I’m thrilled you are exploring Society Hill Synagogue and have found your way to the page of Divrei Torah, words of Torah, which are part of a generations-long Jewish practice of refracting sacred Jewish teachings through the light of our own day and age.
For me, Judaism is an opportunity to nourish ourselves, grounded in the Jewish story: a story that has unfolded throughout the generations, with twists and turns, tragedy and triumph, serving as a source of life to those who engage with it.
The Jewish People are known as B’nei Yisrael: the people who wrestle with the Divine. The name comes from that moment in our tradition in which it is understood that our ancestor Jacob “wrestled with a figure,” a figure understood to be a manifestation of that very Divine Being (see Genesis 32).
That moment produced a legacy of sacred wrestling; grappling; seeking to make meaning of, and find purpose in, our time on earth.
These Divrei Torah are my efforts, in conversation with the community of Society Hill Synagogue, to make meaning and to find purpose, seeking to serve this community, our broader world, and the Divine.
I hope you find meaning in them yourself, and I encourage you to reach out to me if you would like to discuss their contents or to discuss becoming a part of the Society Hill Synagogue community. Welcome!
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The Back and Forth of Torah and Our Lives
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar Some weeks, in our exploration of the weekly Torah portion, we react to the events of the world immediately around us. Other weeks the Torah portion raises themes that apply to our lives or our Judaism on a more subtle, ongoing

Guns.
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This week, for my weekly email to the congregation, I was planning to share the remarks I delivered this past Friday evening at TGIShabbat, when I spoke about the racist massacre in a Buffalo, New York grocery store on the basis

Creating a Palace in Time Amidst the Whirlwind of the World
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar A couple of months ago I underscored the idea, using Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel’s famous turn of phrase, that Shabbat is meant to be a palace in time: immune to the whims and vagaries of the weekday rhythms, the trials and

Reflecting on the Meaning to be Found in Counting
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar In our Saturday morning Torah discussion last week, held weekly from approximately 10:30-11 am as part of our Shabbat service, having recently been enriched by the additional, weekly participation of our Hebrew School students, we discussed Parashat Emor, the Torah portion known

The Juxtaposition of Yom Hazikaron and Yom Ha’atzmaut
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar Today marks Yom Ha’atzmaut, Independence Day in Israel, coming on the heels of Yom Hazikaron, shorthand for Yom HaZikaron LeHalalei Ma’arakhot Yisrael ul’Nifge’ei Pe’ulot HaEivah, Memorial Day for the Fallen Soldiers of the Wars of Israel and Victims of Actions of Terrorism, which is

The Future of Reproductive Choices
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar I don’t need to tell you that the revelation of the draft opinion of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization sent shockwaves through our national environment. The opinion, if the final version holds true to the draft’s core holdings, would overturn a 50-year-old

The Jewish Response to Alienation
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar I’m left still feeling the high of Friday night’s celebration of the generosity that led to our synagogue expansion. Members from every chapter of this community’s history came together displaying firsthand what intergenerational Jewish community looks like. Those who have been

A Bar Mitzvah Teaching on Kashrut and Belonging, and an Extended Teaching on the Last Remaining Ounce
As is our custom its my privilege to share some words of Torah from him. Skylar’s parashah (Torah portion) was Shemini, a portion that is situated partway through the book of Vayikra (Leviticus). Vayikra, which takes place in the aftermath of the Exodus and the Revelation at Sinai, lays out, essentially,

I’m Stepping Away for the Month
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar Dear Friends, Today is the due date for for our little one, and while there are no immediate signs that they’re going to arrive on schedule, I’m beginning approximately one month’s worth of parental leave starting tomorrow. (Going with a fixed

Ways to Support the People of Ukraine
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar Those who are regular participants in Friday night and Saturday morning services with us might have intuited by now that the emphasis of my Divrei Torah, my teachings from torah, tend not to engage directly or explicitly with the headlines of the

The Lost Touch
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This past Shabbat during services, we collectively studied Parashat Tetsaveh, the Torah portion known as Tetsaveh, which means “You [Moses] shall instruct.” The portion falls in the last third of the Book of Exodus as Moses remains with God at Mt. Sinai, gathering instructions

Getting in the Right Headspace
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This past week during Shabbat services, we discussed the weekly torah portion, Terumah. Terumah means “gifts” and it refers to the gifts that the Israelite people were called upon to bring so that, collectively, they could facilitate the construction of the mikdash, “sanctuary,” from the

Did Anyone Ever Teach You How to Pray? (Also, Blessings and Babies)
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar Tonight I want to talk about the thing that has been happening all around us this evening: prayer. Prayer is paradoxically extremely central to Jewish life—it is in some ways the central activity that happens at any Jewish event: a Shabbat

Revelation: Not Just a One Time Thing?
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This past Shabbat we studied Parashat Yitro, the Torah portion in the Book of Exodus known as Yitro, named after Moses’ father-in-law, Jethro, who witnesses the intense burdens Moses is under, navigating the many disputes of the Israelites, and helps him organize

A Bat Mitzvah’s Teaching on Questions
By Rabbi Nathan Kamesar This past weekend, for the second Shabbat in a row, we were fortunate to celebrate a beautiful Bat Mitzvah. Talia and her family celebrated in the sanctuary, on the Society Hill Synagogue Bimah, where multiple generations of this family have now