Parashat Hukath

We look forward to seeing you all this Friday night, June 27 at 7pm for our lovely Kaballat Shabbat services.

Saturday June 28, we will hold our Shabbat morning services, starting at 9am, with the Torah service at approximately 9:45am. This week the Koeller family is sponsoring the kidush after services in honor of Kevin’s birthday – mazal tov to you and thank you for all you do.  We hope you all can join us. This is also a special Shabbat in which several of our congregants again read from the Torah.

Sunday June 29th, there will be no Intro to Judaism class. The class will continue on July 13th.

Please note, that although next Friday night is July 4th, come rain or shine or even fireworks, we will still be welcoming in Shabbat at the regular time.

Cantor Ben-Moshe’s Weekly Message:

This week’s parshah, Hukath, includes the record of the death of Miriam the Prophetess, older sister of Aharon and Moshe.  The Torah relates in the next paragraph that the People of Israel didn’t have water, and began complaining of thirst.  This juxtaposition led the Midrash to posit that there was a miraculous well which followed B’nei Yisrael in the Wilderness during Miriam’s lifetime, and which disappeared after her death.  In recognition of the vital role which Miriam played in the Exodus and the period of wa ndering, many Jews now place a cup of water on the table at the Passover Seder, in memory of Miriam’s well and in honor of the leadership of Miriam. As her life was a blessing to the People of Israel, may the courage and leadership of Jewish women throughout the ages be a blessing and an inspiration to us.  Shabbat Shalom. Hazzan Yitzhak Ben-Moshe

Rabbi Tarlow of Texas A&M’s Center for Crypto Judaism Weekly Parasha:

This week’s parashah presents us with one of Hebrew Scripture’s most perplexing sections. The section’s name is “Chukat (law of.. )” and you will find it in the Book of Numbers 19:1-22:1. This week’s section deals with three issues that at first glance seem to be unrelated: (1) the issue of the “parah adumah” or as it is know in English “the red heifer,” (2) the death sentence imposed by G’d on Moses and Aaron, and (3) the copper snake that will serve to heal the nation of illnesses brought about by poisonous snake bites.  In other words in each case there is a crisis and a remedy found within the crisis.  Throughout the parashah one overriding question seems to dominate the text: How do we trust G’d even when we do not understand what is happening?  When is trust appropriate and when is it foolish?

Trust is a difficult concept to comprehend.  It tales years to develop trust and only a few seconds to lose it.  Is trust a return to an almost Eden-like state of innocence or naivete? Without proper communication does trust die?  It is noteworthy that the word  “Parah Adumah” (Red Heifer) is, in linguistic terms, closely related to the “Parah Masechah/the Golden (Molten) Calf”.  Additionally, the term “nachash (snake)” reminds us of the snake with poisonous words in the Garden of Eden.  Now the copper snake will cure the people of the poison introduced into their bodies due to a their lack of trust in G’d.  How come? What is the connection? Is the text using a “how” rather than a “what” to teach us an eternal insight into the nature of humanity?

What the text may be teaching us then, is that trust placed in the right sources can lead to holiness and goodness, but trust misplaced leads to sin and destruction. Is this text teaching us something about leadership and reminding us that leaders who believe they are gods poison a society?   Is trusting an issue of in what we trust, how we trust, of where we place our trust?  Is trust a concept that matures with time, that is as we mature we trust may trust people less and trust G’d more, or does trust lie outside of our personal time?  Might it be that this week’s lesson in the subtlest of ways is about Israel’s growth from teenager toward adulthood?

Perhaps this week’s section is a way to remind us that the difference between an adult and a teenager is not in the body’s development but in the development of personal character. To be an adult is to know how to limit oneself. to know whom to trust and who not to trust.  When does too much trust makes us naive and when too little trust makes us cynical?  Might the lessons of the Red Heifer be teaching us that we need to judge people and leaders not by what they say, but rather by what they do?  How gullable are we?  How do we learn when to trust and when not to trust?  What do you think?

Friday services – Parashat Korah

 

