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A nonprofit, independent news source to inform, inspire, educate and connect the St. Louis Jewish community.

St. Louis Jewish Light

A nonprofit, independent news source to inform, inspire, educate and connect the St. Louis Jewish community.

St. Louis Jewish Light

A nonprofit, independent news source to inform, inspire, educate and connect the St. Louis Jewish community.

St. Louis Jewish Light

Dvar Torah

Rabbi Neal Rose

Pandemic ‘Tales of Gratitude’ can bring us together

By Rabbi Neal RosePublished January 14, 2021

This week’s Torah reading describes the first seven of the 10 plagues that were intended to demonstrate how the power of the God of Israel surpasses that of Pharaoh and a host of lesser Egyptian gods and goddesses. At first, it appears that these...

Rabbi Rachel Bearman

Torah gives us role models to be righteous upstanders

BY RABBI RACHEL K. BEARMANPublished January 7, 2021

After I graduated from college, I spent a year working for Facing History and Ourselves, an international organization whose mission is to use lessons of history to challenge teachers and their students to stand up to bigotry and hate.One of Facing History’s...

Rabbi Lane Steinger serves Shir Hadash Reconstructionist Community in St. Louis.

We pray 2021 will be a year of true kindness

BY RABBI LANE STEINGERPublished January 1, 2021

I write this message during a season of endings. The secular year is coming to its close, and this Shabbat we fittingly will read the concluding parashah of B’reyshit, the Book of Genesis. Our Torah Reading is Va-y’chi, Genesis 47:28-50:26, which...

Rabbi Garth Silberstein serves Bais Abraham Congregation and is a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical and Cantorial Association, which coordinates the d’var Torah for the Jewish Light.

All Jews share responsibility for, fate of one another

BY RABBI GARTH SILBERSTEINPublished December 23, 2020

There is an important principle in Jewish law, which states that all Jews are responsible for one another: Kol Yisrael Areivim Zeh BaZeh. This idea was perhaps first demonstrated by Yehudah, who, as we read in last week’s parsha, told his father,...

Rabbi Carnie Shalom Rose is The Rabbi Bernard Lipnick Senior Rabbinic Chair at Congregation B’nai Amoona and a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical and Cantorial Association.

It’s more than OK to be proud to be Jewish

By Rabbi Carnie Shalom RosePublished December 17, 2020

How much attention do you pay to your dreams? Clearly, the Pharaoh of Egypt (and his courtiers, as we heard in last week’s Torah Portion!) took their (and the Pharaoh’s!) dreams very seriously.  And in this week’s Parashah of Miketz, the Torah...

Rabbi James Stone Goodman

Parashat Vayeshev: No settling down in this, or any, era

By Rabbi James Stone GoodmanPublished December 10, 2020

In our book this week, father Jacob thought he was going to settle down, so he sent me after my brothers.I couldn’t find them but I go when called. I wouldn’t make so much of that I don’t have the energy to be anywhere else. My present is demanding...

Rabbi Michael Dolgin

When do we know we’ve completed the struggle?

By Rabbi Michael DolginPublished December 3, 2020

In Parashat Vayishlach, Jacob receives a new name that becomes the name of the Jewish people: Israel.This moment in Genesis 32 is essential to every generation, especially in the fraught times in which we live. Jacob faces what he believes is an existential...

Rabbi Carnie Shalom Rose is The Rabbi Bernard Lipnick Senior Rabbinic Chair at Congregation B’nai Amoona and a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical and Cantorial Association.

True, mature faith has no place for quid pro quos

By Rabbi Carnie Shalom RosePublished November 25, 2020

Jacob left Beersheba and set out for Charan. He came upon a certain place and stopped there for the night, for the sun had set. Taking one of the stones of that place, he put it under his head and lay down in that place. He had a dream; a stairway was...

Rabbi Jeffrey Abraham serves Congregation B’nai Amoona and is a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical and Cantorial Association, which coordinates the d’var Torah for the Jewish Light.

May we be thankful for what we have

By Rabbi Jeffrey AbrahamPublished November 19, 2020

Here we are in the Jewish calendar with no holidays. The month of Cheshvan that just ended is at times referred to as Mar Cheshvan, or Bitter Cheshvan, by virtue of the absence of any holidays.  It is precisely during this time period that we have the...

Rabbi Neal Rose

From tent to sacred domain

By Rabbi Neal RosePublished November 11, 2020

Inter-generationality is the major theme of this week’s Torah reading, Chayei Sarah.  The narrative begins with the death and burial of our matriarch, Sarah.  It then continues highlighting the marriage of Isaac and Rebeccah, the inheritors of the...

Rabbi Noah Arnow of Kol Rinah

Performing hospitality mitzvah in a COVID world

Rabbi Noah ArnowPublished November 5, 2020

When was the last time you had guests?  It’s been so long since we’ve had anyone over that I can’t even remember. And when someone does come into our house, even for a moment, we all suddenly put on masks: We all cover our faces, our noses, our...

Rabbi Carnie Shalom Rose

Parashat Lech-Lecha – With ‘wonder and amazement,’ we see hope within chaos

By Rabbi Carnie Shalom RosePublished October 28, 2020

“The Eternal One said to Abram: Go forth from your native land…to the place that I will show you”. (Genesis 12:1)This Shabbat, we will once again read the well-known Parashat Hashavua of Lech-Lechah, which includes the Divine’s call to our ancestor...

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