But Enough About Me

Rabbi Leon A. Morris, The Jewish Week, June 10th, 2004 Has narcissism become the predominant religion of American life? Personal fulfillment, the individual’s search for meaning, and other self referential notions indicate the ways in which traditional motivations for religious observance have fallen by the wayside. In pre—modern times, our behavior was exclusively regulated by … Read more

Beyond, or Mixing, Denominations

Rabbi Leon A. Morris Some time ago, Nike launched a new concept in sneakers called “Nike iD!” Catering to a generation no longer content with buying a specific model of athletic footwear shared by thousands, Nike iD enables customers to go to their Web site and to “make your mark with customizable gear,” the combination … Read more

A First-hand Account of Israel’s Wagner Debate

NEW YORK, July 17 (JTA) — The opportunity to hear the German State Orchestra, Staatskapelle Berlin, perform in Jerusalem was in itself ironic. That Daniel Barenboim, the orchestra’s world-famous conductor, is an Israeli Jew made a performance in Jerusalem all the more intriguing. Moments after Shabbat ended on July 7, two friends and I hurried … Read more

Taking It With You: Bringing Joseph’s Bones Out of Egypt

January 1999 Rabbi Leon A. Morris  In this week’s Torah portion, Vayechi, Joseph and his brothers show two very different ways of reacting in response to the past. Joseph’s brothers fear that he will take revenge on them once their father has died. They ask, “What if Joseph still bears a grudge against us and … Read more

Mining A Tradition

Steve Lipman Leon Morris’ life as a Jewish educator began in third grade. There were only seven other Jewish families in Connellsville, Pa., in the foothills of the Alleghenies. “This,” Morris says, “is a part of the country where the assumption is everyone is Christian. This is a place that hardly knew what a Jew … Read more

Reform Judaism

Rabbi Leon A. Morris, Sh’ma Journal  At the time of publication the writer was a fourth year rabbinical student at Hebrew Union College Reform Judaism will grow and thrive not by thoughtlessly seeking out a perceived “center”, but by recapturing the sense of dialectic that Judaism has always treasured and Reform has all but lost. … Read more

Reform Jews Embracing Mitzvot – Session

Many Liberal Jews for quite some time have been rethinking earlier attitudes and approaches to the Mitzvot. In 1885, Reform rabbis in America declared as binding only the moral laws, but rejected “all such [mitzvot] as are not adapted to the views and habits of modern civilization.” Since that time, Reform Judaism has undergone many … Read more