What Does it Mean to Have a Deeper Yom Kippur?
Rosh Hashanah begins the work. Yom Kippur seals it. But only if you are willing to go deep.
Rosh Hashanah begins the work. Yom Kippur seals it. But only if you are willing to go deep.
This year, as with everything relating to the High Holy Days in the era of COVID-19, the space that IKAR carves out for grief had to be rethought.
They feel like the local police and media don’t fully understand the situation at hand.
In a year like no other, it was a Rosh Hashanah like no other.
Yom Kippur counts on us to feel vulnerable. It is through feeling vulnerable that we open the hidden vessels of growth and healing.
There is one universal God. This God is the creator of the world; the God of all humanity; the God introduced to the world by the Hebrew Bible.
The deep contemplation that Rosh Hashanah demands is enhanced by the Shabbat experience.