Response to FrontPage’s “Rabbi of Hate” Smear
by: Rabbi Michael Lerner on June 29th, 2010 | 10 Comments »

Tikkun note: Rabbi Lerner is in the midst of prayer for healing of all people hurt in the Israeli assault on the Gaza Aid Flotilla, including Israeli soldiers as well as anyone else hurt, and their families
David Horowitz’s FrontPage magazine has published an article about our recent Network of Spiritual Progressives national conference in DC under the absurdist headline “Rabbi of Hate.” I am including some representative paragraphs and comments (go here if you have the stomach to read more), and then my response on their site. Some quotes from the article itself:
Tikkun Rabbi Michael Lerner, the one-time “politics of meaning” guru to the pre-presidential Clintons until he became politically inexpedient, is now blasting away at the Obama Administration. Lerner recently convened his Network of Spiritual Progressives in Washington, D.C. for a Religious Left gabfest. And much of it was gripping [I'm glad they thought so--or did they mean griping?] about President Obama’s spiritual failure to remain ideologically pure, in the eyes of leftist clerics and activists.
Lerner’s D.C. visitation included a protest in Lafayette Park imploring the President “To Be the Obama Americans Thought They Were Voting For.” Whatever enthusiasm the Religious Left rally may have cherished for Obama seems to be dissolving into anxiety, disappointment and betrayal.
“One thing Obama has not done: tell the truth. Tell us what’s going on!” a “shattered” Lerner demanded to presumably nodding heads at the rally, according to an on-site report by my assistant Connor Ewing. Lerner’s Washington jamboree for about 500 followers was called “Strategies for Liberals and Progressives in the Obama Years,” and subtitled “Creating ‘The Caring Society’: A Progressive Alternative to Tea Party Extremism and Corporate Domination of American Politics and Culture.”
… Besides Lafayette Park, Lerner’s activists rallied in a Lutheran church and in the United Methodist lobby office on Capitol Hill, where they were joined by the United Methodist Church’s chief lobbyist, Jim Winkler. Although Lerner himself is a somewhat faded star since the Clintons dissed him in the early 90s, his rally was graced by a somewhat more ascendant Brian McLaren, chief poobah of the Emerging Church, the amorphous community for left-leaning, post-modern evangelicals. A more therapeutic antidote to Lerner’s polemics, McLaren touted his New Kind of Christianity and platitudinously appealed for common ground and new narratives while not so indirectly lobbing condemnation at the supposed “visions for social suicide” of conservative evangelicals who have not yet bent the knee to global warming activism or, presumably, McLaren’s own latest crusade against Israeli occupation.
… Less somberly, and almost magically, Marianne Williamson, the almost forgotten mystic who famously helped then First Lady Hillary Clinton channel the spirit of Eleanor Roosevelt, also appeared. She helped bring “people to their feet in cheering and excitement” for the “depth of insight, wisdom and vision of what we could do together.” Congressman Dennis Kucinich even took the stage to tout an Environmental and Social Responsibility Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which Lerner straight-facedly insists is politically plausible and not utopian.
The comments included these:
- Mr Lerner is no more a Rabbi than any of us. He is self-ordained.
- Don’t dismiss these folks so quickly. They are actually helping Obama to further his agenda. By criticizing Obama from the left they make him seem moderate by comparison. Obama can wear the cloak of compromise as he marches us down the road to serfdom… Lerner may be crazy but he’s crazy like a fox. Beware!
Here is the response I posted on their website:
I usually ignore the slurs against liberals and progressives on this site Frontpagemag.com, and the consistent calumny directed against me through the years. But this time, I want to correct two of the dozen distortions or more in this article [I should have added "and comments" since that is where the slurs about my ordination appear, not in the article itself].
