What is "Jewish Spirituality"? How do I make it part of my life? Today's foremost spiritual leaders share their ideas and experience. Whether you are just curious, intently searching for greater personal meaning, or actively seeking ideas, information, practices and inspiration to enrich your spiritual life, The Jewish Lights Spirituality Handbook is the ideal companion for your journey as it explores:
What is "Jewish Spirituality"? How do I make it part of my life? Today's foremost spiritual leaders share their ideas and experience. Whether you are just curious, intently searching for greater personal meaning, or actively seeking ideas, information, practices and inspiration to enrich your spiritual life, The Jewish Lights Spirituality Handbook is the ideal companion for your journey as it explores:
On the Spiritual Journey
Rebbe Nachman of Breslov
Introduction
Part I
Awakening the Possibilities: What is Jewish Spirituality?
Part II
The Worlds of Your Life: Where is Spirituality Found?
Part III
The Times and Seasons of Your Life: When Does Spirituality
Enter?
Part V
So What Do You Do With It? Why Spirituality Should be Part of Your
Life
Notes
About the Contributors
Index of Contributors
Isa Aron, PhD, is professor of Jewish education at Hebrew Union
College–Jewish Institute of Religion's Rhea Hirsch School of
Education. Founder and former director of the Experiment in
Congregational Education (ECE), she now serves as senior
consultant. She holds a PhD in philosophy of education from the
University of Chicago, and her writing on education and
congregational renewal has appeared in such journals as the
American Journal of Education, Tikkun and the Journal of Reform
Judaism. She is also author of Becoming a Congregation of Learners:
Learning as a Key to Revitalizing Congregational Life and The
Self-renewing Congregation: Organizational Stragegies for
Revitalizing Congregational Life.
Isa Aron, PhD, is available to speak on the following topics:
Synagogue Change (or Synagogue Renewal)
Jewish Education
Moral Education
Neil Gillman, rabbi and PhD, is professor of Jewish philosophy at
The Jewish Theological Seminary in New York, where he has served as
chair of the Department of Jewish Philosophy and dean of the
Rabbinical School. He is author of Believing and Its Tensions: A
Personal Conversation about God, Torah, Suffering and Death in
Jewish Thought; The Death of Death: Resurrection and Immortality in
Jewish Thought, a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award and a
Publishers Weekly "Best Book of the Year"; The Way Into
Encountering God in Judaism; The Jewish Approach to God: A Brief
Introduction for Christians; Traces of God: Seeing God in Torah,
History and Everyday Life (all Jewish Lights); and Sacred
Fragments: Recovering Theology for the Modern Jew, winner of the
National Jewish Book Award.
Rabbi Elyse Goldstein, one of the leading rabbis of a new
generation, is director of Kolel: The Adult Center for Liberal
Jewish Learning, a full-time progressive adult Jewish learning
center. Goldstein lectures frequently throughout North America. She
is also editor of The Women's Torah Commentary: New Insights from
Women Rabbis on the 54 Weekly Torah Portions; and The Women's
Haftarah Commentary: New Insights from Women Rabbis on the 54
Weekly Haftarah Portions, the 5 Megillot and Special Shabbatot; and
author of the award-winning New Jewish Feminism: Probing the Past,
Forging the Future and ReVisions: Seeing Torah through a Feminist
Lens (all Jewish Lights).
Rabbi Elyse Goldstein is available to speak on the following
topics:
Women and Judaism
Reform Judaism
Jewish Parenting
General Judaica
Arthur Green, PhD, is recognized as one of the world's preeminent
authorities on Jewish thought and spirituality. He is the Irving
Brudnick professor of philosophy and religion at Hebrew College and
rector of the Rabbinical School, which he founded in 2004.
Professor emeritus at Brandeis University, he also taught at the
University of Pennsylvania and the Reconstructionist Rabbinical
College, where he served as dean and president.
