Posts in Renewal
Parshat Chukat is filled with mystery and meaning.

Parshat Chukat is filled with mystery and meaning.

It begins with God’s instruction to Moses and Aaron to tell the people to sacrifice a red heifer that is free from blemish (nearly impossible to find), and which has never been yoked. Its ashes are then to be used in a ritual of purification to release individuals from impurity. As many of our sages commented, this was an irrational or supra-rational instruction. In subsequent verses we see how important it was for the supplicant to cleanse himself and his clothing after contact with a corpse. It is obvious that transitions of life and death had great significance then, as they do now. Transitions become sacred or meaningful for us, as for them, when marked by rituals for the cleansing of body, mind and spirit.

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This week we witness the rebirth and beauty of spring.

This week we witness the rebirth and beauty of spring. For many of us, it is most welcome. For some with allergies, Oy! This Shabbat is also Earth Day! Of course, every Shabbat is an earth day, when we traditionally refrain from disturbing the earth, no plowing, planting, cutting, harvesting etc… to be in harmony with the natural world.

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Welcome to Fall! I hope the Yom Tovim have been renewing for you.

Welcome to Fall! I hope the Yom Tovim have been renewing for you. Many of us felt energized just being able to reconnect with community, either in person or on zoom.

We shared Simchat Torah this year with Shirat HaNefesh, another independent community that is also wrestling with its future. Some members of the Fabrangen Havurah also joined us when their Simhat Torah was cancelled because one of their leaders came down with covid. They are also another independent community in search of renewal.

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Shanah Tovah! For those who attended our High Holiday service at WJ High School and on Zoom I hope you found the services meaningful.

Shanah Tovah! For those who attended our High Holiday service at WJ High School and on Zoom I hope you found the services meaningful. I’m most appreciative of the amazing and hardworking Kehila HiHo Team. There are so many details of planning, security, technological challenges, etc. Thankfully, we didn’t need to endure bad weather.

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The last Parsha, Ekev, started with notion of how we take our steps (Ekev) moving forward.

The last Parsha, Ekev, started with notion of how we take our steps (Ekev) moving forward. This Parsha opens with the word, Re’eh, the intention of “seeing.” To watch where we are stepping is a important insight. “See, I set before you today a blessing and a curse.” Moshe Rabeynu, our eminent Teacher uses the visual aid of two mountains, one that is lush, Har Grizim, and the other that is barren, Har Eval, to drive home the point of the choices before us.

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As the Israelites prepare to enter into the Land of Promise...

As the Israelites prepare to enter into the Land of Promise we have just witnessed the long overdue Inflation Reduction Act, a thumbs up for this Land of Promise.

We hope it will impact the wellbeing of millions of people and the Land, Earth and climate. Like in ancient times, the bickering and ups and downs of the wilderness journey led to a reaffirmation of the covenant that we ought to have with each other, this planet and the Source of All Being.

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Well, we just got back from the Promised Land! Actually, not the biblical Promised Land.

Well, we just got back from the Promised Land! Actually, not the biblical Promised Land. We spent several days in and around Canaan Valley, West Virginia. It was the perfect place to go if you’re into the Parshiot this week. Matot-Masey, a double Parsha, brings us to the mountains overlooking the Promised Land. The Israelites are about to enter and in Masey we recall the forty-two stops along the way.

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Tonight is the 33rd day of the Omer.

pect of mourning that is still observed. In spite of the loss, the day is an affirmation of life.Tonight is the 33rd day of the Omer. Known throughout time as Lag B’Omer it is a special day during the 7 weeks between Pesach and Shavuot. After an intense four weeks of planting and cultivating the land there is a reprieve. Our sages also credit the day with the lifting of a plague. Some scholars say that was the day the fighting ended between the Roman legions and the Jewish rebels. There is an as

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The Parsha this week seems to start out with a simple instruction to take a census of the Israelites over the age of 20...

The Parsha this week seems to start out with a simple instruction to take a census of the Israelites over the age of 20 (to serve in the army?). Ki Tissa, first of all, does not mean “take a census.” It means to “lift up“ one's self to be counted by giving atonement for wrongdoing! Each person is instructed to give a half shekel as an offering. The sages asked, why a half shekel? A response was that it takes another person to make a whole shekel, or to make one whole. Atonement doesn’t work unless it is done with another, or with others. Also, everyone, rich or poor, gives the same half shekel.

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