I'm going to try to gather up some of the other loose ends from my
conversation with my rabbi, though I wasn't taking (many) notes
and it's now been a few days, so this'll be vague in places.
He recommended that I become familiar with the works of Leopold Zunz,
a 19th-century scholar, though I failed to note why. (Presumably
related to the whole question of reforms/innovations in halacha, as
that was the main topic of conversation.) One of these days I'll
get myself a copy of Encyclopedia Judaica so I can look up
the bare-bones info on pointers like this.
We talked about how reforms to halacha go all the way back. He believes
that the Reform movement follows the process, though because its interpretations
are different, when you build on those things can seem to get kind of
far afield. An example from me (that we didn't discuss): if you
have made a case for egalitarian reforms in most things, as Reform and
some Conservative have done, then I have to grant that you can make a
case for patrilineal descent. (I still think this is a bad idea, however,
as it really divides the Jewish people on the question of who
is a Jew, and it's not like children of Jewish fathers and non-Jewish
mothers can't convert fairly trivially if they're raised in the religion.)
We didn't go very far down this path; I think I disagree with his claim,
because at least historically there have been cases where Reform just
plain threw out halacha, but maybe he's talking current practice and
not history.
Remember, though, that Reform does not believe that the oral law (or,
necessarily, the written law, i.e. Torah) came directly from God at
Sinai, so this is presumably more about respecting the tradition than
anything else. It seems obvious to me that my rabbi respects the
halachic tradition far more than average in Reform (probably a lot of
why we click so well), but one rabbi does not a movement make.
We drifted into the question of just how a modern Reform Jew goes
about making decisions, and we kept ending up on Shabbat topics.
We talked about electricity; I said I use timers for lights and the
crock pot and am fairly rigid there and more lenient elsewhere (though
I try to avoid issues rather than making explicit decisions; I'm a
wuss). He asked detailed questions about the crock pot; not sure why.
Somewhere in there I said that I don't unscrew the fridge light,
though as a practical matter I know where in the fridge the things I'm
going to need on Shabbat are, and occasionally (read: at night when the
room is otherwise dark) I've been known to close my eyes and just grab
the Coke anyway. He thought this was excessive, and this led to a
discussion of intent vs. side-effect. He's right; I already believe that
side-effects are not transgressions if I didn't want the results anyway.
(We also talked about motion-sensor lights in this context. Summary:
the (now-hypothetical) neighbor's lights are not my problem. Putting
one in myself would be.)
We talked some about the get issue, and the Orthodox solution
of editing history and how offensive I found that idea. I've mentioned
this before.
We didn't really talk about what I describe as "rules hacks" in the
halachic system. Another time. (I still have stuff I want to say
about this, but haven't gotten it written down yet.)
At the end of the hour he asked whether I wanted to keep studying
philosophy or instead begin to tackle talmud, and I opted for the
latter. During the Shabbat discussion we had already started into
that, so we're going to just start with the 39 melachot (forbidden
categories of work) and go from there. Just as soon as the book I
ordered comes in and I make a first pass through the first bit on
my own to acclimate. Yay! I can't wait!