Kehillat Ohr Tzion

Rabbi Shlomo Schachter

Parashat Shoftim

President Jeff Schapiro

4 Elul 5784

Davening Schedule

Friday, September 6


Mincha & Kabbalat Shabbat: 7:00 pm

Earliest Candle Lighting: 6:22 pm

Candle Lighting: 7:21 pm

Sunset: 7:39 pm


Saturday, September 7


Shacharit: 9:00 am (sharp)


Kiddush is sponsored by KOT.


Pre-Minchah Class: 7:00 pm 

Mincha: 7:30 pm

Havdala: 8:21 pm


Sunday, September 8


Shacharit: 8:30 am


Thursday, September 12


Shacharit: 6:45 am

Donations


No donations this week.


Please remember to drop off your Dash's receipts in the bag in the shul foyer.


Contacts


President: Jeff Schapiro 

jefrs@verizon.net



Rabbi: Shlomo Schachter

rabbischachter75@gmail.com


Newsletter: Joseph Enis

je.jfed@gmail.com


Chesed: Mireille Schapiro

mireilleschapiro2@gmail.com


Fun/Fund: Beth Weiss

bmweiss516@gmail.com

 

Publicity: Phyllis Steinberg

phyllismksteinberg@gmail.com

  

Social Action: Phyllis Steinberg

phyllismksteinberg@gmail.com

 

Web Site: Karen Marks

ohrtzionwebsite@gmail.com

  

Kiddush Sponsorships: Cheryl Stein 

clslaw@gmail.com



Web Site: www.OhrTzion.org

*** KOT PLEDGES ***
KOT depends on Voluntary ATID pledges to ensure that we can provide for all of our expenses. If you have made a pledge, the Board of KOT thanks you for your generosity. If you have not made a pledge or have questions regarding the Voluntary ATID program, please contact Steven Weiss at kot613@outlook.com.
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From the President:


The new flooring is completed at the shul. With that being done, we are going to try a new seating arrangement. This is just a test run and we need everyone's input about how they feel about the proposed configuration. I am sure that there will be pros and cons, and that is why I'm asking everyone to voice their honest opinion. I strongly encourage you to join us for davening on Shabbat and to voice your opinion regarding the new seating arrangement. Nothing is set in stone; it is simply a trial to see how people feel, so don't hold back.


The painting is scheduled to take place in two weeks. We are still looking for a little more money to be raised to cover all these expenses so please try and give what you can. I thank all those who have already generously given; it is much appreciated.


Shabbat Shalom.

Jeff

 

From the Rabbi:



When you come to shul this weekend you'll notice some obvious changes. Among them is an experimental re-orientation in order to optimize the space for the High Holidays. It is halachically acceptable and part of an ongoing assessment of what will work best. I will discuss the halachic considerations in shul this Shabbat.


This week we entered the Hebrew month of Elul, a month characterized by new beginnings. It’s not just the beginning of football season, it’s also a new academic year, a new agricultural cycle and training camp for the new Jewish Year. Unlike football, in Judaism the Super Bowl comes at the very beginning of the Year - Rosh Hashanah. So how do we get ourselves into peak ‘spiritual shape’? With the practice of teshuvah


Teshuvah means returning, repenting and reconciling. Coming home to our most authentic selves, to our community and to God. As kids ‘go back to school’ we go back to shul and prepare ourselves for the Days of Awe. Traditionally, our training regimen includes blowing the shofar, reciting Psalm 27 and adding special prayers for forgiveness. But none of these are actually teshuvah, only outer forms which are meant to facilitate an inner process. 


Often, when we first approach teshuvah, with our classical Jewish guilt, we fall immediately into a critical self evaluation, looking back on our misdeeds. While examining our past actions can be part of the teshuvah process, the Torah portion we read every year at the beginning of this month paints a picture of teshuvah which is a little more nuanced than self-reproachful interrogation.


This week we read parashat Shoftim, the instructions for the Biblical system of governance. Judges, Officers, The King, The Prophet, The Sanhedrin and the High Priesthood all hold certain powers that check-and-balance each other in a sort of ‘Constitutional-Monarchical-Democratic Theocracy.’ All these systems have to work together to (Deut. 16:20) “pursue a Just Justice," or as sometimes translated “Justice, Justice you shall pursue." In football the phrase is “Good-enough gets you beaten in the playoffs." We can never rest on our laurels and think of ourselves as a morally- or spiritually-finished product. We have to keep chasing an ever-higher ideal. 


On a spiritual level, parashat Shoftim is about updating and empowering our conscience; our system of self-governance. It’s not looking backward, but rather envisioning who we can become. “If you could re-write your internal process of decision making, how would you like it to run?” What are the internal voices that need to be balanced? The Judges and Sanhedrin are our core values and aspirations. The officers are our self-discipline. The ‘inner King’ is responsible for protecting us from negative energies and the malicious cultural vices all around us and the Priesthood represents the role of prayer and spiritual practice in regulating our emotional turbulence. And there is an inner voice of prophecy to which we must listen if we are to remain authentic to ourselves. If you could make all these voices work together harmoniously, what would that look like?  


Now friends, let’s go out there and do it! Our Super Bowl is in 30 days.


Blessings, 

Rabbi Shlomo




Classes This Week



Shul & Community Events


The online KOT Donation page has been updated. You can no longer use PayPal and the url has changed:


https://www.ohrtzion.org/donations



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This is the time for the annual maintenance of the Eruv. Rabbi Lander is being brought in from Toronto to inspect, and, typically, the required repairs and upgrades cost several thousand dollars. The entire community benefits from the existence of the Eruv. Please give generously, so needed work can proceed without delay:


https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=NJ36V7XUG3VK6


879 Hopkins Rd.
Williamsville, NY 14221