Friday, June 29, 2012

Jewish Take on Supreme Ct. Upholding Obama Care THIS SHABBAT


Dear Haverim,

     *Tonight, Kabbalat Shabbat services will be at 6:30 p.m., (happy hour at 6 p.m.).  My sermonic topic: A Jewish Response to the Supreme Court Upholding the Affordable Health Care Act (a.k.a. “Obama Care”).

     *Tomorrow, Shabbat services will be at 9:30 a.m.  My dvar Torah will be: Hitting the Rock: What Happens When You Short-Change Shiva.  I will deal with the emotional impact of mourning in light of Miriam’s Death.

Looking Ahead…

        *This Wednesday, July 4th, please note the later 9 a.m. start time for our CBS-AKSE Community Minyan at CBS.  No breakfast that day.  Also from July 4-15, I will be at Camp Ramah in the Poconos as an educator.  Cantor Ruth and Rabbi Steven Saks of AKSE will be available to see to your pastoral needs (but I hope you have none J).

        Shabbat shalom!

        Rabbi Michael

Sunday, June 24, 2012

More on Korach: 4th of July and "Wicked" reference


Tosefta: Additional Information on Parashat Korach

          During this past Shabbat’s dvar Torah on Parashat Korach, I made the point that often it is the victors that dominate the historical narrative.  On the surface, Korach’s observation that we are all a kingdom of priests,  seems much in line with the early Rabbi’s attempts to democratize our religion, moving Temple-based rituals to the home and synagogue.  Yet it is these very same Rabbis, perhaps concerned about their own early contested claims to authority, who created midrashim after midrashim vilifying Korach as a megalomaniac, keen on destroying the entire community to feed his own insatiable ego and lust for power.  We never hear from Korach himself because he is buried in an abyss.

          This past Shabbat, I shared that I was first confronted with a non-victor’s view of history when, at age 9, I encountered my visiting elderly British uncle’s view of the War of Independence.  “Oh yes, your so-called ‘Revolutionary War,’ bunch of ungrateful colonists who failed to appreciate all their mother country had done for them.  Well you were more trouble than you were worth, so we cut you off – good riddens!”  I never heard this version of the 1776 before.  It was shocking!

          I wonder, if Korach had been given the chance, how might he have narrated events found in the Torah portion named for him? When stories have clear villains and victims, perhaps we should be skeptical, and at least imagine there might be more to the story.  Even in the most obvious story of good and evil, villain and victims, like the Holocaust, to pin it all on Hitler, dupes us into a false sense of security, that it could never happen again because Hitler was an aberration.  But Hitler did not act in a vacuum.  He had many people who either helped and even more who sat back and did nothing.  Nor did Hitler act in a vacuum (and neither did Korach for that matter).  Be it a vindictive Treaty of Versailles, the evil report of the spies and a sentence to desert-wandering for 40 years, or needing a wheelbarrow full of Deutschmark to buy a loaf of bread, demagogues need the right set of circumstances to succeed.

          Finally, I referenced the words to the song, Wonderful, from the Tony-Award-winning musical, Wicked.  In the referenced scene, I described how the Wizard got the title, Wonderful.  Within the song, Elphaba and the Wizard debate the difference between lying and history.  It seemed like a great text to share with you in closing.

WIZARD: See - I never had a family of my own. So, I

guess I just - wanted to give the citizens of Oz everything.

ELPHABA(spoken): So you lied to them.

WIZARD: (spoken) Elphaba, where I'm from, we believe all sorts of

things that aren't true. We call it - "history."

(sung) A man's called a traitor - or liberator

A rich man's a thief - or philanthropist

Is one a crusader - or ruthless invader?

It's all in which label

Is able to persist

There are precious few at ease

With moral ambiguities

So we act as though they don't exist.



source: http://www.lyricsondemand.com/

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Jewish take on Obama's Immigration Initiative & Korach: when is it right to rebel


Shalom Haverim,

     *Tonight, Friday, June 22, Shabbat services will be held at 6:30 p.m. (with happy hour at 6 pm.)  My dvar Torah will be on A Jewish Take on President Obama’s Immigration Initiative.  I will be highlighting work done by the AJC – American Jewish Committee, which has taken a leading voice in this issue.

