Shabbat Shalom and Shanah Tovah: Saying goodbye to 2021 and welcoming in 2022

In March 2020, I learned a new way to be a rabbi- through Zoom… Ironically, my new year’s resolution for 2020 was to increase my technology skills, and indeed, I created this website as part of my working on this new year’s resolution… I found someone to tutor me and teach me… and luckily, by the time the pandemic hit, I was ready to transition my congregation (Temple Bet Yam in St. Augustine, Florida) to online services through Zoom. I found that I truly loved this manner of worship… I enjoyed the creativity of designing powerpoints and the opportunity to connect with people beyond the synagogue walls… instead of people feeling like they have to dress up and go into a building to pray… stand when they are told to stand and sit when they are told to sit… everyone was welcome to tune in… it did not matter where people were located nor whether they were synagogue members… and indeed, our congregation grew significantly during the pandemic… and people connected to the service and the community on their own terms… in their own way… as much or as little as they wanted… sitting on their sofa or walking on the beach or over a glass of wine on their balcony… and it was all good… and suddenly all the guilt and shame and pretense of organized religion fell away… and all that was left was the worship… and I, who had always struggled with certain prayers that I believed were relics of a history that no longer spoke to the Judaism that I was trying to birth into a new century… I could express my faith and lead worship by choosing those prayers and music that best articulated my understanding of what is at the heart of Judaism… and so it is with this Shabbat service… may this coming year bring blessing, healing and strength to all who wish to view it…

A shabbat service to welcome in the secular new year… with some of my favorite musical renditions of the traditional Hebrew prayers