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The Days of Awe: Spiritual Magic

Temple Or Olam is blessed with a boy whose wide-open nature is a constant reminder of what really matters in this world.  The child has autism.

He tells us exactly what is on his mind.  He is without guile.  He does not know subtexts.

Recently, he led a prayer with me at a Kabbalat Shabbat service.  When the last notes had been sung, he announced to the congregation, “This was the best prayer ever.

Everyone in the room smiled and nodded: It was the best prayer ever.  The boy had told us so.  He had spoken truly.

Abracadabra!

Abracadabra is an Aramaic phrase.  Each word in the phrase mirrors cognate words in Hebrew.  The first part of the word, abra means “I create.” The second part of the phrase, “cadabra” means “like I speak.”  When you say “abracadabra,” you are saying, in effect, “What I speak, I bring into being.”

What are the Days of Awe if not the opportunity to understand – deeply – that by speaking, we create?

In Pri Ha’aretz, Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Vitebsk wrote with tenderness about the power of speech.  His commentary on Parsha Vayera states: “And he who speaks, behold this person is creating new heavens and new earth like that which was at the beginning of creation: ‘By the word of the LORD the heavens were made” (Ps. 33:6).’”

According to Targum Bereishit, the birth of humanity that we celebrate each year on Rosh Hashanah was immediately accompanied with God’s loving gift of our capacity for speech: “There was in the body of Adam the inspiration of a speaking spirit, unto the illumination of the eyes and the hearing of the ears.”

God fashioned humanity through divine speech in Genesis 1.  God’s own creation inherited the capacity to create, like God, through speech.

What would godly words sound like from human beings?  They would be words of truth and possibility, of kindness and understanding, of forgiveness and atonement.  They would be the very words of love.

This year, during Temple Or Olam’s High Holy Days, we will consider the power of our words.  A new year opens wide before us.  Let us name the things we must make.  By articulating those things, by naming them through prayer and reflection, we can make them real.

Abracadabra.


Southern Jewish Life Part of History Channel Special

Tonight, the HISTORY CHANNEL will premier “You Don’t Know Dixie” at 9 pm.  The special will include a look at the contributions of Southern Jews to Southern culture and history.  Enjoy!

Kabbalat Shabbat Service: Diamonds in the Rough?

In the opening to this week’s parsha, Moses begs God to allow him to enter the good land God has promised the Israelites. God answers: ‘Rav l’ach’ – you have abundance. At this Kabbalat Shabbat service, we will hear a story of a diamond, a story that tells us that our lives, however flawed, have the capacity to sparkle, to shine, and be the fulfillment of our own reams.

Join us for a joyous family Kabbalat Shabbat!

When: Friday, August 12 at 7 p.m.
Where: McGill Baptist Church, Concord NC


August 2011 shmoozeletter

The August shmoozeletter is on line: please click here.

Points of interest:

  • August 12 service
  • August 20 service / bar mitzvah of Charlie Mace
  • Tot shabbat August 27
  • Special Study session on Tish B’Av, August 09
  • Upcoming events in September: Yard sale, Dream Act
  • High Holy Days dates

 

Tisha B’Av Study Session

Daughter Zion has one of the most powerful voices of Tanakh. We hear her cry out in the opening chapters of the Book of Lamentations where she is not afraid to confront God with the evidence. God, she insists, has cruelly brutalized the people Israel.

Lamentations is read annually on Tisha B’Av, the anniversary of the destruction of the both the first and second Temples. The First Temple was destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar, the Babylonian king, in 586    BCE.    The Second Temple was demolished by the Romans, in 70 CE.

The poetry of Lamentations is haunting, sorrowful, seeming, in some respects, to foreshadow the horrific destruction of Jewish life in the twentieth century.

This year, we will engage in special study session of Lamentations on August 9th. If you are interested in joining the conversation, please email Rabbi Barbara at Rabbi.Thiede@or-olam.org and she will send you more information.

New page, new pics, new blog!

Announcing…

  • Tikkun Olam now has a page all to itself on our website.  Expect more information about upcoming projects and more pictures of our happy TOO Tikkunolamers at work.
  • New pictures have been posted in the members area of our blog and our bnai mitzvah page sports a new picture of Temple Or Olam’s very first teenaged bat mitzvah.
  • Adrenaline Drash, Rabbi Barbara’s new blog, is now linked to our website.  Check it out at adrenalinedrash.com

Shabbat Shalom to everyone!

Blessing the people Israel…

This Shabbat our tots will enjoy a goodly amount of dancing, singing, and processing during their Shacharit service.  They’ll also learn how to hold their hands when they bless the people Israel and even hear a story about how the famous and oldest blessing of our tradition came into being.

Please feel free to join us for a short and sweet Shabbat morning service – though the service is intended for 2-5-year-olds, older children (of any age) are welcome to join in the fun.

Bagels and cream cheese, anyone?  We ask that everyone bring something to nosh after our service.

Event: Tot Shabbat
Date: July 16
Time: 10 – 11’ish
Location: McGill Baptist Church, 5300 Poplar Tent Road, Concord.

Temple Or Olam’s Upcoming Yard Sale: All Proceeds go to our Religious School

Time for a summer housecleaning?

Samuel and Shannon Leder have graciously offered to host a yard sale to benefit Temple Or Olam’s Religious School during their neighborhood’s annual yard sale.  The exact date will be determined by the Woodcreek neighborhood soon, but it may be as early as July 30th.

Please start saving anything you think you can contribute to our yard sale.  Please price and label items on your own to minimize work for our yard sale volunteers (we don’t want them up all night pricing things AND getting up early, too, to sell them!).  We’ll all bring our items to the Leders’ home the day before the yard sale.

We’ll let everyone know as soon as we have a firm date.

For help on pricing items, please check out the following website:

http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=guidelines+for+pricing+items+at+a+yard+sale

Many thanks for your participation!

Temple Or Olam . . . now with more kazoo?

We had a wonderful time at Friday night’s Kabbalat Shabbat service.  Songs by The Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, and Cat Stevens (to name a few) helped us consider key elements of our service from a fresh perspective.  One of our congregation’s children led us in a Woody Guthrie song that inspired a whole new take on Aleynu, and the rabbi’s lovely rendition of “Tears in Heaven” made for an especially moving Mourner’s Kaddish.

At the very end of the evening, the sudden appearance of a kazoo led to a spontaneous call from the congregation for kazoo at every service.  Despite the reservations of the kazoo player (who was concerned with the inevitable stress of meeting kazoo quotas at all future services), we are nevertheless quite certain that henceforth we will be Temple Or Olam . . . with more kazoo!

Getting to Know Hospice and Palliative Care of Cabarrus County

Rabbi Barbara Thiede has just begun working with Hospice and Palliative Care of Cabarrus County to make a free Advance Care Planning Workshop available to our congregants this fall.  Temple Or Olam will be inviting other faith groups to join us in learning about the importance of preparing a living will as well as a healthcare power of attorney.  This should prove a wonderful way for our congregation to connect with other congregations in our area and to learn about critical end-of-life issues.

We’ll have more information for everyone as this program develops, but for now we want to let everyone know that materials from Hospice and Palliative Care of Cabarrus County will be available at this Friday’s service, where we will be rocking and rolling to the music of Cat Stevens, Simon and Garfunkel, and more.  Following the service we will enjoy fellowship over a red, white, and blue oneg.

We hope to see you there!

Event: Kabbalat Shabbat Rock-n-Roll Service Time: 7 p.m. Date: July 8. 2011 Location: McGill Baptist Church, Concord