And if your children choose to marry an Orthodox Jew?
My understanding and this is coming from a very sheltered perspective is that the reform and conservative believe in the same TaNaKh as us. They believe the same as us, but interpret how the commandments relate to them differently. The best example I can think of has to deal with kosher. I was brought up in a kosher house, two dishwashers, 3 sets of plates, 3 sets of silverware etc....
From
MY UNDERSTANDING, and this could be completely wrong, but I was taught the conservative as an
average, believe more in the spirit of keeping kosher. This would mean they still don't eat pork or shellfish and may keep dairy and meat separate but use the same dishware, silverware and glassware. Of course, this is a very bold generalization, but just go with it, I'm sure you can list a bunch of exceptions. This is just a general generalization.
The reform again believe in kosher, but interpret it more as a time-bound restriction that doesn't apply to them.
Most will still avoid shellfish and seafood more out of tradition then belief, but will mix dairy and meat in the same meal. In the US, I'm sure its less strict then this, but I'm speaking as a whole of the reform Jews in the world.
Now to my point, a Jew is a Jew one of two ways.... They can trace their mother's lineage and her mothers and her mothers etc.... all the way back to Mt. Sanai when we received the Torah or they had a very valid conversion or their mother's mother's etc... had a conversion.
I'd say 3-4 days ago, I would absolutely say without any doubt that any non-orthodox conversation is invalid. I'm still not sure, but in one of the threads Levite was saying the conversion was identical to the orthodox. I feel I need to do more reading into it before I can really keep that same stance.
Either way, something I'm sure you've heard, if you get two Jews in a discussion about law, you get three different opinions.
I was always brought up to err on the side of caution. After all, there are a lot of rabbinic laws that one could theoretically break, and still not break HaShem's law. A good example was a short discussion we had yesterday about opening a soda can during the Shabbath. There are several different opinions on the matter, but which is right?