Dr. Green is author of several books including Ehyeh: A Kabbalah
for Tomorrow; Seek My Face: A Jewish Mystical Theology; Your Word
Is Fire: The Hasidic Masters on Contemplative Prayer; and Tormented
Master: The Life and Spiritual Quest of Rabbi Nahman of Bratslav
(all Jewish Lights). He is also author of Radical Judaism (Yale
University Press) and co-editor of Speaking Torah: Spiritual
Teachings from around the Maggid's Table. He is long associated
with the Havurah movement and a neo-Hasidic approach to
Judaism.
Judy Greenfeld, second invested cantor at Temple Emanuel in Beverly
Hills, California. She leads the New Emanuel minyan, a weekly
progressive prayer service.
A world-renowned philosopher and social activist, Dr. David Hartman
(z"l) is the founder and president emeritus of the Shalom Hartman
Institute in Jerusalem. Named after his late father, the Institute
is dedicated to developing a new understanding of classical Judaism
that provides moral and spiritual direction for Judaism's
confrontation with modernity.
Presently professor emeritus at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, he
received his rabbinic ordination from Yeshiva University's
theological seminary in New York City. He is the author of many
award-winning books, including A Living Covenant: The Innovative
Spirit in Traditional Judaism (Jewish Lights) and Maimonides: Torah
and Philosophic Quest, both winners of the National Jewish Book
Award; A Heart of Many Rooms: Celebrating the Many Voices within
Judaism (Jewish Lights), finalist for the National Jewish Book
Award and a Publishers Weekly "Best Book of the Year"; and Love and
Terror in the God Encounter: The Theological Legacy of Rabbi Joseph
B. Soloveitchik (Jewish Lights).
Mark Hass has been on the staff of the Detroit News and the Miami
Herald.
Rabbi Levi Meier, PhD, is chaplain of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
in Los Angeles. He is a clinical psychologist and was one of the
religious leaders who "screened" The Prince of Egypt for the
DreamWorks Studio. He is also the author of Moses—The Prince, the
Prophet: His Life, Legend & Message for our Lives and Ancient
Secrets: Using the Stories of the Bible to Improve Our Everyday
Lives (Jewish Lights).
Rabbi James L. Mirel has served as spiritual leader of Temple B'nai
Torah in Bellevue, Washington, for more than a decade. He is one of
the most respected congregational rabbis in the United States, and
has received awards and recognition for his work in Jewish and
communal services. He has served as a religion columnist for the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer and as a radio talk show host on the
award-winning God Talk.
Rabbi Debra Orenstein is an acclaimed teacher, speaker and
scholar-in-residence. Before repatriating back to New Jersey in
2010 to become spiritual leader of Congregation B'nai Israel in
Emerson, she spent twenty years as an instructor at the American
Jewish University and a pulpit rabbi in Los Angeles. Rabbi
Orenstein is the author and editor of five books, including
Lifecycles 1: Jewish Women on Life Passages and Personal Milestones
and Lifecycles 2: Jewish Women on Biblical Themes in Contemporary
Life (Jewish Lights). A seventh generation rabbi, she is also an
alumna of the first entering class to include women at The Jewish
Theological Seminary. For downloadable teachings and
scholar-in-residence information, please visit
www.RabbiDebra.com.
Rabbi Debra Orenstein is available to speak on the following
topics:
Finding (More) Meaning in Jewish Ritual and Practice
Unfolding Adventures in Lifecycle, Spirituality and Gender
Reading the Bible with New Eyes: Feminist Interpretation
Ways in to Jewish Spirituality
Raising Spiritually Fulfilled Children: Generation Mentsch
Rabbi Jack Riemer, a well-known author and speaker, has conducted
many workshops and seminars to help people learn about the
inspiring tradition of ethical wills and to prepare their own. As
head of the National Rabbinic Network, a support system for rabbis
across all denominational lines, he gives sermon seminars to rabbis
throughout the United States. He is editor of The World of the High
Holy Days (Bernie Books) and Wrestling with the Angel (Schocken),
coeditor of So That Your Values Live On: Ethical Wills and How to
Prepare Them, and contributed to May God Remember: Memory and
Memorializing in Judaism—Yizkor (both Jewish Lights).
