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254 Broad Avenue Leonia, NJ 07605 201.592.1712

  • June 02, 2022 8:47 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    June 2, 2022

    Dear Friends,
      It has been said that the Torah is the constitution of the Jewish people.
      What does the Torah have in common with the US Constitution, and how does it differ?
      It's a pertinent question to ask as we celebrate Shavuot- the holiday of the giving of the Torah- this weekend, and as we debate how the Supreme Court should interpret the Constitution. 

      We'll consider this question at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM), which will feature an outdoor dairy oneg (cheesecake?) in honor of Shavuot.

       We celebrate the bat mitzvah of Ash Devins at our Shabbat Morning Service (10:00 AM).
       Now how about this- Ash's great grandfather was a rabbi who served Adas Emuno in Hoboken in 1945-46!
       Mazal tov to Ash and her family!

        Ready to read our next book for the Adas Emuno book club next month (July 11)? Dara Horn is one of the best new Jewish novelists, and All Other Nights, is an intriguing and suspenseful spy story set in Civil War New Orleans.

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    For Livestream Services:
    Find all our recorded services on YouTube at "Adas Emuno Streaming" and use this direct link once the service has started: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCftctPu9pRG4bBQCR6RH4Dg/live
  • May 26, 2022 9:32 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    May 26, 2022

    Dear Friends,
      It was fifty years ago next week that Sally Preisand was ordained as the first woman rabbi.
      Today more than half of the graduating rabbinical and cantorial classes of our movement are female, and a whole generation of young people have grown up in this new era.
      We'll mark this momentous anniversary at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM).

       We celebrate the bat mitzvah of Nora Levy at our Shabbat Morning Service (10:00 AM).
       Mazal tov to Nora and her family.

        We have just learned of yet another mass shooting tragedy in a school, casting a pall over a Memorial Day weekend when we pause to remember all those who made the ultimate sacrifice while serving our country. 

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    For Livestream Services:
    Find all our recorded services on YouTube at "Adas Emuno Streaming" and use this direct link once the service has started: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCftctPu9pRG4bBQCR6RH4Dg/live
      
  • May 19, 2022 10:00 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    May 19, 2022

      It's a big weekend: our final family service of the school year, our final Torah study, and our final session of religious school!
      

     Our Shabbat Evening Family Service (7:30 PM) will feature the debut of our new Adas Emuno musical ensemble, featuring Elka Oliver, Peter Hays, Scott Dennis, Scott Avidon, and of course, our cantor Iris Karlin. You won't want to miss it!

      This is also the Confirmation of six graduating students: Myles Beckerman, Noah Gereb, Griffin Lawrence, Matt Priblo, Sasha Raskin, and Hannah Scowden. Mazal tov to all!
      
       We conclude our year long study of “The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel” at Zoom Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM).
     
       And we conclude religious school on Sunday, with heartfelt thanks to students, parents, and teachers.

        At services, at school and at Torah study we persevered through another year of hybrid learning and praying- facing the further waves of  the pandemic with great dedication and spirit. In Hebrew we say, kol hakavod- all honor to you, for a job well done!
        
    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    PS. A Shavuot Cooking Class will take place on Sunday evening (7:00 PM). Look for details in an email tomorrow.

    Our monthly Board meetings are open to all members and take place on the third Thursday of each month (7:30 PM) via Zoom. To receive a link for tonight or any meeting, contact Michael Fishbein.

    For Livestream Services:
    Find all our recorded services on YouTube at "Adas Emuno Streaming" and use this direct link once the service has started: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCftctPu9pRG4bBQCR6RH4Dg/live

  • May 12, 2022 8:31 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    May 12, 2022
    Dear Friends,

       An Israeli astronaut recently visited the International Space Station. It was what he brought on the flight that was most interesting and moving. I'll explain at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM).

        We celebrate the bar mitzvah of Shane Feinstein at our Shabbat Morning Service (9:30 AM- note earlier time), following in his father Andrew's footsteps, who became a bar mitzvah here too! Mazal tov to Shane and his family. 
         
        The Adas Emuno Book Club takes place via zoom on Monday (7:30 PM). Join the discussion on the provocative collection of short stories  For the Relief of Unbearable Urges by Nathan Englander. See the Rabbi’s weekly message for the link.

      
    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    For Livestream Services:
    Find all our recorded services on YouTube at "Adas Emuno Streaming" and use this direct link five minutes before services are scheduked to begin: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCftctPu9pRG4bBQCR6RH4Dg/live

     

  • May 05, 2022 12:07 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    May 5, 2022

    Dear Friends,
      Today is Yom Ha'Atzmaut- Israel Independence Day...the Jewish State's 74th birthday.

      Our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM) will celebrate Israel through words and music. 
      My remarks "Israel Is for the Birds" will particularly interest nature lovers!

       We're coming down the home stretch of our Zoom Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM)- just two sessions remaining- where we look at the fascinating return of  the Jews, under Ezra and Nehemiah, from the Babylonian exile.  
         
        Please note that the next meeting of the Adas Emuno Book Club has been rescheduled for Monday, May 16 (7:30 PM). It's not too late to read the provocative collection of short stories  For the Relief of Unbearable Urges by Nathan Englander.

       And to all our imahot; Happy Mother's Day!

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    For Livestream Services:
    Find all our recorded services on YouTube at "Adas Emuno Streaming" and use this direct link once the service has started: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCftctPu9pRG4bBQCR6RH4Dg/live
  • April 28, 2022 9:12 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    April 28, 2022
    Dear Friends,
      Today is Yom HaShoah- Holocaust Remembrance Day...and the imperative to remember remains as important as ever in our troubled world. 

      Our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM) will remember through words, music and candle lighting. I will comment on a powerful piece in this regard written by a high- school student.

        You may read the essay here: 
    Op-Ed: In high school, I've barely learned about the Holocaust - Los Angeles Times (latimes.com)

       Our busy spring b'nai mitzvah season begins at our Shabbat Morning Service (10:00 AM), when Hannah Rak celebrates her bat mitzvah. Mazal tov to Hannah and her family!

        Please note that the next meeting of the Adas Emuno Book Club has been rescheduled for Monday, May 16 (7:30 PM). It's not too late to read the provocative collection of short stories  For the Relief of Unbearable Urges by Nathan Englander.

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    For Livestream Services:
    Find all our recorded services on YouTube at "Adas Emuno Streaming" and use this direct link once the service has started: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCftctPu9pRG4bBQCR6RH4Dg/live

  • April 21, 2022 8:45 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Apr.21, 2022

    Dear Friends,
      This year the last day of Pesach coincides with Earth Day.
      That's the perfect opportunity to speak about the ecological significance of our spring festival.
      We'll do so at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM).

      The last king of ancient Judah was Zedekiah, an understandably tragic figure.
      We'll follow his story, and that of the great prophet, Jeremiah, who predicted his demise, at our Zoom Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM).

       Religious school (and Confirmation) resume this Sunday- hoping everyone had a good spring break.

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    For Livestream Services:
    Find all our recorded services on YouTube at "Adas Emuno Streaming" and use this direct link once the service has started: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCftctPu9pRG4bBQCR6RH4Dg/live
  • April 14, 2022 11:01 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    April 14, 2022

    Dear Friends,
       Pesach begins tomorrow night, and when it coincides with Shabbat as it does this year, it is the one time we do not have our Shabbat Evening service. 
       Shabbat Morning Torah study and Sunday Religious school are also on break for the holiday.
       
       However, for those who are not attending a second night seder, you are cordially invited to join the cantor and I for a Zoom Pesach Celebration (7:30-8:15 PM) on Saturday night.
        We will feature music and contemporary readings for our festival of freedom, and a holiday quiz. See the Zoom link in the Rabbi’s weekly message emailed to members.

         If you missed our Zoom Pesach Cooking Class, you can view here (enter the password carefully-case sensitive), the first thirty minutes with our cantor's Israeli recipes (easy to make!) and the second half with members sharing their seder memories:
    https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/fkF7dbH9OwilEEg3ZFFzB6sugwLs2ZgzB29xp7SXXuxKjNRyHX8aGVWqRR__eFXF.xsdr95PUdB-6Gb65?startTime=1649027245000 (Passcode: t0n1Xq#h)

      At our seders this year we add special prayers of peace for Ukraine, so devastated by war, and for our beloved Israel, recently wracked by a spate of terrorist attacks. There is no freedom without the basic security of being able to live free of fear and violence. 

    Shabbat shalom and Hag Sameach,
    Rabbi Schwartz
  • April 07, 2022 8:43 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    April 7, 2022

    Dear Friends,
      We're looking forward to our Shabbat Evening Family Service (7:30 PM), which features our K-2 class sharing some special songs. Come support our youngest students in-person! 
      
      Hezekiah and Josiah are the two most important Israelite kings after David and Solomon, and we'll find out why at our Zoom Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM).

       Pesach is one week away:
       *A Tot-Pesach program takes place this Sunday (9:30) in the social hall, as well as a school-wide Pesach celebration during regular school hours.
       *Next Friday is the first night of Pesach- this is the one time we do not have a Shabbat service.  No Torah study the next morning, and no school next Sunday.
        *You are cordially invited to a second night Zoom Pesach Celebration (7:30- 8:15 PM) in words and music, led by the cantor and myself  on Saturday evening Apr. 16 (link in next week's message).
        
    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    For Livestream Services:
    Use this direct link once the service has started:
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCftctPu9pRG4bBQCR6RH4Dg/live
  • April 03, 2022 6:09 PM | Lance Strate (Administrator)

    Lance Strate's D'Var Torah for April 1, 2022

    This week’s Torah portion, Parshat Tazria, comes from the dermatology section of the Torah. I say that because it’s mostly about skin disease, and how a kohen is needed to diagnose whether it is to be considered pure or impure, and if impure, whether the individual needs to be quarantined. Tazria also includes rules for purification after giving birth, for the mother to go to the mikvah, and male infants to be circumcised. And it ends with instructions regarding ritual sacrifice and offerings to be made on the Sabbath, at the start of each new month, and as a sin offering. With that in mind, I want to suggest that what all of this has in common, and what the Torah is mainly trying to do, is to answer the question, how shall we live our lives? And that includes the question of how should we worship God? And it includes ethical questions regarding how we should treat other people, and animals, and plants for that matter. And what we should do when we get sick. This ancient document is a complete guide for living.

    As modern Jews, and especially as Reform Jews, we understand that the Torah is a product of its times, of antiquity, and much of its practical instructions no longer make sense to us. If you have a skin disease, you go see a doctor. And you don’t need a kohen to tell you that. As for whether to quarantine, we’re more likely to listen to Dr. Fauci, or our primary care physician, or follow the advice of the CDC, or the requirements of our schools and employers. And if that is the case, why do we still cling to the Torah? What does it still have to teach us?

    Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel once said that, we are closer to God when we are asking questions than when we think we have the answers. To this I would add that good questions are eternal. The answers will change, depending on the times we are living in, depending on who you ask, depending on the situation. Scientists understand that the answers they provide are always subject to change as new information is obtained, and our knowledge increases. That’s why the rules and recommendations regarding wearing masks have changed over the course of the pandemic. At the start they were based on the experience of previous airborne diseases, but as medical researchers learned more and more about COVID-19, they updated their findings and corrected their conclusions.

    And the point is that answers may come and go, but good questions remain with us forever. Questions like, how should we live our lives? If we focus on the questions, then we can understand that what Parsha Tazria and similar parts of the Torah are telling us is to ask that question, how should we live our lives?, to reflect on our actions, not to go about our lives moving from one activity to another in mindless fashion, like robots and automatons, or in naïve innocence like animals or infants. And in asking, how should we live our lives, we are also asking, how should we live our lives as Jews?, because the Torah is specifically trying to answer that question, as a document particular to the Jewish people. And in accordance with that question, we are also asking, how should we, as Jews, live in harmony with nature, and with God?

    So, when Rabbi Heschel said that, we are closer to God when we are asking questions than when we think we have the answers, he was answering the question of how we should live our lives, as Jews, in harmony with God. Which is by asking questions. Asking questions is very much a part of Jewish culture, and the Jewish religion. Even asking questions of God. During troubled times, we have been known to ask, why me, God, why me? And it is not a part of our tradition, but others tell the story of a rabbi some 2,000 years ago who asked of God, why have you forsaken me? More recently, after losing his son to an incurable disease at the age of 14, Rabbi Harold Kushner set out to answer the question, why do bad things happen to good people?, and the result was a bestselling book published back in 1981.

    We love questions so much that we are even known for substituting questions for answers. The advice columnist known as Dear Abby was once asked, why do Jews always answer a question with a question? Her response was, how should they answer? That of course is a variation on an old joke about a congregant who asks the rabbi, rabbi, why do you always answer a question with a question? To which the rabbi responds, do I? And then there’s the one where two guys are having lunch at a deli, and one says to the other, life is like a tuna fish sandwich. The other fellow thinks about it for a bit, and then asks, so, why is life like a tuna fish sandwich? To which the first guy replies, what am I, a philosopher?

    And then there’s the similar question asked when we’re overlooked or not given our due: what am I, chopped liver? Maybe we don’t ask that question so much anymore, but for the past four thousand years, we have been asking the twin questions of the mi chamocha, the oldest prayer in our liturgy. The translation is along the lines of, who is like You, among the gods, Adonai? Who is like you, great in holiness, awe-inspiring in splendor, doing wonders? In the centuries that followed the exodus, and the revelation at Sinai, the sages studied the texts that make up the Torah and asked, what do these writings mean? How are we to understand them? How are we to make sense of them? They understood that the meaning of a written work is never entirely obvious. That there is always a need for interpretation. And that interpretations differ, depending on the reader, the place and time and circumstances, and so much more. Asking questions about the meaning of the Holy Scriptures, and how to apply them to our lives, is the basis of the Talmud, and Rabbinic Judaism, and Reform Judaism.

    I do want to add a small, friendly amendment to Rabbi Heschel’s statement, that, we are closer to God when we are asking questions than when we think we have the answers. This refers specifically to asking good questions, because not all questions are good questions. I know that we tell our children that there is no such thing as a bad question, and we do so to encourage them to ask questions. But it’s not really true. There most certainly are bad questions. Some of them are known as loaded questions, a classic example being a question asked of a male politician by his opponent: have you stopped beating your wife? Some other examples: Have you always had a gambling problem? Is it difficulty to hide the fact that you’re incompetent? Do you actually believe your own lies? Or on a more positive note, why do you feel that our product is the best? You get the idea.

    Then there’s the familiar story of a young man who sets out to ridicule a respected elder, a rabbi of great renown. He holds a small bird behind his back, and asks the rabbi, is the bird I’m holding alive or dead? If the rabbi says the bird is dead, he plans to show him the live bird that he’s holding. If the rabbi says the bird is alive, he plans to crush it and show the rabbi that the bird is dead. Recognizing the young man’s intent, the rabbi responds, the answer, my son, is in your hands. A good question is one that is asked with an open mind and open heart, and an intent to learn something new, not to mock.

    Neil Postman, in his book Crazy Talk, Stupid Talk, tells the story of a town in Lithuania that suffered from a mysterious plague, back in the days before modern medicine. People afflicted would fall into a deathlike coma, and no one could tell if they were still alive or not. The dilemma, then, was the uncertainty of whether the individuals being buried were actually alive or dead. Two different solutions were offered, based on two different questions. One group based their solution on the question, how can we make sure that we don’t bury anyone who is still alive? The other group answered a question that on the surface seemed to be asking the same thing, but in fact was asking something entirely different, and actually simpler and easier to answer: how can we make sure that everyone we bury is actually dead? Think about it.

    It’s not just that, we are closer to God when we are asking questions than when we think we have the answers. It’s also that the questions we ask determine the kinds of answers we get. If I ask, when was Congregation Adas Emuno founded?, there is only one correct answer, 150 years ago, on October 22nd, 1871. If I ask, do you know when was Congregation Adas Emuno founded?, there are two basic answers, yes or no. If I ask, what do you know about the history of Congregation Adas Emuno?, that is an open ended question that would allow for a wide range of answers, and a different set of answers from the question, how do you feel about Congregation Adas Emuno?

    So now, I am going to ask a question, but I don’t want you to tell me the answer, I just want you to think about the question itself. The question is, do you believe that God exists? And now, I want you to think about a question that sounds like it’s the same question, but really is quite different: do you believe in God? And my point is not about whether you are an atheist or agnostic or not, but just to recognize the difference between the two questions. Because they refer to two different kinds of belief.

    And before going any further, I want to remind you that the main question in Judaism is, how should we live our lives? And that includes questions of religious practice. It’s about what we do. When it comes to belief, the emphasis is on the oneness of God, as expressed by the shma; the emphasis is on monotheism as opposed to polytheism. The mi chamocha almost seems to admit of the possibility that there are other gods of lesser stature, when we ask, who is like You, among the gods, Adonai? Less accurate translations try to fix this by adding a phrase so it reads, who is like You, among the gods who are worshipped? There is also some ambiguity at the start of the Ten Commandments, where it reads, I am Adonai, your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt and the house of bondage. You shall have no other gods before Me. And then, after the prohibition against making graven images, it reads, you shall not bow down to them or serve them, for I, Adonai your God, am a jealous God. This refers to idol worship, but it is also about the nature of God.

    What is important to understand is that for most of human history, stretching all the way back into prehistory, there was no question regarding belief in the divine. There was no question that the world is alive. Not just animals and plants, but rivers, lakes, and oceans. The earth, the soil, the land, even mountains. Even the air, which we experienced as the wind. And everything that is alive is understood to be conscious in some form, maybe not in the same ways that human beings are conscious, but conscious in their own ways. And everything that is alive and conscious is animated by spirit and soul, words that in Hebrew are synonymous with breath and wind. So it is only natural for people to see the world as populated by divine and semidivine entities, supernatural beings, spirits and gods. The existence of a spiritual dimension to the world was taken for granted, and never called into question. And that is why the Torah and Tanach do not address the question of the existence of the divine, but take that as a starting point, and instead present a radical new idea about the nature of the divine.

    Rather than a world of different deities, each one competing for people’s loyalty, defending different territories, in conflict with one another, we have a universal God who is the God of all of the different peoples of the earth. Oneness is at the core of Jewish belief. One God and one Creation. One set of basic ethical standards that apply to everyone, with one judge above us all, so that there is no one else to appeal to, no other court of appeals, no second opinion. And a singular, coherent universe that is open to our exploration and discovery, that we can learn about and come to understand through study and science. This allows for the God of Spinoza, who equates God with nature. And for Albert Einstein, who says that the God he believes in is the God of Spinoza, and also says that God does not play dice with the universe. By this he meant that the universe is orderly and ultimately knowable. But it’s also true because if there is only one God, the God has no one else to play dice with.

    So the question I posed, do you believe that God exists?, is a thoroughly modern question. It comes up only after so much of the workings of our universe, and ourselves, has been explained by modern science. And it is a question that references external reality, something separate and apart from ourselves. As such, for those who answer yes, it suggests the need for some form of external support, some proof or evidence, something relating to the empirical method of modern science, something open to sense perception. And if the answer is simply that it’s a matter of faith, that cannot help but come across as an inadequate response, just as it would for a question like, do you believe that gravity exists?, or do you believe that molecules exist?

    By way of contrast, the question, do you believe in God?, is significantly different. It is not just about the existence of the divine, but about feeling the presence of the divine. Arguably, you could believe that God exists, but not believe in God, not believe, for example, that God cares about us, or accept what’s we call God’s will. There is a difference between believing that and believing in. Believing that takes us into the external world of facts and data. Believing in takes us into the world of internal feelings and intuition, of trust and mutual presence. In religious terms, believing that leads us to think in a transactional way, for example to do good so that we will be rewarded in the afterlife, or to engage in prayer in order to get something that we want. Believing in leads us to do good for its own sake, to pursue tikkun olam, the healing of the world, and to accept that we will not always get our way or be in control of our own destiny. Believing that appeals to our rational side, believing in to our spiritual side. Even when our rational side fills us with doubt about the existence of God, we are still capable of believing in God, listening to that still, small voice within, even when we are unsure of its origin.

    There is a marvelous exchange in the novel by Stephen King, The Stand, which posits a post-pandemic conflict between good and evil. The ostensible leader of the good community, Mother Abigail, is speaking with one of the heroes, Nick, telling him that he’s called upon to confront evil, and shouldn’t try to run from the will of God. Nick responds that he doesn’t believe in God. And Abigail answers, “Bless you Nick, but that doesn’t matter. He believes in you.” In the same way, we can believe in each other, and think about the difference between me saying that I believe you exist, and I believe in you.

    I was introduced to the distinction between believing that and believing in through the writings of Walter Ong, who was a Jesuit priest. And Ong, in turn, was inspired the writings of the great Jewish philosopher and theologian, Martin Buber. Buber famously distinguished between two types of relationships, the I-It and the I-You. In the I-It relationship, we relate to things, to objects, to possessions and commodities, to stuff that we seek to control, or manipulate, or own. This is true even of other living things, even people, when we treat them as objects, when we objectify them, or view them as means to an end. In the I-You relationship, we relate to persons, to persons as persons, whether they are human beings, or other living things, or any part of the natural world, or of the divine and the spiritual. Both relationships are important, both have a role to play in our lives, as they relate to our material and spiritual needs, to science and religion.

    What Martin Buber teaches us is that we exist only and entirely in relationships. This is the same lesson taught by Einstein, the lesson of relativity, which is that everything in the universe exists in relation to everything else. This is the lesson of ecology, that all living things exists in interconnection with each other, and with their environment. And it’s not that we’re reduced to a game of chance, that there is no certainty. It’s rather that the certainty is to be found in the relationships, not in the isolated fragments of those relationships. This too is the message of oneness that guides our faith.

    So we can believe in each other because we can believe in our relationship to one another. We can believe in our people, in our tradition, in our religion, as a relationship, a relationship to the people in our congregation and all around the world, a relationship to the people who came before us and those who will come after us, a relationship to the past and the future. We can believe in humanity as a whole, we can believe in life in all of its forms, we can believe in our world, our planet, and our relationship to it. And we can believe in our relationship to the spiritual dimension of the world, even if we are unsure as to what exactly there is on the other end of that relationship. As Martin Buber explains, God, or the divine, or whatever name we choose to use, is in the relationship. And that is why we follow the shma with the v’ahavta, the commandment that you shall love God. Because love is the relationship we need to enter into, love is the I-You relationship that we need to believe in.

    Once upon a time, people mostly saw the world as made up of I-You relationships, and saw the divine everywhere they looked. That is why the Torah deals with skin disease. In modern times, we mostly see the world as made up of I-It relationships. So, for us, the Torah calls upon us to remember that other dimension of human life, to remember the I-You relationship, to remember to believe in other persons as person, and to remember to believe in something greater than ourselves. To remember to remember to believe in love.

    Shabbat shalom.


Cantorial Soloist

Suzy Auriel Merritt

Religious School Director

Annette De Marco

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