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- CCAR Journal - Winter 2024
CCAR Journal - Winter 2024
The Reform Jewish Quarterly
Edited by Rabbi Edwin C. Goldberg
200 Pages6.00 × 9.00 × 0.60 in
Other Purchase Options:
On Being a Jew and a Human Being amid Rapid Technological Change
- At the Gates
- On Being Human: Jewish Theology and the Digital Life – Rabbi Joseph A. Skloot, PhD
- Response to Joseph Skloot: Deactivating the Golem – Rabbi Shirley Idelson, PhD
- Divine Transcendence as an Answer to the Problem of Ethical Loneliness – Rabbi Kari Hofmaister Tuling, PhD
- Response to Kari Tuling: Reimagining a Transcendent God — Rabbi Rachel Gurevitz, PhD
- A Holistic Jewish Life – Rabbi Sari Laufer
- Response to Sari Laufer: Facing the Demise of Reform Jewish Particularism – Rabbi Amy R. Perlin
- Freeing Ourselves from Kant’s Dichotomy – Rabbi Leon A. Morris
- Response to Leon Morris: Choosing to Accept What is Beyond Choice – Rabbi Lisa J. Grushcow
- Toward a Reform Jewish Theological Renewal in Dark Times – Dr. Alyssa M. Gray
- Response to Alyssa Gray: Tragic Vision, Stubborn Hope – Rabbi David Stern
- How We Should Teach Reform Jews to Read the Torah Since We All Know That the World Is Round: Seven Guidelines for Reform Jewish Leaders – Rabbi Jeremy S. Morrison, PhD
- Response to Jeremy Morrison: Ruthlessly Relevant Torah – Rabbi Hilly Haber
- My Religious Philosophy: A Religious Naturalist Approach – Rabbi Rifat Sonsino, PhD
- A New Yahrzeit Ritual Practice: Yahrzeit Observance in the Home on the Deceased’s Birthday – Rabbi Mark S. Kram
- 60th Ordination Anniversary Sermon – Rabbi Alan D. Fuchs
- The Akeidah as Dream Sequence – Rabbi Neil Amswych
- Biblical Women Speak: Hearing Their Voices through New and Ancient Midrash by Rabbi Marla J. Feldman, reviewed by Rabbi Rachael Klein Miller
- Jewish Sunday Schools: Teaching Religion in Nineteenth-Century America by Laura Yares, reviewed by Rabbi Samuel K. Joseph, PhD
- Undesirables: A Holocaust Journey to North Africa by Aomar Boum and Nadjib Berber, reviewed by Rabbi Samuel Kaye
- Fractured Tablets: Forgetfulness and Fallibility in Late Ancient Rabbinic Culture by Mira Balberg, reviewed by Rabbi Matthew Kraus
- The King Is in the Field: Essays in Modern Jewish Political Thought edited by Julie E. Cooper and Samuel Hayim Brody, reviewed by Rabbi Joshua Herman
- The Last Consolation Vanished by Zalman Gradowski, edited by Arnold I. Davidson and Philippe Mesnard, translated by Rubye Monet, and reviewed by Rabbi Rachel Maimin
- Women and the Religion of Ancient Israel by Susan Ackerman, reviewed by Rabbi Elizabeth W. Goldstein, PhD
- Biblical Women and Jewish Daily Life in the Middle Ages by Elisheva Baumgarten, reviewed by Rabbi Susan L. Einbinder, PhD
- Klaf – Jehanne Dubrow
- Bouldering – Jehanne Dubrow
- Saying Kaddish – Jehanne Dubrow
- To Inherit and Bequeath – Rabbi Stephen S. Pearce, PhD
- Sh’mana – Rabbi Albert Micah Lewis
- Obituary for a Dog (Seder K’lavim) – Immanuel Suttner
- When We Left – Rabbi Adam D. Fisher
- Elijah’s Cup: A Child’s Pesach – Roger Nash
- Living by a Lunar Calendar – Roger Nash
- A Story of Mizrach in My Town – Roger Nash
- Hillel on the Roof – Philip Terman
- On Reading the Akeidah as a Dream Sequence on Rosh HaShanah – Rabbi Daniel Polish
- At the Tashlich Pond – Rabbi Dan Fink
- Predicate Psalm – Michael Sandler
- Unlike Jacob – Rabbi Israel Bobrov Zoberman, PhD
Rabbi Edwin Goldberg currently serves as the rabbi of Congregation Beth Shalom of The Woodlands, in the Houston area. He received rabbinic ordination and a doctorate in Hebrew Literature from the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion (in 1989 and 1994, respectively). He has authored several books, including: Midrash for Beginners, Heads and Tales: Stories of the Sages to Enlighten Our Minds, Swords and Plowshares: Jewish Views of War and Peace, Love Tales from the Talmud, Saying No and Letting Go: Jewish Wisdom on Making Room for What Matters Most. He served as the Coordinating Editor of the new Reform Jewish machzor, Mishkan HaNefesh. He also edited a companion commentary, Divrei Mishkan HaNefesh and has published many articles and sermons. Rabbi Goldberg has taught as an adjunct professor at the University of Miami in the department of Religious Studies and Judaic Studies. He is also a graduate of the Institute for Jewish Spirituality.
