Thursday, October 29, 2009

Why Are You Wearing a Skirt?!

Question of the Week:
 
I am an observant girl and I plan to run the New York City Marathon this November. I will wear a long skirt, as I always do. I need a good answer to give people who will inevitably ask "why are you wearing a skirt?"

Answer:

It is highly impractical to run a marathon wearing a skirt. Not that I have ever tried (either running a marathon or wearing a skirt, let alone both at once) but I can only imagine that it would slow you down and somewhat hamper your success.
 
But practicality is not everything. Your determination to run the marathon in a skirt is a credit to you. Life is a marathon, and you win not by running the fastest, but by living according to higher standards.
 
A woman's body has a mystique and power that should not be flaunted or cheapened. That's why Jewish law requires that a woman's figure should not to be accentuated by her clothes. Skirts, unlike pants, fulfil this requirement.
 
Of course there are baggy pants that don't accentuate the body, and there are tight skirts that do (and indeed tight or short skirts defeat the purpose and are not kosher). But there is something else about skirts that make them appropriate as opposed to pants. A skirt is distinctly and unmistakably feminine. Skirts help nurture and express the female identity.
 
The way we dress does not only send a message to others about who we are, it actually affects our own view of ourselves. When a woman dresses in a way that is clearly feminine, she proudly affirms her identity as a woman. She need not imitate men or compete with them, she can be herself and be proud.
 
The last four decades have seen women make huge progress in every area of life, something Judaism applauds and embraces. But we have also seen women trying to catch up with men in a way that denies their femininity. Instead of flourishing as women, they sometimes have been made to feel that they have to become more male than men. In so doing, the world loses out on hearing the uniquely feminine voice. And women lose out even more, for they are not being themselves.
 
The skirt represents a proud feminine stance. When you run a marathon wearing a skirt, you are making a clear statement. I am not trying to catch up with men. I am running my own race, keeping my femininity in tact. In that race, you have already won.
 
Good Shabbos,
Rabbi Moss

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Friday
Mincha 6:10pm
6:30pm - 7:15pm Shabbos Service with kids program and Kiddush in honour of the engagement of Ben Hoch and Victoria Rachitzky - mazel tov!  
Saturday
9am Class on Weekly Parsha
10am -12:30pm Morning Service with kids program followed by Kiddush 
Mincha 5 mins before candlelighting time, followed by Sholosh Seudos and Maariv
 
Sunday
8am Morning service followed by breakfast and Beginners Talmud Class
 
**NEW**
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7am-7:45am morning service
 
 
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nefesh office | 45 bellevue rd | bellevue hill | NSW | 2023 | Australia

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Is My Dog in Heaven?

Question of the Week:
 
My family has been greatly saddened by the loss of our beautiful German shepherd to cancer. My daughter told me she was sure our dog has a soul and would now be in heaven. Is this in accordance with our faith?
 
Answer:
 
I am sorry hear that news. I hope you find comfort in the following thought.
 
Very often animals are reincarnated human souls. The Kabbalah teaches that some people leave this world without having learnt all the lessons they needed to learn, or without having achieved all that their soul was meant to achieve. So their soul is sent down again as an animal. In this form, they learn the required lessons, and then they are ready to move on to higher worlds.
 
This may have happened to your dog. The Kabbalists said that dogs are known to be faithful, loyal and protective. A dog will stick by its owner, putting itself in danger to ensure its owner's safety and wellbeing. A soul that lacked these traits in its human lifetime may be sent back down as a dog to attain these qualities.
 
Perhaps your dog was a soul that in a previous life had barked up the wrong tree. Maybe she was disloyal to her G-d, unfaithful to her people or untrue to her family, and therefore needed to come down again to learn fidelity and devotion. Or perhaps she came to protect your family from harm, because in a previous life she had failed to protect her own family. She excelled in these areas, and so her mission is complete.
 
We can't know these things for sure. But one thing we know is that her soul is better off now. Your family looked after her for her time here. Now the time has come for the soul within her to be released. She has learnt her lessons of faithfulness and loyalty. Hopefully you have too.
 
Don't wait for the next reincarnation to live a faithful life. Do it now.
 
