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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 Dale Schreiber is a chaplain providing Jewish care coordination for Pathways Hospice and Palliative Care and has a private practice, Renewal-in-Action, specializing in resiliency, spiritual development and compassion fatigue recovery.

Sarah’s story gives us strength, comfort and joy

BY RABBI DALE SCHREIBERPublished November 8, 2017

The biblical story of Abraham and his wife, Sarah, culminates in this week’s portion Chayei Sarah.  Their status as patriarch and matriarch are supreme among other biblical characters.  The very first prayer of the Amidah (Standing Prayer), said three...

Maharat Rori Picker Neiss is executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council. 

When Abraham ‘truly wakes up’

BY MAHARAT RORI PICKER NEISSPublished November 2, 2017

It isn’t easy to wake up in the morning. In this week’s Torah portion, the Torah describes for us three times that Abraham arose in the morning, each for a task more difficult than the last. The first time is in connection with the destruction of...

Rabbi Justin Kerber

Torah portion has ironic parallels for the Iran nuclear deal

BY RABBI JUSTIN KERBERPublished October 25, 2017

I find it hard to believe that this week’s Torah portion, Lekh L’kha, is all about international relations. But it deals with immigration and emigration, hostage taking and rescue, alliances, warfare and conflict resolution. Abram, Sarai and company...

Rabbi Justin Kerber

The role of privilege in our violent world

BY RABBI JUSTIN KERBERPublished October 19, 2017

I’m scared. Wherever I look, violence threatens. New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof speaks about his recent trip to North Korea and why the prospect of nuclear conflict is terrifyingly real. The Times reports how soldiers of the military of...

Orrin Krublit is assistant rabbi at Congregation B’nai Amoona and a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical Association. 

Look to the light in this new year

BY RABBI ORRIN KRUBLITPublished October 11, 2017

For many of us, beginnings can be simultaneously exciting and challenging. There are many “new starts” that we face throughout our lives: new schools, new years, new careers, new family members and more. Some people may approach these opportunities...

Rabbi Brigitte Rosenberg

Include ‘spiritual’ friends on Sukkot guest list

BY RABBI BRIGITTE ROSENBERGPublished October 4, 2017

This week, we celebrate Sukkot. It is a festival in which we celebrate and give thanks for the bounty and blessings in our lives and, of course, we get to spend time outdoors as we dwell in sukkot. Sukkot is also a festival that celebrates hachnasat...

Learning from Yom Kippur to stand as one

BY RABBI JAMES STONE GOODMANPublished September 27, 2017

Said Rav Hama, son of R. Hanina: Great is the transformation, for it brings healing to the world (B. Yoma 86a). In the Yom Kippur machzor (prayer book, a cycle), a well-known prayer begins the evening liturgy: In the yeshivah [study hall] on high and...

Elizabeth Hersh is Senior Rabbi at Temple Emanuel.

The difference between remembering, forgetting

BY RABBI ELIZABETH HERSHPublished September 20, 2017

Ha’azinu is a lesson about remembering and forgetting. While this Torah portion includes a piece of poetry, one may suggest that the entire Torah is poetry. Rabbi Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin (1817-1893) wrote: “One of the distinguishing marks of poetry...

Rabbi Dale Schreiber is a chaplain providing Jewish care coordination for Pathways Hospice and Palliative Care and has a private practice, Renewal-in-Action, specializing in resiliency, spiritual development and compassion fatigue recovery.

Sing a song of holiness

BY RABBI DALE SCHREIBERPublished September 13, 2017

Netzavim-Vayelech is a double portion, although the tradition treats them like conjoined twins, inextricably linked. Netzavim  (stand) and Veyelech (go out) are bookends.  They are read just short of the High Holiday when we gather to do the work that...

Rabbi Shulamit Cenker, M.Ed., was ordained by the Hebrew Seminary, a rabbinical school for the deaf and hearing, in Skokie, Ill. She completed a year of postordination learning at the Conservative Yeshiva in Jerusalem before moving to St Louis in early 2016. Rabbi Cenker teaches adults beginner and intermediate Hebrew for the Center for Jewish Learning of the Jewish Federation of St Louis and is a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical Association.

Curses and beliefs: To what do we attest?

BY RABBI SHULAMIT CENKERPublished September 7, 2017

It’s Elul. In Parshat Ki Tavo, as the Israelites are nearing the end of the journey from slavery in Egypt to freedom in Eretz Yisrael, G-d instructs Moshe to tell the people to enter the Promised Land: “You are entering a land of milk and honey …...

Benjamin Chaidell is the Rabbi Bernard Lipnick Rabbinic Intern at Congregation B’nai Amoona and is a member of the St. Louis Rabbinical Association.

Debate for the sake of heaven and those in need

By Benjamin ChaidellPublished August 30, 2017

Many of the hot-button political issues today relate to how we assist those on the margins of society. Refugees, government subsidized health care and social welfare programs are issues that divide Republicans and Democrats, liberals and conservatives.I...

Rabbi James Stone Goodman serves Congregation Neve Shalom and is a past president of the St. Louis Rabbinical Association. 

What’s the blessing, what’s the curse

By Rabbi James Stone GoodmanPublished August 17, 2017

See, I have set before you this day, a blessing and a curse.  — Deuteronomy 11:26.Parashat Re’eh opens with part of the farewell speech of Moses, here perched at the edge of the Promised Land, knowing that he is not destined to take us into the land. He...

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