Reconstructionist Movement Featured in Report on Innovation in Faith Communities
In a visionary report on the changing American religious landscape, RRC/JRC serves as a model for creative institutional transformation.
In a visionary report on the changing American religious landscape, RRC/JRC serves as a model for creative institutional transformation.
We welcome your submission for the High Holidays on the theme of “Embracing the Stranger — Within and Without.” Deadline is July 17, 2017!
Statement on terrorist attacks on Egyptian Coptic Christians in May 2017
All branches of the Reconstructionist movement have adapted resolutions affirming the full equality of transgender, non-binary and gender non-conforming individuals.
In the wake of the Syrian refugee crisis, Congregation Dorshei Emet in Montreal campaigned to sponsor four refugee families. We were happy to hear that the first of the four families arrived in Canada last month.
On January 29, 2017, Reconstructionist rabbis and thinkers gathered for a day of learning and study on “Moving Forward in Changing Times.” The gathering offered a range of Jewish approaches to finding spiritual strength as an activist, how to have difficult conversations with those with opposing viewpoints and how to stay sane and grounded in what feels like an avalanche of political change.
In an interview, Tresa Grauer shares the latest innovations in the way we support our Reconstructionist communities.
Two RRC professors are part of an effort in which scholars of religion will, for the first 100 days of the new administration, be sending letters to the president, vice president, cabinet secretaries and members of the House and Senate.