All in Prescriptions

A New, Old Theology

In this reflection on some of the core questions of our existence which have been thrown into sharp relief during the pandemic, David Adelson offers a perspective informed by theological concepts, spiritual insights, and personal testimony. The novelty of our COVID-19 universe is seen in terms of the perennial and the unchanging.

Leadership Practices for the Era of COVID-19

Often mentioned but rarely analyzed, the issue of leadership has become a staple of management jargon in recent decades. COVID-19 has brought the presence and absence of leadership into sharp relief. Michael Zeldin, Ph.D., is one of Jewish Education’s most renowned academics, and Lesley Litman, Ed.D., one of its modest revered practitioners. Together, they offer a Jewish vocabulary for the development of leadership practices.

The Horns of a Dilemma

How to be passionate and moderate is a perennial challenge made more acute by the extreme circumstances of these days. Rabbi Michael Marmur, Ph.D., argues that in order to be equal to the enormity of the challenge, Reform Judaism will have to redouble its efforts to proceed with seriousness of purpose and resoluteness of spirit.

Two Psalms for Hard Times You Won’t Find in Your Prayerbook

Rabbi Rachel Adler, Ph.D., is a theologian, striving to view profound questions of meaning through prisms of tradition. In this essay she turns to two psalms from the Hebrew Bible not included in liturgies of encouragement and comfort. She argues that Judaism in all its complexity offers articulations of deep anxiety, uncertainty and anger of which we may have need in these challenging times.