In the SATC episode, didn't she have to keep "harassing" the rabbi before he would take her seriously? |
Unitarians don't have to believe in God or Jesus. |
It's a Jewish parable that the convert is turned away three times before he/she is taken seriously. I don't know if this is actually the practice by rabbis, but generally you have to be seen as being rigorously steadfastly serious, not just interested. |
But why would a "devout Jewish" person attend services there instead of a sinagogue? |
Well, I can't answer that, but maybe he likes the minister. Maybe he feels comfortable. I have Jewish friends who go to Quaker meeting. My brother (Jewish) went to Catholic Youth League events because he liked the leader and events so much -- wasn't interested in the religion. It would up to the individual to explain. |
I think, using a poorly constructed sentence, that the OP meant that his father attends a Unitarian Church. Though, my sentence structure is poor too, so I might be wrong. |
+1 |
|
"Extreme religion" such as in this case is "sxmcary" to me.
Agree that it is more of a relationship issue-rather than religion. He cannot just change the rules now when it effects the whole family. FWIW: I am a reformed Jew (and NOT a "washed-out one
|
| "Scary" not sxmary. No idea how that spelling got there. |
|
I say f*ck him.
But I suppose that's what caused the problem. |
| My mother converted to Judiasm, it took her over a year and was intensive study. |
Though there are some Orthodox Jews who don't recognize you as being Jewish unless you are Jewish on your maternal side. They also don't recognize converts to "reformed" Judaism. It can be a problem if you want to get married in Israel and are coming from the U.S. There are extreme beliefs for every religion. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/02/magazine/02jewishness-t.html?pagewanted=all |
REFORM Judaism. Not reformed. |
I looked into converting and the Rabbi I spoke with said I could join the Temple without any study / ceremony, as long as I wanted to and would follow the faith. He was more in the camp of it is what you actually do that is important. Obviously a more liberal Temple. |
Really? Wow, I've been saying it wrong for some 30 years. |