We Need A Moral Breakthrough: Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II's Remarks to the URJ Biennial 2017
This address was presented before the 74th Union for Reform Judaism Biennial convention on Wednesday, December 6.
How the Heart Relates to Moral Judgments
The Bible, with 850 attestations of lev and levav, the Hebrew words for heart, portrays that organ as the center of emotion, intellect, and personality.
Not Like Every Other Festival
Our congregation's sukah was blown down by the wind last year, just after the beginning of the Sukot festival. The cause was one of those freak storms that tear up trees, down power lines, and destroy sukot.
Escape from Freedom
What is it that Moses demands of Pharaoh? Ask most people and they will respond,"Let my people go." Indeed, in Cecil B.
Walking Together
Parents and children often live in separate worlds. No matter how close they may be emotionally, their experiences, friends, and values are generally quite distinct.
Expressing Gratitude
Dedicated to the memory of my mother, Victoria Sonsino, z.l., who died on December 25, 2006.
Introducing Vayikra
Hearing the Silent, Seeing the Invisible
Throughout Parashat Vayeira, beings both divine and mortal use powerful words. Equally profound throughout this portion, however, are the volumes unspoken.
Frighted with False Fire
At the end of the second act of The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Hamlet designs a clever trap, a custom-written play-within-a-play, in the hope that its actors will lead Denmark's treacherous King Claudius to indict himself in the plot that killed Hamlet's father.
Pagination
- First page
- Previous page
- …
- 27
- 28
- 29
- 30
- 31
- 32
- 33
- 34
- 35