Bialik’s Radical Subversion
May 22, 2004 By Ismar Schorsch | Commentary | Bemidbar
The overture to the book of Numbers is decidedly upbeat. All appears in order for a quick journey through the wilderness. We are at the start of the fourteenth month since the exodus from Egypt. A month before Moses had erected the Tabernacle, commemorating the first anniversary of Israel’s freedom. Just three months after its redemption, Israel experienced God’s revelation at Mount Sinai. The opening chapters convey an aura of invincibility. With exactly 603,550 fighting men above the age of twenty, Israel is arrayed around the Tabernacle in military formation with four tribes on each side. The ultimate power of this force is spiritual, for the Tabernacle at its center protected by the Levites, is not only the repository of the tablets of the covenant, but also the abode of God on earth. As a shrine, it serves as an earthly microcosm of God’s cosmic dwelling.
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The Past Leading to the Present
Oct 30, 2004 By Ismar Schorsch | Commentary | Vayera
The unusual Hebrew phrase “lekh lekha” occurs only twice in the entire Tanakh: at the beginning of last week’s parasha when God instructs Abraham to leave Haran, and this week, when God asks him to offer up his son, Isaac, as a sacrifice (Genesis 12:1; 22:2).
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Abraham: Knight of Many Faiths
Oct 23, 2004 By Ismar Schorsch | Commentary | Lekh Lekha
It is hard to reconcile the glaring gap between promise and fulfillment in the story of Abraham.
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What Is a Sukkah, Really?
Sep 30, 2004 By Ismar Schorsch | Commentary | Sukkot
During the festival of Sukkot in 1974, while on sabbatical in Israel, the Schorsch family took a trip to Sharm El Sheikh on the Straits of Tiran.
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The Truth about the Exodus
Apr 30, 2005 By Burton L. Visotzky | Commentary | Pesah
This past December, I went with my wife and two adult children on a family vacation to Egypt.
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The Significance of the Tenth
Jan 15, 1994 By Ismar Schorsch | Commentary | Bo
The tenth plague finally shatters Pharaoh’s resistance.
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Accounting for God’s Silence
Jan 22, 2005 By Ismar Schorsch | Commentary | Beshallah
In his utterly engrossing autobiography, A Tale of Love and Darkness, which came out in Hebrew in 2002, Amos Oz describes the elderly maidservant in the home of his maternal grandparents in Ukraine as being stone deaf.
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The Flood and Creation
Oct 16, 2004 By Ismar Schorsch | Commentary | Noah
Midrashim often draw big ideas from the smallest of linguistic anomalies.
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