Seeing the C Change Last week I found myself browsing in a bookstore, and I couldn’t help but notice something striking. The sections on Judaism and spirituality seemed to be shrinking, while entire walls were devoted to fantasy, supernatural romance,…
Tag: Yeshua
Tazria and Metzora – The Lightness of Grace
Seeing the Whole Person In this week’s Torah portions, Tazria and Metzora, we encounter the person afflicted with tzara’at, a condition that brings not only physical suffering but also deep social isolation. The Torah instructs that the afflicted individual be…
Korban Copies: Becoming Living Offerings
When I was in college, I had a friend who kept a large collage on the wall of his dorm room. At first glance it looked like a collection of family photographs. The pictures were carefully arranged and gave the…
Yitro – A Perfect Government
With Parashat Yitro we reach one of the decisive turning points in Israel’s formation as a people. The journey from Egypt to Sinai has never been merely about escape from oppression; it has been about the reordering of allegiance. From…
B’shelach – I’d Like to Teach the World to Sing
Imagine, just for a moment, if I asked everyone to join hands and we played that old Coca‑Cola jingle from the early 1970s: “I’d like to teach the world to sing, in perfect harmony.” It was the perfect fusion of…
Shemot – Seventy-nine and Holding
I woke up this morning, glanced at the news, and for a brief moment wondered whether the earth had slipped off its axis while I was asleep. Yesterday’s headline in the Courant read, “The World Is on Watch,” and it…
Vayechi – Mercy and Justice: The Incredible Two-Headed Servant
Parashat Vayechi brings us to the close of the book of Genesis and places us squarely at a moment of transition. These are end-of-life words—Jacob blessing his sons, Joseph preparing to die in exile, and in the Haftarah, King David…
Vayigash – At the Threshold of Blessing
The Torah portion Vayigash brings us to one of the most emotionally charged threshold moments in Israel’s story. Judah steps forward, Joseph reveals himself, and a family fractured by betrayal stands at the edge of reconciliation (Gen 44–45). Rabbinic tradition…
