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The World that Isn’t There
Dec 27, 2024 By Joel Seltzer | Commentary | Miketz
Years ago, I read a book by the author Chuck Klosterman titled But What if We’re Wrong? The premise of the book is to attempt to “think about the present as if it were the past,” or in other words, to consider whether despite our current devotion to rationality and the scientific method, there are aspects of our modern world about which we might be profoundly wrong?
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When Jacob Met Esau: Facing Our Fears
Dec 13, 2024 By Gordon Tucker | Commentary | Vayishlah
The story told in Parashat Vayishlahof the meeting between Jacob and Esau is well known.But a closer consideration of the details of the tale speaks to very contemporary concerns.The overall backdrop to the scene is the pervasive feeling of fear. Esau, Jacob learns, is approaching, and there are 400 men with him. Is it a lavish welcoming party? (This is not unheard of in the Middle East—I myself experienced just such a welcoming party in Egypt when I was traveling there with some American Cabinet officials in 1980.) Or is it a prelude to belligerency?Are the loud sounds they are making just the sounds of 400 excited people from a demonstrative culture, or are those cries of war?Jacob assumed the worst. He didn’t bother asking the messengers who reported Esau’s approach whether the 400 men were armed or not.Jacob reflexively got ready for battle
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Going Out to Meet God and History
Dec 6, 2024 By Arnold M. Eisen | Commentary | Vayetzei
In what ways do the Jewish people, the descendants of Jacob, still reside in his “house”? How can we, who bear the name by which Jacob will be called in next week’s Torah portion, become the Israel whom Jacob henceforth struggles to become? I’d like to suggest, using the indispensable categories for Jewish self-understanding contributed by Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik, that Jacob is party to the “covenant of fate,” while Israel signifies the “covenant of destiny.” The “covenant of fate” is imposed on Jews by history and circumstance, while the “covenant of destiny” is one that Jews are called on to embrace in partnership with God.
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On the Perils of Pregnancy: A Letter to Rivkah
Nov 29, 2024 By Rabbi Annie Lewis | Commentary | Toledot
Before you bravely took leave of your family, they blessed you that through your line would come thousands upon thousands of descendants. When you struggled to conceive, Yitzhak pleaded with God for you to bear children.
The Torah records how the boys thrashed about in your womb. וַיִּתְרֹצְצוּ הַבָּנִים בְּקִרְבָּהּ. You cried out, אִם־כֵּן לָמָּה זֶּה אָנֹכִי, “If this is how it is, why do I exist?” (Gen. 25:22).
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“Ger Vetoshav”: A Lesson on Vulnerabilities and Humility
Nov 22, 2024 By Gordon Tucker | Commentary | Hayyei Sarah
Abraham rose, as he had to, from his wailing, because there was a necessary and sacred task to perform. And at that moment of needing to bury his dead, an enormity confronted him. Here’s how Abraham put it: “ger vetoshav anokhi”—I am merely a stranger (ger), come to be an alien resident (toshav) here. I have no place; I have no accumulated rights and privileges.
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Aiden Pink – Senior Sermon (RS ’25)
Nov 21, 2024 By 91첥 Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Hayyei Sarah
Aiden Pink – Hayyei Sarah
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Can You Spell Check the Tanakh?
Nov 15, 2024 By David Zev Moster | Commentary | Vayera
There is a puzzling word in this week’s parashah: מֵחֲטוֹ “from sinning” (Genesis 20:6). God appears to Abimelekh in a dream and says, “I myself have kept you from sinning (מֵחֲטוֹ) against me [with Sarah].” The word מֵחֲטוֹ is unusual because it should be spelled with an alef, either as מֵחֲטֹא in 1 Samuel 12:23 or as מֵחֲטוֹא in Psalm 39:2. We know there should be an alef because the Hebrew root חטא “to sin” appears 603 times in the Tanakh and has an alef 99.2% of the time. So, is the missing alef of מֵחֲטוֹ a spelling error? It depends on who you ask.
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Claire Shoyer – Senior Sermon (RS ’25)
Nov 14, 2024 By 91첥 Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Vayera
Claire Shoyer’s Senior Sermon on Vayera
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Alex Friedman – Senior Sermon (RS ’25)
Nov 13, 2024 By 91첥 Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Vayera | Rosh Hashanah
Alex Friedman’s Senior Sermon on Vayera
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How Can We Be a Blessing?
