A Symbol of Peace
Feb 20, 2026 By Daniel Nevins | Commentary | Terumah
The Arch of Titus in Rome is simultaneously one of the saddest and most exciting places for a Jew to stand. It is but a short distance from the Colosseum, the stadium made famous by its cruel sports, built with money plundered from the Jerusalem Temple in 70 CE. Titus’s Arch celebrates the destruction of our Temple, a building designated by Isaiah to be a house of prayer for all nations. A bas-relief sculpture on the arch’s inner walls depicts a sickening scene: the triumphant display of the Temple’s sacred objects, the Menorah most prominent among them, along with a pathetic procession of enslaved Jews.
Read More
Wade Melnick – Senior Sermon (RS ’26)
Feb 19, 2026 By JTS Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Terumah
Wade Melnick-Terumah
Read More
Before Them, Before Us: Law as Master, Law as Servant
Feb 13, 2026 By Gordon Tucker | Commentary | Mishpatim | Shabbat Shekalim
וְאֵלֶּה הַמִּשְׁפָּטִים אֲשֶׁר תָּשִׂים לִפְנֵיהֶם These are the rules that you shall place before them. (Exodus 21:1) So begins this week’s parashah, Mishpatim. It is here that the Jewish legal tradition begins, where Torah (i.e. “Instruction”) becomes Nomos or Law. Immediately after that opening sentence, the text continues with rules concerning masters and servants. […]
Read More
Eitan Bloostein – Senior Sermon (RS ’26)
Feb 11, 2026 By JTS Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Mishpatim
Mishpatim All Class of 2026 Senior Sermons
Read More
On Moses’ “Saying” and “Telling”
Feb 6, 2026 By Alan Cooper | Commentary | Yitro
The highlight of Parashat Yitro is undoubtedly the spectacular son et lumière at Sinai, accompanying the uniquely unmediated revelation of God’s “words” (the 10 Commandments) directly to the people. The gravity of the occasion demanded special preparation, and most of Exodus 19 is devoted to that preparation…
Read More
Noam Blauer – Senior Sermon (RS ’26)
Feb 6, 2026 By JTS Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Yitro
Yitro All Class of 2026 Senior Sermons
Read More
Between the Lines: The Last Dekrepitzer by Howard Langer
Feb 4, 2026 By Library of the Jewish Theological Seminary | Public Event video | Video Lecture
About The Last Dekrepitzer The fiddler busking in the Columbus Circle subway station in 1965 is the Dekrepitzer Rebbe, the sole survivor of the obscure Dekrepitzer Hasidic sect known before the war for its rebbes’ fiddling. The Last Dekrepitzer follows the life and spiritual quest of Shmuel Meir Lichtbencher a/k/a Sam Lightup, from his isolated shtetl in the […]
Read More
The Gifts of Tu Bishvat: A Springtime Conversation
Feb 2, 2026
Seasons of Responsibility begins with Tu Bishvat. The session explored how Tu Bishvat’s meaning has evolved over time. We discussed the gifts of Tu Bishvat for this unique moment. And we’ll see Tu Bishvat not just as a single day, but as the beginning of a springtime season that leads to Purim, Pesach and Shavuot.
Read More
When Prayer is Not Enough
Jan 30, 2026 By Cantor Rabbi Shoshi Levin Goldberg | Commentary | Beshallah
You may know this joke: a man is drowning in the ocean and several people with boats come to rescue him. He responds to each of them, “No, thank you. I’ve been praying, and God will save me.” When the man arrives in heaven, angry with God, God asks him, “Why didn’t you get on the boats I sent?”
Prayer is rarely enough. Jewish leaders are acutely aware of this reality today. Cantors, in particular, know that there is far more to our jobs than leading prayer.
Read More
Marc Hersch – Senior Sermon (RS ’26)
Jan 29, 2026 By JTS Senior Sermon | Commentary | Senior Sermon | Beshallah
Beshallah All Class of 2026 Senior Sermons
Read More
Where We Stand is What We Learn
Jan 23, 2026 By Luciana Pajecki Lederman | Commentary | Bo
As a Talmud teacher, I am constantly aware of the dynamic web of relationships in which learning takes place—between me, the students, and the text we explore together—each quietly and continually shaping the relationship between the others. But as Director of the Beit Midrash, I am especially attuned to the role of the surrounding environment: how the space itself can either nurture or inhibit those relationships.
Read More
Words Fail Me
Jan 16, 2026 By Jan Uhrbach | Commentary | Va'era
That is the way the Zohar (the foundational text of Kabbalah, Jewish mysticism) understands our exile in Egypt: as the exile of speech, a failure of words. In this reading, the breakdown of speech is both cause and effect of our enslavement, while healing and redeeming speech—finding our voice—is both the process and hallmark of redemption.
