
Humanistic Jews affirm that...
...A Jew is someone who identifies with the history, culture and future of
the Jewish people.
...Jewish identity is best preserved in a free, pluralistic environment
...Jewish history is a human saga, a testament to the significance of
human power and human responsibility.
..Judaism is the historic culture of the Jewish people.
...We possess the power and responsibility to shape our own lives
independent of supernatural authority.
...Ethics and morality should serve human needs.
...The freedom and dignity of the Jewish people must go hand in hand with
the freedom and dignity of every human being.
What Humanistic Jews Believe
Humanistic Jews believe:
Each Jew has the right to
create a meaningful Jewish lifestyle free from supernatural authority and
imposed tradition.
The goal of life is personal dignity and self-esteem.
The secular roots of Jewish life are as important as the
religious ones.
The survival of the Jewish people needs a reconciliation
between science, personal autonomy, and Jewish loyalty.
Freedom from supernatural authority
Theistic religions assert that the ultimate source of wisdom and of the power of
the solution to human problems is found outside of people - in a supernatural
realm. Humanistic philosophy affirms that knowledge and power come from people
and from the nature in which they live.
Dignity and self-esteem
Life is worthwhile when each person sees them self as worthwhile. Self-respect is
distinct from happiness. Happiness is less the goal of life than the consequence
of having attained it. Self-respect is dependent upon autonomy. The autonomous
person feels that s/he is responsible for the basic direction of his/her own
life and that no one else has the right to usurp that responsibility. Autonomy
does not mean that each person is individually self-sufficient. Healthy
dependence is horizontal rather than vertical.
Secular Jewish Roots
Judaism is an ethnic culture. It did not fall from heaven. It was not invented
by a divine spokesperson. It was created by the Jewish people. It was molded by
Jewish experience. Holidays are responses to human events. Ceremonies are
celebrations of human development. Music and literature are the expressions of
human needs.
-- Society for Humanistic Judaism