Academy for Jewish Religion

Looking for Love in All the Rough Places

A D’var Torah for Parashat Va’ethanan By Rabbi David Markus It’s fitting that the “Jewish greatest hits” of Parashat Va’ethanan come immediately after Tisha b’Av. After our spiritual calendar’s lowest day, Torah promises that anyone who seeks God with whole heart and soul will find God exactly where we are – even in exile (Deut. 4:27-29). We stand again… Continue reading Looking for Love in All the Rough Places

Bayit

How to Scout Your Landscape – P. Shlakh

Part of a yearlong Torah series on spiritual building and builders in Jewish life. Okay, you’re ready for spiritual building. As with a survey before building with a physical structure, first survey the landscape. How? Parshat Shlach asks that question directly, and some of our spiritual ancestors’ first answers went tragically wrong. Their lessons – about who… Continue reading How to Scout Your Landscape – P. Shlakh

Academy for Jewish Religion

Lighting Us Up: Theology, Pluralism and Becoming the Menorah

A D'var Torah for Parashat Beha'alotekha by Rabbi David Markus What does God need of our spirituality, what do we need of it, and how do we know? These questions cast long theological shadows across sacred tradition, and efforts at clarity often generate more heat than light. It’s with those questions in mind that I… Continue reading Lighting Us Up: Theology, Pluralism and Becoming the Menorah

Academy for Jewish Religion

Yom Kippur Asks “Answers” – Not Just “Afflictions”

Yom Kippur Asks “Answers” – Not Just “Afflictions” A D’var Torah for Parashat Acharei Mot By Rabbi David Markus This week’s parashah (Acharei Mot) brings Torah’s first mention of Yom Kippur (#sorry), so each year this parashah starts me thinking about the High Holy Days (#notsorry). Each year, I recall how three words in this parashah once drove me from Judaism.… Continue reading Yom Kippur Asks “Answers” – Not Just “Afflictions”

Bayit

Why This Firstborn Will Go Silent Before Passover: The Social Justice Ta’anit Dibbur

Among Passover’s many customs, the fast of the firstborn (ta’anit bechorot) fell into disuse.  This ritual fast, commemorating Egypt’s victims of the Tenth Plague’s death of the firstborn, finds little traction among modern liberal Jews.  Even most traditionalists arrange a ritual joyous reason to avoid the pre-Passover fast. The day before Passover, however, this particular firstborn of Israel… Continue reading Why This Firstborn Will Go Silent Before Passover: The Social Justice Ta’anit Dibbur

Bayit

Holy Ashes: Designs for Spiritual Flow

Part of a yearlong series of Torah wisdom on spiritual building and builders. How well does a spiritual practice or spiritual community “work”? One answer from this week’s Torah portion (Tzav) may seem surprising: We gauge what works spiritually by the detritus it leaves behind from what it transforms. If there’s no detritus, we’re doing… Continue reading Holy Ashes: Designs for Spiritual Flow

Academy for Jewish Religion

Controlling the High Price of Judaism (and Guilt)

Controlling the High Price of Judaism (and Guilt) A D’var Torah for Parashat Vayikra By Rabbi David Markus The Jewish value of tzedakah underscores that to “be Jewish” is partly to “do Jewish,” and to “do Jewish” means to support others. That’s one reason that Judaism calls for tzedakah as charitable acts of support for others that double as communal… Continue reading Controlling the High Price of Judaism (and Guilt)

Bayit

People of the Building Fund

Part of a yearlong Torah series about building and builders in Jewish spiritual life. “Don’t give to the Building Fund,” said no synagogue leader ever. Most community leaders would love to have Moses’ problem in “fundraising” for the Mishkan. Moses received so many resources from “everyone” to build Mishkan that he had to stop them… Continue reading People of the Building Fund

Other places

Jewish Ethics Demands Independent Path Forward

Jewish clergy, seminaries, day schools and other nonprofits must not govern their own ethics systems. Most lack sufficient expertise and independence to earn and keep public trust in their capacity to self-regulate. This conclusion comes hard to me. As a pulpit rabbi with a dual career in law and governance — and as past general… Continue reading Jewish Ethics Demands Independent Path Forward