Nov 8, 2024 By Cantor Rabbi Shoshi Levin Goldberg | Commentary | Lekh Lekha
I have often pondered the meaning of the expression that a deceased person’s memory should be a blessing or will be for a blessing. Proverbs 10:7 teaches that “the name of a righteous person is invoked in blessing”—זֵ֣כֶר צַ֭דִּיק לִבְרָכָ֑ה . Originally, this likely referred to invoking the name of a well-known righteous person as an exemplar and conduit for our own blessing. The Babylonian Talmud also teaches (Kiddushin 31b) that after the death of a parent, we may continue to fulfill the mitzvah of honoring our parents, and by extension other beloved relatives and friends, by saying “zikhronam livrakhah,” “may their memory be for a blessing.”
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Sass Brown – Senior Sermon (RS ’25)
Nov 6, 2024 By 91첥 Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Lekh Lekha
Sass Brown Senior Sermon for Lekh Lekha
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Living With Difference
Nov 1, 2024 By Naomi Kalish | Commentary | Noah
Is the story of the Tower of Babel about human unity, or about human diversity?At the critical point when the Torah transitions from the story of Noah and its universal themes to the particular family of Abraham, the Tower of Babel conveys ambivalence about both unity and diversity.In doing so, it provides us with a model for how we can navigate our own complex social dynamics, especially in times of crisis and trauma.
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God’s Partners in Torah
Oct 25, 2024 By Robert Harris | Commentary | Bereishit
The ancient rabbinic Sages taught that the people of Israel must consider themselves, שותפיו של הקדוש ברוך הוא במעשה בראשית “God’s partner in the work of creation” (BT, Shabbat 119b and elsewhere). Often overlooked is that reading the Torah’s opening (בראשית ברא אלהים…, which I am deliberatively leaving untranslated for now) demands a similar type of partnership. The reason for this is that the opening of the Torah contains impenetrably difficult syntax. Let us consider the very first verse: בְּרֵאשִׁית בָּרָא אֱלֹהִים אֵת הַשָּׁמַיִם וְאֵת הָאָרֶץ. If we were to translate this verse literally, and absolutely retaining the order of the words, we would understand it along these lines: “In the beginning of, he-created God (did), heavens and earth . . . ” This is a far cry from the affecting cadence of the majestic King James Bible’s translation, “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” The question is, given the difficult syntax, what does this verse “actually” mean?
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Rebecca Galin – Senior Sermon (RS ’25)
Oct 22, 2024 By 91첥 Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Bereishit
Rebecca Galin’s Senior Sermon on Bereishit
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Lessons from Kohelet: If There Is Nothing New Under the Sun, How Do We Solve Our Gigantic Contemporary Problems?
Oct 16, 2024 By Stephanie Ruskay | Commentary | Sukkot
Kohelet (Ecclesiastes) is read during Sukkot, and at this moment I’m finding it to be precisely the wisdom I need. When I feel worried about the many crises we face, the idea that there is nothing new under the sun can be comforting. To me it means we have what we need to address the problem. We need to have humility and consider the tools God has given us and those humans have developed over time. Our main task is to find the right formula. Though breakthrough discoveries and new inventions exist, often what we seek is the right old tool in the proper configuration. It is a question of titration.
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More Than the Motions
Oct 13, 2024 By Joel Seltzer | Commentary | Yom Kippur
The haftarah, from Isaiah chapter 57, was chosen precisely to prevent the type of self-congratulatory behavior that we humans exhibit when we play the “dutiful child,” while simultaneously managing to miss our larger purpose.
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Sacred Words in Liturgy and Life
Oct 11, 2024 By Shira Billet | Commentary | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur
Human communication, the commitment to taking words seriously and to viewing the words we write and speak as serious commitments, has become even more imperiled in an age where our words are mediated through the technologies of social media, artificial intelligence, and the crippling social phenomena of political polarization and widespread mistrust.
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Hope Through Tears
Oct 4, 2024 By Joel Seltzer | Commentary | Rosh Hashanah
The haftarah for the second day of Rosh Hashanah echoes both the violence and the promise of the Akedah, the Binding of Isaac, as Israel is described as “the people escaped from the sword” (Jer. 31:2), while God promises, “There is hope for your future—your children shall return to their country” (31:17).
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Pour Out Your Hearts
Oct 3, 2024 By Joel Seltzer | Commentary | Rosh Hashanah
Hannah provides a powerful paradigm of prayer for us on these Days of Awe. Are we concerned with how we may appear when we are in prayer?
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Crying With God
Oct 1, 2024 By Gordon Tucker | Commentary | Rosh Hashanah
In an essay some years ago, the Israeli teacher and poet Sara Friedland ben Arza asked us to focus on the prayer Hayom Harat Olam (Today the World Stands as at Birth) in the Rosh Hashanah liturgy. She asks why, in a religious tradition that moved away so notably from ancient mythological motifs, is there a rare reference to the “birthing” of the world? And why is that short prayer placed just after the shofar
is blown?
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