| This Weeks Kiddush Sponsor |
This weeks Kiddush is sponsored by the
Chelminsky Family
You too can sponsor a Kiddush. Contact us to reserve a date. |
|
A BIT OF WIT |
"I haven't spoken to my wife for 18 months." Says Chaim to Moshe. "is everything OK?" Asks Moshe. "Yes," Replies Chaim, "I just don't like to interrupt her."
|
| JEWISH YOUTUBE |
As we prepare for the holiday of Shavuot, the day upon which we will receive the Torah for the 3320th time, I share with you a short video with one theme - "Torah is for me and you" Click here to watch |
| Check Us Out |
Click here to read " A LETTER FOR PEACE" about a fateful day in June |
|
PARSHA IN A NUTSHELL |
|
Completing the head-count of the Children of Israel taken in the Sinai Desert, a total of 8,580 Levite men between the ages of 30 and 50 are counted in a tally of those who will be doing the actual work of transporting the Tabernacle. G-d communicates to Moses the law of the "Sotah", the wayward wife suspected of unfaithfulness to her husband. Also given is the law of the Nazir who forswears wine, lets his or her hair grow long, and is forbidden to become contaminated through contact with a dead body. Aaron and his descendents the Kohanim are instructed on how to bless the people of Israel. The leaders of the twelve tribes of Israel each bring their offerings for the inauguration of the altar. Although their gifts are identical, each is brought on a different day and is individually described by the Torah.
|
| Join Our List
|
|
|
|
|
Shabbat
Candle Lighting Time 7:52 pm
Kabbalat Shabbat
8:00 pm
Shabbat Morning Chasidut Class
9:00 am followed by:
Morning Services
9:30 am
Followed by a gourmet kiddush
Ethics of Our Fathers Class
Evening Services
7:45 pm
Shabbat Ends
8:50 pm
Weekday Services
Sunday Morning Services
9:00 am
Weekday Morning Services
Adult Education
Tuesday Senior's Class
10:30 - 11:30 am
Israel: The Land & The Spirit
Thursday Parsha Class
9:00 pm
With Rabbi Yehuda
Friday Torah Studies
1:00 - 2:00 pm
With Rabbi Baron Delivered in English
|
|
Shavuot |
|
|
On Sunday night June 8th we will be celebrating Shavuot. Shavuot is a Jewish holiday that simultaneously commemorates two things: the reaping of the spring wheat harvest and the Giving of the Torah. It is called Pentecost in English, and always falls on the sixth and seventh of the Hebrew month of Sivan.
Shavuot also caps off the Counting of the Omer, the 49-day count which starts with the second day of Passover, the day when the First Barley Offering was offered in the Temple. Though the Temple no longer stands, the omer must be counted even without the offering.
ALL NIGHT LEARNING On Sunday, June 8th , we will be having a All Night Learning session for Shavuot. Join Jews throughout the world in observing the centuries old custom of conducting an all night vigil dedicated to Torah learning - the first night of Shavuot. This will start at 11:45 pm, light refreshments will be served.
Ist DAY SHAVUOT Then on Monday, June 9th, we will celebrate Shavuot. Join us at 10:00am when we read the Ten Commandments and enjoy a delicious dairy kiddush and Ice Cream Party.
