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as above, pleaseOn this point, I’ve read that a Jew can visit different rabbis to get the answer they want to hear. I’ve read this someplace, in a Jewish book (it was not a polemical book attacking Judaism. The same thing has been known to happen in Catholicism, where people go to the priest who is most likely to give them the answer they want to hear.)
I have hundreds of dollars worth of Jewish commentaries and other Jewish doctrinal books, and i don’t recall the source where I read it. It’s not far fetched, because there are such different branches of Judaism where there is fundamental disagreement on various issues. The Jewish Publication Society book on Reform Judaism indicates that branch of Judaism does NOT even consider the Torah to be inspired. What I understand is that the Reformed synagogues meet to discuss what they can agree on, and there seems to be not very much that they do agree on.
There is wisdom in going from one rabbi to another, as there would be in going from one priest to another – if a person get the same answer each place, perhaps they will develop a conviction of the advice they are being given. It’s not a bad idea per se. If a person is playing games, especially word games, then they are just convicting themselves of error. One cannot arrive at truth on that path.
JPS has a recent book published on Orthodox Judaism and the idea of recruiting rabbis selectively is outlined there. Rabbis are “hired” if they appeal to the selection committee and they can be dismissed otherwise. There are itinerant rabbis for congregations that do not have a rabbi under contract.
It would be uncharitable to press you on the point, but since you brought it up, why were you going to these different types of synagogues except for “shopping” for the rabbi and doctrine that you wanted to hear? On christian evangelical radio stations I have heard of non-Catholic Christians doing exactly that. I hear of Protestants that just move around at free will to find “what suits them” and they are quite openly frank about it. JPS just published a book on Conservative Judaism and I’m going to try to fit that into my budget, to get that point of view.
My reading books is not the same as your experience of life, but it is the closest substitute and I respect the authors enough to spend the money to try to understand. “The rabbi tells us what we need to hear.” I need to read Jewish books. But, perhaps you could expand how or why you need to hear Conservative, Orthodox, AND Reform points of view – you don’t get what you “need” in one place? How does one assimilate these different points of view. I ask this with sincerity. Please do not flag my post, but give me some insight into your remarks.
How very wrong. The first decision stands until revised by the same authority who paskened originally. This is the law.On this point, I’ve read that a Jew can visit different rabbis to get the answer they want to hear
When G‑d communicated the Torah at Sinai, he spoke to the women first.