Bayit · Uncategorized

Building for Mobility: Spiritual Life on the Move

Part of a yearlong series on Torah’s wisdom about building and builders in Jewish spiritual life. So far, Builders Blog traced Torah’s first 18 portions, harvesting lessons about spiritual building from our spiritual ancestors’ lives and early journeys. Now in the 19th portion (Terumah) comes Torah’s building story par excellence, about building the Mishkan – the holy structure to… Continue reading Building for Mobility: Spiritual Life on the Move

Academy for Jewish Religion

Seeing the Voices: The Call of Teaching in Spiritual Formation

ACADEMY FOR JEWISH RELIGION Faculty Meeting Dvar Torah January 24, 2019 Good morning everyone.  I'm delighted to join the AJR family.  Thank you to Ora for the invitation to teach, and to Jeff for inviting me to open with my long experience of one whole day on the AJR Faculty. We're in Parshat Yitro.  Our… Continue reading Seeing the Voices: The Call of Teaching in Spiritual Formation

Academy for Jewish Religion

Answering With Great Joy

It's an occupational hazard. We clergy so delight in bringing Torah to life and liturgy to life that we might unashamedly “geek out” – especially when we do both at the same time. When I link Torah with liturgy in ways that enliven both, my joy can be irrepressible. (Thankfully my New York congregation seems to like it,… Continue reading Answering With Great Joy

The Wisdom Daily

What Men In Jail Can Teach Us About Joy

Actually, it didn’t happen in a jail, which typically houses shorter-term detentions.  It happened in Sing Sing Correctional Facility, a maximum-security prison operated by the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, where some inmates spend decades on custodial sentences for the most serious felonies. Behind cinder block, metal bars and barbed wire isn’t typically… Continue reading What Men In Jail Can Teach Us About Joy

Bayit

Power Tools For Spiritual Building

Part of a yearlong series on Torah wisdom about building and builders. The first weeks of Bayit’s Builder’s Blog harvested keystone principles about building the Jewish future – from primordial foundations of building, to where and with whom spiritual neighborhoods create community. Now it’s time to build – but what and how?  Parshat Mikeitz offers answers: first… Continue reading Power Tools For Spiritual Building

Academy for Jewish Religion

Keeping the Mind in Mind: The Essence of Pluralism

Exciting news: studying theology can teach us how to think and even build secular careers! Whatever one's beliefs, immersion in the complexities of sacred text can expand perspective and cultivate character. Studying theology can make the mind nimbler, the heart more tender and the spirit wiser. But for all of theology's great promise, theology doesn't promise certitude. The… Continue reading Keeping the Mind in Mind: The Essence of Pluralism

Academy for Jewish Religion · Other places

Genesis (En)Gendered: An Angelic View from Eden’s Way 

This momentous #metoo #ibelieveyou moment urges us to see old stories with new eyes. Reading sacred texts with ever renewing eyes is one of many ways that theology teaches us how to see and think – to reach beyond ourselves, to not become calcified and thus brittle, to strengthen our capacity to hold multiplicity and nuance without falling into… Continue reading Genesis (En)Gendered: An Angelic View from Eden’s Way 

Bayit

First Build: Seven Foundation Principles for Spiritual Builders

Part of a yearlong series about building and builders inspired by the Torah cycle. We're all stardust, re-mixed chemical elements forged in some distant supernova.  We're all broken shards, fallen from the primordial shattering. We're all reflected light, glimmering with the Source of Light.  We're all builders, making and re-making the world one brick and… Continue reading First Build: Seven Foundation Principles for Spiritual Builders

The Jewish Studio

Resilience in endings… and new beginnings

Last in a series on resilience in Jewish spiritual life. For a whole year's Torah cycle of weeks, we've been looking to Torah for resilience lessons. We began with Cain as an unlikely resilience teacher.  We learned resilience from Noah in the rain and Abraham never quitting because he loved more than himself.  We learned resilience from Rebecca, the first to… Continue reading Resilience in endings… and new beginnings

Sermons

Holy Vision and Optical Delusion

Shanah tovah.  It's so good to see each and every one of you. In 1952, Ben Gurion, Israel's first prime minister, visited the U.S. on a fundraising mission.  Fresh off Israel's miraculous War of Independence victory over seven invading armies, Ben Gurion arrived to a standing ovation of thousands waiting to see him. What do… Continue reading Holy Vision and Optical Delusion