organized worship
Jun. 4th, 2003 09:12 pmI was recently appointed the chair of the worship committee
at my synagogue. This is really the rabbi's committee in
many ways, because any decision about what happens on the
bimah is ultimately his, but the rest of us act as advisors,
a sounding-board, a source of proposals, and implementation
gophers. Next week the rabbi and I have a meeting to
brainstorm about the broad agenda for the next two years.
There are several small matters that I would like us to change in how we conduct services, and I finally realized that they have a unifying theme.
But first, back to basics: why do we have worship services? ( Read more... )
I don't think there's anything surprising in what I've just written. Now, what are the implications?
I realized that all of the issues I want to discuss can be cast as community-building. Specifically:
- I want to restructure Friday-night b'nei mitzvah so that they are more like our conventional Friday services. They need to be less about the family and more about the congregation.
- I want to integrate the grade-school children into regular services instead of having special services (e.g. the 4th-grade service). I think it's important that they be part of more than one service per year, and right now those services, like b'nei mitzvah services, are different in a way that drives some of the community away.
- I want to give congregants -- members of the community -- more opportunities to participate in services, thus becoming stakeholders. Specifically, I want congregants with the skills to serve as substitutes when the cantor isn't available. (But, also, I'm thinking of adult Torah readers here. We've talked about that but never done anything organized about it.)
I'm hoping that, by taking small steps over time, I can actually nudge things in the direction I want them to go. I'll have a better idea after our meeting.