Society for Humanistic Judaism was created in 1969.
City Congregation for Humanistic Judaism was created in 1991.
International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism was created in 1985.
Society for the Advancement of Judaism was created in 1922.
Society for Classical Reform Judaism was created in 2008.
There are a number of Jews who do not believe in God, yet who do want to maintain ties with organized Judaism; they are attracted to the ethics and values that Judaism teaches, but could live without some of the supernatural interpretations. In 1963, a Detroit rabbi, Sherwin T. Wine, created what came to be known as Humanistic Judaism. His goal was to welcome secular Jews who liked Jewish culture and respected Jewish ethics; they would now be able to continue having a relationship with Judaism, and would not be expected to believe in a deity. The Society for Humanistic Judaism has been in existence since 1969 and has branches in a number of cities. I enclose a link to it.
Humanistic - album - was created on 2001-09-25.
Humanistic Judaism is new as an organized group (it began in 1963), and while other non-orthodox sects refrain from officially condemning it, they generally do not see it as a religious denomination, but more of a social denomination. Due to the high rate of intermarriage, and the lax rules for conversion (in some cases non-existent), most individual Jews of other sects do not recognize humanistic Judaism as valid. Some Jewish sociologists believe that in a few generations, the members of humanistic Judaism won't even identify themselves with mainstrain Judaism.
Ethical monotheism. The belief and worship of One God, and the ethical system of conduct which that implies. See also:Who created Judaism?Jewish contributions to society
It was the way of the nose-pickers.
Lots of those. In more or less the order of most traditional to least traditional, here are some: Modern Orthodox Judaism Masorti (Traditional) Judaism Conservative Judaism Reform Judaism Liberal Judaism Reconstructionist Judaism Renewal Judaism Humanistic Judaism
Esther Reisel has written: 'Zikah hilonit la-Yahadut' 'Modern Jewish identity' -- subject(s): Humanistic Judaism, Judaism, Secularism, Jews, Identity
No. There are many religions that fully accept gay people, including: Christianity, Metropolitan Community Church Christianity, United Church of Christ Islam, Liberal/Progressive Judaism, Conservative Judaism, Humanistic Judaism, Liberal/Progressive Judaism, Reconstructionist Judaism, Renewal Judaism, Reform Pagans Unititarian Universalism