     *Tomorrow, Saturday, June 23, Shabbat services begin at 9:30 a.m.  My sermon will be on Korach: Legitimate and Illegitimate Rebellion or Two Takes on 1776 and the American Revolution.

     *Note: This Sunday’s 9 a.m. morning minyan will be held at CBS. Wednesday’s  7:30 am community minyan will be held at CBS. Friday’s 7:30 am  community minyan will be held at AKSE.

        Be relevant.  Stay informed.  Attend Shabbat services at Congregation Beth Shalom!

     Shabbat shalom,

    Rabbi Michael

Friday, June 15, 2012

Israel Film Fest @ CBS + CBS Camping Shabbaton


Dear Haverim,

      This weekend is our annual Congregation Beth Shalom Camping Shabbaton in Bellepain State Park, Woodbine, NJ (1 Henkinsifkin Road
Woodbine, NJ 08270)

  If you cannot make the camping, and would like to come pray with us on Saturday morning at the historic synagogue in Woodbine, it is located at 610 Washington Ave., Woodbine, NJ 08270.

        Back at Congregation Beth Shalom, Cantor Ruth will be leading both Friday night services, tonight at 6:30 p.m., and on Saturday morning at 9:30 a.m.  I know she would welcome your company if you are not camping in Woodbine.

        Sunday Morning Minyan, 9 a.m., will be held at Congregation Beth Shalom. (Wednesday’s Community Minyan at CBS, Friday’s Community Minyan at AKSE).

        Please attend the JFD ISRAEL FILM FESTIVAL this Monday, 7 p.m., at Congregation Beth Shalom.  We will be screening: Je T’Aime I Love You Airport.  I will both introduce and lead a post-screening conversation after the film.

        Shabbat shalom!

      Rabbi Michael

Friday, June 8, 2012

Rabbi Michael's WeekEND NOTES:Matrilineal Descent

Dear Friends,

Please note tonight's later service time.

*8 pm, Friday night service, June 8. Samantha Hughes' bat mitzvah. Sermon Topic: Matrilineal Descent: Does it still make sense in an Egalitarian Movement?

*9:30 a.m., Saturday, June 9. Samantha Hughes bat mitzvah continue! Her sermon topic: The Menorah:Source of Wisdom and Light.

Stay informed. Be relevant. Be moved. Attend Shabbat services at Congregation Beth Shalom


Shabbat shalom!

Rabbi Michael

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Ariella Beals' AEA Graduation Prayer at CBS Tonight


Life, Love, Laughter, Smiles, Family, Friends

Thank you G-d,

for all of these gifts and more, like nature. A leaf, a tree, a forest. A grain of sand, a pebble, a mountain. A feather, a hawk, a flock of geese. A creek, a stream, a river. A puddle, a lake, an ocean. The spinning of a spider’s web. The turning of the world. A blade of grass. A raindrop. A rainbow. A cloud. A star. A student learning from a teacher. A teacher learning from a student.

My friends,

Who brighten up my life, and make me smile. When my dog Yofi was getting a serious surgery back in Kindergarten, the one thing I clearly remember was my friends comforting me. They have stood by me through the years, laughing with me and crying with me. They make the world seem new each time I see it.

My loving family,

Who support me, put up with me, embrace me , protect me, embarrass me, guide me, imagine with me, laugh with me, hope with me, dream with me and fly with me. They have all given me such wonderful opportunities that make their lives more difficult, like such a fabulous education as AEA, even though there is tuition, and my dance, even though it complicates just about everything.

I pray that someday I will be lucky enough to be half as worthy as all of the gifts you have given me.

Please G-d,

Give me the strength to protect the world and all its inhabitants.

Most important of all, let me always be aware of the gifts you have given me.