Read More
Hearing the Cry: Miriam, Pharaoh’s Daughter, and Moral Courage
Jan 9, 2026 By Naomi Kalish | Commentary | Shemot
At times of difficulty, uncertainty, and strife, I often find comfort and courage in stories, especially stories about people who connect and transform or resolve conflict. This week’s parsha, Shemot (Exodus 1:1-6:1), gives me such a story of hope in its portrayal of the relationship between two people from groups in conflict.
Read More
Pictures at a Benediction: Envisioning Jacob’s Blessing of his Sons
Jan 2, 2026 By Eliezer B. Diamond z”l | Commentary | Vayehi
what did Jacob’s bedchamber look like when the brothers came to receive their final blessings—and curses? (Gen. 49) I have found numerous artistic renderings, but two in particular caught my attention because of how differently they paint the scene.
Read More
A Song of Hope
Dec 26, 2025 By Burton L. Visotzky | Commentary | Vayiggash
In a curious foreshadowing of the book of Exodus, in this week’s Torah reading (Gen. 46:8) we read, “Ve’eleh shemot—These are the names of the children of Israel who came into Egypt . . .” This is verbatim the same report as the opening verse of the book of Exodus. But there, the names are limited only to Jacob’s actual sons, and the full enumeration of their own offspring is absent.
Read More
A Light for One, a Light for a Hundred
Dec 19, 2025 By Marcus Mordecai Schwartz | Commentary | Miketz | Hanukkah
When I look at the Prato Haggadah in our exhibition at the Grolier Club, I think of the man who once protected it. His name was Ludwig Pollak. Born in Prague in 1868, Pollak became one of Rome’s leading Jewish scholars of classical art. He directed the Museo Barracco, advised the Vatican’s archaeological collections, and […]
Read More
Judah and Tamar: Writing the Story
Dec 12, 2025 By Judith Hauptman | Commentary | Vayeshev
One of the most gripping stories in the entire Bible appears in this week’s parashah. Chapter 38, a self-contained unit, interrupts the ongoing Joseph saga to tell the story of Judah and Tamar.
The chapter opens with the somewhat strange statement that Judah leaves his brothers, meets up with Hirah the Adulamite, and there, in Adulam, finds himself a wife of Canaanite stock. He thereby violates God’s warning to the patriarchs to avoid Canaanite women (Gen. 24:3, 28:1). Judah’s wife bears him three sons. He marries off his first son, Er, to Tamar. No information is provided about her lineage. Er dies because he was “displeasing to the Lord” (v. 7).
Read More
Jacob’s Fear
Dec 5, 2025 By Arnold M. Eisen | Commentary | Vayishlah
The Torah wants us to identify with the ancestors we meet in the book of Genesis; indeed, Abraham and Sarah and their children become our ancestors when we agree not only to read their stories, but to take them forward. Abraham “begat” Isaac in one sense by supplying the seed for his conception. He “begat” him as well by shaping the life that Isaac would live, setting its direction, digging wells that his son would re-dig, making Isaac’s story infinitely more meaningful—and terrifying—by placing him in the line of partners with God in covenant. So it is with us. Nowhere is this impact of the ancestors more obvious than in the case of Jacob, who in this week’s parashah receives the name by which we heirs to the covenant call ourselves to this day: Israel. The ancestors are us, if we accept the Torah’s invitation to make them so. We are them: the latest chapter in the story that they lived and bequeathed to us, and which we have chosen to live and bequeath to others.
Read More
A Scholarly Revolution: Rewriting the Rules of Talmud Study
Dec 1, 2025 By Judith Hauptman | Public Event video | Video Lecture
In his many volumes of Talmud commentary, beginning with publication of the first in 1968, Professor David Weiss Halivni introduced a groundbreaking approach to Talmud study: distinguishing between the attributed teachings of the rabbis and the anonymous editorial layer that surrounds them. This interpretive revolution transformed the field, offering a powerful tool for understanding the development of rabbinic thought.
Read More
The Monumental Act of Listening
Nov 28, 2025 By Jessica Fisher | Commentary | Vayetzei
Parashat Vayetzei brings us to a climactic moment of a 20-year conflict between Jacob and Laban. When Jacob came to Laban’s house after tricking his own father and brother, Laban made him work for seven years to earn the right to marry Rachel, only to be tricked into marrying Leah. So he worked seven more years and finally married Rachel. More hiding and trickery ensued, until finally Jacob decided it was time to leave this toxic dynamic and he snuck away with his family. But Laban caught up to them and, after years of deceit, they had it out with each other, putting everything on the table once and for all: Laban was hurt that Jacob had left without giving him a chance to say goodbye to his children and grandchildren; Jacob was resentful for the years of hard labor, lies, and harsh treatment. (Gen. 31:26-42)
Read MoreSUBSCRIBE TO TORAH FROM JTS
Our regular commentaries and videos are a great way to stay intellectually and spiritually engaged with Jewish thought and wisdom.