Eric Yoffie
Eric Yoffie | |
---|---|
Born | 1947 United States |
Occupation | Rabbi |
Eric H. Yoffie is a Reform rabbi, and past president of the Union for Reform Judaism (URJ), the congregational arm of the Reform movement in North America, which represents an estimated 1.5 million Reform Jews in more than 900 synagogues across the United States and Canada. He was the unchallenged head of American Judaism’s largest denomination from 1996 to 2012.[1] Following his retirement in 2012, he has been a lecturer and writer; his writings appear regularly in The Huffington Post, The Jerusalem Post, and Haaretz.
Contents
Family and career
Rabbi Yoffie was raised in Worcester, Massachusetts, where his family belonged to historic Temple Emanuel, and he was involved in the Reform Movement's Youth organization, the North American Federation of Temple Youth (NFTY). He first held the position of president in the Northeast Region of NFTY before moving on to be the organization's Vice President in 1965-1966.
After high school Yoffie spent his freshman year at Stanford University, and graduated from Brandeis University. He received his Rabbinical ordination from Hebrew Union College in New York in 1974. He served congregations in Lynbrook, NY, and Durham, NC, before joining the URJ as director of the Midwest Council in 1980. In 1983 he was named Executive Director of the Association of Reform Zionists of America (ARZA). In 1992 he became vice president of the URJ and director of the Commission on Social Action. In addition, he served as executive editor of the Reform Judaism magazine. On July 1, 1996, he succeeded Rabbi Alexander M. Schindler as president of the Union for Reform Judaism. In 1999 The Jewish Daily Forward named Yoffie the number one Jewish leader in America.[2]
He is married to Amy Jacobson Yoffie. The couple has two children, and reside in Westfield, New Jersey.
On June 10, 2010, Rabbi Yoffie announced his intention to step down from the post of president of the URJ at the age of 65, in June 2012.[3] He was succeeded by Rabbi Rick Jacobs, who had served as the senior rabbi at Westchester Reform Temple in Scarsdale, NY.[4]
Views on Jewish Life
Rabbi Yoffie has been a proponent of increased traditionalism within Reform Judaism, encouraging a greater focus on Jewish text study and prayer. Dr. Jonathan Sarna, the dean of American Jewish historians, noted that Yoffie devoted time as President of the URJ to bringing “old ideas” to Reform Judaism, “urging its rank and file to focus on enriching their spiritual lives and expanding their knowledge of Judaism.”[5] During his tenure, he announced two major worship initiatives. The first, in 1999, was designed to help congregations become “houses in which we pray with joy.”[6] The second, eight years later, fostered Shabbat observance among individual Reform Jews while encouraging congregations to rethink their Shabbat morning worship.[7] Rabbi Yoffie was also a proponent of lifelong Jewish study and helped synagogues to develop programs that increased Jewish literacy among adults.[8] In 2005, he introduced the Sacred Choices curriculum to teach sexual ethics to teens in Reform camps and congregations.[9]
In his recent writings, Yoffie has argued against understandings of Judaism that are primarily secular or cultural, referring to such Jews as "self-delusional," and suggesting that such understandings mistake a part for the whole and that a religiously-grounded Judaism is essential to assure the Jewish future.[10]
Views on Interfaith Relations
Rabbi Yoffie has been a pioneer in interfaith relations and launched Movement-wide dialogue programs with both Christians and Muslims. In 2005, he was the first Jew to address the Churchwide Assembly of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.[11] Later that year, he harshly criticized some positions of the Religious Right, but in 2006 he accepted the invitation of the Rev. Jerry Falwell to address the students and faculty of Liberty University; as the first Rabbi to appear at a university-wide convocation, he talked frankly of areas of agreement and disagreement between Evangelical Christians and Jews.[12] Yoffie first spoke shared values of family and morality before defending church-state separation and gay marriage, which elicited boos from the students.[1]
