Online Archives

Rabbi carries on teaching tradition with Methodists

Posted by Bwcarchives on

BY IRA RIFKIN
Special to the UMConnection

It takes a certain chutzpah for a Jew to lecture believing Christians about the New Testament?s spiritual message; even more so when church officials are in attendance. Yet that?s the core of an experiment in spiritual cross-pollination involving one of the nation?s leading Protestant denominations and a Maryland rabbi with a long and unconventional career.

The rabbi is Joshua Martin Siegel, the recently hired 'rabbinic adviser' to the Baltimore-Washington Conference of The United Methodist Church.

'This is significant,' said Rabbi Siegel. 'It?s an opportunity for people with a serious interest in religion, in a culture that?s becoming increasingly secular, to work together and learn from each other in an ongoing way instead of just being suspicious of each other.'

Siegel?s ministry with the conference began officially in September, and aspects of his role are still being worked out.

In essence, however, his ministry is to provide the conference with what church officials admit is a much needed spiritual shot in the arm. Moreover, he has been asked to do it from an unabashedly Jewish perspective.

'We don?t want him to pull any punches,' said the Rev. Roderick J. Miller, the conference?s Director of Connectional Ministry. 'Much of what is American Methodism has become more cultural than anything else. We want to go beyond that. To be a Christian means to go deeper and wider in furthering our knowledge of God and in living it out.

'Rabbi Siegel can help us recover some of the spirituality that has been lost here.'

Siegel?s hiring appears to be a first for The United Methodist Church, the nation?s second largest Protestant denomination with more than 8 million members, albeit one that has suffered decades of shrinking congregations and budgets. As near as can be determined, Siegel, 73, also represents a first for any leading American Christian denomination.

'I don?t know of any other situation where a rabbi or a Jewish layperson has been attached so formally to a prominent Christian body,' said Rabbi A. James Rudin, senior inter-religious affairs advisor to the American Jewish Committee. 'Plenty of Jews teach at Christian schools and universities. But this is different. So far as I know it?s a first and I?d even call it a breakthrough. It?s a pioneering effort.'

Siegel will deliver talks and organize discussions for conference headquarters staff, for pastors, for youth groups and for others. Plans are also in the works for joint Methodist-Jewish community social action projects and other activities.

Every Thursday, Siegel leads lunch-hour Bible study sessions held at the conference center. The discussions begin with Siegel coaxing spiritual meaning from the church?s designated Hebrew Bible (the Old Testament in Christian parlance) and New Testament weekly readings.

One recent Thursday, Siegel linked teachings about humanity?s ability to advance spiritually through individual action from passages in the New Testament books James and Mark and the Hebrew Bible?s Book of Ruth. Along the way, he managed to quote Shakespeare, Dostoevsky and F. Scott Fitzgerald.

It was Miller who brought Siegel to the attention of Bishop John R. Schol. Miller said that some eight or nine years ago, while pastoring a local church, he began attending classes on spiritual healing led by Siegel at a Baltimore senior citizens center.

'What I heard from Rabbi Siegel were things I had not learned in the seminary,' Miller said. 'His ability to synthesize head knowledge with life experience and a depth of heart fed a hunger of mine.'

About a year ago, Miller assumed his job with the Baltimore-Washington conference. Soon after, he mentioned Siegel to the bishop.

'Judaism and Christianity share deep commonalities, which takes on a particular importance in a world that wants to separate people,' Bishop Schol replied when asked why he brought Siegel onboard. 'Rabbi Siegel has a lot to offer to us in the richness of biblical understanding. We need to get that wherever it is available.'

Siegel, ordained at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati, began his career traditionally enough in the 1960s as the rabbi of the Reform congregation Temple Sinai of Long Island in Lawrence. He was, for a time, prominent in New York liberal rabbinic and political circles.

That all came to a sudden end in the early ?70s with the release of 'Amen: The Diary of Rabbi Martin Siegel.'

The book was a best-seller. Following a diary format, it docu-mented a particularly difficult year in his life, personally as well as professionally. It read like a full-blown attack on the spiritual emptiness, rampant racism, selfish materialism and general insensitivity that he believed defined his congregants. Not surprisingly, he was fired.

His bridges burned in New York, the city of his birth, he moved to Maryland, where he led the unaffil-iated, progressive, and much smaller Columbia Jewish Congregation. He stayed there for nearly 30 years, retiring in 1998.

During those years he was active on homeless issues at the federal level in Washington and regionally in Maryland. After leaving the Columbia congregation he became a spiritual counselor at an inner-city Baltimore shelter for homeless ex-felons, drug addicts and the emotionally troubled, incorporating basic kabalistic principles into the self-help materials he wrote and distributed to clients.

His attraction to Kabbalah, and Jewish mysticism in general, prompted Siegel to begin visiting Mea Shearim, the haredi Jerusalem neighborhood, where he spent months at a time studying the teachings of the legendary early chasidic master Reb Nachman of Bratslavia. Back home in Columbia, he began sending Jews wanting a more traditional Orthodox lifestyle to local Chabad rabbis. Gradually, he also became ritually observant.

Today, the Rabbi sees himself as post-denominational. 'I don?t really think of myself as being part of a specific category. I just try and go where HaShem (God) sends me,' he said.

Few questions have been raised within the Baltimore-Washington Conference as to why the church would use a non-Christian as a spiritual mentor. But Siegel, Miller and Bishop Schol expect such murmurings to eventually surface.

'There are always some people who will complain, but I would say they would be a minority, a very small minority,' said Bishop Schol. 'Part of the challenge we face in our faith journey is that we tend to operate in isolation and only in terms of what we know and are comfortable with. This is an opportunity to go beyond that ? And the last time I checked God was speaking through the Hebrew Bible to all people. ? Rabbi Siegel knows more about the Hebrew Bible than anyone else on our staff. Why shouldn?t we take advantage of that?'

This story first appeared in the New York Jewish Times.

Comments

to leave comment

Name: