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Summary
Summary
Named a 2007 National Jewish Book Award Runner-Up in the category of Contemporary Jewish Life and Practice.
JPS's holiday books take us through the joys, spirit, and meaning of the seasons. Blending the old and the new, they ground us in the origins and traditions of each holiday and open up to us ways we can add our own expression to these special days. Although synagogue ritual is touched upon, the real focus here is on our personal connections to each holiday and our home observance.
As we move from season to season, Paul Steinberg shares with us a rich collection of readings from many of the Jewish greats--Maimonides, Rashi, Nachmanides, Shlomo Carlebach, Marge Piercy, Elie Wiesel, Martin Buber, Abraham Joshua Heschel, Arthur Green, and others--and he guides us in discovering for ourselves the many treasures within each text. The readings teach us about the history of each holiday, as well as its theological, ethical, agricultural, and seasonal importance and interpretation; others give us inspiration and much food for thought. These stories, essays, poems, anecdotes, and rituals help us discover how deeply Jewish traditions are rooted in nature's yearly cycle, and how beautifully season and spirit are woven together throughout the Jewish year.
Reviews (1)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Steinberg, a rabbi and educator, calls the Jewish holidays "fundamental expressions of our spirituality." In Judaism's holistic approach, he says, spirituality encompasses the interaction of a person's intellectual, emotional and physical aspects, so the holidays "tie us to history, the earth, the Jewish people and God." This first of three volumes explores Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and Sukkot. Each section discusses a holiday's biblical origins, ideology and customs, followed by writings from Jewish thinkers throughout history, contemporary perspectives and alternative meditations. What makes this volume stand out from other holiday guides is an additional section with sacred texts presented in and inspired by Talmudic format. Steinberg examines each text at three different levels-literal, interpretive and personal. He doesn't shy away from questioning practices that may seem outmoded, but challenges readers not to abandon them abruptly. His careful, thorough and reasoned explanations will deepen understanding of each holiday's history and tradition, allowing celebrations to become, in fact, more celebratory. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments | p. xv |
Introduction | p. xvii |
Framework of This Book | p. 1 |
Part 1 Heart, Mind, and Celebration | |
The Spiritual Cycle of the Jewish Holidays | p. 5 |
Reason, Faith, and Jewish Observance | p. 6 |
Part 2 Origins of the Jewish Calendar | |
Seeing the Moon | p. 13 |
Setting the Calendar | p. 14 |
A Fix for the Two-Day Fix | p. 15 |
Naming the Months and the Days | p. 16 |
Part 3 Rosh Hashanah | |
The Head of the Year | p. 23 |
Rosh Hashanah in the Bible | p. 24 |
The Month of Elul: A Footpath to Mercy | p. 26 |
Is It Two Days or One Long Day? | p. 29 |
Food and Other Customs on Rosh Hashanah | p. 30 |
Pathways Through the Sources | p. 33 |
Midrash Rabbah: Presence and Pardon | p. 33 |
Jerusalem Talmud: God's Partners | p. 34 |
High Holiday Machzor: The Decree | p. 34 |
The Zohar: A Shofar's Harmony | p. 35 |
Moses ben Jacob of Coucy: Self-Mastery | p. 36 |
Or Ha-Chaim: Gentle Justice | p. 37 |
Mei Ha-Shilo'ach: The Original Intention | p. 38 |
The Rebbe of Strelisk: Heeding Advice | p. 38 |
Rav Kook: Sacred Freedom | p. 39 |
Arthur Green: Returning to Wholeness | p. 40 |
Interpretations of Sacred Texts | p. 42 |
Judgment and Injustice | p. 42 |
Remembrance and Compassion | p. 44 |
The Shofar and Prayer from the Heart | p. 46 |
Significance of the Holiday: Some Modern Perspectives | p. 48 |
From Obscurity to Prominence | p. 48 |
Remembering Creation | p. 50 |
A Clarion Call to Fixing the World | p. 53 |
The Days of Awe and Israel | p. 55 |
The Shofar: A Cry into Eternity | p. 57 |
Alternative Meditations | p. 59 |
Singing Creation into Being | p. 59 |
Facing the Music: A High Holiday Meditation | p. 59 |
Hagar and Sarah, Sarah and Hagar | p. 61 |
Part 4 Yom Kippur | |
The Day for Spiritual Second Chances | p. 65 |
Yom Kippur in the Bible | p. 66 |
Days of Awe | p. 71 |
Erev Yom Kippur: The Threshold of Sanctity | p. 72 |
Yom Kippur and Self-Denial | p. 75 |
Pathways Through the Sources | p. 77 |
Mishnah: Between God and Fellow | p. 77 |
Maimonides: Perfect Repentance | p. 77 |
Zohar: The High Priest's Intervention | p. 79 |
Yehudah Ha-Levi: Attending to the Spirit | p. 79 |
Kitzur Shulchan Arukh: Observance and Practice | p. 80 |
The Maggid of Mezritch: Discovering Unity | p. 81 |
The Rebbe of Lizensk: Forgiving God | p. 83 |
Franz Rosenzweig: To Stand before God | p. 84 |
Abraham Joshua Heschel: The Unforgivable | p. 85 |
Erich Fromm: No Judgment Without Love | p. 86 |
Interpretations of Sacred Texts | p. 88 |
Festivity and Marriage | p. 88 |
Sin and Confession | p. 90 |
Truth versus Mercy | p. 92 |
Significance of the Holiday: Some Modern Perspectives | p. 94 |
An Evolution in Rite and Prayer | p. 94 |
Repentance, Confession, and Atonement | p. 97 |
Moral Freedom and Responsibility | p. 99 |
Accepting the Decree | p. 102 |
Alternative Meditations | p. 105 |
Elul | p. 105 |
The Ritual of the Scapegoat | p. 107 |
Meditation before Yom Kippur for One Who Cannot Fast | p. 107 |
A Carnival at the Gates: Jonah and Laughter on Yom Kippur | p. 108 |
Part 5 Sukkot | |
A Merging of Worlds | p. 117 |
Sukkot in the Bible | p. 118 |
Symbols of Sukkot | p. 120 |
The Heavenly Guests | p. 128 |
The Water Ritual | p. 130 |
Three "Last" Days | p. 134 |
Reading Kohelet | p. 138 |
Pathways Through the Sources | p. 141 |
Midrash: A New Reckoning | p. 141 |
Midrash Rabbah: Prolonging the Celebration | p. 143 |
Rashi on Kohelet: The Joy of Now | p. 143 |
The Zohar: Hosting the Divine | p. 144 |
Sefer Ha-Hinnukh: The Power of Four | p. 145 |
Moses Chaim Luzzatto: Engulfed in Light | p. 146 |
The Rabbi of Kamionka: The Etrog's Glow | p. 147 |
Samson Raphael Hirsch: Minding What We Share | p. 147 |
Elie Wiesel: Joy under Adversity | p. 149 |
Interpretations of Sacred Texts | p. 150 |
Materialism and Redemption | p. 150 |
Prayer and the Powers of Rain | p. 152 |
The Law and the Lesson of Fragility | p. 154 |
Significance of the Holiday: Some Modern Perspectives | p. 156 |
History and Tradition Interwoven | p. 156 |
Harvest and New Seed | p. 159 |
Open to the Earth and All Humanity | p. 164 |
The Season of Our Rejoicing | p. 165 |
Never-ending Joy | p. 168 |
Alternative Meditations | p. 170 |
Imagining Zaydeh's Sukkah | p. 170 |
That Tzaddik's Etrog | p. 172 |
New Rituals for Simchat Torah | p. 175 |
Part 6 Guidance along the Way | |
Is It Law or Custom? | p. 181 |
Exploring Traditional Sources | p. 182 |
Endnotes | p. 197 |
Glossary | p. 219 |
Contributing Authors | p. 235 |
Index | p. 239 |