Chaverim/ Dear Congregants,
We would love you all to join us tonight, Friday June 20 at 7pm for our inspiring Kabalat Shabbat services.
Sunday at the JCC, there is another in the popular summer Splash Bashes!  The event is free and open to the community.  There will be kosher food for purchase, sno-cones, swimming and bouncy water slides!  We hope you can bring your familes.
Sunday afternoon June 22,  at 3:30 pm at Beth El we continue our journey exploring the rich culture, religion and heritage of the Jewish people with Cantor Ben-Moshe and his wonderful Intro to Judaism class.
Our next Saturday morning services are in a week’s time, Saturday, June 28.
We wish you a peaceful Shabbat and we pray, along with the Jewish community in Israel and worldwide, for the safe and speedy return of our three kidnapped boys in Israel, Naftali Fraenkel (16), Gilad Shaar (16) and Eyal Yifrah (19).  
Hazzan Ben-Moshe’s Weekly message:
 This week’s parshah, Korah, deals with a serious challenge to the leadership of Moshe and Aharon-their cousin, Korah, challenges them for the religious leadership of the People of Israel, while Dathan and Aviram of the tribe of Re’uven claim political primacy.  While the rebels cloak their rebellion in high-sounding words, saying that all of the People are holy, so who are Moshe and Aharon to claim leadership-it is clear that their real motivation is a sense of entitlement.  Korah feels entitled to leadership because, as the Midrash tells us, he is the richest of all the Israelites (“as rich as Korah” is a common phrase in Hebrew even today).  Dathan and Aviram seem to think that because they are descended from Re’uven, Ya’acov’s first-born, that leadership is theirs by right.  This sort of thinking is dangerous, of course.  No one is inherently entitled to leadership, but rather one becomes a leader (ideally) because of one’s talents.  Furthermore, leadership should only be taken up for the right reasons. As Rabban Gamliel son of Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi would say, “Let all who work for the community do so for the sake of Heaven, and thus the merit of their ancestors will aid them and their righteousness will endure forever”. (Pirkei Avoth, 2:2).  May all who exercise authority do so for the sake of Heaven, and not out of a sense of entitlement.  Shabbat Shalom
Weekly Torah Portion from Rabbi Peter Tarlow of  Texas A&M Center for Crypto Judaism.

This week’s Torah portion is one of the Bible’s most interesting sections. It is also perhaps one of its most relevant to our modern world.  Called Korach after the name of the failed coup d’état’s leader, you will find it in the Book of Numbers 16:1-18:30.
In this week’s portion we read about Korach’s attempt to overthrow Moses. Korach comes close to bringing the nation to a state of civil war.  As in all revolutions, Korach bases his revolt around an ideology that at first appears to be “fair” but upon deeper reflection we soon discover that his policies would lead to anything but fairness.  Korach’s argument is based around the principal that: “col ha’edah culam kdoshim/all of the members of the community are holy”. At first Korach’s proposition appears to be reasonable, but upon further examination we soon discover that it is political theater that in which not only are all people are presumed to have the same skills, but talent is sacrificed to expediency
Korach supposedly fought for social and power redistribution.  Yet if we read his words carefully it becomes clear that what Korach was really suggesting was a return to anarchy. In Korach’s world there would be no difference between equity and equality.  In other words, Korach wanted a world in which to excel is to be unfair to others; a world in which life would be lived at the level of the lowest denominator, and where creativity should be replaced by conformity.  His statement that we are all holy demonstrates the fallacy in his thought.  To be holy is to be special; if all are holy then none are holy. That is the reason that we derive the Hebrew word for holy (kadosh) from the root K-d-Sh meaning to “set apart”. From this same root we derive words such as Kiddush, the prayer over wine and kiddushin meaning marriage. In all cases we make something holy, special, by setting it apart.
The Bible tells us that Moses’ and G’d’s reaction to Korach’s revolt was swift and precise, the social cancer would be totally eliminated.  Is the Torah teaching us that unless we fight a war to win it, then it is better not be involved?  Is the text teaching us that leaders who live in a world of the make-believe or “shoulds”, rather than in the world of “is” in the long run cause more harm than good?  Does this week’s parashah teach us that the consequences of a leader’s mistakes are visited upon the innocent and the guilty alike?
The text clearly does not mean to imply that G’d was pleased by the innocent shedding of blood, but rather it is teaching us that: leaders must be extremely careful in what they do and do not do, that we must be wise enough to look beyond the political rhetoric and realize that words unexamined may lead to tragedies that impact generations to come.
What do you think? Do you agree with the rabbinic interpretation that living in a world of “should” rather than “is” creates a perception of weakness permitting evil to turn into bloodshed?

Parashat Shlach Lecha – Weekend Services

Chaverim/ Dear Friends,

We hope you can make services tonight, Friday June 13th at 7pm.

Tomorrow morning, Saturday June 14, starting at 9am, we have our Shabbat morning services.  We will have a Torah reading at approximately 9:45 am and a children’s story time too. We are very grateful to Hal and Elaine Jacobs who are sponsoring a very special Father’s Day kidush in honor of their family Hannah, Jo and David.  Please join us for a delicious kidush and weekend of inspiring services.

Sunday June 15, at 3:30pm, we continue our Intro to Judaism class at Beth El.  This class is open to all in the community and it is not too late to join.

Cantor Ben-Moshe’s Weekly Message:

This week we read in Parshat Sh’lah L’kha of the major turning point of the narrative of the People of Israel in the desert-their condemnation to an us  generation of wandering before reaching the Promised Land.  To me, this parshah equals the conclusion of the Torah, with its tale of the death of Moses on the borders of the Land, within sight of his goal.  To come so close, and to be so far away, is heartbreaking.  Unfortunately, it seems that B’nei Yisrael weren’t spiritually equipped to enter the Land of Israel- sometimes, there needs to be a transitional generation between slavery and true freedom.  The bodies of the Israelites were liberated, but slavery still had too strong a hold on their minds.  We know that early trauma can have a lasting effect on a person’s psyche.  It goes without saying that We should all be careful to avoid inflicting such harm, but we should also do everything within our power to help those who have so suffered, so that they can reach towards their full potential.  Shabbat Shalom.