Rabbi Sandy Eisenberg Sasso,a parent, spiritual leader, and
storyteller, is the awardwinning author of God's Paintbrush, In
God's Name, God In Between and many other inspiring books for
children of all faiths and backgrounds. The second woman to be
ordained as a rabbi (1974) and the first rabbi to become a mother,
she and her husband, Dennis, were the first rabbinical couple to
jointly lead a congregation—Beth-El Zedeck in Indianapolis. They
have two children, David and Debora, and three grandchildren.
Sasso, who holds a doctorate in ministry, is active in the
interfaith community, and has written and lectured on the renewal
of spirituality and the discovery of the religious imagination in
children of all faiths.
Rabbi Sandy Eisenberg Sasso is available to speak on the following
topics:/p>
Nurturing the Spiritual Imagination of Children
Tell Me a Story: Reading the Bible and the Religious Imagination of
Children
Filling in the Blanks: How Women Read the Bible
Women and Judaism: A Personal Journey
Midrash as a Tool for Spiritual Reflection
Rifat Sonsino, scholar and rabbi, is spiritual leader of Temple
Beth Shalom in Needham, Massachusetts. Ordained at Hebrew Union
College–Jewish Institute of Religion, he holds a degree in law and
a Ph.D. in Bible and ancient Near Eastern studies. He has served as
editor of the Central Conference of American Rabbis Journal and is
the co-author of Finding God—Ten Jewish Responses and What Happens
after I Die? Jewish Views of Life after Death. He and his wife,
Ines, have two children—Daniel and Deborah—and are the proud
grandparents of Ariella.
Dr. Ron Wolfson, visionary educator and inspirational speaker, is
Fingerhut Professor of Education at American Jewish University in
Los Angeles and a cofounder of Synagogue 3000. He is author of
Relational Judaism: Using the Power of Relationships to Transform
the Jewish Community; The Seven Questions You're Asked in Heaven:
Reviewing and Renewing Your Life on Earth; Be Like God: God's To-Do
List for Kids; God's To-Do List: 103 Ways to Be an Angel and Do
God's Work on Earth; Hanukkah, Passover and Shabbat, all Federation
of Jewish Men's Clubs Art of Jewish Living family guides to
spiritual celebrations; The Spirituality of Welcoming: How to
Transform Your Congregation into a Sacred Community; A Time to
Mourn, a Time to Comfort: A Guide to Jewish Bereavement and
Comfort; and, with Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, What You Will See
Inside a Synagogue (all Jewish Lights), a book for children ages 6
and up. He contributed to May God Remember: Memory and
Memorializing in Judaism—Yizkor, Who by Fire, Who by Water—Un'taneh
Tokef, All These Vows—Kol Nidre, and We Have Sinned: Sin and
Confession in Judaism—Ashamnu and Al Chet (all Jewish Lights).
Dr. Ron Wolfson is available to speak on the following topics:
Building Good Tents: Envisioning the Synagogue of the Future
God's To-Do List
The Seven Questions You're Asked in Heaven
Blessings and Kisses: The Power of the Jewish Family
A Time to Mourn, a Time to Comfort
Click here to contact the author.
Rabbi David Zeller, storyteller, teacher and musician, is a pioneer
in Jewish spirituality and transpersonal psychology. He helped
establish the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology; the Network of
Conscious Judaism; Yakar: Center for Tradition and Creativity; and
Shevet: Center for Jewish Spirituality and Meditation. He has
produced five recordings of meditative and healing music. He
travels extensively throughout the United States and Europe several
times each year to teach and perform. Learn more about David
Zeller, his stories and his music at www.davidzeller.org.
Rabbi Sheldon Zimmerman founded the Task Force on Alcoholism of the
Federation of Jewish Philanthropies of New York. While he was rabbi
of Central Synagogue in New York City, his congregation sponsored
the first Alcoholics Anonymous group to meet in a synagogue.
Formerly president of Hebrew Union College–Jewish Institute of
Religion, he is now rabbi of the Jewish Center of the Hamptons
(NY).
