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Conservative Judaism affirms monotheism.
Its members have varied beliefs about the nature of God, and no one understanding of God is mandated.
Beliefs about God in the tradition of Jewish rationalism have been described as " reemergent " within the movement.
Such rationalism often affirms Maimonidean views of God.
Other views of God affirmed by members of the Conservative movement include Kabbalistic mysticism ; Hasidic panentheism ( neo-Hasidism, Jewish Renewal ); limited theism ( as in Harold Kushner's When Bad Things Happen to Good People ); and organic thinking in the fashion of Alfred North Whitehead and Charles Hartshorne, also known as process theology ( such as Rabbis Max Kaddushin, William E. Kaufman, or Bradley Shavit Artson ).

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