Becoming Like the Wilderness
May 26, 2017 By Eitan Fishbane | Commentary | Bemidbar
With the start of Sefer Bemidbar, the narrative of the Torah turns to the long journey of Benei Yisrael through the wilderness鈥攑unishment for the sin of the Golden Calf and preparation for entry into the Land of Israel. Passage into the sacred terrain first requires an arduous ordeal of wandering鈥攁 physical process of movement and quest. Penitence, pilgrimage, and transformation are anchored in the space of wilderness.
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The Problem with Priests
Jun 2, 2017 By Daniel Nevins | Commentary | Naso
Modern Judaism has a problem with the priesthood. The notion of hereditary holiness鈥攖hat one segment of the Jewish people is set apart from others, given ceremonial privileges, and invited to bless the people鈥攃onflicts with our egalitarian ethos. The strange rituals of the priests, especially when they are invited to raise their hands in blessing the people, feel magical and irrational. For these reasons, many non-Orthodox communities have diminished or even eliminated the priestly privileges such as reserving the first aliyot for kohanim and 尝别惫颈鈥檌尘.
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The Limitations of Ownership
May 19, 2017 By Yedida Eisenstat | Commentary | Behar | Behukkotai
Rashi, the well-known medieval northern French biblical commentator, begins his commentary on this week鈥檚 parashah with a famous question, loosely paraphrased as follows: In what way does the matter of shemittah [the sabbatical year] have anything to do with Mount Sinai? In other words, the laws of Leviticus 25鈥攂eginning with the agricultural restrictions of the seventh year, the regulations regarding the jubilee year, limitations on sale of land and slaves鈥攁re wholly dependent on Israel living in Israel. So why, Rashi asks, were these laws commanded so long before they would become relevant? Of what relevance are the laws of shemittah to the Israelites at Sinai?
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Law, Compassion, and Justice
May 12, 2017 By Eliezer B. Diamond z”l | Commentary | Emor
In the fall of 2012, I taught a course at the Princeton Theological Seminary entitled 鈥淎n Introduction to Rabbinic Literature.鈥 I saw my mission as twofold. My stated goal was to familiarize my students with the intellectual and spiritual world of the Rabbis through the study of representative texts from each of the genres of rabbinic literature: Mishnah, Tosefta, the Talmuds, and the halakhic and aggadic midrashim.
However, my study of text had a subtext: to disabuse my Christian students of the pernicious stereotypes of rabbinic Judaism that, some would argue, were first fostered by the apostle Paul and that persist to this very day in many Christian circles.
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Separation and Union: The Poles of Holiness
May 5, 2017 By Stephen A. Geller | Commentary | Aharei Mot | Kedoshim
These combined parashiyot are complex in their structure and content, yet a careful examination of these chapters reveals a striking and powerful theological insight. In terms of Bible scholarship, they extend across a major divide in the priestly literature: Leviticus 16 describes the detailed rites of yearly atonement that eliminated the taint of sinfulness from the priesthood, shrine, and people. In essence, it is a kind of re-creation of the initial state of purity of the Tabernacle on the day it was dedicated, as described in Leviticus 9-10. The link between atonement and dedication is made subtly, by the reference at the beginning of Leviticus 16 to the tragic deaths of Aaron鈥檚 sons, Nadab and Abihu, at the dedication of the Tabernacle, as recounted in Leviticus 10.
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Gender Inside and Outside the Camp
Apr 28, 2017 By Joy Ladin | Commentary | Metzora | Tazria
The idea that others would examine and report on intimate details of our bodies鈥攖hat such things would be of communal concern, and subject us to institutional regulation鈥攎ay seem archaic. But as transgender people know, when it comes to gender, this kind of surveillance is alive and well.
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A Love That Transforms
Apr 21, 2017 By Leonard A. Sharzer | Commentary | Shemini
This week鈥檚 parashah includes the tragic story of Nadav and Avihu, Aaron鈥檚 two eldest sons, who died, consumed by divine fire, after bringing an offering of alien fire within the sacred precincts of the Mishkan. Considering the dramatic nature of the narrative, and its compelling pathos, the story is told with remarkable terseness.
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Another Passover Season
Apr 14, 2017 By Ruth Messinger | Commentary | Pesah
As we come, again, to the end of another Passover season, many of us are looking forward to moving beyond the matzah intensity. We are obliged, also, to ask ourselves what it means to have retold the story of our people鈥檚 quest for freedom, what new insights we might have gained, what the lessons are that we should take back into the world. I want to talk about our commitment to fight oppression as it manifests itself today in our lives and in the lives of others, and I want to make some observations about the roles there are to play in these struggles, about what we can learn about how to lead in these endeavors.
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