On August 21, 2007 Rabbi Yoffie was the first leader of a major Jewish organization to speak at the convention of the Islamic Society of North America. In his remarks he spoke of "a huge and profound ignorance of Islam" by Jews and Christians in North America. He stated that “the time has come to listen to our Muslim neighbors speak, from their heart and in their own words, about the spiritual power of Islam and their love for their religion.” He also asked Muslims for more understanding of Judaism: “The dialogue will not be one way, of course. You will teach us about Islam and we will teach you about Judaism. We will help you to overcome stereotyping of Muslims, and you will help us to overcome stereotyping of Jews.”[13] Rabbi Yoffie later was a supporter of the Park51 Community Center, and he has been a strong advocate for the rights of Muslim Americans.[14]
In contrast to these above interfaith efforts, Yoffie strongly disagrees with atheism, claiming that it lacks "humility, imagination, and curiosity."[15]
Views on Social Justice
As President of the URJ, Rabbi Yoffie spoke to a wide variety of social justice issues. He opposed the death penalty,[16] supported LBGT rights, and was a prominent spokesperson for gun control. He was the only religious leader to appear at the Million Mom March in Washington, D.C., declaring that “the indiscriminate distribution of guns is an offense against God and humanity.” Rabbi Yoffie went on to state that “our gun-flooded society has turned weapons into idols, and the worship of idols must be recognized for what it is—blasphemy. And the only appropriate religious response to blasphemy is sustained moral outrage.”[17]
Views on Relations with Israel
Rabbi Yoffie has devoted much of his public life to working on behalf of the Jewish state and to promoting close ties between Israel and American Jews. During his years as URJ President, he met frequently with Israel’s elected officials to present the concerns of the Reform movement and North American Jewry. He has been a prominent advocate of religious freedom and religious pluralism in Israel, arguing that the cause of Judaism can only be advanced by education and persuasion and not by coercion.[18] In an incident that drew international headlines, Rabbi Yoffie in June 2006 declined to meet with Israeli President Moshe Katsav after the President refused to address Rabbi Yoffie with the title "Rabbi". The Chief Rabbinate of Israel does not recognize rabbinic ordinations from non-Orthodox institutions,[19] In 2014, Rabbi Yoffie challenged the Presidential candidate, Reuven Rivlin, by asking if he would address Reform rabbis by the title “rabbi”?[20] While Rivlin did not respond directly to this issue while a candidate, a source close to him responded that he “has always received Rabbi Yoffie respectfully and will continue to have a wonderful relationship with Diaspora Jews."[21]
Contemporary Spirituality
In his recent writings, in the Huffington Post and elsewhere, Rabbi Yoffie has addressed broad questions of belief and spirituality in American life. In particular, he has applied a progressive religious point of view to issues of sin, atheism, and community, as well as contemporary matters such as immigration, health care, and economic justice. In “What it Means to be a Liberal Person of Faith”[22] and in other widely read articles, he has suggested that progressive religion has a vital role to play during a time of “culture wars,” fear of terrorism, and economic uncertainty.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Forward 50, 2007: Eric Yoffie, The Jewish Daily Forward, November 10, 2006