Good Shabbos,
Rabbi Moss
 
To subscribe email
rabbimoss@nefesh.com.au
 
 
CLASSES www.bina.com.au  
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Meaningful Motherhood
Bribery and Parenting - how to best use rewards to encourage good behaviour
Discussion group for mothers with their babies
with Nechama Dina Moss and Shternie Dadon
Mondays 10am at Nefesh, 54 Roscoe St Bondi Beach
 
Character Development - Doing the Right Thing
How to confront ethical dilemmas with clarity of mind
The limits of honesty, tricky family situations, confidentiality & much more...
with Rabbi Gourarie at 45 Bellevue Rd  - for Women 
Thursdays 9:20 - 10:15am  22 Oct- 26 Nov
 
One-on-One Learning
Study the topic of your choice, alll levels, contact me to arrange a partner rabbimoss@nefesh.com.au
Monday and Wednesday Nights 8:30 - 9:30pm 

KABBALAH - The Four Worlds - parallel universes and their inhabitants
Tuesdays October 13-27, 8:15 - 9:30pm at Nefesh, 54 Roscoe St Bondi
 
LUNCH IN THE CITY - iJudaism - the interface between Judaism and techology
Thursdays, 1-2pm at Arnold Bloch Leibler, Level 24, Chifley Tower, 2 Chifley Square, Sydney CBD
 
and much more at www.bina.com.au
NEFESH SERVICES - 54 Roscoe St Bondi Beach 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

Friday
Mincha 6:10pm
6:30pm - 7:15pm Shabbos Service with kids program and Kiddush 
 
Saturday
9am Class on Weekly Parsha
10am -12:30pm Morning Service with kids program followed by Kiddush in honour of the wedding of Rob Goldshaft and Lana Gerendas - mazel tov 
Mincha 5 mins before candlelighting time, followed by Sholosh Seudos and Maariv
 
Sunday
8am Morning service followed by breakfast and Beginners Talmud Class
 
**NEW**
Thursday
7am-7:45am morning service
 
 
ALL WELCOME 
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This email was sent to shmuly77d@gmail.com by rabbimoss@nefesh.com.au.
nefesh office | 45 bellevue rd | bellevue hill | NSW | 2023 | Australia

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Evolution vs Creation

Question of the Week:
 
Recently my son and I were talking about the origins of humankind. He said that he was offended by the belief that man had descended from the ape family, and was adamant that we all came from Adam and Eve. I on the other hand believe Darwin's theory to be a more reasonable explanation of our evolution, and think it is ridiculous to continue teaching children the creation myth. As this discussion can go round in circles are you able to shed some light on this age old topic?

Answer:
 
An elderly rabbi was once on an airplane to Israel sitting next to a self-professed atheist. They were amicably chatting the whole trip.
 
Every now and then, the rabbi's grandchild, sitting in another row, would come over to him, bringing him a drink, or asking if he could get anything to make him more comfortable. After this happened several times, the atheist sighed, "I wish my grandchildren would treat me with such respect. They hardly even say hello to me. What's your secret?"
 
The rabbi replied, "Think about it. To my grandchildren, I am two generations closer to Adam and Eve, the people made by the hand of G-d. So they look up to me. But according to the philosophy which you teach your grandchildren, you are two generations closer to being an ape. So why should they look up to you?"

Beliefs have consequences. Why do you think children today lack respect and are unable to honour their elders? Why is tradition looked down upon, and the values of the past all but forgotten? Is it not a natural consequence of modern education? If we teach our children that they are merely advanced animals, then they will act that way. And they will treat their parents and teachers like the obsolete versions of humanity that they are.

We have to be aware of the affects of our beliefs. If we believe that humans came about by accident, then life has no meaning. There can be no meaning to something that happens by chance. A random explosion or mutation cannot give us purpose. My life, your life and all human history has no real significance whatsoever. Whether I live a good life or one full of evil makes no difference. It is all a big accident anyway.

We only have purpose if we were created on purpose. Our lives only have meaning if we were created by a meaningful being. If we teach our children that they were created on purpose with a purpose, then they will know that more is expected from them than from an animal. The Adam and Eve story needs to be taught, not just because it is true, but because it is the basis of morality.

Both creationism and Darwinism require faith. To accept that G-d created man and woman requires faith. To accept that a single-celled organism spontaneously mutated billions of times to form the human being also requires faith. But only one of these beliefs demands that we live a moral life. That's the one I want my kids to know about.

