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"To be a teacher in the right sense is to be a learner.  I am not a teacher, only a fellow student."  (Soren Kierkegaard)

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Service Schedule

May 14th May 20th

Mon. — Thurs. Evenings
6:00pm
Wed & Thurs Mornings
7:00am
Sunday Morning
8:00am
 
Friday, May 18th
Drum Circle
6:00pm
Candlelighting
7:41pm
 
Saturday, May 19th
Shabbat Services
9:15am
Havdallah
8:41pm
   
Upcoming Events
5/14 Israeli Dance
5/15 Meditation Group
5/16 Limmud
5/17 Lunch and Learn
5/18 Drum Circle
5/19 Anniversary/Bday Shabbat
5/13 Men's Club Minyan
5/19 Anniversary/Bday Shabbat
5/20 Tora Fund Brunch
5/26 Tikkun Leyl Shavuot
5/27 Shavuot
5/28 Shavuot
6/2 Starbucks Shabbat

 

RH 1 - The Battle Against Bitterosity

Strings Attached, 2nd Day RH 2010

KN 2010

YK Day 2010 Justice & Change

Archived Articles:

Good and Evil
Psalms On Our Tongues
Memorial
Torah
Ties That Bind
Happy Birthday Rabbi!
Sderot Journey
Shabbat Hachodesh
Seder 09
June 20, 2009
July 4, 2009
July 18, 2009
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August 14, 2009
August 28, 2009
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May 17, 2012

RH Day 1 Sermon - 2011
RH Day 2 Sermon - 2011
Kol Nidre Sermon - 2011
Yom Kippur Sermon - 2011


A FEW PRE-SHABBAT WORDS FROM RABBI AARON

The Road

This Shabbat we close Bamidbar, the fourth book of the Torah. The title of the parasha is quite instructive: Massei literally means "the journeys of...". These are the journeys of the Israelites. We encounter a long list of place names, places where the people encamped during the wilderness trek. Why does the writer place such importance upon leaving us an extensive itinerary? If we were driving across the country, would it be important to make note of each rest-stop, each restaurant, each hotel stop, each gas station? After all, we're focused on "getting there" - who really cares about every stop along the journey?

A few iconic titles of pop tunes come to mind: “The Long and Winding Road” (Beatles), and “Truckin'” (Grateful Dead). Each song highlights the journey itself. The listener is invited to reflect upon our road which leads "both cursed and charmed" (to quote Bruce Springsteen and Emmylou Harris). In a beautiful set of eulogy remarks during the funeral for Sy Rosenberg, Cantor Samberg parsed the opening verses of this parasha, and posed this question: does the man make the journey and its experiences, or does the journey and its events shape the man? Great food for thought - I would think:  it goes both ways for most of us. All manner of things large and small shape us along the way - a pivotal conversation, an important book, an intriguing film, the special people who change our lives (in ways we cannot imagine). And we chart a course, make a plan, build upon a dream. How all those variables unfold - all those unknowables add up to massei b'nei yisrael, the journeys of our ancestors - and our long strange trip, as well. Sure, the destination, the promised land - that drives us through the ups and downs. But there is great Torah that can only be learned On the Road.

Shabbat Shalom

Rabbi Aaron

 

Click any of the images below to view the complete pdf file (some pdf files are more than one page)

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Note from Rabbi Aaron Kol Foods