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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

Judaism

Rabbi Scott Slarskey

The enduring power of the ‘Ten Utterances’

By Rabbi Scott SlarskeyPublished February 4, 2015

Do you know the Ten Utterances (sometimes called the Ten Commandments, even though they contain within them more than 10 discrete imperatives)? Do you believe it is worth knowing the Ten Utterances, or are you even aware of the story of the giving of...

Engaging young adults during odyssey years

By Rabbi Jonah ZinnPublished January 21, 2015

Today’s college graduates are moving back home after graduation in far greater numbers than even a decade ago. This trend, scholars suggest, is a sign of a new life phase known as odyssey. Over the past generation, the typical stages of life have gone...

Parashat Vaera: We are chosen, and we have work to do

BY RABBI TRACY NATHANPublished January 14, 2015

By Rabbi Tracy Nathan Exodus is called the Book of Names in Hebrew (Shemot), and Parashat Vaera continues to remind us of the value of names. At the end of last week’s Torah reading, Pharaoh responds to God’s call to release the Israelites by making...

Rabbi Jim Bennett

Parashat Shemot: ‘Unto every person there is a name’

By Rabbi Jim BennettPublished January 8, 2015

“These are the names of the Children of Israel …” With these words, the book of Exodus begins. And with the recitation of the names, we encounter a new chapter in the life of our people and our history. We move beyond the family drama of the book...

Rabbi Mark Shook

Choices we make determine quality of life

By Rabbi Mark L. ShookPublished December 31, 2014

A very wise person once said: “The definition of a dysfunctional family was any family that had more than one member in it.”  Our Patriarch, Jacob/Israel, presided over a very dysfunctional family. Just how dysfunctional his family was is laid out...

After Hanukkah, lights may fade, but hope remains

By Rabbi Amy FederPublished December 24, 2014

Hanukkah is behind us, yet we are still entrenched in the winter holiday season and everything it brings.  For some of us, that means parties, celebrations and happy homecomings.  Yet for just as many of us, and for mirrored reasons, this is one of...

Parashat Vayeshev: Speaking with peace

By Rabbi Brad HorwitzPublished December 10, 2014

Parashat Vayeshev recounts the story of Joseph and his brothers.  Jacob loved Joseph and favored him over all his other sons. He made him a special ornamental coat, symbolic of this favoritism. Joseph’s brothers became jealous and hateful of Joseph....

Parashat Vayishlach: Facing faces

By Rabbi Noah ArnowPublished December 3, 2014

When was the last time you really stared into another person*s eyes?  If you can remember that moment, what were you thinking?  And did you say what you were thinking?  Staring into someone*s eyes is among the more intimate ways humans can interact. ...

Rabbi Josef A. Davidson serves Congregation B’nai Amoona.

Parashat Toldot: If so, why do I exist?

By Rabbi Josef A. DavidsonPublished November 19, 2014

In psychological lingo there is a term for an inner conflict between two opposing ideas, desires or needs.  When one experiences this conflict, it is called consonant dissonance.  It is characterized by a figure in the middle of two poles, first moving...

Rabbi Micah Buck-Yael

A time to open doors and hearts

By Rabbi Micah Buck-YaelPublished November 12, 2014

This week, as we look in to the Torah, we find a reading that takes us through numerous losses. The parashah opens with the death of Sarah, our first mother, and it closes with the deaths of Abraham and Ishmael, our first father and our first brother....

D’var Torah: Abraham’s hospitality is an example to be emulated

By Rabbi Lane SteingerPublished November 5, 2014

Va-yeyra, our Torah Portion this week, is packed full of fascinating episodes. It contains the narrative of the extraordinary visit to Abraham and Sarah and announcement that the aged Matriarch will give birth “when life is due.” The parashah continues...

Tohu va’vohu – the paradox of chaos

By Rabbi James M. BennettPublished October 15, 2014

Beginning Hebrew students in Israel experience many humorous moments encountering the Hebrew language.  One of my favorites is a story a classmate told of picking grapefruit on a kibbutz.  My friend was surrounded by fallen grapefruit in disarray and...

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