Questions
I Would Like to Ask Our Teen-Age Children
March 18, 2005
Rabbi Gary S. Creditor
This is a very different style
of sermon. It is basically a very long list of questions. Two hundred
and sixty-seven teenagers selected from 3,370 were interviewed
between March and August 2003. Of the 267 respondents, 6.7% percent
identified themselves as Jews. 4% did not identify themselves religiously.
The program, directed by professors from University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, is entitled: National Survey of Youth and Religion
(NSYR). To find out more, "Google" this title, or enroll
on our listserv or go to our website where this sermon is posted and listed.
I have pasted the website from where I have quoted the following questions.
http://www.youthandreligion.org/research/docs/PersonalIVmethods.pdf
My curiosity was piqued by the article in the February 24th edition of
the Times-Dispatch entitled: 'Religion really does matter' to teenagers.
I have worked with teenagers all my life, in synagogue, USY chapters, and
regions, encampments and Israel Pilgrimage, and in Camp Ramah. I have stood
with hundreds and hundreds of b’nai mitzvah who has spent years in
a religious school, and countless more hours learning to chant specifically
for their Shabbat. This title fascinated me. Maybe, just maybe, beyond
all the how to 'do' this and 'say' that, maybe behind all the quotes about
what generations didn't like, there some eternal value in all this.
I went to the website, which I mentioned before. I most sincerely encourage
you to do the same, whether you have children or not, whether you are a parent
or a grandparent. In as much these questions were asked of the teenagers, they
were really being asked about us.
The questions were grouped in general categories. The questions were very probing,
particularly so in the categories of dating and sexuality. The questions about
faith and religion were not only contained to the explicit categories. They
were included in other categories as well. Tonight I stress the questions.
I would also add that I have not seen any data from the 6.7% Jewish respondents.
Perhaps that will be forthcoming or maybe exists and I have not found it yet.
I believe that these questions and their answers are critical for the survival
of Judaism and thus the Jewish people. I reiterate that which I have enunciated
countless times before: While there are many components to a Jewish identity
- Israel, social justice, fund raising, family, saving other Jews, i.e., from
Russia and Ethiopia, that one, singular component that organizes, magnetizes
and holds them all together and gives all of them meaning and purpose is our
faith. Without the faith there is no Judaism. Without the faith of Judaism,
eventually, there will be no Jews. These questions focus on how well we manifest,
teach and transmit our faith. Perhaps the answers reflect whether we have any
faith of our own.
I only extract the relevant questions. For the rest, consult the website.
Family Relationships:
Can you tell me about how you were raised religiously?
In what religious tradition were you raised?
How similar or different are your religious beliefs from your [mother] and
[father]?
Is religion a source of conflict or of sharing [solidarity] with them, or not?
Do you think there is anything else about religious faith or spiritual outlook
that affects the quality of relationships within your family? Do you think
your family relationships are affected by religious or faith or spiritual factors
at all?
Adult Involvements:
Do you have any particularly positive or negative relationships with other
adults in your life?
What about people in your [church] or any other religious group you are part
of?
Who are the people you most admire? Who do you wish to be like?
Morality:
Has there ever been a time when you were unsure of what was right and wrong
in a particular situation?
How did you decide what to do?
Where do your own views of right and wrong come from?
What do you think it is that makes something right or wrong?
How do you decide or know what is good and bad, right and wrong in life?
Religion:
Do you think of yourself as a religious or spiritual person?
Do you believe in God?
When you think about God, what do you think of? Who or what is God to you?
Do you tend to think of God as personal or impersonal? Active or removed from
human life?
Do you think of God as more loving and forgiving, or demanding and judging,
or something else?
How do you get your ideas about God?
Do you consider yourself to be any particular religion, or not?
What are your own religious beliefs? Can you tell me the beliefs of your own
personal faith?
What have been the important influences on you when it comes to religion, faith,
belief, or spirituality?
How involved or active would you say you are in religion and spirituality?
How important or central do you think your religion or spirituality is in your
life?
What are some ways, if any; you would say your faith influences you?
What, if anything, do you think is valuable or important in religion?
Do you think other people who don't practice religious faith should?
[IF yes] Why does that matter? Does it matter which religious faith?
Do you ever have doubts about your (non-)religious beliefs? Which? Why? When?
How different or similar do you feel from other teens your age because of your
own (non-) religious faith and practices?
Religious Experiences:
Have you personally had any significant "religious experiences?"
Would you say that you feel close to God or not? In what ways or not?
Have you ever experiences anything that seemed truly supernatural?
Different people have different ideas about what they believe about things
like angels, demons,
divine miracles, life after death and so on. What do you think?
Do you think that there is any kind of punishment after death for bad things
people have done
in life?
Religious Practices:
[IF RELIGIOUS] Are there any kinds of religious or spiritual things that
you "do," any
practices or habits or regular things that are part of your religious faith
or beliefs?
Do you have habits or regular things you do to feel more connected to God?
Do you have habits or regular things you do to feel more connected to other
people of your faith?
Are there any things you do because you are a Jew that are different from your
friends or other people who are non-religious or of a different religion?
Are there any things you DON'T do because you are Jewish?
Do you pray?
Do you read the Bible?
Do you try to take one day a week to rest, to worship, to take a break from
normal routines?
Do you go to religious services regularly?
Would you say you spend money or time any differently than other people because
of your religious, spiritual or moral beliefs?
Are there any OTHER things you do on a regular basis that have some religious
or spiritual meaning for you?
How important are your religious practices to you?
How, if at all, do these religious practices affect your life?
Dating:
Thinking about your own life and your friends and peers, do you think that
people's religious faith affects their dating in any way? Does religion shape
people's dating relationships?
Sexuality:
Does your religion have any particular teaching or morality when it comes to
sex?
If so, what is it?
Future Prospects:
What do you think you will be like religiously when you are 25 or 30 years
old?
It is possible to ignore this sermon and ignore these questions. I am not the
first Rabbi to present the thesis about the core identity of Jew, the source
of survival through the millennia, and the power of our presence in history.
If we are concerned with our religious and spiritual lives as adults, if we
are concerned about the nature of the children we are creating, if we care
for the perpetuation of Judaism and Jews, then these questions are central
to our own identity and to theirs.
The answers are all around us. May we not forget the questions.
Shabbat Shalom. |