Jack Wertheimer's essay, “The New High Holy Days,” offers a scrupulously fair-minded survey—and a sharp critique—of the way many American Jews now celebrate the High Holy Days. I come from outside Judaism (I was raised a fundamentalist Christian), but the challenges outlined by Wertheimer, although specific to Judaism, have also arisen in many Protestant denominations and in the Catholic Church. In his descriptions of Jews who attend services only during the High Holy Days, I immediately recalled the “C&E Christians” of my youth: Christians who showed up at a church only on Christmas or Easter, at whom regular churchgoers often looked askance.
I've also attended many High Holy Day services over the years and been the beneficiary of the welcoming-the-Gentile attitude that Wertheimer describes as flourishing in many synagogues. In other words: I bring an outsider's perspective to a tradition that has often made me feel welcome inside of it.
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