Thursday, June 23, 2022
Original prayers on Creation, Love and Oneness for TTCBJ Daily Minyan on Facebook Liv e- for June 14 and 23, 2022
Monday, June 6, 2022
Walk with us on our path of discovery - On 41 years in the rabbinate - prayer for the Temple, Congregation B’nai Jehudah Daily Minyan, June 6, 2022
Sunday, May 29, 2022
City of Peace, World of Peace - B’nai Jehudah Daily minyan original reading - May 29, 2022
Daily Minyan Prayer
May 29, 2022
Jerusalem Day
Memorial Day
We praise You,
Our Creator,
For the light that bathes the world with warmth and clarity
We thank You,
Our teacher and guide,
For the heritage that has come down to us
Through the generations
Leading us to work through conflict
So that the thirst for power will succumb to
The human need for connection and compassion,
So that strife will ultimately give way to peace.
We think of those whose lives inspire us
To preserve tranquility in our world.
We recall the place we call the City of Peace,
Jerusalem,
Whose reunification 55 years ago
Gave people of all faiths
An opportunity to visit, live, and pray.
And while we acknowledge that disagreements
And struggle continue among those who believe
That their only their approach to sacred sites there
Should be accepted,
We still know, that in that place where a holy Temple once stood,
Seen by our tradition as a focal point of the world,
Moments of calm and stillness can provide us with hope
That unity will one day prevail
Not only in that place,
But throughout the world
So that, in the words of the prophets,
Nation will not lift up sword against nation
Nor will they ever again train for war.
Monday, May 23, 2022
The Right Direction - Prayer for the Daily Minyan of the Temple, Congregation B’nai Jehudah, Overland Park, KS - May 23, 2022
Daily Minyan Prayer
May 23, 2022
Creator of Light,
Our Protector at Night,
Our Companion at dawn,
As the dark descends,
Provide us with rest that will allow our minds time to consider:
What have we done today to bring peace and healing
For ourselves, our family, and our world?
What will we do tomorrow to brighten a soul in need of support?
What lessons of the Torah will find their way into our actions?
We praise You for fashioning existence
So that we can be Your partners.
We thank You for Your loving guidance
That reaches out to us
From the words inscribed on a Torah scroll,
And from the prayers that pass our lips
Whether they come from the pages of a prayerbook
Or from the depths of our hearts.
Bless us with sincerity and point us in the right direction
So that Your Oneness will lead us upon a path to true peace.
Thursday, May 19, 2022
D’var Torah - May 19, 2022 - meeting of Rabbinical Association of Greater Kansas City
After perusing my Facebook newsfeed since Sunday night and Monday morning, I know that I wasn’t the only local rabbi or regional clergy person following the lunar eclipse on Sunday night. I quickly realized that my iPhone 13’s camera wouldn’t capture a sharp image that would fully reflect the wonder of the moment. Nevertheless, the blood moon, with its orange-red hue, from the illumination of light reflected off of our planet, was fully visible, even in my own photos.
Watching the eclipse was peaceful, and, with so many people simultaneously focusing on the show in the sky, it may have been an unwitting and welcome moment of peace between people. I did tell Rhonda that I wasn’t going sleep until I saw a sliver of light from the sun shining on the moon again - and I didn’t. I guess I wanted the visual reassurance that we were going back “to normal,” The eclipse offered two-to-three hours of time-out-of-time at a time when we needed it.
And we needed it because of what had happened the previous night at the Tops Friendly Market store in Buffalo, New York, when an 18 year old male chose to violently act upon the hatred in his heart. He was driven by white supremacist, racist and antisemitic conspiracy theories with which we have, sadly, had to familiarize ourselves. The motivation was similar to other attacks in recent years that have taken too many innocent lives. We deserve a break from people expressing their twisted, bigoted views in this way. We have no certain answer for how to train and retrain our fellow citizens of all ages to use their words instead of their weapons so that we might have even an outside chance to turn their hearts in a different direction. Yet, we know that we always have to try.
