Welcome to KRA!
Shabbat, October 27th, 2007 Parshat Vayera
   
 
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SHABBAT SCHEDULE
Candle lighting: 5:41 pm
Mincha/Kabbalat Shabbat: 5:45 pm
Shabbat Morning Parsha Class with Rabbi Mintz: 8:45 am
Morning Services: 9:15 am
Youth Groups: 10:00 am
Speaker Mr. Fleischer: 11:15
Hot Kiddush following speaker sponsored by Hesky Kutscher in honor of his aufruf and his upcoming marriage to Bella Kandchorov
Mincha: 5:15 pm
Talmud Class with Rabbi Mintz: 5:35 pm
Maariv: 6:35 pm
Shabbat ends: 6:41 pm
 
    SPEAKER - SHABBAT OCTOBER 27th
  Simon Fleischer, while working toward his Ph.D. in English Literature, teaches English at SAR High School. In addition, he recently completed his first novel. The topic of his talk will be "Hineni and the Power of Silence."
   
    WEDNESDAY NIGHT LECTURE SERIES (OCT. 17th)
  Rabbi Adam Mintz will continue his fall lecture series on Wednesday night, October 24th, at 8 pm at KRA. The topic of the series is "The Ethics of the Relationship of Jews and Non-Jews" and this lecture will address "How Should Jews Deal with Intermarried Jews?"
   


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The Ethics of the Relationship of Jews and Non-Jews
October 24th: How Should Jews Deal with Intermarried Jews?
October 31st: Medical Ethics: Can a Jew Save a Non-Jew on Shabbat?
November 7th: Business Ethics: Can a Jew Cheat a Non-Jew?
November 14th: Forbidden Foods: Stam Yaynam and Bishul Akum

 
    NEXT WEEK'S SPEAKER
  SHABBAT NOVEMBER 3rd: Rabbi Elihu Stern will deliver the lecture. Rabbi Stern is the director of special projects at the Samuel Bronfman Foundation while completing his doctorate in Jewish History at U.C. Berkeley. He previously served as rabbi at the Park East Synagogue. Rabbi Stern is also a staff writer for beliefnet.com where he writes a weekly column entitled "Virtual Talmud" as well as a term- member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
   
    UPCOMING SPEAKERS
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SHABBAT NOVEMBER 10th: We will have a special bar mitzvah program in honor of the bar mitzvah of Brett Krutiansky.

SHABBAT NOVEMBER 17th: Rabbi Adam Mintz will deliver the lecture in honor of the bar mitzvah of Avi Schwarzschild.
   
    MAZAL TOV
  To Hesky Kutscher in honor of the celebration of his aufruf and his upcoming marriage to Bella Kandchorov.
 



 
Hospitality is Next to Godliness
By Rabbi David Polsky

All of us are familiar with the importance of hospitality, but a commonly known midrash elevates its significance to another level. At the beginning of this week’s parashah, Abraham is communing with God. After noticing three strangers walking near his tent, Abraham begs leave of God in order to tend to these men (Genesis 18:3). Our sages derive from this narrative that receiving guests is more important than receiving God’s presence (Tractate Shabbat 127a).

Although this deduction is reasonable, it is nonetheless counterintuitive. Much of the point of religion is for us to recognize and experience God. These goals are contradicted when one abandons God for seemingly more mundane matters.

Upon deeper reflection, Abraham’s actions are completely understandable. Abraham is able to communicate with God, and in such moments the Divine presence is right before him. It is a greater challenge for Abraham to find God’s presence in the faces of the three men who wander in the desert and go unnoticed by others. By finding God’s presence in places and acts of kindness where no one thought to find Him, Abraham demonstrates that God can be found in places we would least expect.

 
 
 
Please let us know if you would like to read a parsha of the Torah or a Haftorah on Shabbat morning. Please let us know if you would like to sponsor a Kiddush, a Gemara shiur or a Jewish History class.
 
OUR ADDRESS:
Kehilat Rayim Ahuvim
241 West 72nd Street, 2nd Fl.
New York, NY 10023
For more information:
e-mail us at
chevra@rayimahuvim.org or
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