DiscoverFrom the Bimah: Jewish Lessons for LifeShabbat Sermon: Ripples with Rabbi Wes Gardenswartz
Shabbat Sermon: Ripples with Rabbi Wes Gardenswartz

Shabbat Sermon: Ripples with Rabbi Wes Gardenswartz

Update: 2025-09-13
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The two lands we love, America and Israel, both have a problem. The problem is real, recurrent, and deadly. The problem showed up in both lands this week. The problem is violence and lack of regard for the sanctity of human life, lack of regard for the Bible’s most important teaching: that all human beings are created in God’s image and therefore deserve to live and to be treated with respect and dignity.

On Monday morning, at a busy bus stop in Jerusalem, two shooters fired upon ordinary people living an ordinary day, killing six innocent people, the victims of terrorism.

The shots were fired in Jerusalem. But the effects were felt in Newton. The effects were felt in our preschool, right here.

One of the victims was Rabbi Mordechai Steintzag. His daughter Tanya teaches at our preschool. On Monday Tanya flew to Israel to attend her father’s funeral. Like Rabbi Steintzag, every one of the victims was innocent; was loved; did good in the world; did not deserve to be murdered; loved their life and their families; and leaves behind families and communities that will never be the same. Each life taken is an infinite tragedy.

And then, on Wednesday, at Utah Valley University, political activist Charlie Kirk was assassinated. He leaves behind a wife, two young children, and family and friends who are bereft that a31-year-old is no more, the victim of political violence. Charlie Kirk’s murder is an infinite tragedy.

Tonight is Selikhot, the beginning of our High Holiday season. How do we understand this violence, and what are we to do about it? Of course we decry it. We denounce it. We mourn it. We lament it. But is there anything we can do about it?

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Shabbat Sermon: Ripples with Rabbi Wes Gardenswartz

Shabbat Sermon: Ripples with Rabbi Wes Gardenswartz

Temple Emanuel in Newton