancement of
Judaism (1922),a New York synagogue
and Jewish center based on Kaplan's position that worship was only one of the
functions that a congregation should foster.
His first major book, Judaism
as a Civilization (1934), contained
a detailed criticism of existing Jewish movements and a call for the
"reconstruction" of Jewish life, leading him and his associates, the
following year, to publish The
Reconstructionist, a journal of Jewish affairs that has made considerable
impact on the leadership of non‑Orthodox American Jewry. In the 1940sand 1950s, the Jewish Reconstructionist
Foundation issued a series of new liturgical texts: a Passover Haggadah and
prayer books for the Sabbath, the high Holy Days, and the festivals. In 1968,
the Foundation opened the Reconstructionist Rabbinic College in Philadelphia
with a curriculum arranged according to priorities that the movement felt were
not adequately espoused by other forms of American Judaism. Thus, in Kaplan's
later years, Reconstructionism was transformed from an ecumenical position
cutting across Jewish denominational lines to a small separate movement.
As previously noted, the starting point for Kaplan's
position is his critical evaluation of the main tendencies of American Jewry,
especially, their inadequate view of Judaism as a totality. According to
Kaplan, Reform rightly recognized the evolving character of Judaism but ignored
the social basis of Jewish identity and the organic culture of the people. At
the other extreme, Neo‑Orthodoxy recognized that Judaism was a complete
way of life and provided a substantial Jewish education for children (something
noticeably lacking in Reform), but considered the Jewish religion to be
timeless and static.
Congenial to Kaplan was Conservatism's commitment to the
scientific study of the Jewish past, its sympathy for Zionism, and its concern
for the unity of the Jewish people. However, Kaplan eventually came to feel
that the Conservative movement remained too closely bound by the traditional
methods and contents of the halakhah
[Jewish law] and was not adequately responding to new conditions and needs.
(According to Kaplan, Jewish law is to be respected, but it has "a vote
and not a veto," so that precedent must, at times, give way to deliberate
enactment.) The solution of the present‑day confusion was a definition of
Judaism as "an evolving religious civilization."
The practical side of Kaplan's position called for the re‑establishment
of a network of all‑embracing, "organic" Jewish communities
around the world that would ensure the self‑perpetuation of Jewish
identity and further secular as well as religious components of the Jewish
heritage (art, music, philanthropy, and so on). Membership should be strictly
voluntary, leadership would be democratically elected, and private religious beliefs
would not be infringed upon, because diversity in modern Jewish life must be
cherished. (Kaplan is a strong advocate of cultural and religious pluralism,
and he maintains that American Jews should participate fully and creatively in
both Jewish and American civilizations.) To clarify the international status of
Jewry, Kaplan proposed a world‑wide Jewish assembly that would adopt a
formal covenant defining the Jews as a transnational people, the hub of which
was Zion and the spokes the branches of the diaspora.
However, Kaplan is not a secularist: Religion, the
concretization of the collective self‑consciousness of the group, is an
essential dimension of a civilization and a necessary component of an
authentic and satisfying modern Jewishness. The religion of a group is
manifested in “sancta," spiritual symbols such as persons, places, events,
and writings, which inspire feelings of reverence, commemorate what the group
feels is most valuable, provide continuity through the flux of history, and fortify
the collective conscience of a people. Kaplan felt a deep attachment to Jewish
sancta and Jewish religious literature.
In order to hold the loyalty of a new generation of Jews
educated in scientific and democratic principles, however, the Jewish tradition
must expunge authoritarianism, dogmatic claims of infallibility, and recourse
to supernatural revelation. (By supernaturalism, Kaplan meant God as a
substantive, anthropomorphic entity and miracles as the divine suspension of
the laws of nature.) The most important personal function of religion is to
answer the question, "What shall man believe and do in order to experience
that life, despite the evil and suffering that mar it, is extremely
worthwhile?" Religion is the pursuit of salvation, which Kaplan defines in
a humanistic, this-worldly way
In Kaplan's frequently reiterated statement, "God is
the Power that makes for salvation" or as he sometimes puts it, "God
is the sum of the animating, organizing forces and relationships which are
forever making a cosmos out of chaos." For Kaplan, the idea of God must be
viewed not metaphysically but functionally, in terms of its effects on human
life. "We learn more about God when we say that love is divine than when
we say God is love. A veritable transformation takes place. . . .Divinity
becomes relevant to authentic experience and therefore takes on a definiteness
which is accompanied by an awareness of authenticity.” Belief in God stems not
from the intellect but from the will to live, reflecting the faith that there
is enough in the world for man's needs, although not for man's "greeds and
lusts." Divinity is that coordinating, integrating factor in nature that
makes possible the actualization of justice, truth, and compassion on earth.
Various ambiguities and contradictions in Kaplan's idea of
God have been pointed out by his critics, especially that his reference to God
as “the sum of forces" calls into question God's unity, and that he refers
to God sometimes as a "Power," sometimes as a "process." Whether
a divine aspect of the cosmos is as empirically evident as Kaplan assumes has
also been challenged.
In response, Kaplan acknowledges the necessity of faith, but
he feels that man's "salvational behavior" indicates the influence of
a cosmic Godhood, as the behavior of the magnetic needle indicates the
magnetism of the earth's poles. Kaplan has proposed that Godhood is a “trans‑natural,"
"super‑factual," and "super‑experiential"
transcendence not infringing on the laws of nature, but constituting a potentiality
that transforms the elements of nature into organic wholes greater than the sum
of their parts.
Kaplan’s position also implies that God, as one aspect of a
pluralistic universe, is limited in power and that nature contains forces that
can even thwart God. He admits that natural evil cannot be explained
theologically, but moral and social evils (hatred, poverty, war) represent the
failure of men to attain complete awareness of the cosmic source of value and
to transform the world accordingly.
Kaplan holds that his position is compatible with historic
Judaism because of his emphasis on the primacy of peoplehood and Zion and because
the divine in Judaism has always been identified with moral value and cosmic
purpose. He does insist that the traditional notion of the Jews as a chosen
people should be eliminated from Jewish theology and from the liturgy, because
no reinterpretation of chosenness, however innocuous, can completely dispel
the implication that some nations are superior to others.
Instead, Kaplan proposes that every people freely take on a
vocation by dedicating itself to those universal values that its history has
clarified, thus contributing to the growing richness of human life through
"ethical nationhood" and the ideal of a peaceful humanity.
Robert Seltzer is a
Professor of History at Hunter College of the City University of New York.
Seltzer, Robert R., Jewish
People, Jewish Thought, © 1982.
Electronically reproduced by permission of Pearson Education, Inc., Upper
Saddle River, New Jersey.