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Remember the Land
May 8, 2026 By Daniel Nevins | Commentary | Behar | Behukkotai
Spring is my favorite season because it draws me outdoors, enticing me to leave the city and enjoy the rivers, fields, and mountains of this glorious earth. Even near the city I often find myself in nature, biking along the Hudson and up the Palisades past waterfalls and nesting eagles. Returning to the land reminds me of the many blessings of our world, filling me with gratitude and awe. It also causes foreboding since the signs of stress on the natural systems that make our lives possible are everywhere evident. While this era of anthropogenic climate change may be new, the concern that human conduct could lead to ruin and exile from the earth is found already in our Torah portion.
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Baseball (A Jewish American Pastime)
May 4, 2026 By Robert Harris | Public Event video | Video Lecture
Part of the series “America at 250: Jewish Ideas and the American Experiment” Download Sources With Dr. Robert A. Harris, Professor of Bible and Ancient Semitic Languages, 91æģ²„ Baseball has long been called Americaās pastimeābut what happens when we read the game through the lens ofāÆphilosophy, theology, halacha and aggadah? This session explores the striking parallels between rabbinic interpretation and […]
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Holy Frustration
May 1, 2026 By Yitz Landes | Commentary | Emor
Like much of Leviticus, Parashat Emor opens with yet more of these rules. But now the Torah needs to acknowledge that even when everything is in the right place, there is still death. Whatās a priest to do when tragedy strikes? āSpeak [Emor] to the priests, the sons of Aaron,ā God tells Moses, āand say to them: None shall defile himself for any [dead] person among his kin, except for the relatives that are closest to himā (Lev. 21:1). In order to stay pure, priests are limited in terms of when they can come near a dead body; even though they may mourn the death of another, the Torah says that they can only be near the corpse of a close relative. After a few terse verses about mourning practices, the Torah enumerates further rules that are meant to keep the priests and High Priest pure, with the upshot being that a priest is āholy to their Godā (21:7).
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How to Be Holy
Apr 24, 2026 By Raymond Scheindlin | Commentary | Aharei Mot | Kedoshim
This week, we read two parashiyot from Leviticus: Aharei Mot andKedoshim. Taken together, they cover five clearly defined topics. Aharei Mot deals with the rituals of the high priest on Yom Kippur; regulations governing the slaughter of animals for food and sacrifice; and the prohibition of various sexual relations, especially incest. This last subject is resumed at the end ofKedoshim. Between the two discussions of sexual relations is the famousChapter 19, which opensKedoshim. This chapter stands out from the rest of our double parashahāin fact, from the rest of the book of Leviticus. It is a reprieve from the seemingly endless ritual instructions, most of which are no longer applicable, that make up the bulk of the book; and, thoughChapter 19does include some important ritual instructions, it is mostly devoted to the kind of rules for life that should govern every well-organized society, rules that people of most cultures and religions have tried to inculcate for everyoneās benefit.
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Gender Inside and Outside the Camp
Apr 17, 2026 By Joy Ladin | Commentary | Metzora | Shabbat Rosh Hodesh | Tazria
Most benei mitzvah would do anything to avoid having to talk aboutParashat Tazria-Metzora, a section of theTorah that focuses communal attention on intimate changes in human bodies. InLeviticus 13, God orders Israelites to notice and monitor intimate changes in one anotherās bodiesāmenstruation, discharges, eruptions, inflammations, hair growth, āswelling, rash, discoloration,ā and so on. For example,Leviticus 13:2commands:
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The Deathly Power of the Holy
Apr 10, 2026 By Marcus Mordecai Schwartz | Commentary | Shemini
Finding the right words after loss is hard, but Mosesās comments to Aaron in this weekās parashah are unusually difficult. At the moment that God fills Aaronās hands with abundance, appointing him as high-priest and his descendants as an eternal priesthood, his two eldest die when they attempt to offer incense with a flame brought from outside the newly dedicated sanctuaryāa strange, uncommanded offering. āAnd fire came forth from the LORD and consumed them . . .ā
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Freedom through Torah
Apr 3, 2026 By David Hoffman | Commentary | Pesah
Freedom in biblical and rabbinic Judaism is a highly complex idea. Consider the mishnah above. At first glance one might think the law, the Ten Commandments carved on the two tablets, would be limiting, constraining human freedom. Counterintuitively, the Sages argue that true freedom only comes from an engagement with Torah! How might ālaboring in Torahā and living a life according to the demands of the Torah induce freedom?
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Elijahāand Santa Claus?!
Mar 27, 2026 By Robert Harris | Commentary | Shabbat Hagadol
I am certain that I am not the first to point out the similarities between the figures of Elijah the Prophet and Santa Clausā¦at least in the way those figures have been popularly imagined. Put simply, folklore posits that each of these figures visits individual homes on a religious holiday (Elijahāthat old shikkur!āsneaks in to […]
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From Anxiety to Action: Telling the Story of the World We Want
Mar 23, 2026
At the heart of Passover is a question that feels urgent today: how do we move forward when the future feels uncertain and frightening? This session explores the Crossing of the Sea through midrash and contemporary thought, treating imagination as a muscle that must be strengthened in times of crisis. As we concludeSeasons of Responsibility, weāll shift focus from individual anxiety to collective responsibility, inviting participants to consider how shared storytelling, community, and action help bring the world we long for into being.
