The Path to Mitzvah
Sep 30, 2008 By Arnold M. Eisen | Commentary | Rosh Hashanah
If the Torah is fundamentally a book of law, a work intended to instruct us on how to live a life that is holy and good, why did the Torah begin with the story of creation? More precisely, why did the Torah begin with the story of Genesis—of God’s creation of the world—and not the first commandment to the Israelites which is to establish a calendar: “This month shall be unto you the beginning of the months,” found later in Exodus 12?
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The Lesson of the First Fruits
Sep 20, 2008 By Marc Wolf | Commentary | Ki Tavo
Remarkably, no pedestrian injuries have been recorded to date.
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New Beginnings
Sep 13, 2008 By David M. Ackerman | Commentary | Ki Tetzei
September marks new beginnings. Summer’s over, school years have begun, heavy traffic has returned to the roads, the new cultural season is underway.
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A Passion for Justice
Sep 6, 2008 By Mychal Springer | Commentary | Shofetim
Next week we mark the seventh anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. The number seven has biblical weight to it: seven days of creation, seven years of the shemitah cycle. Looking back over seven years has a power to it as well.
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How Judaism Is Like an iPhone
Aug 23, 2008 By Marc Wolf | Commentary | Eikev
Since I am a self-professed “techno-junkie,” it took considerable restraint to wait the year for the second-generation iPhone to be released. Having read every review, followed its development on blogs, and waited patiently, only recently did I purchase my iPhone. Before it was in my hand I knew everything it was capable of, yet I was surprised by one aspect: its simplicity. As an Apple aficionado, I was expecting the attractive design, but after opening the box, I realized that there was one thing missing: a manual. The iPhone expects you to intuit its functions, discover its capabilities, and just use it.
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Va-ethannan’s Personal Message to Us
Aug 16, 2008 By Arnold M. Eisen | Commentary | Va'et-hannan
But what really draws me to Va-ethannan, I think, is the way it reaches out to each one of us individually, both pleading and demanding to be heard. It addresses us person by person, one-on-one, in the same way we enter into every serious relationship and tremble with each true love.
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The Currencies of Justice
Aug 9, 2008 By David Hoffman | Commentary | Devarim
You shall not be partial in judgment: hear out low (katan) and high (gadol) alike. Fear no man, for judgment is God’s. (Deut. 1:17)
Philo, the great first-century Alexandrian Jewish thinker, was engaged in a project that in many ways was deeply modern. He sought to “translate” Judaism for the Greek-speaking world of his day and demonstrate to a highly educated and urbane population that the Torah was a philosophically serious work. Not only could one be a Jew and be a Greek, but in many ways a pious Jew was the truest of Greeks.
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The Question of Fracking
Aug 2, 2008 By Rabbi Abigail Treu | Commentary | Masei
Golda Meir famously quipped: “Let me tell you the one thing I have against Moses. He took us forty years into the desert in order to bring us to the one place in the Middle East that has no oil!”
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How We Ascend the Mountain
Jul 19, 2008 By Lisa Gelber | Commentary | Pinehas
Not long ago, I set out in the middle of the night to ascend Haleakala, known as the world’s largest dormant volcano (actually, it’s not really a volcano, but that’s another conversation entirely).
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An Outsider’s Perspective
Jul 12, 2008 By David M. Ackerman | Commentary | Balak
Once in a while, an outsider’s view yields a crystal clear vision of essential qualities not quite visible to those on the inside.
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Recognizing God’s Gifts
Jul 5, 2008 By Marc Wolf | Commentary | Hukkat
There is a voice that echoes in my memory; so distinctive that I can recall it clearly even today.
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Reading Like the Rabbis
Jun 28, 2008 By Daniel Nevins | Commentary | Korah
Grab a thick book and a cold drink and head for a comfy chair at a lake, beach, or pool. Lose yourself in luxurious chapters of artful narrative and savor the unique culture of a well-constructed novel or the incisive analysis of a work of nonfiction. This is the great joy of summer reading: to slow down enough to indulge in what is otherwise impossible, to enter the world of literature.
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God’s True Strength (And Ours Too)
Jun 21, 2008 By Mychal Springer | Commentary | Shelah Lekha
In this week’s Torah portion, Shelah Lekha, God tells Moses to send twelve scouts to the land of Canaan to see what there is to see.
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The Ways God Leads Us
Jun 14, 2008 By Matthew Berkowitz | Commentary | Beha'alotekha
Abraham Joshua Heschel writes eloquently that the supreme aspiration of religion is to inspire each one of us, in the words of the psalmist, “to lift up your eyes and see.”
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Finding Political Guidance in the Torah
Jun 7, 2008 By Arnold M. Eisen | Commentary | Naso
We Jews are up to our necks in political concern these days, in part because power and influence are ours to an unprecedented degree. How shall we think about these matters? Is there a Jewish approach to politics in general, and to these sorts of issues in particular?
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The Torah’s Lessons for Building Communities
May 31, 2008 By Charles Savenor | Commentary | Bemidbar
Bemidbar, the fourth book of the Torah, opens with a demographic and geographic description of the Children of Israel.
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The Torah’s Lessons for Society
May 25, 2008 By Edward Feld | Commentary | Behukkotai
The concluding parashah of Leviticus, Behukkotai, centers on God’s enumeration of both blessing and curse—the blessings that will follow upon observance of the commandments and the curses that will result from violation of the commandments.
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Our Partnership with God
May 16, 2008 By Lisa Gelber | Commentary | Behar
Almost a year after the twenty-fifth anniversary, with current showings on TV Land promising the version with enhanced visual effects, never-before-seen footage, and a digitally remastered soundtrack, as well as videos and DVDs for watching at home whenever you wish, E.T.: The Extraterrestrial is a part of the cinematic culture of many more people than just the moviegoers of the early 1980s.
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Our Influence on God
May 10, 2008 By David M. Ackerman | Commentary | Yom Hazikaron-Yom Ha'atzma'ut
At the geographic heart of Parashat Emor lies a seemingly innocuous statement: “The Lord spoke to Moses, saying: Speak to the Israelite people and say to them: These are My fixed times, the fixed times of the Lord, which you shall proclaim as sacred occasions (Leviticus 23:1–2).”
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A Jewish-Buddhist Understanding of Holiness
May 3, 2008 By Marc Wolf | Commentary | Kedoshim
Leon Wieseltier, in a recent column in The New Republic about diversity at Harvard, commented about the church bells he heard growing up on Avenue O.
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