Five Towns Jewish Home - 9-2-21

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SEPTEMBER 2, 2021 | The Jewish Home The Jewish Home | OCTOBER 29, 2015

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Torah Thought

Parshas Nitzavim By Rabbi Berel Wein

T

owards the conclusion of his long final oration to the Jewish people, our teacher Moshe refers once more to the covenant between G-d and Israel. A covenant is much more than a relationship or an agreement. Covenants, in the Jewish sense of the word, are not altered by changing times and differing circumstances. A covenant has the ring of eternity, not only in time but also in content. Covenants are immutable and unchangeable. They have a binding quality that ordinary agreements or even contracts do not possess. And this is true from the beginning of the story of the Jewish people, and maybe even from the beginning of history and G-d’s relationship to human beings as Creator. We find in the story of the Flood and the rainbow, that the relationship is always based on a binding and unchangeable covenant. The Jewish people have always sensed the gravity of the covenantal relationship with G-d. It is the sole explanation for all the events and patterns of Jewish history from the

time of Abraham until today. We are a covenantal people and are bound by restrictions and fueled by prophetic vision and utopian hope. Only a people who feel themselves part of and bound by an

tion, this binding covenant between G-d and the Jewish people. It is well understood why Moshe fills this final oration to the Jewish people with references and lessons, explicit and implicit, to the covenant

Only a people who feel themselves part of and bound by an eternal covenant would have the strength and the ability to survive and even prosper.

eternal covenant would have the strength and the ability to survive and even prosper under the circumstances of persecution and enmity that have surrounded the Jewish world from time immemorial. It is no cause for wonder why the circumcision ceremony in Jewish life is always called the covenant, for it represents in a physical manifesta-

and to Sinai as the basis of Jewish existence. Only the power of a covenant is strong and mighty enough to guarantee the survival and resilience of the Jewish people. But the shepherd knows very well the weaknesses and strengths of his flock. The 40-year sojourn in the desert has been a learning experience for Moshe, and through his example,

for all future leaders of the Jewish people in all times and under all circumstances. The one thing that Moshe feels is deeply implanted within his people is this idea of a covenant. It is this covenant that creates within us the feeling of being special, chosen and bound by a mission that is far greater than the mundane activities of even life itself. The covenant contains many harsh conditions and predictions. It also portrays an exalted future and a continual message of productivity and influence, that will permeate Jewish society. The vital behavior of the Jewish people, its ability to rise to all occasions, is based on our appreciation of the covenantal relationship between G-d and Israel. Individually, there are many Jews that may not feel bound or even be aware of the existence of this covenant. But within the Jewish soul, as part of our DNA so to speak, we know that we are a covenantal people, and we are charged to think and behave accordingly. Shabbat shalom.


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Articles inside

Just Get Rid of It by Rivki D. Rosenwald Esq., CLC, SDS

3min
pages 166-168

Your Money

3min
pages 164-165

Greenlighting the Taliban’s Takeover of Kabul is a National Disgrace by Marc A. Thiessen

3min
pages 154-155

Silver Star Recipients by Avi Heiligman

5min
pages 156-159

Kabul Isn’t Saigon ‘75, It’s Beirut ’83 by Marc A. Thiessen

4min
pages 152-153

The Aussie Gourmet: Harissa Roasted Carrots

2min
pages 140-141

Notable Quotes

6min
pages 146-151

Rosh Hashana at Our Table by Renee Muller Rosh Hashana at Our Table by Renee Muller

5min
pages 142-145

Parenting Pearls

6min
pages 138-139

Seeing Things Anew by Dr. Deb Hirschhorn

5min
pages 132-135

More to Apples Than Dipping in the Honey by Cindy Weinberger, MS, RD, CDN

3min
pages 136-137

Dating Dialogue, Moderated by Jennifer Mann, LCSW

9min
pages 128-131

Giving Jews a Good Name: Allison Josephs of Jew in the City Talks about Finding Hashem by Tammy Mark

20min
pages 122-127

My Israel Home

3min
pages 118-119

Delving into the Daf

7min
pages 108-111

The Wandering Jew

9min
pages 112-117

New Life on Rosh Hashana by Rabbi Daniel Glatstein

22min
pages 104-107

Coronating the King on His Terms by Rabbi Benny Berlin

4min
pages 100-103

A Tzaddik in Our Midst: R’ Pinchas Mordechai Solow, zt”l by Rabbi Dovid Bender

8min
pages 78-81

Backstage Passes to Divine Service by Rav Moshe Weinberger

9min
pages 92-95

The Jewish Paradox by Rebbetzin Chanie Wolowik

3min
pages 96-97

Rabbi Wein on the Parsha

2min
pages 90-91

Remembering Rabbi David Beit- ler, z”l, by Mike Dube

3min
pages 82-85

Listening to the Shofar, Becoming the Shofar by Rav Yaakov Feitman

5min
pages 98-99

Odd-but-True Stories

5min
pages 42-45

Israel News

10min
pages 24-31
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