- ↑ Yoffie’s Legacy: ‘Old Ideas’ for Reform Judaism, The Jewish Daily Forward, March 23, 2011
- ↑ Rabbi Eric Yoffie Announces Retirement, eJewish Philanthropy, June 11, 2010
- ↑ Once a Critic, New Leader of Reform Judaism Promises Change, by Josh Nathan-Kazis, The Jewish Daily Forward, March 23, 2011
- ↑ Rabbi Yoffie’s Legacy: ‘Old Ideas’ for Reform Judaism, The Jewish Daily Forward, by Jonathan D. Sarna, June 16, 2010
- ↑ Sermon at the Orlando Biennial by Rabbi Eric Yoffie, December 17, 1999
- ↑ Sermon at the San Diego Biennial, December 15, 2007
- ↑ Sermon by Rabbi Eric Yoffie at the Orlando Biennial, by Rabbi Eric Yoffie, December 15-19
- ↑ Sermon by Rabbi Eric Yoffie at the Houston Biennial, by Rabbi Eric Yoffie, November 19, 2005
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- ↑ http://urj.org/about/union/leadership/yoffie/archive/deathpenalty/
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- ↑ Katsav Hosts Conservative Amid ‘Rabbi’ Feud, by Nathaniel Popper, The Jewish Daily Forward, June 30, 2006
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Selection of Articles, Speeches and Blog Posts
2013
- Election time in Israel: Yearning for Ariel Sharon, Haaretz, 1/11/13
- The Self-Delusions of Secular Jews, Huffington Post, 1/16/13
- Dear Prime Minister Netanyahu: US Jews are fed up with not being valued, Haaretz, 1/16/13
- An Inaugural Blessing, Huffington Post, 1/17/13
- Pro-Israel group’s primer on West Bank settlements shows just how disastrous they are, Haaretz, 2/18/13
- Saving Judaism in Israel: A Fantasy, Jerusalem Post, 3/5/13
2012
- Gun Worship is Blasphemy, Huffington Post 12/18/12
- What Thanksgiving Tells Us About America, Community, Loneliness and God, Huffington Post 11/21/2012
- Yom Kippur: The Battle of Sin v. Self, Huffington Post, 8/30/12
- Thank God for the Wisdom of the Supreme Court, Huffington Post, 6/28/12
- For Our Creative Survival: Liberal Zionists Speak Out Huffington Post, 4/25/12
- Religion is Divisive and Conservative and a Very Good Thing Huffington Post, 1/18/12
- Gaza: Five Things I Never Want to Hear Again about the Conflict Jerusalem Post, 11/21/12
- Israel: Settlers, Security, and the Teachings of Judaism Jerusalem Post, 10/19/2012
- How to revive Jewish life in the U.S. Haaretz, 9/10/12
2011
- The Frustrating, Difficult, Never-Ending Search for God, Huffington Post, 2/23/11
- The Palestinians are at fault, but so what?, The Jerusalem Post, 5/9/11
- Why the doves are wrong—and the hawks are too, The Jerusalem Post, 5/17/11
- Why Interfaith Dialogue Doesn’t Work, and What We Can do About It, Huffington Post 5/29/11
- Ecstasy and the Future of Liberal Religion, Huffington Post, 7/10/11
- Judaism is always tikkun olam—and more, JTA, 8/1/11
- What It Means to be a Liberal Person of Faith, Huffington Post, 12/13/11
- Introducing Barak Obama, URJ Biennial 12/16/11
- The Jewish Future of our Children, URJ Biennial 12/17/11
- The Religious Revolution is Coming to Israel, The Jerusalem Post 12/19/11
2010
- Being Fair to Fundamentalists, Huffington Post, 8/2/2010
- Connecting Teenagers to Judaism and the Synagogue, Union for Reform Judaism Board, 12/14/2010
- Religious Freedom and Muslims, Union for Reform Judaism Board, 9/14/2010
External links
- Rabbi Eric H. Yoffie, biography
- Our New President Rabbi Eric H. Yoffie: Teacher of Living Torah, Interview by Aron Hirt-Manheimer, Union of American Hebrew Congregations, Fall 1996
- Rabbi Eric H. Yoffie Contemplations, Interview by Aron Hirt-Manheimer, Union for Reform Judaism, Spring 2012
- Pages using infobox person with unknown parameters
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- Living people
- 1940s births
- American Reform rabbis
- Brandeis University alumni
- Hebrew Union College alumni
- 21st-century rabbis
- People from Worcester, Massachusetts
- People from Lynbrook, New York
- People from Durham, North Carolina
- People from Westfield, New Jersey