Nature can be beautiful, but can also bring powerful destruction. My thoughts are with those in my home state of Texas living through the devastating floods of Hurricane Harvey and its aftermath. Jewish tradition urges us to pray, and also to anchor our prayers by giving tzedakah (charity, righteous giving). In that spirit, here are some place that you can donate to help those impacted by Hurricane Harvey:
http://www.texasmonthly.com/the-daily-post/ways-can-help-people-hurricane-harvey/
Jewish Federation of Greater Houston
Hurricane Harvey Relief Fund (Greater Houston Community Foundation)
I love to contemplate the lights and reflections on the surface of a lake, which reminds me that as human beings, we reflect our spiritual Source. Enjoy this gallery of my photographs of sky and trees in water. It is included in the Gateway of the Sea.
Many people find a total solar eclipse to be an incredibly spiritual experience in nature that opens them to the vastness of the cosmos. More eclipse resources, from practical, spiritual, and particularly Jewish perspectives have been coming my way in recent days, so here are some more wonderful materials for share. (Thank you to Rabbi Riqi Kosovske) for sharing several of these.)
For spiritual reflections from a Jewish perspective, I loved Dr. Tamar Frankiel’s beautiful post on Rosh Hodesh Elul (the new Hebrew month prior to Rosh Hashanah), and its relationship to the eclipse. Another inspiring Jewish resource is Sun and Moon, Together, a free downloadable e-book by Prof. Nehemia Polen and daughter Adina Polen. This “mini literary magazine” includes deep teachings for adults on the moon in Rabbinic tradition, and an illustrated story to share with children.
To continue the theme from the last “What’s New” post in more depth, you can read Rabbi Joshua Heller’s teshuvah (response) to the question of whether one should offer a traditional Hebrew blessing on seeing the eclipse–and which one to say.
Finally, here are some great general guidelines for viewing the eclipse and meaningfully and safely. For those of us who are not in the path of “totality,” there are ways to watch the celestial event remotely.
The previous “What’s New” post has blessings that can be said for the eclipse.
Many people will be traveling to view the full solar eclipse the will be seen across the United States on August 21, 2017. Here is a webpage with links to all kinds of information about this celestial event. Although traditionally, no Hebrew blessing was said upon seeing an eclipse, as in earlier generations people viewed it as a bad omen, today many people view it with wonder and find it appropriate to say a prayer from tradition. Rabbi David Zaslow recommends the blessings below.
Perhaps a blessing practice can help us to see the Eclipse in a more positive, modern light, as a fully predictable natural event that evokes awe and wonder at creation. Still, the traditional sense of the Eclipse calling us to teshuvah, to repairing and mending our ways, is always worthwhile.
Image: Photo that I took during a solar eclipse in California, 2012, using a binocular projector. (In case you needed a reminder, never look at the sun during an eclipse as you can damage your eyes. The linked article will provide some ideas for safe ways to view it.)
For more eclipse resources, read the next “What’s New“ Post.
There is a famous legend about two seas: the Sea of Galilee (Kinneret) in the North of Israel, and the Dead Sea in its south. One gives; one is said to only receive. Read this new post in the Gateway of the Sea to learn the story and my personal take on the deeper meaning of giving and receiving for our ethical and spiritual lives.
The Gateway of the Sea continues to grow! I just added another Tikkun Olam (“repairing the world”) post, on what we can do to help save our seas and oceans…which really means to save humanity’s future on our planet! In this post, which includes a short video, you will get ideas and guidance on how to make better personal choices for our ocean, connect with worthy organizations to support, and meet an inspirational woman and an amazing child who will inspire you to learn about and care for our ocean world.
Observing the solemn season around Tisha B’Av, we think of the destruction of the ancient Temple in Jerusalem, and the Jewish exile from our ancient homeland. Today many Jews find new meaning in Tisha B’Av by taking this fast and this season as a time to ponder contemporary issues like the plight of today’s war refugees as well as the destruction of natural habitats on Planet Earth. At my synagogue observance, we added some poetry from The Shalom Center as a dirge for the destruction of natural habitats, such as many of the world’s precious coral reefs.
As we conclude this season of remembrance, which began three weeks ago on the very day said to be the day on which Moses broke the first set of Tablets of the Covenant, I offer this reflection on Torah and Coral in the Gateway of the Sea, based on a teaching of my late Talmud teacher, Rabbi Judith Abrams. It includes a wonderful video about Coral Reefs and a link to an organization where you can get involved.
My son Charles Haviv went on a solo trek in the Cascade Mountains of Washington State this summer. I’ve posted his panorama of Glacier Peak Wilderness in the Gateway of Mountains, just beneath the introduction. The air is so clear, it’s almost 3-D!
I’ve been outside snapping photos so much this summer, and just had to add some photos to my Gallery of the Four Seasons in the Gateway of Seasons.. The photos are from Rockefeller State Park Preserve here in Westchester, New York. When I’m there I am often moved to say a blessing for the beauties of nature as I sense the glory of the Shechinah, the Divine Presence manifest in nature, all around us.
For more frequent updates, I invite you to follow @wellsprings on Instagram for a fresh look at the world around us!
Check out the Gateway of Gardens where I have updated the section on Community Gardens to link to an article and website about an amazing synagogue urban farm in Chicago. Plus new photos have been added to the gallery of a growing synagogue farm in Westchester, New York.