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A Covenant of Salt
Mar 20, 2026 By Tim Daniel Bernard | Commentary | Vayikra
Covenant is a central concept in Judaism. The Torah and later tradition make clear that the people Israel have a special relationship with God, and Jews have acquired the epithet āthe chosen peopleā (though Jewish particularism need not preclude other peoples having their own unique relationships with God). Rabbi David Hartman,zāl, titled his exposition of Jewish theologyA Living Covenant. Rabbi David Wolpe, in a speech at 91æģ²„,proposedhighlighting the mainstream ideological approach of Conservative Judaism by rebranding it as āCovenantal Judaism.ā
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The Give and Take of Strength
Mar 13, 2026 By Eliezer B. Diamond z”l | Commentary | Pekudei | Shabbat Hahodesh | Vayak-hel
Rituals of closure are common in both the secular and religious realms. An example of the first is the sounding of retreat and the lowering of the flag marking the end of the official duty day on military installations. An instance of the second is thesiyyum,a liturgical ritual and festive meal that is occasioned by the completion of the study of a Talmudic tractate. Closure rituals relate not only to the past but to the future as well. On the one hand, the temporal demarcation of a past event facilitates the emergence of its distinct identity, internal coherence, and significance, thereby providing insight, understanding, and, at times, a sense of accomplishment. At the same time, by declaring an end, a closure ritual creates space in which one canāand mustābegin anew; the past is to be neither prison nor refuge.
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Seasons of Reckoning: The Practice of Moral Accounting
Mar 9, 2026
Sources | Presentation From our Learning Series: Seasons of ResponsibilityJoin us for a timely conversation co-sponsored by the Center for Earth Ethics at Union Theological Seminary. Featuring Karenna Gore and Rabbi Burton L. Visotzky, this program explores how traditions of moral reflection can guide us.In partnership with the Center for Earth Ethics About the Speaker […]
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Kept By Shabbat
Mar 6, 2026 By Amy Kalmanofsky | Commentary | Ki Tissa
Ahad Haāam famously said: āMore than Jews have kept Shabbat, Shabbat has kept the Jews.ā Pretty remarkable coming from the founder of cultural Zionism!
Parashat Ki Tissa either supports or challenges Haāamās words. This weekās parashah relates one of the lowest moments in Israelās storyāthe sin of the golden calfāin which Israel dances before a god of their own making. Coming down Mount Sinai with the stone tablets inscribed by Godās finger (Exod. 31:18), Moses sees Israelās frenzy and smashes the tablets. Moses spends the rest of the parashah picking up the pieces and working to restore Israelās relationship with God. The parashah ends with God giving a new set of tablets to Moses. The holy covenant between God and Israel is restored.
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Zakhor in a Fractured Age
Feb 27, 2026 By Sandra Fox | Commentary | Shabbat Zakhor | Tetzavveh
āCould you have chosen a more loaded week?ā said my husband with a face that can only be described as both bemused and pitying when I told him that I had agreed to write my first 91æģ²„ Torah Commentary on Shabbat Zakhor. As the heaviness of the reading sank in, with its commandment to recall Amalekās unprovoked attack on the Israelites and to āblot outā Amalekās memory, I became apprehensive.
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A Symbol of Peace
Feb 20, 2026 By Daniel Nevins | Commentary | Terumah
The Arch of Titus in Rome is simultaneously one of the saddest and most exciting places for a Jew to stand. It is but a short distance from the Colosseum, the stadium made famous by its cruel sports, built with money plundered from the Jerusalem Temple in 70 CE. Titusās Arch celebrates the destruction of our Temple, a building designated by Isaiah to be a house of prayer for all nations. A bas-relief sculpture on the archās inner walls depicts a sickening scene: the triumphant display of the Templeās sacred objects, the Menorah most prominent among them, along with a pathetic procession of enslaved Jews.
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Wade Melnick – Senior Sermon (RS ’26)
Feb 19, 2026 By 91æģ²„ Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Terumah
Wade Melnick-Terumah
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Before Them, Before Us: Law as Master, Law as Servant
Feb 13, 2026 By Gordon Tucker | Commentary | Mishpatim | Shabbat Shekalim
×Ö°×Öµ×Ö¶Ö¼× ×Ö·×ּ֓שְ×פָּ×Ö“×× ×ֲשֶ×ר תָּש֓××× ×Ö“×¤Ö°× Öµ××Ö¶× These are the rules that you shall place before them. (Exodus 21:1) So begins this weekās parashah, Mishpatim. It is here that the Jewish legal tradition begins, where Torah (i.e. āInstructionā) becomes Nomos or Law. Immediately after that opening sentence, the text continues with rules concerning masters and servants. […]
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Eitan Bloostein – Senior Sermon (RS ’26)
Feb 11, 2026 By 91æģ²„ Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Mishpatim
Mishpatim AllClass of 2026 Senior Sermons
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On Mosesā āSayingā and āTellingā
Feb 6, 2026 By Alan Cooper | Commentary | Yitro
The highlight of Parashat Yitro is undoubtedly the spectacular son et lumiĆØre at Sinai, accompanying the uniquely unmediated revelation of Godās āwordsā (the 10 Commandments) directly to the people. The gravity of the occasion demanded special preparation, and most of Exodus 19 is devoted to that preparation…
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Noam Blauer – Senior Sermon (RS ’26)
Feb 6, 2026 By 91æģ²„ Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Yitro
Yitro AllClass of 2026 Senior Sermons
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