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Unlearning the Tzara’at from Our Walls

by Rabbi Melanie Aron
The Kli Yakar (16th century, Prague)... says that it is this stinginess that brings “tzara’at of houses,” that our refusal to share is what will ultimately destroy our homes and society.
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Building Structures to House All Images of God

by Rabbi Adir Yolkut
It is incumbent upon us to create spaces for God to come into the world. I would add, if we are not doing everything we can to create structures to house all holy human beings, then we are not doing our part in imitating godliness. 
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The Wilderness of Homelessness and a Way Forward

by Rabbi Adam Baldachin
I imagine the Israelites showing the same expression of confusion and disbelief as those families who realize that they have just lost their homes and that their lives have just been upended: not knowing to whom to turn and where to go because of a system that is not built to support them. At least in the story of the Exodus, God has other plans.
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How Drawing Near Leads to Speaking Out

by Rabbi Sharyn Henry
This drawing-near is ultimately what leads to Joseph’s emotions overwhelming him; breaking from silence into sobbing, he orders the room cleared and then reveals himself to his brothers. Our drawing-near is also what engaged our emotions and drew us from silence into speech.
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Joseph and His Amazing Technocratic Dream Coat: The Descent to Tyranny

by Rabbi Daniel Chorny
I am puzzled by the ways in which a country that readily replaces phones and computers as soon as we experience even the slightest decrease in performance can insist that our inherited system for organizing our economy and government works just fine.
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In Our Rabbis’ Eyes, “Sodomy” Meant Toxic Selfishness

by Rabbi David Polsky
As a whole, the rabbinic discussions about Sodom demonstrate that, for the rabbis, the true definition of “sodomy” is toxic selfishness combined with an extreme devotion to property rights.
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Canceling the Cancellation of Debts: A Theological Case for Pruzbol

by Rabbi David Rosenn
Debts are obligations, and Jewish culture is built around obligations.
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Cultivating a Culture of Giving

by Rabbi Jethro Berkman
For the sake of the food insecure in these difficult days, and for the future health of our country, I hope that Ki Tavo’s powerful linking of sacred space and religiosity to the obligation to give to those in need can be strengthened. As Americans increasingly seek spirituality and community outside of organized religion, community builders, religious and non-religious alike, must work to cultivate cultures of giving.
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Learning to Open Our Hands

by Rabbi Lauren Henderson
Our hearts and bodies want to give, but our brains get in the way. 
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Our Wealth is Not Our Own: What Is Jewish Power For?

by Rabbi Louis Polisson
...the Torah teaches us that the particular and the universal are inextricably intertwined. Just as we need partners in the fight against antisemitism, we must use our power to become partners to others in the fights for social, racial, and economic justice. As the Talmud says, ​​even a poor person who is sustained from tzedakah must also perform tzedakah (Gittin 7b). When we feel the fragility of our power, when we feel we need help, even then – precisely then – we must share what we have with others.
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