Wholly Jacob
Dec 16, 2016 By Joel Alter | Commentary | Vayishlah
Among the thrills in superhero movies is seeing the good guy take a pummeling and then stand unscathed in the next scene, ready again for battle. 鈥淣obody else could survive that punishment,鈥 we gush. The indestructible superhero comes to mind while reading of Jacob鈥檚 return to Canaan after living under Laban鈥檚 thumb, then wrestling with a mysterious man, then encountering Esau鈥攁 man who鈥檚 had twenty years to stew in a fratricidal rage.
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The Emergence of Praise
Dec 9, 2016 By Julia Andelman | Commentary | Vayetzei
Our parashah begins with Jacob鈥檚 profound, life-changing encounter with divinity: his dream of the ladder; his vision of God promising that his descendants will multiply and be blessed; and his vow that 鈥渋f God remains with me鈥he Lord shall be my God鈥 (Gen. 28:20-21). But our parashah includes another profound, life-changing moment of connecting to God鈥攁 less famous one鈥攅xperienced by Leah. After giving birth to three sons and naming each of them in accordance with aspects of her life experience, Leah gives birth again and says hapa鈥檃m odeh et Adonai (Gen. 29:35)鈥攖his time I will praise/thank/acknowledge the Lord鈥攁nd names her son Judah (Yehudah, from odeh).
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Two Nations in Your Belly
Dec 2, 2016 By Burton L. Visotzky | Commentary | Toledot
One of the most poignant and profound verses of the Bible appears early in this week鈥檚 Torah reading, Toledot. Our matriarch Rebecca, beset with a difficult pregnancy, asks God, 鈥淲hy me?鈥 (Gen. 25:22). And God replies to her with one of the most fateful verses of the Bible: 鈥淭here are two nations in your belly鈥 (Gen. 25:23). From that moment on, the die is cast: we are locked in a struggle with Esau / Edom. This week鈥檚 haftarah from the prophet Malachi teaches us the stakes: 鈥淚s not Esau Jacob鈥檚 brother? asks the Lord. Yet I have loved Jacob, but Esau I have hated鈥 (Malachi 1:2-3).
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Hesed Depends on Saying No
Nov 25, 2016 By Lilly Kaufman | Commentary | Hayyei Sarah
Of all the lessons that Parashat Hayyei Sarah teaches us about hesed (kindness), perhaps its most important lesson can be summed up in the word 鈥渘o.鈥
Rebecca, the heroine of the parashah, is both physically and ethically strong. She can lift a heavy water urn with ease, and she possesses a deep graciousness called hesed. When she gives water to Abraham鈥檚 servant, Eliezer, and his camels, she fulfills Eliezer鈥檚 eloquent prayer, in which he appealed to God moments earlier to find a fitting wife for Isaac. He names the value of hesed twice in this brief prayer (Gen. 24:12, 14), and his prayer is answered so rapidly and completely by Rebecca鈥檚 action that Eliezer is stunned (Gen. 24:21).
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Itzik鈥檚 Journey
Nov 18, 2016 By David G. Roskies | Commentary | Vayera
He was our Bob Dylan and Dylan Thomas: a Yiddish troubadour and hard-drinking lyric poet who wrote in regular rhymes and rhythms about the lives and unrequited loves of the downtrodden. His name was Itzik Manger, and the Bible was the book he loved most in the world, especially those parts that told an inside, personal story.
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What Was Promised to Abraham?
Nov 11, 2016 By Hillel Ben Sasson | Commentary | Lekh Lekha
In this week鈥檚 parashah, Abraham makes his dramatic first appearance on the stage of the Torah, when he follows the command to go forth to an unknown land, relying on the promise of an unknown God. His moving story, along with that of his sons and grandsons, has captivated readers from all three large monotheistic religions. Generation after generation wished to read these patriarchal and matriarchal stories into their lives, their time and place.
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Building a Boat and a Tower
Nov 4, 2016 By Daniel Nevins | Commentary | Noah
Does it feel lately that the fate of the world is at stake? If so, the Torah seems intent to validate and deepen our concern. Here we are just days before one of the most disconcerting elections in American history, and we have also arrived at Parashat Noah, the original dystopian tale.
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Reading and Rereading
Oct 28, 2016 By Avi Garelick | Commentary | Bereishit
There’s a good quip about the Jewish people: we’re the longest running book club on the planet. This week, in synagogues and study halls across the world, Jews are rolling the scroll of the Torah back to the beginning and starting again.. This is a different kind of reading than we do in other spheres of our lives. We read books, articles, and stories at specific times. They could be life-changing鈥攚e might return to those texts and re-read them鈥攐r they could quickly be forgotten. Some people will do that more than once, at which point they have become either fans or scholars, giving those texts a place of privilege in the formation of their individual identity.
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