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Hello, I would like to ask a question and I see other non-Jews have used this forum to do so.
My family -- my fiance, our son/step son and I are nominally Christian. I was raised Baptist and she was raised Catholic. We go to Baptist or Catholic church only occasionally. Our son (15) is at a questioning age and is interested in our attending services more regularly. He sometimes goes to a fundamentalist church that one of his former teachers invited him to, or to a fundie church his girlfriend attends (which by the way I'm not thrilled about).
When I was his age, I grew up in Queens, which was very diverse. I attended lots of Bar Mitzvahs and sometimes other synagogue services at the invitation of friends, as well as German Lutheran and Catholic services.
Even though we now live in Queens again and it is still diverse and he has diverse friends, it seems people don't invite each other across religious lines as they did in the 1960s when I was growing up. I would like for him to be exposed to other religions, so that he has no prejudices and gets an idea of how other communities worship.
In fact, I'm not even sure that other denominations and religions permit it these days. I have read stories of people curious about Islam being turned away from mosques, etc.
So my question is, is it possible to just attend the local reformed synagogue? Do you have to be invited? I understand that some kind of attendance fee is now mandatory -- is it collected in advance or is a plate passed? Do we have to buy yarmulkes? (As a kid, I remember the local reformed temple had a box of yarmulkes in the lobby for ecumenical visitor that you just popped on your head going in and left in the box going out.)
Thanks in advance for any comments on these questions or any other advice you might have.
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