Parashat Naso

Friday Night Shabbat Services tonight at the usual time of 7:00 PM. Join us for spirited singing and stay after for coffee, cookies and company.
Candle lighting in Austin is at 8:17 PM

Shabbat morning services are a week away, Saturday June 25.

A note from Arthur Gurney: I would like to thank everybody for their thoughts, prayers, calls, cards, and meals since my recent car accident. I am most grateful for the many rides to doctor’s appointments and physical therapy. It was all very much appreciated. I am finally driving again.

Cantor Ben-Moshe’s Message
This week we read in Parshat Naso about the dedication ceremony for the Tabernacle in the Wilderness. Each of the tribal chieftains brought an identical gift for the ceremony. This emphasized he absolute equality of every part of the People of Israel-no matter how large or small the tribe. All of us are, or should be, equal. Non-Orthodox Judaism should be equal to Orthodox in Israel, and of course every Jew should have equal status. May the day soon come when this is fact and not merely aspiration. Shabbat Shalom.
Hazzan Yitzhak Ben-Moshe

The sisterhood will have a host of events in the coming year. Highlights include another Chemist in the Kitchen class with Tamar, book club event with Gail, Art with Sharon, Volunterering at Mitzvah day with Rachael, Jewish yoga (“Oy”ga) fun, garage sale to raise funds for the shul and much, much more. As always, please send us your ideas and if you would like to help with events.

Thank you to our new board of directors!
We welcome new board members Art Levin, Barry Mann and Juliette Meinstein, who are joining Kevin Koeller, Bob Miller, Bam Rubenstein, Gregg and Michelle Philipson, Elaine Jacobs, Arie Stavchansky and Yosef Aguilar. We even have two youth group representatives who will report to the board about the needs of the youth in our congregation, Sara K. and Vania A. You all are tremendous, inspiring and really appreciated.

Kudos to all the many helpers who help make Beth El Beautiful. This week Efrain and Joakin spruced up the landscaping and Tam sharpened all our kitchen knives! Beth El is the kind of place where many hands make light work and everyone can truly make a difference.

Sunday school resumes in the fall, on August 21. Currently enrolliing students for the coming year to join our BERS and their awesome teachers. Bar and Bat mitzvah prep classes also continue. If you have any questions, please contact us at info@bethelaustin.org

Happy birthday this month to Joakin Soto, Kevin Koeller, Hal Jacobs, Rinat Levin, Moshe Sananes, Rachel Butler, Anat Inbar, Terri Rubenstein.
Let us know your special occasion and we’ll give you a Mazal Tov!

Dr. Peter Tarlow, Rabbi Emeritus at Texas A&M and Center for Latino Jewish Relations: Weekly Parasha:
This week we begin the Bible’s fourth book, BaMidbar, or as it is known in English translation, the Book of Numbers. Actually the yearly reading began last week, but due to a heavy travel schedule we will combine the first two weekly sections: BaMidbar and Naso.
Last week we celebrated the festival of Shavuoth. Shavuoth marks the time that the Jewish people went from being a mere “group’ and became a nation. To be a nation, means to live by a set of rules, to cease to live only in the present but to have both a common history and hopes and aspirations for the future. One of Ruth’s decedents will be our most famous king, King David. In a world of ethnic cleansing, genocide and hatred the lessons of this book are more powerful than ever.
It is not easy to find a common theme between the first two weekly sections. The first one, Parashat BaMidbar (Numbers 1:1-4:20) is about the taking of the national census; the need to have precise data and facts. The parashah is a challenge to the modern reader but despite the fact that it is not an easy parashah to read, it teaches us that without a sense of order and organization no society can long survive.
This week’s section, Naso is one of the most unusual sections in the entire Hebrew Bible. The section, called Parashat Naso, begins in Numbers 4:21 and goes until 7:89. It is the only place in Jewish law where there is a “trial by ordeal.” The trial is centered around the theme of a woman whose husband suspected her of being unfaithful to him, and how he could test her honesty.
Interestingly enough, the rabbis changed the text’s emphasis from that of the unfaithful wife to that of the jealous husband. Classical Judaism feared the “power of jealousy” seeing it as an “emotional tornado.” The rabbis understood that to be jealous is to claim ownership of another human being. In that sense this first “rebellion in the desert” is a symbol of the “wilderness of selfishness”, of a desire to control another human being. Each member of Israel had to cross this sea of jealousy if he were to reach the promised land of human dignity. It is for that reason that the rabbis argued that only G’d has the right to be jealous.
Judaism understood that to be jealous is a form of enslavement. It understands that where there is slavery then society soon degenerates into a false sense of order and finally chaos. Is there a time to be jealous? Is it there a proper time to be jealous or is a complete lack of jealousy merely indifference? What do you think?