Good Shabbos,
Rabbi Moss
 
To subscribe email
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How to confront ethical dilemmas with clarity of mind
The limits of honesty, tricky family situations, confidentiality & much more...
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Thursdays 9:20 - 10:15am  22 Oct- 26 Nov
 
One-on-One Learning Night
Study the topic of your choice, contact me to arrange a partner rabbimoss@nefesh.com.au
Monday and Thursday Nights 8:15 - 9:15pm 

KABBALAH - The Four Worlds - parallel universes and their inhabitants
Tuesdays October 13-27, 8:15 - 9:30pm at Nefesh, 54 Roscoe St Bondi
 
LUNCH IN THE CITY - iJudaism - the interface between Judaism and techology
Thursdays, 1-2pm at Arnold Bloch Leibler, Level 24, Chifley Tower, 2 Chifley Square, Sydney CBD
 
and much more at www.bina.com.au
NEFESH SERVICES - 54 Roscoe St Bondi Beach 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

Friday
Mincha 6:10pm
6:30pm - 7:15pm Shabbos Service with kids program and Kiddush sponsored by Nick and Lilach Weininger in honour of the birth of their son - mazel tov!
 
Saturday
9am Class on Weekly Parsha
10am -12:30pm Morning Service with kids program followed by Kiddush sponsored by Matthew and Elana Jones in honour of the birth of their daughter - mazel tov!
Mincha 5 mins before candlelighting time, followed by Sholosh Seudos and Maariv
 
Sunday
8am Morning service followed by breakfast and Beginners Talmud Class
 
**NEW**
Thursday
7am-7:45am morning service
 
 
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This email was sent to shmuly77d@gmail.com by rabbimoss@nefesh.com.au.
nefesh office | 45 bellevue rd | bellevue hill | NSW | 2023 | Australia

Thursday, October 8, 2009

The Real Grand Final

TWO NEW CLASSES START THIS WEEK - SIMCHAS TORAH THIS WEEKEND see below
 
Question of the Week:
 
Thanks for the invite, but I won't be able to attend your Simchas Torah celebration this Saturday night. I have booked tickets to a game and I don't want to miss it. Anyway, I only go to synagogue for the High Holydays. You don't expect me to give up a game for another prayer service, do you?
 
Answer:
 
I agree, it would be foolish to book tickets to an event and then not show up. That's why you should come to shule on Saturday night.
 
Simchas Torah is a celebration of Jewishness, the grand finale of the High Holyday season. All the hard work of the High Holydays comes to fruition on this day. The prayers and Shofar blasts on Rosh Hashanah, the fasting and supplication on Yom Kippur, are all just the build up to the final crescendo, the dancing on Simchas Torah.
 
We pray to be blessed with a sweet new year on Rosh Hashanah; we ask that our soul be cleansed on Yom Kippur; but it is through the joy and dancing on Simchas Torah that we actually bring down all the blessings that we have prayed for.
 
To go to shule for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur and then miss out on Simchas Torah is like waiting in line to buy tickets to a game and not showing up to the game itself. At the height of Yom Kippur your soul was given a ticket. You claim your place on Simchas Torah.
 
So you have two tickets, one to be a passive spectator at a game, the other to be an active participant in a holy moment. You choose which is not worth missing: to watch the strength of the human body, or to experience the exhilaration of the human soul.
 
Some people think synagogue services are boring. They have never been to a Simchas Torah service. Try it once and you'll be a fan for life.
 
Good Shabbos and Good Yomtov,
Rabbi Moss
 
To subscribe email
rabbimoss@nefesh.com.au
 
SIMCHAS TORAH AT NEFESH 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Shmini Atzeres and Simchas Torah:
 
Friday October 9, Mincha 6:10, Shabbos and Yomtov service 6:30pm with Kiddush and dancing
 
Shabbos October 10, service 10am, Yizkor 11:30am followed by Kiddush
Mincha 6:40pm, Maariv, Kiddush and dancing with the Torah 7:30pm till late
 
Sunday October 11, service 10am, Kiddush, dancing with the Torah
Mincha/Maariv 6:40pm
NEW CLASSES STARTING THIS WEEK 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
KABBALAH - The Four Worlds - parallel universes and their inhabitants 
Tuesdays October 13-27, 8:15 - 9:30pm at Nefesh, 54 Roscoe St Bondi
 
LUNCH IN THE CITY - iJudaism - the interface between Judaism and techology
Thursdays, 1-2pm at Arnold Bloch Leibler, Level 24, Chifley Tower, 2 Chifley Square, Sydney CBD
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nefesh office | 45 bellevue rd | bellevue hill | NSW | 2023 | Australia

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Did You Keep Your New Year's Resolution?

