Please have a look at a message I sent last week to Congregation Ansche Chesed, that is both about the Gaza situation, and about how American Jews struggle to understand its moral challenges. Dear Friends, Two weeks into the current Gaza conflict, I may be the only American rabbi left who has not sent […]
My View From Pew
As of this late date in November, 2013, I may be officially the last rabbi in America to blog about the Pew Research Center report on American Jews. Not that I’ve had nothing to say. I’ve just been listening for a while, trying to put it together. I will post a few items on the […]
Blessed be the God of the Jews
It’s not every day that a Talmudic parable comes to life in an actual event. But so it seems to have happened this fall in New Haven, CT. As reported in the Orthodox blog Vos Is Neias and subsequently in the Forward, Rabbi Noach Muroff bought a desk on Craigslist, only to discover $98,000 hidden […]
Beyond the SNAP Challenge
Today is “a damp, drizzly November in my soul” … well, actually in my neighborhood. My own soul feels pretty good. But here in New York City, the weather is just as Melville describes on the first page of Moby Dick. And especially for my most vulnerable neighbors, November has been colder and more challenging, […]
SNAP To It
This week, for the second time, I am undertaking the “SNAP challenge” of spending on food only the average daily benefit for those receiving food stamps (AKA the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program). Nationally, that benefit is $4.50 per person per day, and in New York State it is $4.92 per person per day. When budget […]
Ressurecting The Dead
Hello friends, After a sabbatical from the synagogue and from “Honest to God” — although I hope not from honesty to God — I am returning to JCast Network and to this blog. It’s good to be back. Please give a gander and this next post, to follow anon.
Moses’ Modesty and R. Simcha’s Two Pockets
This past Shabbat’s Torah section, Be’ha’alotekha, includes the famous description of Moses’ singular virtue [Numbers 12.3]: “This man Moses was very humble, more than any other human being on the face of the earth.” If anyone could justify a little vanity, maybe it would be the man whose face glowed with light because he came […]
Conservative and Reconstructionist Practice, Part 2
Rabbi David Teutsch responded to my comments comparing his Guide to Jewish Practice with the Conservative work The Observant Life with some criticisms of his own. I thank David for writing back, and invite him – and others – to continue the conversation. I’d like to respond to David’s observation with 3 points. First, David affirmed that […]
How Do Liberals Jews Behave? Conservative and Reconstructionist Practice
How does a liberal Jew behave? This is heterodox Judaism’s greatest challenge: Does our religion demand any particular way of living? If we do not eat differently than our non-Jewish neighbors, do not marry differently, do not work and rest, nor buy and sell differently, then maybe our Judaism amounts to nothing more than vestigial, […]
Too Religious to be Orthodox
This past Shabbat at Ansche Chesed we heard a presentation from Dov Elboim, a well-known Israeli writer, editor and television host, a face of the phenomenon called hazara bi’she’ela, “returning with questions,” a pun meaning “those who left ultra-Orthodoxy.” Dov was recently profiled here in Haaretz. Hebrew readers will also enjoy his excellent book Journey in […]
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