February 2024 has no Jewish holidays. And on both the secular calendar and Jewish calendar, February 2024 brings "leap time" – a leap day on February 29, and a whole leap month (Adar I) in Jewish time.It's as if this no-holidays month operates to re-set time, to recalibrate so that not only calendars re-align but also… Continue reading Rabbi’s Corner February 2024: resetting Time
Author: velveteenrabbi
Freedom! Now, What Have You Done For Me Lately? – P. Beshallah
Rescued from centuries of Egyptian bondage, our spiritual ancestors reached the Sea of Reeds. Pharaoh changed his mind and came charging with his army. It took a wall of fire to block them, and a miracle to split the sea so our ancestors could leave Egypt behind once and for all.We were free at last. … Continue reading Freedom! Now, What Have You Done For Me Lately? – P. Beshallah
Our Single Garment of Destiny
o liberation comes easy. In whatever form bondage may come, and whether we mean individual or collective shackles, freedom's path always entails effort, drama, uncertainty and suffering along the way. This poignant week coinciding with Dr. Martin Luther King Day 2024, and the Torah portion of Israelite freedom from Egyptian bondage, proves the point utterly –… Continue reading Our Single Garment of Destiny
A Dream, partly Fulfilled – P. Vaera
Dr. Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech invoked the prophetic call for people of all colors and creeds, "Jews and gentiles," to walk together "free at last." Now 60 years later, the dream is yet only partly fulfilled – and not only for African-Americans.This troubled era – and this week's pivotal Torah portion… Continue reading A Dream, partly Fulfilled – P. Vaera
The Cry Heard ‘Round the World – P. Shemot
The Israelite freedom from Egyptian slavery is the liberation story of Western civilization. African-American slaves and later citizens living under Jim Crow mapped their journey to the Israelites journey. Liberation theology is the paradigm theology of everyone who would be free – who seek freedom whether from literal bondage or in emotional and spiritual life.Yet often we… Continue reading The Cry Heard ‘Round the World – P. Shemot
Spring is Coming!
Happy 2024! I hope this secular year dawns bright and hopeful for you and your loved ones.And, Jewishly speaking, happy spring! It's weird but true: we're on the runway for spring already.The Jewish calendar has two over-arching time motives. One is the summer-autumn move of seven weeks leading to Rosh Hashanah, then through Yom Kippur… Continue reading Spring is Coming!
Like You’re Dying (Vayehi)
We live our lives as if we are immortal. We imagine death to be such a downer – so depressive, so scary – that we spend our lives trying to outrun it, or pretending it away. Or in death's shadow we become fatalistic, disconnected. Yet our awareness that all earthly life must die is an… Continue reading Like You’re Dying (Vayehi)
Rabbi David’s Blessing at the Interfaith Council’s “Longest Night”
My namesake, David of Jerusalem, was said to write these words of Psalm 147: Healer of the broken hearted – הרופא לשבורי לבBinder of their wounds – ומחבש לעצבותםCounter of the stars' number – מונה מספר לכוכביםCalling them each by name – לכולם שמות יקרא On this longest night, the blessing we most need is… Continue reading Rabbi David’s Blessing at the Interfaith Council’s “Longest Night”
The Meaning of Life (Vayigash)
We humans seem designed to seek meaning and make meaning of our lives. It's not much of an exaggeration to say that we humans are meaning-making machines. By our values and philosophies, our choices and actions, we wrest meaning from meaninglessness. We make our lives count.And sometimes, it seems easier with 20/20 hindsight. "The meaning… Continue reading The Meaning of Life (Vayigash)
Power Tools for Building (Mikeitz)
Especially in recent times, society has seemed to perfect the art of breaking things. Much that we've come to know and rely on has been beaten up and even busted. While it's nature's way that most everything eventually falls apart, spiritually speaking it's also nature's way for us to lean in, repair and build. We've… Continue reading Power Tools for Building (Mikeitz)
Mind Your Matters (Vayeishev)