First, the claim that I am not really a legitimate rabbi. Throughout most of Jewish history, and in all of the Hasidic world to this very day, the way a rabbi received “smicha” or rabbinic ordination was through a “Beyt Din” (a religious court) which investigated the person’s knowledge of Jewish law and texts and then when they decided he was ready, they convened a court to give him smicha. This is the way I received my smicha. After studying at the Jewish Theological Seminary in the early 60s, I began a private study under the tutelage of Rabbi Zalman Schachter Shalomi, who received his smicha from the Lubavitcher Rebbe and who subsequently was a “shaliach” (representative) of that Hasidic movement for many years, before deciding that he could not accept the refusal to grant women equal rights in Judaism. The second rabbi on my Beyt Din was Rabbi David Wolfe Blank (z’l) who received his smicha from the Habad movement in Israel. The third rabbi on my smicha committee was Rabbi Leibowitz who received his smicha from the Yeshiva University rabbinic training program. All three were, according to Jewish law, ordained orthodox rabbis. They granted me rabbinic ordination, smicha, in 1995. It was after examining this process and the evidence of my training that I was accepted as a member of the Northern California Board of Rabbis, where I am an active member and have my own synagogue where I conduct weekly Shabbat services and Torah study. I say all this just to show the lengths which people on this list and in the right-wing of the Methodist movement will go to lie and distort about someone who disagrees with their politics.
Second, there is the calumny in the headline–rabbi of hate. This takes a particular stretch, since the fundamental position of the Network of Spiritual Progressives is articulated in our call for a NEW BOTTOM LINE so that institutions, social practices, corporations, government policies and individual behavior should be judged “efficient, rational, and productive” to the extent that they contribute to maximizing our human capacities for love, caring, kindness, generosity, ethical and ecological sensitivity, and awe and wonder at the grandeur of the universe. You can read all about our positions at www.spiritualprogressives.org. How this gets translated into “rabbi of hate” is a mystery–particularly since I consistently preach that people on the Left should always try to recognize that people with whom we disagree on the Right are equally created in the image of God and deserve to be respected even when we strongly disagree with the content of their views. For that reason, when others on the Left were putting down President Bush for being stupid and not knowing how to speak English correctly and other personal defaults, we at Tikkun Magazine which I edit www.tikun.org always refused to publish any such put-downs. We don’t believe that it is appropriate to bring into politics the personal failures of individuals, but only their public positions. For that reason we also demand that no one write criticisms of anyone on the Left except in a way that the person being criticized would acknowledge that the perspective attributed to her or him is in fact what they really believe, and only then to criticize it. We don’t believe in the kind of misrepresentation of people’s ideas that you find all the time on this website, but also on some left wing websites as well. We believe in respect for others, even if we strongly critique their views and their public (but not private) actions. In short, this is not a rabbi of hate, but a rabbi of love doing my best to serve God and humanity, certainly likely to be mistaken on some issues and open to criticism, but not open to the distortions about me that this website frequently embraces.



A Rabbi of Love…so clearly so, in all that he says and does, that the projection of hate from the haters is the clearly mirrored image of themselves…….elementary, my dears………..with love, Tony Roeber
Michael,
I’m sorry to hear that you’ve been on the receiving end of such noxious rhetorical flak from Mark Tooley (former CIA analyst – apparently with a particular interest in Latin America – and now president of the “Institute on Religion and Democracy” – for what that’s worth!).
Challenging as it may be, please try not to take his puerile and insubstantial ad hominem attack too much to heart – sadly this kind of tabloid vitriol with a paranoid twist is pretty much bog-standard discourse in far too many conservative evangelical (read: fundamentalist) quarters, and is very characteristic of Mark Tooley also.
It’s kind of a backhanded compliment, in a way, that he perceives you and your ideas as enough of a threat to warrant attack.
Almost all conservative evangelicals adhere to Pauline “replacement theology” and thus see only (evangelical – or what they now prefer to call “orthodox”) Christian believers as the “True Israel of God”; so in their view, you’re one of a very large company of “false teachers” since no (non-Christian) Jewish Rabbi is a “true man of God” by their way of reckoning. You’re just one of a large company as far as they’re concerned – though it would be FAR too impolitic to admit this, even (or especially?) in the pages of Frontpagemag!