Question of the Week:
 
Why do we celebrate the festival of Sukkos immediately after Yom Kippur? Wouldn't it be better to space out these festivals? Or is there some connection between fasting on Yom Kippur and eating in an outdoor hut for a week?
 
Answer:
 
The first thing we do in the new year is make resolutions. The second thing we do is break them. At a moment of inspiration we promise to curb our temper, become more generous, speak to G-d more or quit a bad habit. But soon after we go back to our old ways as if nothing happened. Often a sincere resolution is forgotten as quickly as it was made.
 
The reason: compartmentalisation. Our personalities are divided. We have a holy soul, and we have a physical body. My soul has good intentions and wants to change and improve and grow, but my body is lazy and complacent and can't be bothered.
 
On Yom Kippur I put my body aside and feel my soul, and so I want to soar to new spiritual heights. After Yom Kippur my body reasserts itself, and the yearnings of the soul are forgotten. My soul suggests a resolution; my body vetoes it.
 
The solution: enter a Sukkah. We sit in the Sukkah with our entire being - our body and our soul, our lowly side as well as our lofty side. It is one of the only mitzvos that we do with our whole person. And what do we do in the Sukkah? We eat and drink.
 
Unlike Yom Kippur, when it is a mitzvah to fast and ignore the body, on Sukkos the mitzvah is to indulge the body with food and drink in the Sukkah. On Yom Kippur we neglect our body to allow the soul's true nature to shine forth; on Sukkos we invite our body to join in and be inspired too. On Yom Kippur we see the body as being an impediment to the soul; on Sukkos, by bringing our entire being into the holy space of the Sukkah, and doing a mitzvah with our body, the body becomes a partner to the soul. Then the good resolutions of the soul can be implemented by the body.
 
The Sukkah experience is one of wholesomeness. By making the body a partner in our soul's enterprise, our resolve from Yom Kippur can be translated into reality. Don't miss out on this festival, the one that brings the High Holydays down to earth.
 
Good Shabbos and Good Yomtov,
Rabbi Moss
 
To subscribe email rabbimoss@nefesh.com.au
SUKKOS AT NEFESH 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NOTE: We are not changing our clocks for daylight saving until after Yomtov on Sunday night. 
 
Sukkos:
 
Friday October 2, Mincha 6pm, Shabbos and Yomtov service 6:30pm followed by Kiddush in Sukkah
 
Shabbos October 3, 10am service followed by Kiddush in Sukkah
Mincha 5:35pm, Maariv 6:30pm
 
Sunday October 4, 10am service followed by lunch in the Sukkah, all welcome, no charge, donations appreciated
Mincha 5:45pm.
 
Shmini Atzeres and Simchas Torah:
 
Friday October 9, Mincha 6:10, Shabbos and Yomtov service 6:30pm with Kiddush and dancing
 
Shabbos October 10, service 10am followed by Kiddush
Mincha 6:40pm, Maariv, Kiddush and dancing with the Torah 7:30pm till late
 
Sunday October 11, service 10am, Kiddush, dancing with the Torah, followed by lunch, $15 per person, to book email office@bina.com.au 
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nefesh office | 45 bellevue rd | bellevue hill | NSW | 2023 | Australia

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

There's A Dust Storm in Your Soul

SERVICE TIMES FOR YOM KIPPUR AND SUKKOS - see below
 
Question of the Week:
 
I think I can give Yom Kippur a miss this year. I know it is supposed to cleanse your soul, but I was thinking, I'm really not so dirty.  I didn't rob a bank, I am not a mass murderer. Over all I am a decent and honest person. If I haven't done any major sins do I need to fast on Yom Kippur too?

Answer:

What do you say about the freak dust storm in Sydney this week? The entire city was covered by a huge blanket of dust, blown in by unusually high winds. Flights were cancelled, highways closed, schools evacuated, and people were coughing and spluttering all over the place. Now the storm has passed, but the whole town is filthy.

