ROADS CLOSED! This Sunday, October 5th, is the San Jose Rock and Roll Half Marathon. Please allow extra time to get to the synagogue. The Alameda will be closed near the Temple from 8:00 AM to at least 12:00 PM. Please check http://www.rnrsj.com/home.html to see the race map and road closings. Suggested routes: Take Highway 87, exit on Taylor (expect delays on 87N). Go west to Myrtle Street and turn right (North). Or, if you are traveling North on 880, exit on The Alameda and turn right. Make a left turn on W. Hedding Street and then and immediate right turn on Myrtle Street.
UPDATE FOR OCTOBER 2, 2008
In this Update:
Upcoming Services
Sunday Schedule
Adult Education: theres still time to join the classes!
Sunday classes
Wednesday Beit Midrash & Adult Ed
Month of Mindfulness Zen Meditation starts Sunday October 12
Auxiliary Activities
- Torah Portion of the Week
UPCOMING SERVICES
Friday, October 3
6:15 PM Potluck Dinner open to all (RSVP to the Temple office)
7:15 PM Erev Shabbat Family Service/Shabbat Shuvah
Students in 7th grade will be leading in the service.
Boards of the synagogue and auxiliaries will be installed.
Saturday, October 4
9:00 AM Shabbat Morning Minyan led by Rabbi Magat and Cantor Intern Simerly
Sunday, October 5
1:00 PM Kever Avot Service led by Rabbi Dana Magat and Cantor Intern Meeka Simerly
at Oak Hill Memorial Park, Chapel of the Roses (300 Curtner Avenue, corner of Monterey Road, San Jose)
Wednesday, October 8 Kol Nidre
No Wednesday Hebrew or TJS classes this week
6:00 PM Family Alternative Service (1st grade and up)
8:00 PM Kol Nidre Service
Thursday, October 9 Yom Kippur Day (Temple offices/Preschool closed)
9:00 AM Childrens Service (Preschool Kindergarten)
10:00 AM Yom Kippur Morning Congregational Service/Gesher Program
12:30 PM Sermon Discussion with Rabbi Magat
1:00 PM Social Action/Tikkun Olam Committee Discussion
2:00 PM Yom Kippur Afternoon Service, including Healing Service and Haftarah
3:30 PM Musical Interlude
4:30 PM Concluding Service, Yizkor, Neilah and Havdallah followed by Break the Fast
Monday, October 13
5:30 PM Bring your own dinner: eat in the Sukkah
6:30 PM Erev Sukkot Service (in the Sukkah)
Tuesday, October 14
8:00 AM Sukkot Morning Service
Monday, October 20
6:30 PM Erev Simchat Torah Service and Consecration of students new to our Religious School
Come see a Torah scroll unrolled around the sanctuary and hear the end of Deuteronomy and the beginning of Genesis as we celebrate the never-ending cycle of Torah.
Tuesday, October 21
8:00 AM Simchat Torah Morning Service and Yizkor
Sunday Schedule: October 5
9:00 AM Hebrew Classes/Confirmation
10:00 AM Sisterhood Coffee and Shmooze in the Cottage
10:15 AM Jewish Studies
10:15 AM Adult Intermediate Hebrew Conversation
10:15 AM Wisdom of Heschel (Cantor Unterman)
10:30 AM Adult Aleph Hebrew (introductory)
11:30 AM One Heart, Two Homes: Israel and the Sacred Identity of American Jews (Rabbi Magat)
11:30 AM Jewish Ethics (Cantor Unterman)
1:00 PM Kever Avot Service at Oak Hill Memorial Park
Wednesday Adult Ed: resumes October 15
6:15 PM Western Faiths (Cantor Unterman)
7:15 PM Rock and Roll with Rabbi Magat
7:30 PM Eastern Religions (Cantor Unterman)
AUXILIARY ACTIVITIES
Saturday, October 11
6:00 10:00 PM Game Night (sponsored by Sisterhood and Brotherhood)
Bring a game, a snack to share. Suggested donation: $5 per person. Pizza and drinks provided.
Sunday, October 12
9:00 AM Brotherhood Meeting in the Cottage
Sunday, October 19 10:30 AM
Larry Magid, host of CBS radio and TV, noted child safety expert and writer for the SJ Mercury News will speak at Emanu-El on how to keep your children safe online and recognize warning signs or issues. sponsored by Brotherhood. RSVP to brotherhood@templesanjose.org
Saturday, October 25, 2008:
Shabbat in Nature at Sunol Regional Park
Shabbat Morning Service, Potluck Lunch, hikes and more
.
