Maurice Davis Explained

Maurice Davis
Denomination:Reform
Birth Date:December 15, 1921
Birth Place:Providence, Rhode Island, United States
Death Place:Palm Coast, Florida, United States
Profession:Rabbi
Spouse:Marion Cronbach
Parents:Jack and Sadie Davis
Children:2 children, 6 grandchildren

Maurice Davis (December 15, 1921  - December 14, 1993[1]) was a rabbi and activist. He served on the President's Commission on Equal Opportunity, in the Lyndon B. Johnson Administration and was a director of the American Family Foundation, now known as the International Cultic Studies Association. Davis was the rabbi of the Jewish Community Center of White Plains, New York and a regular contributor to The Jewish Post and Opinion.

Personal and family life

Rabbi Davis married Marion Cronbach, daughter of Rose Hentil and prominent reform rabbi and well-known pacifist (and Davis's teacher) Abraham Cronbach. Davis and his wife had two children, both of whom went on to become rabbis.

Civil rights work

In 1952, Davis founded the Kentucky Committee on Desegregation. In 1965, he walked with Martin Luther King Jr. in Alabama, on the third of the Selma to Montgomery marches, and was appointed to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission by President Johnson.

Anti-cult activity and opposition to the Unification Church

In 1970, when two of his congregants' children joined the Unification Church of the United States, Davis educated himself about the nature and methods of groups he considered to be cults. He assisted the parents of "cult children".[2] Davis directed and appeared in the film, You Can Go Home Again, produced by the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. Davis reported that he observed commonalities among the young people he counseled who had joined the Unification Church. He found that most of them were dropouts from mainline churches or synagogues – and that they were on a quest for idealism, community and a sense of belonging.[3]

In 1972, Davis founded the group Citizens Engaged in Reuniting Families (CERF),[4] a national anti-Unification Church organization, which by 1976 was comprised 500 families.[5] In November 1976, Rabbi Davis spoke at Temple Israel of Northern Westchester, New York, on "The Moon People And Our Children".[6] He compared the Unification Church to the Hitler Youth and the Peoples Temple.[7]

Activism for Judaism

In 1990, Davis criticized people who refer to themselves as Jews for Jesus, Hebrew Christians or Messianic Jews as being "devious" and "deceptive". He further stated that people who accept Jesus as the Messiah are, by definition, Christians and not Jewish.[8]

Quotes

Works

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rabbi Maurice Davis, A Cult Authority, 72 (Published 1993) . . https://web.archive.org/web/20230602010625/https://www.nytimes.com/1993/12/16/obituaries/rabbi-maurice-davis-a-cult-authority-72.html . 2023-06-02 . live .
  2. Hypnosis for young adults: Freeing "the doctor who resides within", Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy,, Volume 12, Number 2 / September, 1981.
  3. http://www.americamagazine.org/gettext.cfm?articleTypeID=1&textID=3752&issueID=496 "A Glass Half Empty"
  4. Web site: 20 Dec 1993, Page 19 - The Baltimore Sun at Newspapers.com . 2022-07-29 . Newspapers.com . en.
  5. Web site: 1975-11-10 . Religion: Mad About Moon - TIME . https://web.archive.org/web/20100323061342/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,913685-2,00.html . 2010-03-23 . 2022-08-07 .
  6. A Temple on the Mount: A History of Temple Israel of Northern Westchester, by Jacob Judd, Ph.D., 1999, retrieved 2/8/07.
  7. https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/cult/misc/hearing2.htm Cults Hearing Noisy, Tense
  8. The Indianapolis Star, January 27, 1990, page A-8, By Carol Elrod, Star Religion Writer
    In his column in a recent issue of The Jewish Post and Opinion, a national newspaper, Rabbi Maurice Davis wrote that people who refer to themselves as Jews for Jesus, Hebrew Christians or Messianic Jews "have pretended not only that they are Jewish, which they are not, but that they speak for either Jews or Judaism, which they do not." "They have distorted our holidays, demeaned our faith, misstated our history, and belittled a legacy which we have spent centuries preserving and enlarging." Rabbi Davis, a former spiritual leader at Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation, went on to note that people who accept Jesus as the Messiah by definition Christians; they are not Jewish.
  9. http://taliashewrote.com/2010/01/28/brotherhood-postponed "Brotherhood Postponed: A Sermon by Rabbi Maurice Davis (March 26, 1965)"
  10. http://www.csj.org/infoserv_articles/langone_michael_arthoping.htm "The Art of Hoping: A Mother’s Story"
  11. https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/wakefield/us-16.html Coming Out of Scientology: The Nightmare Ends, The Nightmare Begins
  12. http://www.ideajournal.com/articles.php?id=7 Masters and Slaves: The Tragedy of Jonestown