David Saperstein

David Saperstein

Director, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism

Rabbi David Saperstein is the Washington representative of Judaism's Reform Movement as Director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, a position he has held for 30 years. The "On Faith" panelist also co-chairs the Coalition to Preserve Religious Liberty, and serves on the boards of numerous national organizations including the NAACP and People For the American Way. In 1999, Saperstein was elected first chair of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom created by Congress. The Religious Action Center advocates for a broad range of social justice issues and provides extensive legislative and program materials for synagogues, federations and Jewish community relations councils nationwide. It also coordinates social action education programs that train nearly 3,000 Jewish adults, youth, rabbinic and lay leaders each year. Also an attorney, Saperstein teaches seminars in First Amendment Church-State Law and in Jewish Law at Georgetown University Law School. He co-authored Jewish Dimensions of Social Justice: Tough Moral Choices of Our Time (1998). Close.

David Saperstein

Director, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism

Rabbi David Saperstein is the Washington representative of Judaism's Reform Movement as Director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, a position he has held for 30 years. The "On Faith" panelist also co-chairs the Coalition to Preserve Religious Liberty, and serves on the boards of numerous national organizations including the NAACP and People For the American Way. more »

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October 2007 Archives



October 14, 2007 2:28 PM

For Some, This is the Wrong Question

There are differing strands in traditional Jewish thought. One major strand focuses on the resurrection and judgment. A second focuses on the belief that there is an immortal part of us, our souls, that return to the Divine after we die.

Personally, I take an agnostic view. I believe that it is unknowable and therefore, asking what comes next is simply the wrong question. The right question is what we do with our lives here. The reward for good deeds is not (or not alone) what is received in the world to come but for its own sake in this life because this is what God has called us to do. And the focus of our religious actions should be for what they mean in this world, in this life... not the next.


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