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The
Woodbury Jewish Center... Bar Mitzvah Year
May 11, 2002
On April 21, our synagogue held
a gala celebration of its bar mitzvah, its 13th birthday. That was
not the right occasion for my sermonic reflections on the significance
of those 13 years, but they are something I have wanted to share
with the congregation. Today's torah portion provides the perfect
text and context for those reflections.
The torah reading describes the three basic functions of the Levites
who were the assistants to the Cohanim, the religious leaders of
the Israelite people. First of all the Levites assumed overall charge
of the Tabernacle, the portable sanctuary used by the Israelites
their wanderings in the wilderness (Num 1:50). Their second task
was to dismantle, carry and then re?assemble the Tabernacle each
time the Israelites moved from place to place in the wilderness.
And their third assignment was to set up their camp around the Tabernacle
to protect its sanctity.
These functions are important to you and me not only as a piece
of the past. They serve as a paradigm for us today as Jews committed
to the vitality of the synagogue and as advocates of the synagogue's
centrality to Jewish life.
What does it mean for us to take charge of the sanctuary as the
Levites did in the past? Taking charge implies a willingness to
dig in and work. Present at our synagogue's bar mitzvah year celebration
were many of the people who nursed and guided the Woodbury Jewish
Center during its infancy. It is not easy to find people like them
who made unbelievable sacrifices with regard to their time and energies
to making the Woodbury Jewish Center a reality.
If a synagogue is to fulfil its sacred mandate to perpetuate the
religious life of the Jewish people, it needs a strong cadre of
volunteers who will roll up their sleeves and work. The Woodbury
Jewish Center is fortunate to have had - and to still have - many
committed and capable volunteers. But, as our President, Abraham
Zelkin, and our various committee chairs will readily admit, we
need many more. So let us follow the model of the Levites and dig
in and help our congregation achieve its vital religious, social
and educational objectives.
The second task of the Levites was to set up and take down the portable
sanctuary each time the Israelites moved to a new camping area.
They had to keep the Tabernacle moving with the people. Today, too,
a congregation is not a static entity. Generations change, times
change, values change. The synagogue must change, too, because,
otherwise, it loses touch with the people.
Many of the early members of the Woodbury Jewish Center became involved
in establishing a new congregation because they had belonged to
synagogues where women were allowed only a limited role. The founders
of our congregation believed that a woman's role in the synagogue
should reflect the egalitarian nature of American society today.
They wanted a congregation where men and women would have equal
responsibilities and equal opportunities to participate in every
aspect of synagogue life.
Making changes in tradition, however, must be done with great care.
A synagogue forfeits its role as guardian of the past and of sacred
values if it merely dittos each trend and fashion of society. As
a congregation pledged to the ideology of the Conservative Movement,
we recognize the gravity of thought that goes into deciding what
to change or whether to change as we strive to create a harmonious
blend of modernity and tradition. We are not afraid of making changes
that will enhance our enjoyment of Jewish life. But they must be
anchored in halacha, in Jewish law, as interpreted by the rabbinic
leadership of our movement.
There is one more task of the Levites relevant to us today. The
Torah tells us that the Levites were to guard the Tabernacle. They
were to protect it. But what was there to guard? The Tabernacle
was basically an empty tent. What filled it were intangible things:
the prayers, thoughts, and hopes of the people. Yet, may we not
assume that this was precisely what they were to protect? And is
this not our task today, to safeguard the beliefs, the rituals,
the cherished ideals of the Jewish people by promoting them among
ourselves and in our community. Is this not why thirteen years ago
a synagogue was established in Woodbury? ...to bring Torah to this
place? However vaguely it may have been articulated, the purpose
for starting this congregation was to involve Jews in learning about
their religious heritage and to nurture them as they explored ways
to make Jewish holidays, traditions and rituals meaningful for themselves,
their peers and their children.
In assessing our response as congregants to the needs of the synagogue,
the torah offers us one paradigm - that of the Levites. Another
paradigm may be found in a small pamphlet called, "Emet V'Emunah,"
which outlines the ideology of Conservative Judaism. In it is a
spiritual portrait of the ideal Jew. It describes this person as
a "learning Jew, a striving Jew and a willing Jew." A
willing Jew because Jewish commitment involves a desire to "refract
all aspects of life through the prism of one's Jewishness. A learning
Jew because one cannot be whole as a Jew without commitment to the
serious and on-going study of Jewish history, Jewish thought and
sacred Jewish texts. And a striving Jew because our spiritual development
and growth demand an openness to Jewish observances one has yet
to make a part of one's life.
I see as the primary agenda of our congregation creating as many
ideal Jews as we can. By doing so, we can boast that the Woodbury
Jewish Center's physical beauty is matched by an inner spiritual
strength. A strength that derives from our commitment to the religious
traditions and ethical aspirations of the Jewish people. May the
momentum of our bar mitzvah year energize our strivings to become
a kehila kidosha, a congregation characterized by three traits:
Jews who are willing to confront life's challenges guided by the
moral vision of our faith, Jews who are devoted to constantly learning
more about their heritage, and Jews who incorporate each year something
new of Jewish tradition into their lives. What wonderful goals to
strive for in our post bar mitzvah years.
Shabbat Shalom
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