Bamidbar
Ella, I’m so proud of you and all the work you have done to get ready for tomorrow. You are so smart, and you think in complex ways about how humans behave in groups and about the human condition.
Your portion is not a bat-mitzvah friendly one, either. It is made up long lists of various censuses – yes, that’s the plural of census - a census of who can enlist in the army and who can work on the tabernacle and a general census of the Israelite population in the wilderness.
B’chukotai
I just returned from a conference in New York City called Recharging Reform Judaism. The first year of the conference was a year ago and its focus was making sure that Zionism remains the central pillar of modern Reform Judaism. The conference was organized by Rabbi Ammiel Hirsch, whose father, Rabbi David Hirsch was instrumental in making sure that Israel was central in Reform Judaism and that Reform Judaism built a strong presence in Israel. Ami was a year ahead of me in rabbinical school. I couldn’t go to last year’s conference, but everybody said it was amazing, so I definitely wanted to go this year
Dror Yikar
Forty-seven years ago, almost to the day, I was called to the Torah for my bar mitzvah on this week’s Torah portion, Behar.
I lucked out in terms of my portion, Behar. I don’t want to give away much since Ophelia will be giving her d’var on it tomorrow, but it is an important section of Torah where the idea of the shnat yovel, or the Jubilee Year is described. It is a somewhat radical economic document which requires the entire country take a year off every 50 years and land would go back to original owners. I can no longer find my d’var, but I distinctly remember it was a very lefty socialist take on private ownership of property. My socialist mother was thrilled. My father was not. Several people in the congregation told me I should become a rabbi, and here I am. Having a bar mitzvah changed my life, and still stands a one of the major milestones and markers of moments when life takes a new direction.
Do Not Separate Yourself from the Community
Well, I don’t know about you, but this past week I’ve been on the “struggle bus” about all the nastiness around us, whether it is what we are seeing unfold on campuses, or talking with our own students, or just having all sorts of feelings about the larger patterns in the world. There is, perhaps ironically, a great German word for this: Weltshmertz (world hurt).
But I am also so glad that here at Temple Sinai, we are in a B’nei Mitzvah marathon, because the joy of celebrating these amazing young people, seeing them grow up, and seeing the families gathering around such milestones even during hard times is a great antidote to all the weltshmertz.
Bar Mitzvah
BAR MITZVAH May 3, 2024
But while this is a simcha, a joy, we are also living through some very difficult times as a Jewish community. The trauma of October 7, the mass protests against Israel weeks before there was any military response, the 400% rise in antisemitism that our community has experienced since then, and now the protests that are roiling colleges and country - this is a lot for adults to deal with and process, much less teens.
Israel Through the Looking Glass
ISRAEL THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS March 15, 2024
We all know Lewis Carrol’s Alice Through the Looking Glass where a young girl’s is mysteriously transported through a mirror into an upside world of absurd characters and parodies of power. Tim and my trip to Israel felt to me like coming back out of the looking glass into a world that made sense and fit reality as I know it, and honestly, with that plane ride, it is a bit like travelling to another dimension.
WHO KNEW NOT JOSEPH
WHO KNEW NOT JOSEPH January 5, 2024
So I’m not so good at getting out of my work gear. It takes me a few days to wean myself off and slow down. One of the ways I do that is to listen to new Jewish or Israeli music and figure out the guitar chords (that I am able to play) and make a chord sheet with the lyrics. If it’s an Israeli tune, I also spend time getting to know the lyrics, appreciating the poetry. That way I feel I’m doing something workish, but it is also fun and since there is no deadline, I can just have fun with it.
KOSTER RUACH
KOSTER RUACH January 12, 2024
Our Torah Portion this week, Vaera, is one that is well known to most of you even if you didn’t know that. It contains about ½ of the story of Passover, and contains the verses that make up the heart of the Haggadah. In it, having fled Egypt, encountered a burning bush, married, had children, and been commanded by God to save the Israelites in Egypt, our portion details those initial encounters between Moses, Aaron, Pharaoh and those pesky fickle Israelites.
CLOSE ENOUGH
CLOSE ENOUGH December 22, 2023
I grew up in a very complex family dynamic. As a Jewish family in the deep deep South during desegregation, in fact usually the only Jewish family in our small town, we got axes through our door and a cross on our lawn; we got bomb threats when my sister was named valedictorian and sucker punches regularly in the school hallways; we had more than a few friends’ parents that wouldn’t allow us into their home or come to their parties, so we had to depend on one another. We felt like we were all in on a secret that everyone else had totally wrong, but that wasn’t cool because it resulted in such sporadic hostility. Mostly I remember it being confusing. It also seemed to confuse my parents, which increasingly makes no sense to me as I age.
We are the Descendants of Such Beautiful Audacity
D’VAR TORAH October 26, 2023 13 Cheshvan 5784
When I was a Dean at Middlebury College, the words “Resistance is the Secret of Joy” hung over my desk. This line from Alice Walker’s novel The Secret of Joy, spoke to me. As a Jew, as a gay man, as a thinking person, and as a person of faith who also sees skepticism as holy, I had to resist a lot of pressure to be like everybody around me. There is a heaviness and a sadness to a life of resistance, but that line helped me see that there was also great joy and meaning in refusing to assimilate and blend in.