2nd DAY SHAVUOT On Tuesday monring we will begin services at 9:30am and Yizkor should take place 11:30am
SHAVUOT SCHEDULE:
Sunday June 8th - Sleepless on Shavuot
7:53 pm Candle Lighting
8:00 pm Evening Services
11:45 pm - All night learning vigil, refreshments will be served Monday, June 9th - Services & Dairy Kiddush
9:30 am - Morning Services
10:30 am - Reading of the Ten Commandments, followed by dairy Kiddush & Ice Cream Party Sponsored by the Rosenthal Family
Evening service @ 7:45
Candle lighting after 8:51pm Tuesday, June 10 - Services, Yizkor
9:30 am - Morning Service
11:30 am - Yizkor followed by a dairy Kiddush
7:45 pm - Evening Service
8:51 pm - Yom Tov Ends To learn more about Shavout please visit our website Click Here |
|
ASK THE RABBI |
|
Dear Rabbi: I am having major problems with my two year old. He has huge tantrums and is impossible to control. We are going crazy and don't know what to do. Is there some Kabbalistic formula to get a child to behave? Answer: If you are seeking a magical incantation that will instantly bring your child into line, I can't help you. But here is a Kabbalistic idea that may give you some guidance. The Kabbalah teaches that there is a parent/child relationship going on within every one of us. In that relationship, intellect is the parent, and emotion is the child. Our emotions, like children, are colourful and fun, wild and untamed, impulsive and erratic. Emotions know no boundaries, have no sense of proportion, and are not reasonable. Our heart can take us to great heights of pleasure and happiness, or can lead us down dark paths of confusion and hurt. This is because our heart is full of vitality and enrgy, but lacks one important skill: it has no direction. When we thoughtlessly follow our heart, we get lost. We can fall in love with the wrong person, get angry for no good reason, or be scared of our own imaginary ghosts. It is our mind that provides direction and perspective, education and guidance. A cool and clear-thinking mind can calmly direct the heart to feel the right emotion at the right time; when to love and when to fear, when to get excited and when to hold back. The same holds true for being parents to our children. A child is a bundle of emotion, spontaneous and moody, passionate and irrational. This is what makes children so lovable and so impossible. They have not yet developed the ability for mind to direct heart. And so, the parent must stand in and play the role of the mind for the child, to help them tell right from wrong, to guide them to channel and control their emotions. This means that a good parent must have all the characteristics of the mind: calmness, clarity, and consistency. The child doesn't always obey the parent, just like at times emotions are too strong to listen to intellect. But even then, the message must be conveyed in a clear and calm manner. If your child is having a tantrum, then he is playing his role well. Your role is to keep your composure and let him know that what he is doing is unacceptable. This may not magically stop his tantrums, but it will give him a model of mature behavior - that mind controls heart, like a parent directs a child.
|
|
E-TORAH |
|
|
Hosea, Amos and Micah. His prophecies include the vision of the Merkavah and many descriptions of the Messianic Era.', 'The book of Tanach containing Isaiah\'s prophecies, including his vision of the Merkavah and many prophecies regarding the Messianic Era.'), article_count:Array(4,0), kid:Array(10761,13631)};glossary_items['g_90092']={word:'Moses', text:'(a) (1393-1273 BCE) Greatest prophet to ever live. Son of Amram and Jochebed, younger brother of Miriam and Aaron. Born in Egypt and raised by Pharaoh's daughter. Fled to Midian, where he married Zipporah. Deployed by G-d to Egypt to liberate the Israelites. Visited ten plagues upon Egypt, led the Israelites out, and transmitted to them the Torah at Mt. Sinai. Led the Israelites for forty years while they traveled in the desert, all the while performing astonishing miracles and wonders. Died in the Plains of Moab, and succeeded by his disciple Joshua. (b) A common Jewish name.', article_count:'71', kid:'70'};glossary_items['g_90113']={word:'Torah', text:'(lit. teaching) (a) The Five Books of Moses (The Bible); (b) the overall body of Jewish religious teachings encompassing the whole body of Jewish law, practice and tradition', article_count:'3138', kid:'1199'};glossary_items['g_90501']={word:'G-d', text:'[It is customary to insert a dash in G-d\'s name when written or printed on a medium that could be defaced. See also "Why Don\'t You Spell Out G-d\'s Name?"]', article_count:'24', kid:'3001'}; // --> Can 20th century people understand the concept of "prophecy"? We can, perhaps, understand "inspiration." After all, poets and artists are inspired. But prophecy lies beyond our experience. The last verse in this week's Torah reading gives us a glimpse of the nature of the prophecy of Moses. The Holy of Holies in the Sanctuary constituted a concentration of divine power. The highest level of intensity was in the sapphire tablets, on which were engraved the ten commandments, which Moses had gotten from Mount Sinai. These tablets were kept in the golden ark. On top of the ark were two golden winged figures, male and female, facing each other. The divine force was somehow focused at the point between them - and it was from that point that the divine voice spoke to Moses. Described like that, it seems like a kind of spiritual technology. A further aspect of this is seen in a teaching from the sages. They explain that a stream of divine energy flows from G-d. One aspect of this energy is that it keeps the world in existence. Another is that it enters the mind of a prophet, such as Moses or Isaiah, and takes the form of words of Torah teachings. Is this perspective on life any less credible than the mysterious findings of relativity theory and quantum mechanics? The aim of the Torah is to harness the most profound forces at the heart of existence in order to achieve the divine purpose of creation. The mitzvot are instructions on how to live in such a way that the spiritual potential of the universe is realized. This will eventually - indeed, very soon - achieve the goal of attaining an epoch of universal peace and harmony, in which "the world will be filled with knowledge of G-d as the waters cover the sea."
| |
|
Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Yisrael and Toby Baron Chabad of Sunny Isles Beach
| |
|