Flexibility: The Key to Redemption? By Gidon Rothstein
July 18, 2010 by Gidon Rothstein
Filed under Holidays, New Posts
Around this time of year, we once again face our continuing state of חורבן, of the destruction not only of our Temple, our Beit haMikdash, but really of the national, legislative, judicial, social, and cultural structure that would be ideal for our people. There are many explanations for why and how this happened, perhaps the [...]
Change and Unity: Navigating the Tension by Gidon Rothstein
June 13, 2010 by Gidon Rothstein
Filed under Halakha, New Posts
It should be unarguable that as times change, our expression of the eternal principles of halachah changes as well. When cars, computers, and other technological wonders came along, rabbis and poskim had to figure out how those appliances fit within the world of halachah.
In those cases, the process was perhaps eased by the items in [...]
Halacha and Autonomous Religiosity: What’s the Problem? by Gidon Rothstein
May 26, 2010 by Gidon Rothstein
Filed under Halakha, New Posts, Philosophy
I first heard of Rabbi Nathan Lopes Cardozo over twenty years ago, when I was a semicha student and he was already a well-known teacher of Torah in Yerushalayim. I mention that because as I come to comment on his recent cri de coeur– “The Future and the Spirit of Halacha: Unconventional Thoughts in Relation [...]
Rabbi Nachum Rabinovitch’s New Responsa: Worth More Than a Casual Look
May 13, 2010 by Gidon Rothstein
Filed under Halakha, New Posts
The first months I had my Bar-Ilan CD-Rom, almost fifteen years ago by now, I got lost many times, overwhelmed by the multitude of sources the disc contained. It was not until I learned to play favorites, particularly with Midrashim and Responsa, that I could make any forward progress. Even then, I was repeatedly introduced [...]
Missing the Point of Holidays: Chametz and Kitniyot on Passover & Torah and Bikkurim on Shavuot by Gidon Rothstein
April 21, 2010 by Gidon Rothstein
Filed under Holidays, New Posts
Mistakes are sometimes self-contained, so that they affect nothing other than the issue they address. Sometimes, though, mistakes—or even just slight misrepresentations of the truth—feed on themselves and end up overshadowing or obscuring important other truths. Pesach and Shavuot, for me personally, are among the times when the latter is true, when our attachment to [...]
Our Writers Respond: The Component Issues of a Traditional Jewish Womanhood by Gidon Rothstein
March 9, 2010 by Gidon Rothstein
Filed under Jewish Culture, New Posts, Our Writers Respond
You know that moment in a conversation where you begin to suspect that the two of you see the world so differently, it might not even be possible to have an intelligible exchange? I do, very well; I once, years ago, deeply offended a congregant and friend when, in the middle of a discussion of [...]
Purim and the Challenge of Human Sexuality by Gidon Rothstein
February 24, 2010 by Gidon Rothstein
Filed under New Posts, Tanach
At a crucial moment of the Megillah named after her, Ester tells Mordechai that she will go and speak to Ahashverosh uninvited, asks him to pray for her, and closes by saying, וכאשר אבדתי אבדתי, when I am lost, I am lost. Megillah 15a puts a twist on this phrase that brings it in line [...]
Women and the Splitting of Modern Orthodoxy: Confronting the Underlying Issues by Gidon Rothstein
February 23, 2010 by Gidon Rothstein
Filed under New Posts
My friend and colleague R. Nati Helfgot’s recent discussion of women’s leadership in communal settings is marked by his usual and admirable judiciousness, his concern to be respectful to all sides in a debate, and his hope to move our community forward as productively and peacefully as possible. With all the respect and admiration I [...]
Balancing the Necessity and Abhorrence of Violence: Of Terrorists and Amalek by Gidon Rothstein
February 5, 2010 by Gidon Rothstein
Filed under Halakha, New Posts, Philosophy
Balancing the Necessity and Abhorrence of Violence: Of Terrorists and Amalek
Tu B’Shvat goes by, a holiday that continues to grow in popularity, especially as the environmental movement takes further hold (we hope), as we become more aware of our relationship with the earth. With its passing, not to be seen again until next year, we [...]
More Than Just a Line in Our Prayers: Remembering the Exodus by Gidon Rothstein
January 13, 2010 by Gidon Rothstein
Filed under Holidays, New Posts, Tanach
In the context of my Mission of Orthodoxy project, I recently noted that Orthodox Jewish men are required to twice daily recall the Exodus from Egypt. While Rambam does not count this as a separate mitzvah, he does include it as part of the structure of the Shema that obligates us morning and evening.[1] We [...]
