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Build The Bridge Over Troubled Water

There's an old saying that a Rabbi gives but one sermon his entire career. I'm not sure I agree, but I understand why this saying exists. It's an understanding that while subjects and topics may change, certain ideas and values find themselves expressed on a regular basis. As I think about the thousands of sermons, bulletin articles, Shabbat messages and other communications over the course of my career, this is certainly rings true for me. And one of those values is the importance of reconciliation, of making up, of the need to fix important relationships that for whatever reason have gone awry. Throughout my career, I have seen tensions between parents and children, among sisters and brothers, and between dear friends lead to bitterness and estrangement. I have officiated at too many funerals, and attended too many shiva houses where the grief was compounded by failure to either seek forgiveness, extend forgiveness, or even attempt to talk and reconcile while there was st

Post Election Wisdom From Harold and Kumar

If you didn't get the reference to Harold and Kumar in the title, this Shabbat message may not work. But if you did get the reference, or are still willing to give it a shot, it will make sense in a few paragraphs from now. Like you, I have been following the reporting about the election results, and the reactions of different groups and organizations. The American people have made their choice, and in perhaps the greatest political comeback in our nation’s history, Donald Trump will be the 47th president of the United States. Some are elated, and others are devastated. Wall Street seems quite happy, our NATO allies decidedly less so. What will be is anyone's guess. As they say in the world of finance "past performance is not an indicator of future results." Considering our nation is still divided over President Trump's first term in office, I will leave an analysis of what the future might bring to others more qualified to speculate. What I will say is that giv

Rabbinic Wisdom For The Upcoming Election

The time has come for decision making. After months of campaigning, debates, and nonstop news reporting, Americans will go to the polls next Tuesday. What can our Rabbi's understanding of this week's Torah reading of Parshat Noah add to our awareness of the responsibilities that face us as voters? Much is made in Jewish tradition of Noah's personal qualities as compared to those of Abraham. The Torah tells us that Noah was a righteous person "in his generation" and walked with God. There is no doubt that Noah was righteous. It makes no sense to me that the plain meaning of the Biblical verse could imply anything else. Yet the phrase "in his generation" which seems to somehow qualify the original statement attesting to Noah's righteousness has often been understood as raising some doubt. Not that Noah wasn't great -- he certainly was. But for our Rabbi's, the issue was whether his greatness was great compared only to the low standards of hi

The Question That Deserves An Answer

I’ve explained to the congregation how in a very real sense, the day after Tisha B’Av, the fast day of the Ninth of Av, is a good time to start thinking about the High Holidays.   But we don’t.     But now is different.   This coming Tuesday and Wednesday, right after the Labor Day weekend is Rosh Chodesh Elul . When the new Hebrew month begins, we are thirty days from Rosh Hashanah.   Our Rabbis wanted us the remember that and think about what that means.   So they instituted several rituals and observances to ensure that, ready or not, willing or not, we start thinking about the great ideas of the High Holiday period, and how they apply to our lives.   They literally force us to do so. When Elul begins, we add the 27 th Psalm to the daily liturgy each morning and evening.   This Psalm is added to help us focus on some of the great themes of the High Holiday season in a way that our regular Shabbat and daily prayers do not.   We need to focus differently at least for a few minute

Don’t Ask Me to Endorse Your Favorite Candidate

I knew it had to happen. I just did not expect it so soon. Once again, a prominent member of the clergy offered an endorsement of a candidate running for elected office, this time Vice President Kamala Harris. About two weeks ago, Rabbi Lauren Holtzblatt told a gathering of the Jewish Democratic Council of America that "…. I could tell you that Jews need to elect Vice President Kamala Harris because our sacred texts tell us to build a world where we feed the hungry, care for the sick, ……………Those are her values” In other words, God wants you to vote for Kamala Harris.   That may not be a fair assessment of her remarks.   But I am sure that there are plenty of other values in those same sacred texts that might cause a more Republican leaning colleague to say the same of Donald Trump.   Indeed, some have. Personally, I am always amazed by the clarity with which the divine voice speaks to certain religious leaders during an electoral season. Back to Rabbi Holtzblatt.   She may

We Are Good At Sports Too!

There are all kinds of jokes about Jews and sports.   Remember this classic clip from the movie Airplane ? I remember those days when you could make a simple joke like that without the fear of lawsuits, being cancelled, or being labeled for life as a bigot. This joke, like so many others, reflected the belief or the stereotype that Jews weren't good athletes. We were great at physics, we've won a disproportionate (and I mean really disproportionate) number of Nobel prizes, and are overrepresented in the arts, entertainment, academia, business and in politics. We should be proud of that. Despite tremendous setbacks and the ever-present reality of antisemitism, Jews in the modern era have achieved amazing success. The readers of this Shabbat message certainly know that with few exceptions, your parents, or grandparents, or great grandparents came to the United States as poor, if not penniless immigrants fleeing poverty, antisemitism, and lack of opportunity in the country of

My Parents Were Wrong: Crime Does Pay

My parents were wrong. Crime does pay. That's all I could think of last week when I heard the news that Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, Paul Whelan and other Americans unlawfully and immorally detained in Russia would be released later that day. Now don't get me wrong: I don't think for a moment that we should not have moved heaven and earth to get them home. I am grateful to all who had a hand in securing their release -- except the Russians -- and I think a special acknowledgement of President Biden's leadership is in order. This was a complicated bargain, one that made last year's release of WNBA star Brittney Griner simple by comparison. Yes, all that is true.  But still, crime pays. And that is a painful lesson.  I have talked about the issues of kidnapping, hostage taking, and unlawful imprisonment many times over the years.   I gave my first sermon about this subject in 1999! While a great deal of attention has been directed toward this in