The Meaning of Pesah
Apr 8, 2006 By Matthew Berkowitz | Commentary | Pesah
Next week marks the beginning of Passover; with this annual celebration, Jews gather to celebrate the birth of the Israelite nation.
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The Psychology of Sacrifice
Mar 31, 2001 By Joshua Heller | Commentary | Vayikra
The sacrificial order laid out in the fourth and fifth chapters of the book of Leviticus may seem alien to modern readers, but in its textual organization and minutiae of ritual, it reflects a deep psychological understanding of the nature of error and atonement in public and private life.
Read MoreWhat We Are Asked to Remember
Mar 11, 2006 By Yehoshua Aizenberg | Commentary | Shabbat Zakhor | Tetzavveh
By Rabbi Yehoshua Aizenberg
Two Sabbaths ago, we celebrated Shabbat Shekalim, the first of four special Sabbaths preceding Pesah. This coming Shabbat, Shabbat Zachor, always comes right before the Purim celebration.
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The Ease of Redemption
Oct 25, 2004 By Ismar Schorsch | Commentary | Yom Kippur
The redemption of the world is easier than you think. It starts with you and me.
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Three Mitzvot to Live By
Feb 18, 2006 By David Rose | Commentary | Yitro
We are each a product of the stories that we carry within us.
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God of Wrath?
Jan 26, 2006 By Daniel Nevins | Commentary | Va'era
There’s an expression that appears periodically in the popular press that annoys me to no end: “The Old Testament God of wrath.”
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Knowing the Feelings of the Stranger
Feb 5, 2016 By Marc Gary | Commentary | Mishpatim
This week’s parashah comprises a multitude of ordinances, providing an embarrassment of riches upon which to comment. Capital punishment, abortion, workers’ rights—to name just a few of the issues suggested by the parashah—offer ample grist for the commentator’s mill. Yet in this political year, with all of its focus on immigration, refugees, and minority rights, it would seem almost churlish to avoid addressing one of the key themes of the Torah reading: the treatment of theger (stranger).
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Seeing the Forest Through the Trees
Jan 14, 2006 By JTS Alumni | Commentary | Vayehi
By Rabbi Ronald J. Shulman
It depends how you look at it. Some of us see the problem; others of us see the solution. Some people look at life and see only the facts. Others are able to look at life and see the meaning. Some of us will read this week’s Torah portion as the story of Jacob and Joseph’s deaths. Others of us will read the narrative in Parashat Va-y’hi as the story of their lives.
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