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Archive for September, 2009

Answering Prayers

Shira Koch Epstein
This year when so many of us find ourselves in need, the first day of Rosh Hashanah falls on Shabbat, a day on which we traditionally forgo petitionary prayers like Avinu Malkeinu. I imagine that for many of my congregants, this is a relief. For the many who do not believe in an interventionist God, is there a place in our worship for prayers of petition?

Facing Our Vulnerability

Leonard Gordon
To support us in our efforts to shock our congregations into a different appraisal of and response to vulnerability is the liturgy. During the High Holidays, in particular, the prayer Unitaneh Tokef — with its famous paragraph describing the many ways people might die during the coming year — can be interpreted as insisting on our vulnerability and mortality.

Starting up with God

Aryeh Cohen essay
AVRAHAM’S FATHER’S IDOLS: A year-long conversation

A Culture of Kashrut

MORRIS J. ALLEN
A person blinded in one eye is exempt from making the pilgrimage. (Hagiga 2a)
While this talmudic text is speaking only of the three-times-a-year obligation to appear in Jerusalem in ancient times — on Pesach, Shavuot, and Sukkot — the ancient rabbinic dictum holds great importance for modern Jews. Indeed, Abraham Joshua Heschel gave [...]

Discussion Guide – Vulnerability & Embodied Practice

What helps you pray?
Does “fasting” help focus your attention on Yom Kippur? How?
In what ways does a sense of vulnerability coalesce a community?

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UPCOMING NEXT MONTH: American Jewish Loyalties

  • Michael Kimmage on the Fifties
  • Noam Pianko on Mordechai Kaplan
  • Arie Dubnov on Hannah Arendt
  • Steven Nadler on Baruch Spinoza
  • Eli Lederhendler on lines that can't be crossed
  • Roberta Seid and Hadar Susskind weigh in on Israel
  • Amy Eilberg on embracing difference
  • Shaul Magid on dogmas in American Judaism
  • Shlomo Fischer on Israel’s army
  • And an array of short personal reflections on convictions outside the pale