A major Conservative movement leader of our time, Elliot N. Dorff
provides a personal, behind-the-scenes guide to the evolution of
Conservative Jewish thought and practice over the last half
century. His candid observations concerning the movement's ongoing
tension between constancy and change shed light on the sometimes
unified, sometimes diverse, and occasionally contentious reasoning
behind the modern movement's most important laws, policies, and
documents. Meanwhile, he has assembled, excerpted, and
contextualized the most important historical and internal documents
in modern Conservative movement history for the first time in one
place, enabling readers to consider and compare them all in
context. In "Part 1: God" Dorff explores various ways that
Conservative Jews think about God and prayer. In "Part 2: Torah" he
considers different approaches to Jewish study, law, and practice;
changing women's roles; bioethical rulings on issues ranging from
contraception to cloning; business ethics; ritual observances from
online minyanim to sports on Shabbat; moral issues from capital
punishment to protecting the poor; and nonmarital sex to same-sex
marriage. In "Part 3: Israel" he examines Zionism, the People
Israel, and rabbinic rulings in Israel.