Rabbi Kedar's blog

Elul 23 Messages

There are eight ways to practice the attribute of humility and each corresponds to a place on the body. (Moshe Cordovoro, Tamar Devorah)

The second practice is with one’s thoughts, as Cordovoro writes:

“Meditate and contemplate on thoughts of goodness, godliness, kindness.”

Elul 22 Message

Moshe Cordovoro teaches in Tamar Devorah (The Palm Tree of Devorah) that to be in the image of God means to be humble, for through humility we learn and practice compassion. There are eight ways to practice the attribute of humility and each corresponds to a place on the body.

The first practice is with the head, as he writes:

Lower your gaze, a person who raises their head upward glorifies himself.

Building Mosque in the Community and How It Affects US

Friends,

The events of recent weeks regarding the Cordoba House Mosque and Community Center in Lower Manhattan is very distressing. The emotions and generalizations seem to imply a syllogism that is counter to our beliefs as Americans and as well as dangerous to us as people of faith. We must stand up and support the freedom of religious expression of all faiths in this country. We must fight against the dangerous tendency to categorize all peoples of the same faith as one. That is to say, we cannot abide by the assumption that all Muslims support terrorist activity and every mosque preaches hate. As Jews we know what it is like to be likened to stereotypes, held accountable for ideas that are said by fanatical Jewish groups that do not represent what we believe, and we know the sting and danger of bigotry and discrimination.

Elul 21 Message

Dear Congregants,

There is a spiritual practice that I have developed over the years. During the weeks before Rosh Hashanah I choose a word to contemplate. This word stays with me the entire year. I research it, I talk about it with friends, I go to sleep asking to dream about it. It is a word that becomes my friend and my teacher, my prod urging me toward resolution, revelation, growth. One year my word was grace, another year it was presence, then I chose forgiveness.

This year I choose humility. Sefat Emet, in his commentary to Ki Tavo in the Book of Deuteronomy writes:

Never think that you have come to the truth; understand that you are always standing at the entrance. The word ‘doorway’ (delet) is related to the word humility (dalut). By realizing how little you have achieved, you find door after door opening for you. A person is always ready to hear the word of God, then when a moment of grace occurs, something opens up for him. But he has to be standing at the doorway.

I have tried to learn humility from others. I only know five:

One I know very well. Three I watch from a far. One was my teacher.

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