A (Fearful) Man with a Mission
Jan 21, 2006 By 91¿ì²¥ Alumni | Commentary | Shemot
By Rabbi Francine Roston
There is a rabbinic teaching that each of us is to carry two pieces of paper in our pockets. From our left pocket we can pull out the piece that reads: “From dust and ashes I have come.” From our right pocket we can pull out the piece that reads: “For my sake the world was created.” There are moments when we need our feet pulled down to the ground and there are moments when we need to be lifted up from low places.
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God’s Evolution
Nov 5, 2005 By Marc Wolf | Commentary | Noah
Our sacred canon serves as the touchstone for tradition.
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Between Creation and the Flood
Oct 29, 2005 By Burton L. Visotzky | Commentary | Bereishit
In the beginning, Dr. Ismar Schorsch was a rigorous scholar, a great teacher, and Chancellor of 91¿ì²¥.
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The Inspirational History of Rosh Hashanah
Oct 5, 2005 By Ismar Schorsch | Commentary | Rosh Hashanah
If sanctity be measured by synagogue attendance, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur win hands down.
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“This Is Water” and This Is Joy
Oct 18, 2008 By Marc Wolf | Commentary | Sukkot
There is an almost organic progression from Rosh Hashanah to Yom Kippur. However, when we get caught up in preparations for the holidays, we risk missing the intended effect. From Rosh Hashanah to Yom Kippur we work on deconstructing ourselves and our worlds. We stand together and seek to expose our inner selves, leaving us vulnerable and open. The language of Yom Kippur prepares us for this feeling—we are not atoning for our sins as we do at the beginning of Leviticus when the laws of sacrifice are first introduced, but on another level altogether. As we learn during our Torah reading, on Yom Kippur we atone from sin (Lev. 16:30). Through the day we literally achieve a level of purity—during the ³§â€™l¾±³¦³ó´Ç³Ù and Avodah services we recite over and over again the verse, “on this day we are purified.” At the end of ±·±ð‘i±ô²¹³ó, we are left spiritually lighter.
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Our Obligation to “Strangers”
Feb 21, 2009 By David Marcus | Commentary | Mishpatim
Last week’s parashah contained a magnificent description of the revelation at Mount Sinai. The scene was dramatic: The people were gathered at the foot of the mountain as Moses ascended. There was smoke, fire, thunder, and loud sounding of the shofar. Then God revealed Himself and gave the Ten Commandments. The Ten Commandments represent the first laws of the mutual covenant between God and Israel, and this week’s parashah contains more of these laws that collectively are known in English as “The Book of the Covenant” (sefer habrit). Our sages long ago pointed out that our parashah starts with the Hebrew word for and: ve’eleh hamishpatim (and these are the rules), indicating a direct connection between the Ten Commandments and the Book of the Covenant. Both were given on Sinai.
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The Electricity of Awe
Feb 14, 2009 By Daniel Nevins | Commentary | Yitro
Parashat Yitro is a play in three acts, starting with Act I, a backstory in Exodus 18. Moses reunites with his family, notably his wise father-in-law, Yitro (Jethro), who rejoices at the miraculous reunion and then mentors his inexperienced son-in-law in the art of religious leadership. Yitro teaches Moses how to bless God, offer sacrifice, and administer justice among his restive and distressed people.
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The Difficult Journey to Redemption
Feb 7, 2009 By David M. Ackerman | Commentary | Beshallah
As an undergraduate, I studied American History, with a special focus on the African American experience in the nineteenth century. Black Americans of the time divided their lives into two distinct phases—before emancipation and after emancipation. The Civil War, of course, served as the hinge; by war’s end in 1865 millions of former slaves had become, in the parlance of the day, freedmen. Not that post-emancipation Black life in America was easy, simple, or beautiful. As we all know, it took another century for some of the basic promises of emancipation—the right to vote, some measure of equal opportunity, fair and equal access to public accommodations, among others—to become reality. But still, that moment came to represent the possibility of transformation, of reversal of fortune, of redemption, for many.
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