A somber celebration for Jewish New Year
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Young Chang
Though Rosh Hashana celebrates God’s creation of the world, though
it’s a time for people to greet each other with apples and honey in hopes
of a good and sweet year, Rabbi Mark Miller admits it’ll be a solemn
celebration.
“It’s going to be especially difficult to talk about sweetness with
the taste of ashes in our mouth,” the Temple Bat Yahm rabbi said. “Yet
the High Holy Days summon us to look toward the future with renewed
confidence, trust, faith, hope, perseverance and determination.”
Miller and other local rabbis will lead congregants through sermons
and services that emphasize hope despite Tuesday’s terrorist attacks on
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Rabbi Marc S. Rubenstein of Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach expects
more visitors than usual Monday evening because people gravitate to
places of worship during tragedies, he said. Often, they’re in search of
a human connection.
So for the first time, though Rubenstein has never before spoken of
his own life in temple -- out of fear of abusing the pulpit -- the rabbi
plans to get personal. He will give sermons on miracles and love and
God’s presence in his life with personal examples.
“Because now, we’re hearing personal stories of how people are coping
with tragedies,” he said. “I feel I have to be positive. I can’t be
negative.”
Monday evening, when Rosh Hashana begins at sundown, Rubenstein will
give a sermon titled “To Begin Anew.” His first morning service Tuesday
is called “How to Live a Meaningful Life.” He will blow a ram’s horn to
kick off Rosh Hashana and children will send up fortune-stuffed helium
balloons to God. Later services will focus on the blessings God gives
people and Jewish theology.
Prayers will be said for peace in the world, and Rubenstein expects
about 250 people per service.
He acknowledges we live in an unjust world. The question is, what does
man do with injustice?
“We’re partners in God’s creation,” Rubenstein said. “We have to serve
God and we have to serve each other.”
Miller will discuss Tuesday’s tragedy during his Monday evening
message at Temple Bat Yahm, but within the context of the Jewish view
that man was created in the image of God.
“There are people who besmirch that image and, in the name of God,
drag his name through the mud. And so while we are all created in the
image, there are those who devote their lives to erasing that image and
finding more in common with the lowest beast,” Miller said.
His message will continue Tuesday, the first full day of Rosh Hashana,
with a discussion of the religious and scientific basis for the
“essential unity of humankind.”
“Both underscore, each from its own perspective, how one we all are
with each other and that the events this past week were violations of
that natural order and that religious ideal,” Miller said.
FYI
TEMPLE ISAIAH
o7 2401 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. (949) 548-6900.
f7 Rosh Hashana services will be held at 8 p.m. Monday, 9:30 a.m. and
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, and 9:30 a.m. Wednesday.
TEMPLE BAT YAHM
o7 1011 Camelback Drive, Newport Beach. (949) 644-1999.f7
Service times will be at 8 p.m. Monday, with a reception following at
10 p.m. On Tuesday, the main service will begin at 10:45 a.m. and the
Tashlich Service at North Star Beach at 1:30 p.m.
CHABAD JEWISH CENTER OF NEWPORT BEACH
o7 3419 Via Lido, Suite 147, Newport Beach. (949) 721-9800.
f7 Services will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday and Wednesday.
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