 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
 |
|
Rabbi's Ramblings......
Shalom Congregants and Friends.....
Well, we are finally getting back to "normal." Our community -- both Jewish and general -- returns to its regular life -- with a lot of catching up to do and a lot of struggling with all the damages and loss as the result of the storm. We will be resuming our busy fall programming schedule -- hopefully to interest and involve you. We hope that you will take advantage of the many special programs that are upcoming. Our monthly bulletin was delayed when the printing company was closed for a week without power, but the Chai-lites is now in the mail. If you signed up for email delivery, you should have received it! Why not sign up now....The November Shabbat dinner could not be rescheduled... so make plans for the next one on December 16th!!
This Shabbat, come to synagogue and honor our veterans as we welcome JWV Post 45 to our Shabat evening service. We thank them for sponsoring the Oneg Shabbat as well. Also, we will be doing a reading in memory of Kristallnacht, that was commemorated early this week... and saying a prayer in memory of Yitzchak Rabin, whose yahrzeit was also commemorated this past week (see column below).
Again, FYI, we have a new supply of Israel-America friendship pins. They are available for you to pick up at any service.
Because things are still in "catch-up" mode, the Weinstein Mortuary-sponsored program on "Reincarnation in Jewish Thought" has been postponed to the spring.
Our first Hav-deli of the year is coming up a week from Saturday afternoon - do give your RSVP!
We have a special need to reconnect as a community after going through a trying period -- so see you in shul!
Shabbat Shalom
...... Rabbi Gary and Iris Atkins
"All it takes to study Torah is an open heart,
a curious mind and a desire to grow a Jewish soul." |
|
|
Shabbat Services & Candle Lighting Times
Friday, November 11 8 P.M. (CLT 4:14 EST)
Saturday, November 12 9:30 A.M., Mincha, Maariv 4:15 P.M |
|
Joke of the Week
The early bird gets the worm, but it's the second mouse that gets the cheese! |
|
Social Action Updates
Make a donation to MAZON to help the hungry in our communities.... Food banks are depleted because of the recent storm and shelter bneeds.....
Be aware of those less fortunate than we are!! Carry out the mitzvah of tikkun olam!
A mitzvah we can ALL DO: Visit a friend in a nursing home or assisted living center or who otherwise can't get out! Or bring someone to a service here who couldn't get here on their own!
The Blomfield Department of Social services reports that over 110 bags of food were donated via Project Isaiah! THANKS.... |
|
Community Events
Sunday, November 13, Reincarnation in Jewish Thought, PROGRAM HAS BEEN POSTPONED UNTIL THE SPRING!
Sunday, November 20, Community Interfaith Thanksgiving Service, LDS Church, 1000 Mountain Road, 7pm. PLEASE BRING A DONATION OF NON-PERISHABLE FOOD FOR THE BLOOMFIELD FOOD PANTRY! |
|
Weekly Torah Portion Commentary.....
This week by Rabbi David Hoffman,
Professor at the Jewish Theological Seminary
Martin Buber, the great 20th-century Jewish theologian, observed a powerful literary connection between the beginning of Abraham's life and the end. God first speaks to Abraham suddenly, seemingly without introduction, and commands: "Go forth (lekh lekha) from your native land and from your father's house to the land that I will show you" (Gen. 12:1). With these few words, God introduces God's Self to Abraham and it is with these words that their relationship is founded. The phrase "Go forth" appears on only one other occasion in the entire Torah. Toward the end of Abraham's life, as God begins the last conversation God will ever have with Abraham, God again commands: "Go forth." This time God demands that Abraham "go" and take "[his] son, [his] favored one, Isaac, whom [he loves]" and give him as a burned offering (Gen. 22:2).
The words "Go forth" (lekh lekha) serve as literary bookends to Abraham's life. As Buber dramatically describes our story, in the first instance at the beginning of Abraham's life, Abraham is asked to separate himself from the world of his Fathers-his past, his family, and everything he knows. In the second instance, Abraham is asked to kill his son and thus separate himself from the world of his Sons-his future and the promise and the expectations of a time where his offspring would be "as numerous as the stars" (Gen. 15:5), where his progeny would be made into "a great nation" (Gen. 12:2).
In his spiritual life, Abraham has been asked to give up so much. He is asked to leave all that he knows and then surrender the very hopes and expectations that may have allowed him to have had the courage in the first place to take those first steps away from the world of his Fathers. God has demanded that Abraham walk away from both his past and the hope of a particular future that has propelled his entire life.
We can offer a reading of the repetition of this literary phrase that emphasizes the importance of sacrifice in the religious life. Transcending one's own needs and concerns is a worthy goal of the spiritual life and the practice of being nudged beyond (sacrificing!) our parochial self-interests seems to me to be a healthy provocation.
And yet the type of sacrifice God demands of Abraham seems to exceed what might be considered creative or productive agitation. This sort of sacrifice does not feel like something that should serve as a foundational part of our relationship with God.
