The Importance of Shame in Rabbinic Tradition

The Importance of Shame in Rabbinic Tradition

Jan 24, 2022 By David C. Kraemer | Public Event video | Video Lecture

We often think of shame or embarrassment as an experience to be avoided, and, to be sure, rabbinic tradition considers shaming someone else in public to be a grievous sin. But the Talmud also teaches that the capacity to feel shame is important, for the fear of shame will keep one from sin. Join聽Dr. David Kraemer聽to discuss this complicated emotion and how Jewish tradition 鈥渇eels鈥 about it.

Read More
Divine Rage

Divine Rage

Mar 28, 2022 By Amy Kalmanofsky | Public Event video | Video Lecture

God鈥檚 anger has been a problem for generations of theologians.聽Dr. Amy Kalmanofsky聽explores the power and purpose of divine rage and the different ways the prophets Jeremiah and Ezekiel use God鈥檚 anger.聽聽聽

Read More
Mandatory Fun: The Commandment of Joy

Mandatory Fun: The Commandment of Joy

Apr 4, 2022 By Sarah Wolf | Public Event video | Video Lecture

Usually we think of the mitzvot, the commandments of Jewish law, as involving specific actions. Yet the Torah also commands us to feel certain emotions, including love for God and joy on the festivals. Dr. Sarah Wolf to explores rabbinic texts that grapple with questions about what fulfillment of such a commandment should look like.

Read More
Relating to God

Relating to God

By 麻豆原创 | Public Event video | Video Lecture

Join JTS scholars to explore what Jewish texts and thought can teach us about how we might understand, experience, and be in relationship with the divine.聽

Read More
Restoring Balance: Exploring an Ancient Paradigm for Moving Beyond Our Mistakes

Restoring Balance: Exploring an Ancient Paradigm for Moving Beyond Our Mistakes

Sep 14, 2020 By Julia Andelman | Public Event video | Video Lecture | Yom Kippur

Yom Kippur is the Day of Atonement鈥攜et the concept of atonement itself is rarely explored. The text of the聽mahzor聽(High Holiday prayerbook) asks God to 鈥渇orgive us, pardon us, grant us聽atonement鈥濃攂ut how is atonement distinct from forgiveness and pardon?聽Through an examination of biblical and rabbinic sources, we will learn how our ancestors聽interpreted聽the concept of聽kapparah,聽atonement, and the great power it held in their understanding of聽how聽human beings鈥攆lawed in our very nature鈥攃an聽carry on in the聽world聽after we have sinned.聽

Read More
From Self-Interest to Self-Surrender: Confronting the Challenges of Prayer

From Self-Interest to Self-Surrender: Confronting the Challenges of Prayer

Aug 31, 2020 By Benjamin D. Sommer | Public Event video | Video Lecture | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur

Why do many modern Jews find聽tefillah聽so difficult? We鈥檒l grapple with this question by exploring attitudes toward prayer among thinkers including Rambam and Heschel, and we鈥檒l contrast assumptions about what makes for a genuine and meaningful prayer in Jewish tradition and in American culture.聽In particular, we鈥檒l聽discuss our expectations of what happens when we pray and the possibilities that emerge when we don鈥檛 put ourselves at the center of the prayer experience. Along the way, we will touch on Thomas Aquinas, Quakerism, Thomas Merton and yoga, and the light they shed on traditional Jewish conceptions of prayer.聽

Read More
Seeking and Offering Forgiveness: What are We Doing and How Do We Do It?

Seeking and Offering Forgiveness: What are We Doing and How Do We Do It?

Aug 24, 2020 By Eliezer B. Diamond z”l | Public Event video | Video Lecture | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur

Forgiveness is at the heart of the High Holy Days season, yet it is far from clear what we mean by this term. Employing insights from rabbinic sources,聽mussar聽literature and psychology, we will think out loud about what we hope to achieve and how to achieve it as we seek forgiveness for ourselves and are asked to forgive others.

Read More
God of the Faithful, God of the Faithless: Belief and Doubt in Prayer

God of the Faithful, God of the Faithless: Belief and Doubt in Prayer

Aug 17, 2020 By Jan Uhrbach | Public Event video | Video Lecture | Rosh Hashanah | Yom Kippur

Do we need 鈥渇aith鈥 in order to pray? Can synagogue services be worthwhile and meaningful even if we鈥檙e not sure what we believe? We are hardly the first generation to struggle with contradictions among our intellectual beliefs, traditional Jewish liturgy, and the act of prayer. What do biblical and rabbinic texts about prayer, and the聽prayerbook聽itself, teach us about these conflicts, and how can they help us connect to prayer even in times of doubt or faithlessness?

Read More