RISE UP, O GOD, AND SCATTER OUR ENEMIES
SERMON - Shabbat after Hamas Massacre October 20, 2023
This Shabbat I want to take my text from the prophet Madonna, from her album, Bedtime Stories from the first verse of the title track:
Today is the last day
That I'm using words
They've gone out, lost their meaning
Don't function anymore
CITIES OF SLAUGHTER
CITIES OF SLAUGHTER
Rise and go to the cities of the slaughter and you’ll come to the yards, And with you eyes and your own had feel the fence, And on the trees and on the stones and plaster of the walls, The congealed blood and hardened gore of the dead. And you’ll come from there to the ruins and stop before the destroyed homes, And pass by the pierced walls and shattered ovens, Where the axe’s head bit deep, to burst and deepen holes, Baring the black stone and shears of brick all burned, And they’ll look like the open mouths of black and mortal wounds. That have no remedy, that have no cure.
WHO BY FIRE?
WHO BY FIRE
In 1973, Canadian poet and singer Leonard Cohen, 39 years old, at the height of his early fame, with hits like Suzanne and Famous Blue Raincoat, announced his retirement from music. It was a dark time for him, a time of depression and disorientation. He left the music scene in Greenwich Village and retreated to a rustic Greek Island without roads or modern amenities: the Greek Island of Hydra where he had bought a house for $1500 in the early 60’s. He went to Hydra to try and renew his spirit and figure out a direction for his life. On the day of Yom Kippur, he was lying in a hammock listening to the radio when he heard that Egypt and Syria had launched a surprise attack on Israel. He immediately jumped up, and without a plan, took a ferry to Athens and the first flight to Tel Aviv. The news was bad.
SHOWING UP
SHOWING UP
Welcome and thank you for joining us tonight.
There is something very powerful in showing up like you have tonight.
90% of life is just showing up.
When my partner Tim was choosing a project for his Senior Design Project at Georgia Tech’s Architecture program, he chose to design a synagogue. The first design rule was: The ark should face east; the second was that the sanctuary needs to be able to triple in size two days a year.
My family were High Holy Jews. Michelle Obama’s speechwriter Sarah Hurwitz was a High Holy Day Jew before a breakup led her to spend more time at a local Reform synagogue, starting a process that would result in her excellent book about Judaism: Here All Along.
THE YOM KIPPUR WAR AND THE WAR TODAY
THE YOM KIPPUR WAR AND THE WAR TODAY
Today, on Yom Kippur 50 years ago today by the Jewish calendar, at 2:00 in the afternoon, the air raid sirens began to howl, starting low and rising to that piercing clashing scream that flips your stomach. In synagogues across Israel, men started to get up and walk out of the synagogue, a few at first, then almost everyone. They were being called up for war. The armies of Egypt and Syria, armed with up-to-date weapons by Russia, simultaneously launched a surprise attack on Israel that came very close to destroying the country. The goal of those armies? To undo the humiliation of their losses in the Six Day War in 1967, and to undo the creation of Israel in 1948.
PALE BLUE DOT
PALE BLUE DOT
When God saw how corrupt the earth was, for all flesh had corrupted its ways on earth, God said to Noah,
“For My part, I am about to bring the Flood—waters upon the earth—to destroy all flesh under the sky in which there is breath of life; everything on earth shall perish.” (Genesis 6:17)
And on the seventh day the waters of the Flood came upon the earth…
All the fountains of the great deep burst apart,
And the floodgates of the sky broke open. , (Genesis 7:10,11b)
WELCOME 5784
WELCOME 5784
I want to start tonight by inviting everyone to just close your eyes, take a breath, and put out your own wish for a good and sweet new year. What are you hoping for in the new year? For your family? For this community?
THE POWER OF PRIDE
THE POWER OF PRIDE
As many of you know, this summer, we fulfilled my promise last Rosh Hashanah to have a campaign against antisemitism that included signs on local buses. With a generous donation from someone who is not Jewish but who wanted to help us fight antisemitism, a small group of us worked with a graphic artist to create our Halt H8 campaign. In doing this, we were also fulfilling something we’ve heard again and again in conversations with groups of congregants as we worked on our strategic plan for the coming years: you want Temple Sinai to be more visible in the community and be a leader in the local community. I’m very proud that we were able to do this.
The feedback from the larger community was excellent. As a direct result of those buses, several leaders in the community and in the schools reached to me to talk about how to better fight antisemitism.
SHABBAT CHAZON
SHABBAT CHAZON
And on the seventh day the waters of the Flood came upon the earth… All the fountains of the great deep burst apart,
And the floodgates of the sky broke open.
(The rain fell on the earth forty days and forty nights.)
That same day Noah and Noah’s sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth, went into the ark, with Noah’s wife and the three wives of his sons— they and all beasts of every kind, all cattle of every kind, all creatures of every kind that creep on the earth, and all birds of every kind, every bird, every winged thing.