Sunday, October 26
Brotherhood and Sisterhood Trip to the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco
Open to anyone (not necessary to be a Temple, Sisterhood or Brotherhood member but it would be nice if they were). Children under 18 must be accompanied by an adult.
Depart Temple by handicap accessible bus** at 12:45 pm
Return to Temple at approx. 5:30 pm
COST: $15.00 per seat by October 5.
MUSEUM COST:
Admission: $9.00 adult, $7.00 senior, under 18 free, Museum members free.
Our educator-guided tour is at 3:00 pm. and will last approx. 60 minutes. Brotherhood and Sisterhood are hosting the tour which is included in their prepaid museum admission. Spaces are limited.
Saturday, November 8 6:00 10:00 PM
Diaspora Dinner XVI: The Jews and Cuisine of Scandinavia
A five-course gourmet dinner and history presentation by Jonathan Hirshon.
Space is limited to the first 80 diners. Your check ($49 per person) payable to Brotherhood guarantees your spot.
Torah Portion of the Week:
can be found on the URJ website, http://urj.org/torah/
Vayeilech, Deuteronomy 31:130
Shabbat Shuvah, October 4, 2008 / 5 Tishrei, 5769
The Torah: A Modern Commentary, pp.1,5461,554; Revised Edition, pp.1,3861,394;
Haftarah: Hosea 14:210; Micah 7:1820; Joel 2:1527
The Torah: A Modern Commentary, pp.1,6341,638; Revised Edition, pp. 1,4361,440
The Torah: A Women's Commentary, pp. 1,2351,250
D'VAR TORAH |
Vayeilech : Shabbat Shuvah! Be Strong and Resolute"
Carol Ochs
In Vayeilech, the shortest portion in the Torah, Moses tells the people that he will not be leading them into the Land of Israel, per God's instruction; instead, Joshua will lead them (Deuteronomy 31:13). Then God informs Moses that he will soon die and that he should prepare Joshua to lead the people. Must he die before he will reach the goal that has absorbed his entire life! But only of God can it be said that God's work was finished.
By the time we reach a certain age, we know that we are mortal. We have lost grandparents. Later, we lose parents. And, still later, we lose peers. And yet we spend our days as if we were not mortal. We initiate projects, we form relationships even though all we cleave to we must hold very loosely. At some point we will learn that now it is our turn. When we are told that we may look over into the Promised Land but will not reach it, how do we live out our final days? So many of our days have been spent anticipating times to come. Do we know how to live in the present when we have been told we will not be part of the future?
From the beginning of Elul we have been preparing for the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur, which, ritually, is a preparation for death. Some of us actually dress in the kitel that will be our shroud. We do not bathe or eat or engage in sex. What is this annual rehearsal of death really about?
The holy day of Yom Kippur is not about death, but about rebirth. We let die the many ways we have grown callous, been spiritually asleep. Then these twenty-five hours of intense introspection, repentance, and physical affliction bring about liberation, a fresh start, a year new not only in time, but also in the opportunity to start again.
We have, over the course of the past twelve months, gradually grown away from the ideal self who emerged after the last Yom Kippur. Those first few weeks after the High Holy Days had been so promising, but eventually the old bad habits reemerged. These old habits now seem even worse than they were the year before. We feel helpless to overcome them by ourselves. Gritting teeth, making forced promises seems to be inadequate. Judaism is the religion of freedom, but our imprisonment springs from us, our habits, our appetites. And now we reach Shabbat Shuvah, the Sabbath between Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur, and we look to the Torah portion to map our own transformation.
Three times in the portion we read, Be strong and resolute" (Deuteronomy 31:6, 31:7, 31:23). And in verse 31:6 we read, For it is indeed the Eternal your God who marches with you: will not fail you or forsake you." By ourselves we cannot find rebirth. We imprison ourselves. We are tempted to accept our not-so-bad self. But the repeated verse gets our attention: Be strong and resolute." And before we can once again protest our weakness we are assured, It is . . . God who marches with you. will not fail you or forsake you." What has become clear to us over the course of the Ten Days of Repentance is that we can't do it alone. Whether we locate God in our most authentic core, in the interaction with the Jewish community, or in the chain of tradition that makes our personal trials part of the story of the Jewish people, we need to relate our struggle with our people's in order to cross over to the Promised Land.
