1. Joel Roth

    Joel Roth is a prominent American rabbi in the Rabbinical Assembly, which is the rabbinical body of Conservative Judaism. He is a former member and chair of the assembly's "Committee on Jewish Law and Standards" (CJLS) which deals with questions of Jewish law and tradition, and serves as the Louis Finkelstein Professor of Talmud and Jewish Law at the Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) of America, in NYC, where he formerly served as dean of the Rabbinical School.

  2. Elliot N. Dorff

    Elliot N. Dorff (born 24 June 1943) is a Conservative rabbi, a professor of Jewish theology at the American Jewish University (formerly the University of Judaism) in California (where he is also Rector), author, and a bio-ethicist. Dorff is an expert in the philosophy of Conservative Judaism, Bioethics, and acknowledged within the Conservative community as an expert decisor of Jewish law. Dorff was ordained as a rabbi from the Jewish Theological Seminary in 1970.

  3. Isaac Klein

    Isaac Klein (1905-1979).Rabbi Isaac Klein was born in Hungary in 1905, and emigrated with his family to the United States in 1921. After earning a BA from City College in New York in 1931, As he was nearing ordination at the Yeshiva's REITS he transferred to the Jewish Theological Seminary of America where he was ordained in 1934. Rabbi Klein subsequently earned a PhD from Harvard.

  4. David Golinkin

    David Golinkin is a rabbi, author and President and Rector of the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies, Israel. He is a major halachic authority in the Masorti movement (Conservative Judaism in Israel.) Golinkin is a Conservative rabbi, and a member of the Rabbinical Assembly. He is the editor or author of eighteen books, and over 150 responsa, articles, sermons and books. He is a professor of Jewish law at the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies, …

  5. Jules Harlow

    Jules Harlow (born June 28, 1931) is a rabbi and liturgist; son of Henry and Lena Lipman Harlow. He was born in Sioux City, Iowa. In 1952 at Morningside College in Sioux City he earned a B.A., and from there went to New York City to study in the Jewish Theological Seminary of America; here he became ordained as a rabbi in 1959. He then became a staff member of the Rabbinical Assembly (RA), the international organization of rabbis in Conservative Judaism.

  6. Robert Gordis

    Robert Gordis (1908 - 1992) was an important figure of Judaism. He founded the first Conservative day school, served as President of the Rabbinical Assembly and of the Synagogue Council of America, and was professor at Jewish Theological Seminary from 1940 to 1992. He wrote one of the first pamphlets explaining Conservative ideology in 1946, …

  7. Alan Silverstein

    Alan Silverstein is an American Conservative rabbi and the spiritual leader of Congregation Agudath Israel since 1979. He received a master of Hebrew letters in rabbinics from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America and a Ph.D. in Jewish history from its Institute for the Advanced Study in Humanities and was ordained by its Rabbinical School. He also earned a master’s degree in Jewish history from Columbia University.

  8. Amy Eilberg

    Rabbi Amy Eilberg (born October 12 1954) is the first woman rabbi ordained by the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, one of the academic and spiritual centers of Conservative Judaism. Ordained in 1985, she was the first woman appointed to serve on the Rabbinical Assembly's Committee on Jewish Law and Standards in 1986. As of 2004, the JTS has ordained more than 150 women rabbis and the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies has ordained approximately 30.

  9. Aaron L. Mackler

    Aaron L. Mackler is a Conservative rabbi, a professor of theology at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, author, and a bio-ethicist. Mackler is an expert in the philosophy of Conservative Judaism and in Bioethics. He graduated from Yale University in 1980. Mackler was ordained as a rabbi from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. He earned a Ph.D in philosophy from Georgetown University.

  10. William E. Kaufman

    William E. Kaufman is a rabbi, a philosopher, and an author of several books and academic articles. He is a member of the Rabbinical Assembly, the international association of Conservative rabbis. He serves as rabbi at Temple Beth El, in Fall River, Massachusetts. He is an adjunct professor of philosophy at Rhode Island College and Bristol Community College. He has published many articles in "Judaism" (quarterly journal), …

  11. Stewart Vogel

    Rabbi Stewart Vogel is a prominent Conservative rabbi serving as senior rabbi of Temple Aliyah in Woodland Hills, California. Vogel is the current president of the Board of Rabbis of Southern California and active in committees of the international organization of Conservative rabbis, the Rabbinical Assembly.

  12. Arnold Stiebel

    Arnold S. Stiebel, Ph.D. is an American rabbi. He is a member of both the Rabbinical Assembly, which is the rabbinical body of Conservative Judaism and Reform Judaism's Central Conference of American Rabbis. He was born in New Orleans and educated and degreed at Louisiana State University in New Orleans, Memphis State University, Rabbinic training specifically at the Hebrew Union College in Jerusalem and Cincinnati and Pepperdine University.