Spirituality offers lots of claims, fewer promises, and one guarantee. Whatever one's beliefs (or none at all), spirituality promises seekers a life of enhanced meaning, fueled by values lived in community, in dialogue with ancient tradition stretching forward into the future. The only guarantee is that it won't always be easy.Just ask Jacob and Joseph… Continue reading Mind Your Matters (Vayeishev)
December 2023 Rabbi’s Corner: Darkness and Light
Most every spiritual system has a festival time of year dedicated to shining light in the darkness. As the Northern day reaches its lowest ebb, Jews around the world prepare to celebrate Hanukkah – the Festival of Lights. Hanukkah's nightly ritual of kindling candles has become one of Judaism's most cherished rituals.Especially this year, it's about much… Continue reading December 2023 Rabbi’s Corner: Darkness and Light
Becoming “Israel,” Again and Again
Every so often, we do well to return to our first principles of who we are – both individually and as a people. We do well to revisit our core origin story – the story we tell ourselves about who we are called to be. Whether amidst challenge or triumph, we do well to see with clear… Continue reading Becoming “Israel,” Again and Again
Thanksgiving and the First Stone of Blessing (Vayetzei)
The fortuity that Thanksgiving often aligns with the Torah dream story of Jacob's Ladder isn't just a calendrical quirk. The Pilgrims of America's colonial experience understood themselves to be following, quite literally, in Jacob's footsteps as travelers on a God-blessed journey toward new spirituality and new opportunity in a new world.From their common narrative, there's… Continue reading Thanksgiving and the First Stone of Blessing (Vayetzei)
When “Because” Doesn’t Answer “Why” (P. Toldot)
If you or someone you love ever suffered, you probably asked why. “Why?” and particularly "why me?" echo in history and the psyche, whether spoken aloud or asked silently within. The human heart wants to know why, even when the mind knows that there’s no knowing why.These deeply human questions reveal much about us, and… Continue reading When “Because” Doesn’t Answer “Why” (P. Toldot)
Are You Talking to Me? (P. Hayyei Sarah)
Spiritual life means different things to different people. From Torah's early chapters forward, the core of Jewish spirituality has centrally featured personal engagement with the One we call God. Long before fixed liturgies and other books, there was individual dialogue spoken from the heart.This week's Torah portion harkens back to those ancient times when one-on-One… Continue reading Are You Talking to Me? (P. Hayyei Sarah)
Rabbi’s Corner: November 2023
November pivots into the heart of autumn and all of its many symbols and feelings of transitions. It's a time of "catching up to ourselves" at Shir Ami, navigating so much that's unfolding in the world around us, and seeking ways to truly count our blessings in gratitude for what is and what yet may… Continue reading Rabbi’s Corner: November 2023
On Spirituality and Judgment Amidst Trauma (P. Vayera)
t's another Torah portion ripped from the headlines, with plot twists, dubious behaviors and vexing moral quandaries all evoking recent Mideast events. We are called to confront not only how we navigate hard times, but also how we understand and judge behaviors arising amidst hard times. Torah seemed to know what psychologists learned thousands of years… Continue reading On Spirituality and Judgment Amidst Trauma (P. Vayera)
Lekhi Lakh – Wresting a Blessing, Becoming a Blessing
It's another "ripped from the headlines" Torah portion. This one introduces Avram (later, Avraham) as spiritual history's first monotheist, and a God who promises both the giving of blessing and becoming a blessing. But Avram quickly learns that blessing doesn't mean ease or instant gratification. With eerie relevance to current events, Torah teaches of blessing… Continue reading Lekhi Lakh – Wresting a Blessing, Becoming a Blessing
Make a Little Birdhouse In Your Soul (P. Noah)
In these turbulent days of Mideast news – the shock, the spiral of despair and death, the worry that worse may yet be to come – it all can feel overwhelming, as if the torrent is all but sure to destroy the innocent along with the rest.Facing his own torrent of overwhelm and destruction, Noah… Continue reading Make a Little Birdhouse In Your Soul (P. Noah)