Meteorologists are dumbfounded. No one has seen anything like it before, and no one saw it coming. But I think it is perfect timing. A dust storm is just what we needed to see now, a few days before Yom Kippur.

Yom Kippur is a day of spiritual cleansing. Every immoral act is a stain on our soul, and on this day it gets wiped clean. We look back at the year that went by and analyse our actions, trying to identify the things we have done wrong. Through fasting, deep prayer and a true inner turnaround, we clean off the stains and regain our purity.

But many of us feel that we have little to regret. We make the mistake of thinking that if we haven't murdered anyone, if we haven't committed any big sins, we are fine. The truth is, it's not only the big evils that need to be cleansed on Yom Kippur. There is a far more pervasive evil that needs our attention. Not the big blotches on our soul, but the little specks of dust.
There is a spiritual dust that accumulates in our souls. This is the dust of little evils, those seemingly harmless acts that are in fact very damaging. We tend not to take these minor transgressions so seriously, but we should.

You may not be a murderer, but have you never participated in a character assassination? Deriding or disparaging someone, either to their face or behind their back, is not murder, but it is the dust of murder.
You are not a liar, but you may have on occasion massaged the truth to protect your own pride, or adjusted a story to suit yourself. You may have never robbed a bank, but it is perceivable that you may have cut corners here and there in your business, and made money through slightly deceptive means.

These are not dramatic acts of evil, they are the dust of evil, simple ordinary activities that many of us fall for every day. A speck of dust may seem completely insignificant. But as we witnessed in Sydney this week, when millions, billions and trillions of such particles move together they can bring an entire city to a standstill.

So too with the dust of evil. A tiny bit of gossip here, a little joke there, a small stretch of the truth over there - in isolation they seem trivial and harmless, but every bad word said is another speck of dust. Over time they accumulate to create a thick cloud of darkness over our soul.
 
So now is time to clean up. Apologise to those you have hurt, and ask G-d to wipe away the thick layer of dust that has built up over your soul. And remember, if little specks of dust can cause such darkness, imagine what little sparks of goodness can do.

Good Shabbos and Gmar Chasima Tova - an easy fast and a year of blessing,
Rabbi Moss
 
To subscribe email rabbimoss@nefesh.com.au
HIGH HOLYDAYS WITH NEFESH fully booked
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Services:

Yom Kippur fast begins 5:36pm Sunday, ends 6:32pm Monday (Sydney times)
 
Sunday, 27th September - Kol Nidrei: 5:45pm - 7:45pm
Monday, 28th September: 9:30am - 2:30pm, 4:00 - 6:32pm
Yizkor Monday 10:45am
 
All Services will be held in the Games Room, 2nd floor, Hakoah Club.
 
Childminding will be in the play area upstairs, for those who have booked their kids in.
 
Please note: there is a different service for the Russian community in the Goldstar Room on the first floor. We are one floor above them - don't be confused!
 
If you would like to sponsor or part-sponsor the breaking of the fast after Yom Kippur, please contact the office on 9363 5543 or office@nefesh.com.au.


SUKKOS AT NEFESH 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NOTE: We are not changing our clocks for daylight saving until after Yomtov on Sunday night. 
 
Sukkos:
 
Friday October 2, Mincha 6pm, Shabbos and Yomtov service 6:30pm followed by Kiddush in Sukkah
 
Shabbos October 3, 10am service followed by Kiddush in Sukkah
Mincha 5:35pm, Maariv 6:30pm
 
Sunday October 4, 10am service followed by lunch in the Sukkah, all welcome, no charge, donations appreciated
Mincha 5:45pm.
 
Shmini Atzeres and Simchas Torah:
 
Friday October 9, Mincha 6:10, Shabbos and Yomtov service 6:30pm with Kiddush and dancing
 
Shabbos October 10, service 10am followed by Kiddush
Mincha 6:40pm, Maariv, Kiddush and dancing with the Torah 7:30pm till late
 
Sunday October 11, service 10am, Kiddush, dancing with the Torah, followed by lunch, $15 per person, to book email office@bina.com.au 
Safe Unsubscribe
This email was sent to shmuly77d@gmail.com by rabbimoss@nefesh.com.au.
nefesh office | 45 bellevue rd | bellevue hill | NSW | 2023 | Australia

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Tradition, Modernity, Apples and Honey

SERVICE TIMES FOR NEFESH AT HAKOAH see below
 
Question of the Week:
 
Why do we eat apples and honey on Rosh Hashanah? I know it is supposed to symbolise a sweet new year, but there are plenty of other sweet foods we could eat. I imagine in times gone by that was the only sweet food that was readily available. But these days we have much more choice, so why do we still dip apples in honey?
 