This past Tuesday was the 68th anniversary of the United States Supreme Court Brown v. Board school desegregation decision, a milestone which I marked for a number of years in Topeka with the local community and members of the Brown family. That landmark judgment by the highest court in the land began a process that echoed aspects of the Jubilee year noted in the beginning of this week’s Parashah, BEHAR. The restitution and restoration represented by the D’ROR - whether that word means RELEASE or, as it reads on a certain ringing icon enshrined in Philadelphia, LIBERTY- that was to be proclaimed in the Jubilee year was intended as a reset that would reestablish a measure of socioeconomic balance to society. Just the mention and suggestion that land should be given back to its original owners every 50 years, whether or not the practice persisted over time, offers us a foundation for equalization that our society sorely needs on so many levels.
I recently attended, via Zoom, a study group at Temple Beth-El in Las Cruces with my successor, now a newly-ordained Reform rabbi and her husband, who was ordained as a Conservative rabbi last year. To mark the approach of Lag Ba-omer, which we observe today, they shared the story of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and his son, Rabbi Elazar, hiding in a cave for twelve years so that the Roman authorities could not carry out the death sentence against them. The Talmud related that they survived while being nourished by a carob tree and a spring of water that had miraculously appeared in the cave. When Elijah the prophet appeared to tell them that it was safe for them to leave, their first reaction, upon seeing people plowing and sowing, was to assume that Torah study had ceased. Everywhere the two of them set their gaze, the place was immediately burned. Consequently, a Divine voice instructed them to return to the cave, where they sat for another twelve months. When they emerged again, at the command of the Divine voice, the eyes of Rabbi Elazar would still strike as before, but the eyes of Rabbi Shimon would restore and heal. Rabbi Shimon tried to calm and reassure his son that their dedication to study would suffice for the world and, perhaps, bring others along for a renewed commitment to learning.
We know that we are living in a time of change where many desire only to tear down and assume control, while others still seek diverse partners to build up. We also know, that, even with the challenges we face, it is always within our power to bring release and healing to our communities. May our teaching and our contributions at this time to our neighborhoods, our nation and to this world, cast a colorful tapestry of insight and mutual understanding. And may the unity that so many experience separately and together while witnessing the wonders of nature serve as the basis of our ongoing work with people across the ideological spectrum in preserving a secure and promising future for our planet and for the human family.
Tuesday, May 17, 2022
A Prayer to the Giver of LIght and Blessing - May 17, 2022
Daily Minyan Prayer for The Temple, Congregation B’nai Jehudah
(On the 68th anniversary of the Brown v. Board Supreme Court decision for school desegregation, and after the tragic shootings in Buffalo, NY).
May 17, 2022
Eternal God,
Giver of light that provides us with clarity
For our eyes and for our minds and souls,
You have created us with the ability
To understand the meaning of creation.
The world and the universe
provide for us a constant model
of diversity, growth, expansion, and symmetry
That can we can, if we choose, reflect in how we act towards
Our fellow human beings.
There are those individuals who recognize
how all people are intricately connected
And how our ongoing cooperation
And our unending quest for mutual understanding and peace
Emulate Your blessings for us all.
There are others who, sadly, create barriers among
The inhabitants of our world,
Who believe that they can dictate which people truly deserve
Kindness, decency and compassion.
Teach us, Source of Wisdom and hope,
That Your Oneness encompasses us all
And that, to be like You,
It is Your Torah, Your instruction, founded upon love
That can guide us.
May that light of Torah seep into the depths of every human soul.
Sunday, May 8, 2022
For our mothers - for The Temple, Congregation B’nai Jehudah, Overland Park, Kansas, May 8, 2022
Daily Minyan Reading
Mother’s Day
May 8, 2022
Eternal Creator,
Who gives us the brightness of the day
And the shining light of Torah,
We thank you for your partnership with parents
And, on this day, specifically, we express our gratitude
For the role of mothers
In giving us our very lives
In nurturing our bodies and souls
In guiding us with their special and unique wisdom
In demonstrating confidence, courage, and persistence
In modeling the many significant ways
through which we can contribute to community life
In passing down to us the heritage of family members
that preceded them
And in reaching down two, possibly three generations,
And sometimes even four
To illustrate the value of accumulated experience
And to serve as an exemplar of optimism and hope
So that we will teach future generations
About the meaning of their presence
and their legacy
In our lives.
God, bless our mothers who are among us now,
And those who came before
Who have led us to discover new ways
To understand the essence of our existence
Which is embodied in Your enduring Oneness
And embedded in Your daily renewal of creation.