From Rabbi Peter Tarlow of Texas A&M Center for Crypto Judaism

This week’s Torah section is: “Sh’lach L’chah meaning: Send forth”.  You will find it in the Book of Numbers 13:1-15:41.  Reading this week’s parashah we cannot help but connect its name to an earlier section found in Genesis: “Lech L’chah meaning Go forth”.  In Lech l’chah G’d tells Abraham to change the place where he lives and to change his life. In this week’s parashah, it is not G’d commanding Abraham to move but Moses who commands the Israelites to send forth twelve spies to scout out the land that generations back G’d had given to the people of Israel.  In the case of Lech l’chah, Abraham obeys the command, successfully moves from Ur to Canaan and from moral darkness to spiritual light.  In this week’s case, the twelve spies will fail.  It is fear and lack of faith in themselves and in G’d that will turn success into failure.


Are not these two Torah portions different sides of the same coin?  Both leaving Ur and Sinai required acts of courage and the need to leave the familiar and accept risk. Both Bible portions share a common theme: that without an optimistic sense of faith, we lack the courage to dream and thus become eternal slaves of fear.


In this week’s section the text teaches us that ten of the spies brought back a highly negative

and pessimistic report stating: the enemy is too strong, the land cannot be conquered. From their perspective Jewish history would die before it was born. As in the case of most pessimists they were excellent in presenting the problem, but offered no alternative solution. Pessimists, despite what they may claim, tend to become frozen in their fear of success.

Realistic optimists take a very different approach to life. Thus, two of the twelve spies take state: “Im chafetz banu ha’Shem v’hevi otanu el ha’aretz ha’zot utnah lanu eretz asher hi zavat chalav udvash/if the Lord so desires it, then He will bring us into this land and give it to us, for it is a land flowing with milk and honey.” (14:8). The two positive spikes knew the task would not be easy but with strength of faith and a sense of dedication G’d would not abandon them and they would succeed. These two spies, Caleb and Joshua, teach us an important lesson: Pessimism accomplishes nothing.  Indeed, pessimists not only hold themselves back, but also destroy the spirit of those with whom they associate. Pessimists are not realists. Realists offer solutions, pessimists  offer only fear but never alternative solutions.

Judaism is not a religion for pessimists. We Jews are commanded to be persons of faith; not to be deniers of faith. Judaism insists that we have faith in oneself and in G’d. Is not our history a 5,000 year journey of faith and optimism? Ours is the story of a small people refusing to give into “the reality of the pessimist.”  It was only with faith that even as we faced the horrors of Nazi Europe, we were willing to rebuild a modern nation from the ashes of Europe’s bigotry.
To be an optimist is to sanctify the past and to embrace the future.  As a people of faith we have no other choice then to remember the words of Joshua and Caleb “be strong and to be of good courage” for  like our ancestors in Sinai we have no alternative. Are you a person of optimistic faith or negative pessimism?

Friday night services and Splash Bash

We hope you had a wonderful week and would like to invite you to our Friday night services tonight, June 6th at 7pm.  Our next Saturday morning services are next week, Saturday June 14 at 9am.  This coming Sunday, June 8th at 11am, our Sunday school children and any congregants who  wish to come, will be going to the JCC’s annual Splash Bash party at the pool of the J.  The event is free and open to all in the community.
Shabbat shalom to you all and with deep appreciation of all our World War II veterans who helped liberate Europe on D Day seventy years ago!
Hazzan Ben-Moshe’s Weekly Message:
There is an old expression that someone is”digging their grave with a knife and fork”, which is to say that a person is overindulging in food in an unhealthy way.  This week’s parshah, B’ha’alot’khah, illustrates this saying in a graphic way.  As the People of Israel are moving away from Sinai on their journey through the wilderness, they begin to complain about the monotony of a steady diet of manna, the food which appeared with the morning dew.  They begin to say that they would rather be in Egypt, where they had meat, fish and vegetables (forgetting of course the scanty rations that slaves received).  God gets annoyed and says to Moses,in effect, “They want meat?  Fine, I’ll give them meat!”  The next morning, large numbers of quail appear around the camp, which the Israelites gather and begin to greedily devour.  As the meat is “between their teeth”, God strikes them with a plague in punishment for their ingratitude and greed.  The place is known thereafter as “Kivroth Hata’avah”, “The Graves of Greed”.
Our Torah and our Tradition certainly encourage us to enjoy what we have in this world-Judaism is not a religion of asceticism and self-mortification.  However, we need to indulge our appetites moderately, in a healthy way.   We shouldn’t dig our own “Graves of Greed”, but rather we should strive to live healthy and happy lives, in service to God and in pursuit of righteousness.  Shabbat Shalom.