I think it’s obvious to anyone with an ounce of goodwill and sense that Mark Tooley failed utterly to substantiate his claims about you in any way, and that his views are likely to be shared only by the most paranoid rumps of conservative Christianity – who are currently squealing like frightened swine over growing liberalizing tendencies in formerly conservative political and religious constituencies, as well as the de-churching of many – especially young adults.
When these malevolent clowns have you in their sights, you know you must really be doing SOMETHING right!
RE: IRD & Mark Tooley this link may be of interest: http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Institute_on_Religion_and_Democracy
(especially the section on sources of funding)
Best Wishes, Rob.
Well, as a Leftist, I certainly don’t agree with those filthy disgusting reactionaries at Frontpage. But the author of this critique did make me laugh with his subtle putdowns of the spiritual arrogance and New Age spaciness so characteristic of Lerner et al here at Tikkun. Note this hilarious passage: “So Lerner`s spiritual progressives grieved…while also channelling the departed spirits of 1960`s radical activism, perhaps with a little help from Marianne Williamson…” Fantastic ridicule :) . Hmm, I don’t sense that most of you are laughing…Well, I am, folks!!
Marco
Hmm, where did that big smilie come from (above)? I did not emphasize my laughter that much!
Marco
I’ve been following and trying to digest the publications of NSP for a few weeks. A New Bottom Line is precisely what men and women of good will working toward the elusive goal of the common good have been seeking throughout history. A New Conversation is also needed in our country, indeed throughout the world; a conversation that incorporates the principles it promotes; Solidarity, mutual respect, tolerance, love and justice.
In much of the writing by and for NSP it is distressing to find language and rhetoric that does just the opposite, in fact language that is, in a sense, violent even as it proposes nonviolence. Language that seeks to inflame passion is important, and it is most effective when used sparingly. Constantly ttying the words “greed” and “corporation”, “corrupt” and “politician”, “evil” and “right wing” together at every opportunity turns many progressives away. These devices are those of the desperate who, forsaking imagination and creativity, resort to the tactics of those whom they oppose. We can do better than this.
All spiritual traditions recognize that everything is not a competition, it is not required nor even appropriate that one side wins; these represent a militaristic worldview. Rants using this worldview are cheap coming from the Left or the Right, and equally stand in contradistinction to the stated goals of universal justice and peace.
My husband and I attended the Washington conference and came away feeling inspired and energized. I was blown away by the diversity and brilliance of the speakers. I am so grateful to Michael and all of the other organizers.
As for this situation, the image I keep getting is that of Rev. Ama Zenya, who at Layfayette Park was encouraging us to “send our love” to President Obama. Now, I envision sending love to Mark Tooley. In describing Michael as the “rabbi of hate,” it seems clear to me that Mark is in need of the love we at NSP talk about so much.
I also agree with Jerry C., who posted above. Can we let go of the divisive and judgmental language? This is a great challenge to me personally, so I am asking this question of myself primarily. Is it possible to promote the caring society and not use judgmental (or dare I say attacking) language ourselves? Hmm… Can we try? For one, may I suggest that we refuse boundaries altogether? By that I mean “left” vs. “right: “spiritual” vs. “secular,” etc., etc. As our Buddhist friends so kindly remind us, this is the language of dualism. Better to remember that while we have many things that seemingly divide us, we are not separate from the ones with which we disagree but indeed interconnected. Amen?
I can’t beleive this Susan Perretti actually recommending “we” send our “love” to Mark Tooley. How patronising ignorant and hypocritical! I wonder how Mark Tooley would receive this “love”? Probably with a smirk, and a laugh!
As far as not using divisive language, I will damm do whatever I please!
Really, you “spiritual” types are just so funny.
Marco
My goodness, Marco! Do you need some love too?
Yes, Debbie, but not from you. And certainly not from cheap hypocrites like Susan Perretti, who have little love to give. And, oh, I sent that post by Perretti to Mark Tooley, so he could have a good laugh at her “loving” vibes. And, while we are at it, why not send good vibes and prayers to Hitler, Stalin, Pinochet, and Batista? Don’t they deserve compassion and cool vibes also?
Marco
Well, I stand corrected: Mark Tooley said to me that he welcomes Susan Perretti’s love! :)