Yesterday’s Torah reading on the subject of the Yefat To’ar – the beautiful captive – took on an acute relevance this year in light of the recent Eilat rape which has horrified Israel. Statistics released in news reports connected to the rape (as well as those reporting the recent #MeToo revelations) demonstrate that what might have once been regarded as unpleasant isolated incidents are actually symptoms of a widespread societal sickness.
Thursday, 11 July 2024
Yefat to'ar and contemporary sexual violence
Torah, science and coping with the limits of our knowledge
Knowledge is a highly treasured commodity -- and we believe that the Torah was composed by the ultimate source of knowledge. For many, therefore, there is a keen expectation that familiarity with the Torah’s text and laws grants one an automatic and profound insight into the truths and mysteries of the universe. Such an expectation however is not easily compatible with a verse in this parashat Nitzavim: a verse which forms the basis of that week’s discussion in Judaism Reclaimed:
“The hidden matters are for Hashem our God, and the revealed matters are for us and our descendants forever to perform all the words of God.”
Rosh Hashanah prayer: is God listening?
As we ready ourselves for the upcoming Rosh Hashanah shul-marathon, it is striking how much the Jewish new year is characterised and dominated by prayer. Yet when we set aside the haunting traditional melodies and important communal aspects of the Rosh Hashanah services, the concept of praying to God is one that many people seem to find challenging.
to infuse oneself with Divine ideas. Jewish prayer is not an outpouring from within oneself; rather it means infusing the heart with truths that come from outside of oneself. If prayer were merely an expression of what the heart already feels, prescribed prayer…at fixed times would be absurd. For such prayer would assume that certain emotions could be present on demand at predetermined times. Instead, “hitpallel” means to steep oneself with lasting, eternal truths because they are likely to fade away from one’s consciousness.
Know that the intended function of all of these acts of worship such as reading from the Law and prayer and performing other commandments is only to train one to be involved in the commands of God and to free oneself from worldly matters …You should empty your thoughts of all matters when you read the Shema and pray
Rosh Hashanah: how new is the Jewish New Year?
“Blast [a word that shares the same root as teruah] with trumpets and the sound of a shofar before God the King....Before the Lord, for He has come to judge the earth; He will judge the inhabited world justly...”
Wednesday, 10 July 2024
Calendar complications and second day celebrations
As I sit writing this post in Jerusalem, I imagine that a significant proportion of its eventual readers has recently emerged from “Two-day Yom Tov” – a second day of festive Sukkot celebrations and restrictions. The institution of second day Yom Tov for those living outside of Israel, which was decreed by one of the last sitting Sanhedrins, is at the heart of debates between traditionalists and modernisers of the Jewish world.
Nechemiah's Sukkot celebration: not since the times of Yehoshua bin Nun?
Nechemiah’s description of the Sukkot celebration as something that “the Children of Israel had not done so since the days of Yehoshua bin Nun,” raises profound questions. As a Gemara asks: “Is it possible that [King] David came and yet [the Jews] did not perform Sukkot until the days of Ezra?” We can add to the Gemara’s example many more righteous rulers such as Shmuel, Shlomo, Josiah and Hezekiah who were lauded by the prophets for their punctilious observance and teaching of the Torah and under whose reign it would therefore seem inexplicable for the festival of Sukkot not to have been celebrated as mandated by the Torah.
[The people] made sukkot, each man on his roof, and in their courtyards, in the courtyards of the Temple of God, in the plaza of the Water Gate and in the plaza of the Gate of Ephraim. The entire congregation that returned from the captivity made sukkot and dwelt in sukkot. The children of Israel had not done so from the days of Joshua ben Nun until that day…
Articles of faith: approaches to biblical criticism
For many years, Rabbi Gil Student's Hirhurim blog and social media activity has been at the forefront of online Orthodox discussion a...
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In a popular post last month, this group explored a suggestion (advanced by the Seforno and developed by Rabbi S. R. Hirsch) that God’s init...
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One of the primary themes of Talmud Reclaimed is the exploration of how and why the study of Talmud has evolved over the 1500 or so year...
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It is understandable that, in Torah portions containing key events such as the founding covenants of our nation and God’s command for Yitzch...