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Seven Days, Many Voices
Insights into the Biblical Story of Creation
Edited by Rabbi Benjamin David
330 Pages6.00 × 9.00 × 0.80 in
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Few stories are as compelling as the Creation story in the Book of Genesis. Our readings of Creation are incredibly diverse. This collection gives us a lens into a wide range of creative and inspiring thinking about Creation. Important thinkers such as Rabbi Arthur Waskow, Dr. Alyssa Gray, Rabbi Aaron Panken, PhD, Rabbi Mira Wasserman, PhD, Rabbi Jill Jacobs, and many others, examine the Creation story through fields of midrash, biblical criticism, literature, theology, climate justice, human rights, history, and science. This diverse collection of some of today's finest thinkers will challenge assumptions and spark new ideas. Great for individual study or community learning!
Introduction
Note about Translations
Acknowledgments
Day One: Light and Darkness
1. Cosmic Disorder
Rabbi Oren J. Hayon
2. Creation: Responsibility, Blessing, and Sanctity
Rabbi Dr. Yehoyada Amir
3. “In the Beginning” of BT B’rachot: Another Creation
Alyssa M. Gray, JD, PhD
4. Creating Worlds One Day at a Time
Cantor Amanda Kleinman
5. The Why and the How of Creation: Harmonizing Genesis and the Big Bang
Rabbi Geoffrey A. Mitelman
6. Light and Darkness: The Human Condition in Buddhist and Muslim Texts
Rabbi Joshua M. Z. Stanton
Day Two: Sky and Water
7. The Second Day: A Pilot’s Perspective
Rabbi Aaron Panken, PhD
8. Holding the Waters at Bay
Rabbi Mira Beth Wasserman, PhD
9. Separating the Waters
Rabbi Kinneret Shiryon, DD
10. The Night Sky
Rabbi Scott M. Nagel
11. Water Conservation as Biblical Imperative
Rabbi Kevin M. Kleinman
12. What If?: The Sacred Potential of Water
Shaina Herring and Rabbi Sara Luria
Day Three: Land and Vegetation
13. The Holiness of Wild Places
Rabbi Jamie Korngold
14. The Jewish Imperative of Healing the Land
Alex Cicelsky
15. Why We Must Teach Our Children to Care for All Living Creatures
Rabbi Rayna Gevurtz
16. Bal Tashchit: God’s First and Most General Call
Rabbi Fred Scherlinder Dobb, DMin
17. The Third Day and Our Oceans
Liya Rechtman
18. From the Third Day to the Song of Songs: The Eco-Torah of an Indigenous People
Rabbi Arthur Waskow
Day Four: Times and Seasons
19. If Not Now, Why?: Celebrating the Festivals at Their Set Times
Rabbi Jill L. Maderer
20. A Light for the Nations
Rabbi Denise L. Eger
21. The Physics of Jewish Time and the Fourth Day of Creation
Loui Dobin
22. Diaspora Time
Rabbi Michael G. Holzman
23. Separate, Mark, and Season—Just Don’t Yawn: The Lesson of the Fourth Day of Creation
Rabbi Edwin Cole Goldberg, DHL
24. Music and the Punctuation of Time
Cantor Ellen Dreskin
Day Five: Animals of Land and Water
25. Global Swarming: Can We Become Worthy of Creation?
Rabbi Matthew Soffer
26. Reading Sacred (Con)Texts Today: Historical Background, Modern Interpretations
Rabbi Rifat Sonsino, PhD
27. The Animal Kingdom
Rabbi Dr. Shmuly Yanklowitz
28. Creation as Intimate Partner
Rabbi Mike Comins
29. Creation: An All-You-Can-Eat Buffet
Rabbi Mary L. Zamore
30. Forging a Path Back to the Garden: A New Kashrut for Today
Rabbi Karen Deitsch
Day Six: People
31. Finding Meaning as God’s Servant: Consulting the Design Specs for Humankind
Rabbi David E. S. Stein
32. In the Image of God: God Is the Queer Role Model I Always Wanted
Rabbi Rachel Grant Meyer
33. Male and Female God Created Them: The Everyday Life of the Creation Myth in Israeli Society
Rabbi Noa Sattath
34. Created in God’s Image: Protecting Even the Least Deserving of Protection
Rabbi Jill Jacobs
35. The World As It Is
Rabbi Dr. Rachel S. Mikva
36. Paradise on Earth
Dr. Rachel Havrelock
Shabbat
37. What a Group of Cloistered Nuns Taught Me About Shabbat
Rabbi Shoshanah Conover
38. Determining the Path Ourselves: What Might Shabbat Look Like for Us?
Rabbi Jack P. Paskoff
39. The Loneliness of Time: What We Can Learn from That First Shabbat
Rabbi Richard F. Address
40. Shabbat and Parenting
Rabbi Benjamin David
41. Shabbat and Social Justice
Rabbi Jonah Dov Pesner
42. Shabbat and Workers’ Rights
Rabbi Ellen Lippmann
Contributors
Benjamin David is the rabbi at Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania. He is a respected teacher, writer, and leader within the Reform Movement.
The son of Rabbi Jerome and Peggy David, Rabbi David was born in Philadelphia and grew up in Cherry Hill, New Jersey. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Muhlenberg College in 1999 before enrolling in the Hebrew Union-College Jewish Institute of Religion. As a rabbinic student, he taught widely, and worked with students of all ages at Shaaray Tefila of Manhattan, the 92nd Street Y, the Jewish Guild for the Blind, and Temple Beth Am of Monessen. As a student he won multiple awards in the fields of midrash and Talmud and co-founded a literary review, Davar Aher. He was ordained from the New York campus of HUC-JIR in 2004.
Following ordination he served for seven years as the associate rabbi at Temple Sinai of Roslyn in New York, where he worked closely with synagogue youth and on such causes as Israel, social action, and community organizing.
Rabbi David is deeply committed to URJ Camp Harlam, where he spent time as a camper, counselor, and supervisor. He now serves each summer on the rabbinic faculty.
A competitive runner, he has run 18 marathons, including the Boston Marathon twice and the New York City Marathon four times. He is also a co-founder of the Running Rabbis, which brings clergy together to run and walk in the name of shared causes.
As a cancer survivor, he works with cancer patients and their families and is active both locally and nationally in the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
His wife, Lisa, a fellow Camp Harlam alum, is the director of Camp Harlam. They are the proud parents of Noa, Elijah, and Samuel.
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