Perhaps the emphasis should not be placed on what God is asking Abraham to walk away from but on what God may be asking Abraham to walk toward. That is to say, God is asking Abraham not to live in his past or in the hopes for a particular future. By asking Abraham to give up both, God invites Abraham to focus on the present moment of their relationship. And there is much uncertainty in this moment. In the one instance, at the beginning of Abraham's trials, God tells Abraham to "Go forth," but God does not tell him where he is going. With the second command of "Go forth," God tells Abraham to go forth to a mountain that God will identify later in the journey. In both instances, God asks Abraham to inhabit the uncertainty of the present.
This paradigm of a relationship with God serves as an important counterbalance to an alternative way the Torah conceives of our relationship with God. The Torah repeatedly reminds us of God's role in our past, of the God who took us out of Egypt, who gave us the Torah, and led us into the Land of Israel. The Torah asks us to recount our people's story, tell our children, and remember that we too were once slaves. And, of course, the Torah holds out God's promise for a particular future. "I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you (Gen. 12:2). The promise made to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob about a future in the Land serves as the cornerstone for our contemporary understandings of the redemptionthat we believe will take place for the Jewish people and for all of humanity. So much of our Jewish lives takes place in inhabiting a particular past and promise for a particular future.
However, here-with the drama of Abraham's relationship with God-we are encouraged to separate ourselves from the potentially disruptive "noise" of our individual and even our people's history. We are asked to set aside the hopes we harbor for a particular future. As with Abraham, God is reminding us to be actively present for God and our lives now. Our personal histories are important, as are our desires for a promised future, and yet, the divine call of "Go forth" (lekh lekha) reminds us that no stories of the past nor hopes for a certain future are more important than the steps we take into the present moment. Like Abraham, we are challenged to free ourselves from the constraints of our history and the expectations of a certain future. God, through Abraham, asks each of us to "Go forth" into our present.. |
|
Beth Hillel Synagogue Library
Lots of new books and videos......
Read contemporary newspapers and magazines!!
New for this year: The Revised Edition of the Encyclopedia Judaica!
Donated to our Library by the Bloomfield Prosser Library..... |
|
Upcoming Synagogue Events
Honoring our Veteran's Shabbat Service, November 11...
Oneg sponsored by JWV Post 45
Sisterhood Jewelry Party, Wed. evening, November 16, 7-9pm
Lunch and Learn study, Thursday, November 17, 11am
Special Birthday Kiddush - Aaron Perlman November 19
Hav-deli at Shabbat Mincha, November 19... 4pm
Fall Adult Education Classes, Monday evenings November 14, 21..... after minyan...
"Fascinating but little-known Women in the Bible."
Thanksgiving weekend service schedule
Thursday Nov. 24 - Minyanim 9am and 5pm
Friday Nov. 25, 7am and 6:15 early Kabbalat Shabbat service
Next Shmoozes -- December 1 and 15 |
|
News from Israel... Remembering Yitzchak Rabin.....
At memorial, Peres says Rabin's path is accepted as way to peace.....
JERUSALEM (JTA) -- At a ceremony marking the 16th anniversary of the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, Israeli President Shimon Peres said most Israelis accept Rabin's stance on two states for two peoples.
Peres was among the speakers Wednesday at the official national memorial service at the Mount Herzl cemetery in Jerusalem.
"The two states for two people solution is a necessary truth," Peres said at the ceremony. "It's the Israeli government's stand, which is supported by most Israeli citizens."
Also Wednesday, during a special Knesset session in memory of the slain prime minister, Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin decried what he termed Jewish terrorism.
"Rabin's assassination carries two messages on democracy: We must have zero tolerance for political violence, and at the same time, we must avoid demonization of political groups and minorities. We must avoid gross and negligent generalizations, as those who opposed Oslo faced after the murder," read a draft of the speech released Tuesday, according to the Jerusalem Post.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Shimon Peres, Supreme Court President Dorit Beinisch and opposition leader Tzipi Livni spoke at the memorial session.
During an official memorial ceremony Tuesday night at the President's Residence, Peres honored Rabin and reflected on their relationship.
"We will never forget your walking down the road of hate and incitement, along a landscape of violence and provocation. You did not panic. You did not retreat. You did not stop your march," Peres said.
"Your path, Yitzhak, the way of peace and security, is lit today by the light of millions of candles, by whose light we will continue to march. We gather here today not only to remember, but also to say that the battle is not over. It is not enough simply to remember; there is a need to continue and act in order that the great undertaking which you began will be able to advance a long way still."
Peres said it was no secret that he and Rabin had differences of opinion, "which caused both you and me no small amount of distress."
"Beneath that, however, we enjoyed a mutually shared vision, and that vision brought us far-reaching result and much satisfaction," the president said.
The annual gathering in memory of Rabin, held each year in Rabin Square in Tel Aviv, where he was gunned down during a peace rally in November 1995, will take place Saturday night. |
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
|
 |
|
|
|