Shabbat HaGadol

While we as a people have had years to understand our experience of slavery, and can retell its story in a way that helps us find new meaning in it, the challenge we are all experiencing now is new: we don’t know how we will tell its story, or what meaning we will find in it months or even years from now. As we live through this particular chapter, many of us are feeling a kind of discomfort -- deeper than our inability to hug our children, or see our friends, or order the food we want. This discomfort has a name: grief.

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Shabbat Vayakhel-Pekudei

The Torah tells us what defined the mishkan, our first spiritual home, was not how strong it was, how long it lasted but the effect building it had on us. God tells our ancestors, if they create a sacred space, shechanti betocham (25:8) – “I will dwell amongst you.” Our sages point out, betocham literally means I will dwell “in them.” God is not in what we build, but within the hearts and souls of its builders.

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Shabbat Zachor

The Purim story is fundamentally an us-versus-them story. And even though it was written some 1500 years ago, it speaks across the centuries to the culture wars and political struggles of our day: The failure of our leaders to reach across the aisle to address the climate crisis, the widening wealth gap, or global health threats like the new Coronavirus. To compromise on their personal agendas, or set aside their egos, in order to focus on the well-being of humanity and our planet.

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Shabbat Mishpatim

“You shall not wrong the ger, nor shall you oppress him; for you were gerim in the land of Egypt.” Remember you are a nation of immigrants, recall your ancestors who fled ancient Egypt, Czarist Russia, Nazi Germany. Don’t build walls that cut you off from those memories. Rather, let these memories expand your hearts across the borders that threaten to cut you off from your past.

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Shabbat Bo

After the Israelites crossed the Red Sea, they turned around to see the water closing on the advancing Egyptian armies. The angels, seeing all this, were about to break into song when God suddenly silenced them, declaring, “How dare you sing for joy when My creatures are suffering.” The angels’ silence reflected a moral and spiritual victory. A strength that enabled our ancestors to, in my grandfather’s words, “differentiate between transitory and relatively insignificant values and those which are truly fundamental.”

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Adam LavittPassover, compassion
Shabbat Shemot

Our tradition acknowledges, there are times when there is a clear conflict between what is legal – the decrees of politicians and legislators; and what is just – the higher moral codes of our religious and ethical traditions. It is at times like these we are inspired by those who realized the only way to redeem the world was to challenge the status quo in the name of a higher authority.

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Shabbat Vayishlach

Like Jacob, each of us wrestles, at different times in our life to find peace and wholeness, to live lives of integrity. We can all think of a moment when it seemed like we were doing everything right, succeeding in all the ways others expected us to — but…felt…like something was missing... Only after we put aside the expectations others had of us, could we hear the name given to us by God, our higher calling, our deeper purpose. Jacob’s was to become Israel, to move beyond his small sense of self to become the father a nation.

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Adam Lavittidentity, purpose, Jacob
Shabbat Chayyei Sarah

At the beginning of our Torah portion, the image we have of Abraham is a sad one: Having banished Hagar and Ishmael, he returns home without Isaac, only to receive the news that his wife Sarah has died. In a few pages, the tribal patriarch, the leader of his clan, loses all those closest and most dear to him. As he mourns everyone he has lost, we wonder, is it too late for Abraham? is this what he has to look forward to? A life of isolation, cut off from his own family and the promise of the future?

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