The Give and Take of Strength
Mar 13, 2026 By Eliezer B. Diamond z”l | Commentary | Pekudei | Shabbat Hahodesh | Vayak-hel
Rituals of closure are common in both the secular and religious realms. An example of the first is the sounding of retreat and the lowering of the flag marking the end of the official duty day on military installations. An instance of the second is the聽siyyum,聽a liturgical ritual and festive meal that is occasioned by the completion of the study of a Talmudic tractate. Closure rituals relate not only to the past but to the future as well. On the one hand, the temporal demarcation of a past event facilitates the emergence of its distinct identity, internal coherence, and significance, thereby providing insight, understanding, and, at times, a sense of accomplishment. At the same time, by declaring an end, a closure ritual creates space in which one can鈥攁nd must鈥攂egin anew; the past is to be neither prison nor refuge.
Read More
Kept By Shabbat
Mar 6, 2026 By Amy Kalmanofsky | Commentary | Ki Tissa
Ahad Ha鈥檃m famously said: 鈥淢ore than Jews have kept Shabbat, Shabbat has kept the Jews.鈥 Pretty remarkable coming from the founder of cultural Zionism!
Parashat Ki Tissa either supports or challenges Ha鈥檃m鈥檚 words. This week鈥檚 parashah relates one of the lowest moments in Israel鈥檚 story鈥攖he sin of the golden calf鈥攊n which Israel dances before a god of their own making. Coming down Mount Sinai with the stone tablets inscribed by God鈥檚 finger (Exod. 31:18), Moses sees Israel鈥檚 frenzy and smashes the tablets. Moses spends the rest of the parashah picking up the pieces and working to restore Israel鈥檚 relationship with God. The parashah ends with God giving a new set of tablets to Moses. The holy covenant between God and Israel is restored.
Read More
Zakhor in a Fractured Age
Feb 27, 2026 By Sandra Fox | Commentary | Shabbat Zakhor | Tetzavveh
鈥淐ould you have chosen a more loaded week?鈥 said my husband with a face that can only be described as both bemused and pitying when I told him that I had agreed to write my first JTS Torah Commentary on Shabbat Zakhor. As the heaviness of the reading sank in, with its commandment to recall Amalek鈥檚 unprovoked attack on the Israelites and to 鈥渂lot out鈥 Amalek鈥檚 memory, I became apprehensive.
Read More
A Symbol of Peace
Feb 20, 2026 By Daniel Nevins | Commentary | Terumah
The Arch of Titus in Rome is simultaneously one of the saddest and most exciting places for a Jew to stand. It is but a short distance from the Colosseum, the stadium made famous by its cruel sports, built with money plundered from the Jerusalem Temple in 70 CE. Titus鈥檚 Arch celebrates the destruction of our Temple, a building designated by Isaiah to be a house of prayer for all nations. A bas-relief sculpture on the arch鈥檚 inner walls depicts a sickening scene: the triumphant display of the Temple鈥檚 sacred objects, the Menorah most prominent among them, along with a pathetic procession of enslaved Jews.
Read More
On Moses鈥 鈥淪aying鈥 and 鈥淭elling鈥
Feb 6, 2026 By Alan Cooper | Commentary | Yitro
The highlight of Parashat Yitro is undoubtedly the spectacular son et lumi猫re at Sinai, accompanying the uniquely unmediated revelation of God鈥檚 鈥渨ords鈥 (the 10 Commandments) directly to the people. The gravity of the occasion demanded special preparation, and most of Exodus 19 is devoted to that preparation…
Read More
When Prayer is Not Enough
Jan 30, 2026 By Cantor Rabbi Shoshi Levin Goldberg | Commentary | Beshallah
You may know this joke: a man is drowning in the ocean and several people with boats come to rescue him. He responds to each of them, 鈥淣o, thank you. I鈥檝e been praying, and God will save me.鈥 When the man arrives in heaven, angry with God, God asks him, 鈥淲hy didn鈥檛 you get on the boats I sent?鈥澛
Prayer is rarely enough. Jewish leaders are acutely aware of this reality today. Cantors, in particular, know that there is far more to our jobs than leading prayer.
Read More
Where We Stand is What We Learn
Jan 23, 2026 By Luciana Pajecki Lederman | Commentary | Bo
As a Talmud teacher, I am constantly aware of the dynamic web of relationships in which learning takes place鈥攂etween me, the students, and the text we explore together鈥攅ach quietly and continually shaping the relationship between the others. But as Director of the Beit Midrash, I am especially attuned to the role of the surrounding environment: how the space itself can either nurture or inhibit those relationships.
Read More
Words Fail Me
Jan 16, 2026 By Jan Uhrbach | Commentary | Va'era
That is the way the Zohar (the foundational text of Kabbalah, Jewish mysticism) understands our exile in Egypt: as the exile of speech, a failure of words. In this reading, the breakdown of speech is both cause and effect of our enslavement, while healing and redeeming speech鈥攆inding our voice鈥攊s both the process and hallmark of redemption.
Read More