Moshe the Mindful?
Jan 5, 2024 By Lilliana Shvartsmann | Commentary | Shemot
Moshe’s journey mirrors the struggles many face in navigating transitions and seeking purpose amidst uncertainty. The 19th-century Polish commentator Ha鈥檈mek Hadavar suggests Moshe intentionally led his flock to the most remote location, a place no other shepherd dared venture, seeking solitude. He needed such desolation to encounter God. While we don’t know if Moshe had his own meditation, journaling, or spiritual practices that promoted solitude, his courage and strength in recognizing the necessity of solitude are evident.
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Is it Heretical to Ask God for Protection?
Dec 29, 2023 By Marcus Mordecai Schwartz | Commentary | Vayehi
Jacob鈥檚 words of blessing to Joseph in chapter 48 surprise me every time that I read them. Though putatively an attempt to bless his son, they are primarily directed at his grandsons, Ephraim and Manasseh, and gain authority from Jacob鈥檚 fathers and from the shepherding and redeeming God he has known so intimately throughout his life.
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The Reason(s) Jacob Went Down to Egypt
Dec 22, 2023 By Ira Tokayer | Commentary | Vayiggash
Parashat Vayiggash is a good place to illustrate the modern scholarship, which sees the Torah鈥檚 Joseph story as a combination of three source documents with separate accounts of how and why Jacob descended to Egypt.
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A World in Crisis Needs a Yosef
Dec 15, 2023 By Avi Garelick | Commentary | Miketz
Our society today faces crises of overwhelming proportions on many fronts鈥攕ome observers have called our situation one of polycrisis, to emphasize how crises interact and amplify each other. Climate change is breathing down our necks, wars proliferate, and pandemics threaten our health, all while governments struggle to react sufficiently. Many who enjoy relative peace and affluence suffer from a sense of helplessness and foreboding. We need a Yosef.
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Tamar, Our Mother
Dec 8, 2023 By Yael Landman | Commentary | Vayeshev
Parashat Vayeshev begins the story of Joseph, Jacob鈥檚 favorite son. But just after this narrative kicks off, the text veers for the length of a chapter into the story of another of Jacob鈥檚 sons, Judah, as well as Judah鈥檚 three sons and his daughter-in-law Tamar. Just as the Joseph story is foundational for the broader narrative of B鈥檔ei Yisrael鈥攖he children of Jacob who become the Israelites鈥攖he story of Judah and Tamar is foundational as well.
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Caleb Brommer – Senior Sermon (RS ’24)
Nov 30, 2023 By JTS Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Short Video | Vayishlah
Vayishlah All the Class of 2024 Senior Sermons
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Sami Vingron – Senior Sermon (RS ’24)
Nov 28, 2023 By JTS Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Vayetzei
Vayetzei All the Class of 2024 Senior Sermons
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Remember Dinah; Listen to Women
Dec 1, 2023 By Rabbi Ayelet Cohen | Commentary | Vayishlah
Dinah鈥檚 story is often overlooked in a parashah rich with other narratives that are easier and more pleasant to explore. But this is not a time to shy away from difficult stories or avoid stories of sexual violence. Shabbat Vayishlah can be an opportunity for our communities to center the stories of women and girls in their fullness and explore the ways our communities can become communities of support.
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