What's 'conservo'?
I listened to all 30 minutes of it.
I never read Kaplan. I tried, but I stopped for the same reason I don't belong or identify with 'reform' movements anymore.
Rabbi Cosgrove ends more 'conservative'-- pushing back at Kaplan. I appreciate that. Maybe this indicates a turn towards conservatism in 'Reform' movements. I hope so. I think the 'Reform' has gone about as far as it can go.
I grew up with this 'progressive', 'evolved', 'enlightened' Park Avenue Judaism. It never really took though. I have been out of contact with it for so long. This talk reminded me of why I had to leave it behind.
Perhaps in the scheme of things, the 'Reform' was needed. I wasn't there at 'Reform's' beginnings, but I can imagine unopposed Orthodox rule. In any event, 'Reform' (Reform, Conservative, Reconstructionism, Renewal) has become so much a part of the air we breath that I assume 'Orthodoxy' has been changed because of it. Maybe it has become less the monster of my imagination.
I have read Rabbi S.R. Hirsch's (the founder of Modern Orthodoxy) critique of 'Reform', and I do agree with a lot of what he said. But maybe I am sitting on the shoulders of Reform and spitting on it? Who knows? In any event, thanks 'Park Avenue' for giving me your best, but it left me hollow and shivering.