But how is this portion supposed to guide and reassure us when Moses does not make it to the Promised Land? The line from Pirkei Avot 2:16 reminds us, It is not up to you to finish the work, yet you are not free to avoid it" (trans. Leonard Kravitz and Kerry M. Olitzky, Pirke Avot: A Modern Commentary on Jewish Ethics [New York: UAHC Press, 1993], p. 30).
If we have understood our lives in terms of Torah, and Torah in terms of our lives, then we are ourselves a work in progress. We may not have reached completion, but that cannot keep us from the daily work of transforming ourselves.
Had Moses reached the stage of completion? There is no way we can know. We can only understand how Moses functioned for the Israelites. As long as he was around they were the Children of Israel not yet the full-grown, responsible people who would battle for the Promised Land. Moses rejoined the democracy of those who age and diethe mere mortals who inhabit our Torahreminding us of what mere people can do in alliance with God.
Are we ready now for rebirth? Be strong and resolute." Maybe this year can mark a new way of our being in the world. Maybe with the help of Torah, tradition, and communitymaybe with the help of Godwe can overcome the obstacles that have kept us from becoming our best selves. Maybe now we are ready to enter the Day of Atonement with the sense of hope and confidence that are the core of its message.
Dr. Carol Ochs is director of Graduate Studies and adjunct professor of Jewish Religious Thought at Hebrew Union CollegeJewish Institute of Religion in New York.
DAVAR ACHER |
Re-creating and Reconnecting through T'shuvah
Nancy Kasten
We read this short parashah on Shabbat Shuvah this year during the time that our liturgical tradition is most focused on t'shuvah . How can Parashat Vayeilech contribute to our understanding of and participation in this process of t'shuvah , a term most often translated as repentance" or turning"? In his Hilchot T'shuvah 7:4, Maimonides states:
Let not a penitent imagine to himself that he is distant from the level of the righteous because of the transgressions and sins he has done. It is not so; rather he is beloved and pleasing to the Creator as if he had never ever sinned. Moreover, his reward is greater, for he has tasted the taste of sin and withdrawn from it and overcome his evil urge. Our Sages said that in that place where penitents stand, the completely righteous are unable to stand [Babylonian Talmud, B'rachot 34b]. That is, their level is higher than that of those who have never ever sinned, because they overcome their urge more than the latter.
In this week's parashah, Moses seems to have come to terms with the fact that his life will end before the Israelites enter the Promised Land. He does his best to prepare Joshua and the Israelites for an imminent leadership transition without expressing bitterness or resentment. In this moment, he doesn't rebuke the Israelites for their waywardness or lack of faith. He simply reassures them that God will remain with them no matter what mistakes they may make or transgressions they may commit. He also provides the Israelites with a set time to remind themselves of the understandings that he, Moses, comes to at the end of his life.
This picture of Moses is very different from the one we get of him earlier in his lifea Moses who clings to his authority despite his frustration and impatience with a people whom he sees as noncompliant and self-destructive. Moses almost appears to have re-created himself in this final chapter of his life, perhaps understanding that his own transgressions and mistakes actually have drawn him to a deeper and more profound understanding of God's relationship with him and with future generations of the Jewish people.
In his writings on Shabbat Shuvah, the S'fat Emet refers to those who truly seek forgiveness as m'chadshim , literally renewers" or re-creators." This concept addresses the potential pitfall of Maimonides' perspectivethat we might justify our transgressions by claiming that sinning draws us closer to God and that t'shuvah is about resisting the urge to sin again. By defining true t'shuvah as a process of renewing oneself, the path toward God becomes a path of tikkun of taking ourselves apart and putting ourselves back together to be different than before. Our parashah presents Moses as an example of one who remakes himself even in his last days, when his old self might have been jealous, judgmental, and self-pitying. Instead, through t'shuvah, the repentant, renewed Moses is open, accepting, and connected to God and community.
Rabbi Nancy Kasten is currently teaching classes in the Melton Mini-School, freelancing, and volunteering. She lives in Dallas, Texas, with her husband Rabbi David Stern and their three children.