Micah Cowan – Senior Sermon (’26)
By JTS Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Vayishlah
Vayishlah
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Seasons of Responsibility: Interreligious Conversations on Environmental Justice and Repair
Winter-Spring 2026 Learning Series Across Jewish, Christian, Muslim, and Hindu traditions, the early spring season is a shared period of reflection, renewal, and ethical clarity. While rooted in different stories and practices—from Tu BiShvat to Lent and Easter, from Ramadan to Holi and Passover—these holidays collectively invite communities to consider how human choices shape the […]
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Jewish Worlds Illuminated: A Treasury of Hebrew Manuscripts from The JTS Library
By Library of the Jewish Theological Seminary
Jewish Worlds Illuminated: A Treasury of Hebrew Manuscripts from The JTS Library September 17–December 27, 2025Grolier Club 47 E 60th St. New York, NY 10022 Jewish Worlds Illuminated features over 100 manuscripts and books offering a world tour of Jewish literary creativity across many centuries and thousands of miles. The exhibition explores the diversity of cultures […]
Read MoreTruth or Fiction?
By MFA in Creative Writing | Public Event video | Video Lecture
The JTS MFA in Creative Writing is built around conversation about hard truths and strange fictions—about writing, teaching, failure, ambition, and why anyone keeps doing this in the first place. This three-part online series invites you into those conversations, with faculty and students speaking honestly about craft, community, and what it really means to commit to the work.
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Between the Lines: Children of the Book
By Library of the Jewish Theological Seminary | Public Event video | Video Lecture
In Children of the Book: A Memoir of Reading Together (St. Martin’s Press / On Sale: August 26, 2025), Ilana Kurshan reveals how literature weaves an invisible thread through the tapestry of family life. Kurshan, a mother of five living in Jerusalem, struggles to balance her passion for books with her responsibilities as a parent. Gradually she learns how to relate to reading not as a solitary pursuit and an escape from the messiness of life, but rather as a way of forging connection and teaching independence. Introducing her children to sacred and secular literature—including the beloved classics of her childhood—she becomes both a better mother and a more compassionate reader.
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Indigenous Leadership and Ecological Responsibility
Download Sources Drawing on the Center for Earth Ethics’ Freedom to Be: Dialogues on Freedom of Religion or Belief for Indigenous Peoples, this session built a foundation for understanding Indigenous identity, spirituality, and relationships to land. Roberto Múkaro Borrero and Rabbi Stephanie Ruskay explored where religious communities have shown up—and where they have not—and invite participants to consider how faith […]
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Law, Agency, and Ecological Responsibility: A Catholic–Jewish Conversation Drawing on the Book of Esther
What does it mean to act responsibly when power is uneven, harm is systemic, and silence can feel safer than action? Drawing on the Book of Esther, this Catholic–Jewish conversation reflects on moral agency, ecological responsibility, and the challenges of ethical decision-making within contemporary legal and institutional systems.
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Between Fast and Feast: Hindu and Jewish Perspectives on Restraint and Responsibility
What does it mean to act responsibly when there is no guarantee of results? Jewish and Hindu traditions both turn to fasting as a practice of restraint and agency. Focusing on the Fast of Esther, alongside Hindu fasting traditions, this session explores how intentional self-restraint—held in tension with celebration—can shape ethical responses to the climate crisis.
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America at 250: Jewish Ideas and the American Experiment
As the United States approaches its 250th anniversary, this series explores the rich and surprising intersections between Jewish thought and American life. From baseball and youth culture to constitutional law, storytelling, and democratic theory, leading scholars reveal how Jewish ideas, texts, and experiences have shaped—and been shaped by—the American experiment. Sources for each session will […]
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Relationships and Commitments: Land Beyond Ownership
There are ways to exist in harmony with all of creation that cultivate the soul and a relationship with the Divine. Hussein Rashid and Rabbi Gordon Tucker bring Muslim and Jewish texts into dialogue to explore how religious traditions resist transactional relationships with the earth and with one another. Drawing on the sabbatical vision from Leviticus and a Muslim sources on overtaxation, they reflect on restraint, renewal, and the dangers of extraction. Timed with converging sacred moments—the beginning of the Jewish calendar, Persian New Year, and the close of Ramadan—this session offers a shared language for ethical living in a fragile world.
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