Rabbi Kerry M. Olitzky, named one of the fifty leading rabbis in
North America by Newsweek, is well known for his inspiring books
that bring the Jewish wisdom tradition into everyday life. He is
executive director of the Jewish Outreach Institute, and is author
of many books on Jewish spirituality, healing and Jewish religious
practice, including Making a Successful Jewish Interfaith Marriage:
The Jewish Outreach Institute Guide to Opportunities, Challenges
and Resources; Introducing My Faith and My Community: The Jewish
Outreach Institute Guide; Jewish Paths toward Healing and
Wholeness: A Personal Guide to Dealing with Suffering; Grief in Our
Seasons: A Mourner's Kaddish Companion; Twelve Jewish Steps to
Recovery: A Personal Guide to Turning from Alcoholism & Other
Addictions—Drugs, Food, Gambling, Sex...; Facing Cancer as a
Family; Life's Daily Blessings: Inspiring Reflections on Gratitude
for Every Day, Based on Jewish Wisdom; 100 Blessings Every Day:
Daily Twelve Step Recovery Affirmations, Exercises for Personal
Growth and Renewal Reflecting Seasons of the Jewish Year; and
Recovery from Codependance: A Jewish Twelve Step Guide to Healing
Your Soul. He is also co-author of Grandparenting Interfaith
Grandchildren; Jewish Holidays: A Brief Introduction for
Christians; Jewish Ritual: A Brief Introduction for Christians;
Renewed Each Day, Vol. One—Genesis and Exodus: Daily Twelve Step
Recovery Meditations; Renewed Each Day, Vol. Two—Leviticus, Numbers
and Deuteronomy: Daily Twelve Step Recovery Meditations Based on
the Bible and co-editor of The Rituals and Practices of a Jewish
Life: A Handbook for Personal Spiritual Renewal(all Jewish
Lights).
Rabbi Kerry M. Olitzky is available to speak on the following
topics:
The Jewish Twelve Step Path to Healing and Recovery
Sparks Beneath the Surface: A Spiritual Read on the Torah
Welcoming the Stranger in Our Midst
How to Nurture Jewish Grandchildren Being Raised in an Interfaith
Family
Optimism for a Jewish Future
Stuart Matlins is founder, editor-in-chief and publisher of Jewish
Lights Publishing and SkyLight Paths Publishing. Both imprints
focus on religion and spirituality from a broad non-denominational
perspective. He is author or editor of several books, including the
best-selling How to Be a Perfect Stranger, 5th Edition: The
Essential Religious Etiquette Handbook (SkyLight Paths); The Jewish
Lights Spirituality Handbook: A Guide to Understanding, Exploring &
Living a Spiritual Life (Jewish Lights); The Perfect Stranger's
Guide to Wedding Ceremonies: A Guide to Etiquette in Other People's
Religious Ceremonies; and The Perfect Stranger's Guide to Funerals
and Grieving Practices: A Guide to Etiquette in Other People’s
Religious Ceremonies (both SkyLight Paths).
Stuart was the 2006 recipient of the American Jewish Distinguished
Service Award, an annual presentation of Hebrew Union
College–Jewish Institute of Religion. He was a member of the First
Catholic/Jewish Lay Conference at the Vatican in October 2007, an
event under the auspices of the Interreligious Information
Center.
Among his many speaking appearances, Stuart has been the
scholar-in-residence or guest lecturer at the National Funeral
Director’s Association convention, Temple Isaiah (Palm Springs,
CA), The Jewish Center of the Hamptons (East Hampton, NY), Temple
Sholom (Plainfield, NJ), Israel Congregation (Manchester, NH) and
at the annual gatherings of the Jewish Community Centers
Association and the Jewish Outreach Institute. He also has been a
featured speaker or panel member at many Book Expo America
conventions, and at the biennial Festival of Faith and Writing at
Calvin College, as well as at churches and other conferences.
Before publishing took over his life, he was a management
consultant for over thirty years as a managing partner with Booz
Allen Hamilton, Inc. and then heading his own consulting firm.
He is the co-founder of an innovative synagogue in Woodstock,
Vermont, with his wife, Antoinette Matlins, and served as lay
spiritual leader for nineteen of its twenty-one years. He has
served for almost twenty years on the Board of Governors of Hebrew
Union College–Jewish Institute of Religion, and was chair of the
Board of Overseers of its New York School.
He is listed in Who’s Who in America.
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