Making Every Word Count
Oct 14, 2016 By Arnold M. Eisen | Commentary | Ha'azinu
Ha’azinu is remarkable in two respects: what it says, and how it chooses to say it. My focus here will be the latter, but let’s note with regard to the former that in this, his final address to the Children of Israel before a set of farewell blessings, Moses reviews all of his people’s past, present, and future. He begins by calling on the God who had called Israel into being and called him to God’s service. He reminds Israel that God has chosen them and still cares for their well-being. He prophesies that despite all that God and Moses have said and done, Israel will abandon God, as they had in the past. God will punish them, as in the past, but never to the point of utter destruction. In the end, God and Israel will reconcile.
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Parts That Are Left Behind
Oct 14, 2016 By Sarah Diamant | Commentary | Ha'azinu
As we approach the end of the Torah and read Moses’s parting words, we share with you this work which was created as part of JTS’s Artist-in-Residence program, and is on display at JTS as part of the Corridors exhibition.
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The Art of Fly Fishing and Teshuvah
Oct 11, 2016 By Arnold M. Eisen | Commentary | Yom Kippur
I went fly fishing this summer with my son and a very patient instructor, and came away with three lessons directly relevant to the work of teshuvah.
First, fly fishing is hard, very hard, and if my skill at casting that day is any indication, it’s unlikely I will ever be very good at it.
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Is This the Fast I Desire?
Oct 11, 2016 By Julia Andelman | Commentary | Yom Kippur
When I was a congregational rabbi, my practice was to offer a sermon on Yom Kippur morning relating to social justice. I would raise an issue of ethical concern in the world; share my reading of what Jewish texts and tradition had to say on the matter; and suggest actions for individuals and for the community.
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The Bluebird Inside Our Hearts
Oct 7, 2016 By Marcus Mordecai Schwartz | Commentary | Shabbat Shuvah | Yom Kippur
Read Morethere’s a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I’m too tough for him,
I say, stay in there, I’m not going
to let anybody see
you.
Returning with God
Sep 30, 2016 By Mychal Springer | Commentary | Nitzavim
This week’s Torah Portion, Nitzavim, speaks profoundly about teshuvah, the literal and figurative struggle to return to God. When we turn back to God “with all [our] heart and soul,” the parashah tells us, then God “will bring you together again from all the peoples where the Lord your God has scattered you” (Deut 30:3). Being scattered is a state of disorientation and disconnection. Teshuvah represents a coming home. There’s an organic connection between the return to the Land of Israel—the land at the center of the Jewish soul, from which we have been banished—and the return that involves changing our ways and opening our hearts to God.
Read MoreSo Close to Me
Sep 30, 2016 By Bronwen Mullin | Commentary | Nitzavim
Read MoreYou say it’s in my heart
Like my heart is less a mystery than the great expanse of heaven
You say it’s in my heart
Like my heart is less a threatening thing than the deepest darkest ocean
Aphrodite and the Rabbis
Sep 27, 2016 By Burton L. Visotzky | Public Event audio
Judaism as we know it is a western Roman religion, argues Rabbi Burton Visotzky. Yes, the very empire that destroyed the Jerusalem Temple in 70 CE served as the culture in which Judaism was nurtured and became the religion of the rabbis that we still celebrate today.
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Seeking Forgiveness for Structural Injustice
Sep 26, 2016 By Stephanie Ruskay | Short Video | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur
Forgiving and Asking Forgiveness: Sound Bytes for the High Holidays 5777
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Teshuvah in Two Directions
Sep 26, 2016 By David C. Kraemer | Short Video | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur
Forgiving and Asking Forgiveness: Sound Bytes for the High Holidays 5777
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A Heart of Compassion and Forgiveness
Sep 26, 2016 By Eitan Fishbane | Short Video | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur
Forgiving and Asking Forgiveness: Sound Bytes for the High Holidays 5777
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Return Us to You
Sep 26, 2016 By Mychal Springer | Short Video | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur
Forgiving and Asking Forgiveness: Sound Bytes for the High Holidays 5777
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Asking Forgiveness with Authenticity
Sep 26, 2016 By Paula Rose | Short Video | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur
Forgiving and Asking Forgiveness: Sound Bytes for the High Holidays 5777
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Forgiving Ourselves
Sep 26, 2016 By Anne Lapidus Lerner | Short Video | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur
Forgiving and Asking Forgiveness: Sound Bytes for the High Holidays 5777
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Getting to ‘Sorry’
Sep 26, 2016 By Shira D. Epstein | Short Video | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur
Forgiving and Asking Forgiveness: Sound Bytes for the High Holidays 5777
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What It Means to Enjoy
Sep 23, 2016 By Alan Cooper | Commentary | Ki Tavo
At one of our Shabbat afternoon Talmud classes some 50 years ago, after the usual bout of eating, drinking, and singing, the topic under discussion was what it means to “enjoy” Shabbat and Yom Tov (Sabbath and Festivals). We discussed Rabbi Eliezer’s statement that Festival “rejoicing” is obligatory, as well as the two alternative ways he proffers for attaining pleasure: either by eating and drinking or by sitting and studying. Rabbi Joshua interjects that it should be half of one and half of the other (BT Pesahim 68b).
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Everyone on the Team
Sep 23, 2016 By Craig Scheff | Commentary | Ki Tavo
Everyone on the team, from the manager to the coach, from a secretary to an owner, has a role to fulfill. That role is valuable if the team is to come close to reaching its potential. The leader must understand this. Every single member of your team needs to feel wanted and appreciated. If they are on the team, they deserve to be valued and to feel valued. Do you want someone on the team who doesn’t feel necessary and appreciated? How do they find out unless you let them know?
Read More—John Wooden and Steve Jamison, Wooden: A Lifetime of Observations and Reflections On and Off the Court
The Blessing of Assimilation—Then and Now
Sep 20, 2016 By Arnold M. Eisen | Public Event video
Current JTS Chancellor Arnold M. Eisen revisits former JTS Chancellor Gerson D. Cohen’s landmark 1966 essay “The Blessing of Assimilation in Jewish History.” Chancellor Eisen discusses how the issues raised by Chancellor Cohen half a century ago continue to engage and challenge us today.
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Why Do We Need a Reminder to Remember?
Sep 16, 2016 By Yedida Eisenstat | Commentary | Ki Tetzei
When was the last time you memorized a phone number? In the age of Gmail, iPhones, and Facebook, remembering has become a passive activity. But at the end of this week’s parashah, the Torah commands us to actively “remember what Amalek did to you… do not forget.” But what did Moses command Israel to remember and why?
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Promises, Promises
Sep 16, 2016 By Cheryl Magen | Commentary | Ki Tetzei
Oh, promises, their kind of promises, can just destroy a life
Oh, promises, those kind of promises, take all the joy from life
Oh, promises, promises, my kind of promises
Can lead to joy and hope and love
Yes, love!
Read More—“Promises, Promises” (from the 1968 musical of the same name), lyrics by Hal David
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