In this new post in the Gateway of the Sea, I share a favorite image from the Midrash of the sea filling a cave, offered as metaphor for how divinity fills our world–and us. It is a message that I find echoed in Jewish mysticism and as well as in an article by a secular climate activist who loves the sea.
The whole is in the part and the part is in the whole.
I just got back from a few wonderful days near the sea, so here’s a new post in the Gateway of the Sea, on a special blessing (berachah) that is said upon seeing the sea!
Finally, I’m on summer vacation and turning my attention back to my passion of creating this website! It seemed appropriate to start with a Tikkun Olam post, which you will find in the Gateway of the Sea, about the plight of today’s refugees at Sea and some groups that we can support to help them.
Tikkun Olam: “Repairing the World.” This term has a long history in rabbinic and mystical thought. Today it is often used to mean Social Action, making the world better. It is said that Tikkun Olam, repairing the world, starts with Tikkun HaLev, repairing the heart. (From our page on Sacred Words.)
Sometimes I just have to pass along a wonder of nature shared by a friend or colleague. Check out an amazing Instagram video of a rainbow in the falls at Yosemite National Park, from Rabbi Naomi Levy.
Shalom! In honor of Shavuot, the holiday of the Giving of the Torah, visit the Gateway of Mountains, where you will learn about mountains in the Bible, especially symbolized by the Theophany (appearance of the Divine) at Mount Sinai. Learn about mountains as symbols of peak experiences in the Bible, and listen to a guided meditation based on Moses encounter with God’s presence at Sinai.
Once again, thanks for your patience in waiting for new content on the site, as my congregational and seminary teaching duties have needed my full focus during the seven week Omer period from Passover to Shavuot. As we enter the slower summer months, with God’s help I hope to add new Gateways (content pages) and many Pathways (posts) for your enjoyment and learning.
Wishing everyone a very happy and meaningful Shavuot!
Have you listened yet to the guided meditation on Miriam’s Well? It is found on both the Gateway of Wilderness and the Gateway of Water from Underground. It’s a great five minute interlude if you are feeling a little spiritually dried out or need some refreshment. The narrative is one that I wrote and read, based on ancient lore about Miriam’s miraculous and life-giving well in the Sinai desert.
Shalom! Apologies that I have not posted anything new to Wellsprings since the eve of Passover, due to a busy season at my work as a congregational rabbi. Plus I am happy to share that I will be teaching a summer trimester course at the Academy for Jewish Religion on, “Ruah Ha-Qodesh (the Holy Spirit) in Rabbinic Literature,” and this has also required a lot of preparation time and taken me away from the website. But have no fear, I have many more posts in the pipeline and God willing you will be seeing more very soon!
Right now we are in the midst of Counting the Omer, a sacred practice of counting the days between Passover and Shavuot, viewed by many as a time to work on personal growth, as each day of the Omer brings a new divine quality for reflection. Courtesy of Rabbi David Seidenberg at Neo Hasid, here are two Omer Counter widgets, including one in English and a special Omer Counter (in Hebrew) that features a different native plant from the Land of Israel for each of the 49 days. That seemed particularly appropriate for the themes of Wellsprings of Wisdom!
Check back here each day until Shavuot for a new illustration! And hopefully as you check you’ll see some new posts growing, too.
(Note: the Native Plants of Israel Omer Counter is not visible after the count ends with the Shavuot Holiday.)
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Before I finish preparing for Passover, here are two more Pathway posts to enhance your Passover experience, or throughout the season: some delicious ideas about symbolic Passover foods from the earth in the Gateway of Gardens, and a new Guided Meditation on Miriam’s Well in the Gateway of Wilderness (Miriam’s well and Miriam’s cup are already the subject of a couple of posts in the Gateway of Water Underground). For your convenience, you can find all Passover-related posts collected here.
If you are counting the Omer (a spiritual practice of counting the 49 days between Passover and Shavuot), you might enhance that with a look at Counting the Omer of your life, in the Gateway of Seasons.
If you can’t take a Passover retreat, take a break this week and explore Wellsprings of Wisdom!
In honor of Passover, I have revised a post on the Parting of the Sea. which is now on both the Gateway of Wind and the Gateway of the Sea! What is a miracle? How does the story of the Sea parting inspire us to help others and to grow as people? Hopefully there are some good questions here for personal reflection or to discuss at a Passover Seder. Enjoy and Happy Passover!
Also, since I’ve been asked, a reminder that photo credits are visible on hover (or light touch on a smaller device), except for featured images, which are credited at the bottom of each post. I am also gradually linking reposted photos from websites like Flickr back to their original location as possible. Photos by “JHD” are my own. Photos not by me, my family or friends (with their permission) are public domain or Creative Commons License.
Spring is coming, slowly but surely! In honor of springtime and Passover, a big thank you to Rabbi David Zaslow of Ashland, Oregon, for sharing “The Reason for the Season,” from his new book, Reimagining Exodus, in the Gateway of Seasons. He explores how the changing seasons affect our moods, and poses an intriguing question raised by our teacher, Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi of blessed memory, about whether the Hebrew calendar and its holidays should be reversed for Jews living in the Southern Hemisphere.
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