Answer:
 
The biggest question Judaism faces today is how to respond to modernity. How can Judaism appeal to a new generation? What will ignite the Jewish soul in the 21st century? Does Judaism need an update, or should we try to go back in time and recreate the lost world of Jewish life that existed in times gone by?
 
There are two common answers, the traditionalist and the modernist.
 
The traditionalist says that whatever was done in the past is right, and anything new is evil. What was good for our great-grandparents is good for us too. We need to go back to the good old days. Modernity can go jump.
 
Then there is the modernist. The priests of progress say that whatever is old is out, and whatever is new is in. We are not our grandparents, and we are not living in their world. We need to update Judaism to fit into the latest fads, the newest of new-age ideas, the most recent cutting edge worldview. This view claims that Judaism needs to move with the times.
 
In truth, they are both wrong. Traditionalism won't work, because it doesn't deal with the unique challenges and blessings that we face today. Modernism won't work either, because it has no roots, no eternal truths, it is fickle and flimsy, superficial and empty.
 
There is as third approach, one that I believe is the authentic Jewish approach. This is the apples dipped in honey approach. Not traditionalism, not modernism, but applehoneyism.
 
Both apples and honey are sweet foods. This they have in common. But where they differ is in their shelf life. An apple goes bad very quickly.  Even after a few minutes left exposed, a slice of apple will go brown and soft, and soon be inedible. Leave an apple in a fruit basket for a few weeks, and it will shrivel up and become mushy and rotten. Apples need to be eaten fresh.
 
Not so with honey. Honey does not decompose. In fact, the ancients used it as a preservative. Jars of honey were found in the pyramids in Egypt, unspoiled after thousands of years. Honey never goes bad.
 
Apples represent the modern world, the here and now, that fleeting moment in time we call the present. It is fresh today, stale tomorrow. Honey on the other hand represents tradition, a force that is unchanging and constant, timeless and stable.
 
Jewish spirituality is a delicate marriage of these two forces. For our spiritual life to be dynamic and alive, it must change and keep up with the times. But to have substance and meaning, it has to present a truth that is above change, that is timeless.
 
The true way to achieve this balance is by not making up new traditions, but rather finding new depth in the old traditions. The laws and rituals of Judaism are as compelling and inspiring today as they ever were. But their message needs to be communicated in a way that speaks to today's world. Maintain the beliefs and rituals of our grandparents, but bring to them a new vitality, by exploring deeper reasons and explanations that talk to our generation. You don't need to change our traditions to make them relevant. All you need to do is dig deeper into their meaning. In the infinite well of Judaism you will find the message for today.
 
The apple alone will go rotten fast, as will every spiritual fad not based on truth. Dip your apple in the honey of our eternal tradition, and it will be preserved forever.
 
Nechama Dina and I wish you a sweet new year, may you be inscribed and sealed for a year of blessing and goodness,
Rabbi Moss
 


 
HIGH HOLYDAYS WITH NEFESH fully booked
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Services:

Rosh Hashanah
 
Friday, 18th September (mincha 5:40pm) - 1st Night 6:30 - 7:15pm
Saturday, 19th September - 1st Day 9:00am - 1:00pm
                                Mincha 5:30pm Maariv 6:30pm
Sunday, 20th September - 2nd Day 9:00am - 1:00pm
 
Yom Kippur
 
Sunday, 27th September - Kol Nidrei: 5:45pm - 7:45pm
Monday, 28th September: 9:30am - 2:30pm, 4:00 - 6:32pm
 
All Services will be held in the Games Room, 2nd floor, Hakoah Club.
 
Childminding will be in the Monash Room, next to the Games Room, for those who have booked their kids in.
 
Please note: there is a different service for the Russian community in the Goldstar Room on the first floor. We are one floor above them - don't be confused!
 
If you would like to sponsor or part-sponsor the breaking of the fast after Yom Kippur, please contact the office on 9363 5543 or office@nefesh.com.au.


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nefesh office | 45 bellevue rd | bellevue hill | NSW | 2023 | Australia