Shavuot, Shabbat
As has become tradition the last couple years, he concluded with a reading of Before the Law. I don't know why that story gives me (and lots of other people) chills, but it does. It's very effective at 2 in the morning when you're hearing it; it's not quite the same reading it in the comfort of your office.
The group ranged from about 15 to 25 people, which is a good size. I prefer an intimate study session to a large one. Almost everyone participated, including a couple high-school students.
Afterwards I walked home with my rabbi. (Well, 80% of the way, until we reached the branch point.) I enjoyed our conversation, and at that hour of the night the neighborhood is quite peaceful.
After the morning service I invited two people back for lunch. (I'd invited one of them last Shabbat; the other I picked up at services, when I found out that her husband is out of town and she would otherwise be spending the afternoon alone.) It was a fun group with lots of good conversation. This was so much better than spending the day alone the way I did last year! (And, for that matter, the way I spent the seventh day of Pesach.)
Friday night I led services at Tree of Life. Turnout was low; I guess there was some element of "wait, we were just there last night, and this morning" going on, or something. The people who were there were very pleasant, though, and I got a disproportionate number of compliments compared to past times. (I thought I did a very good job, but it's always gratifying to have outside confirmation.)
The rabbi talked about yom tov sheni -- whether it's necessary to add an extra day to holidays outside of Israel. (ToL doesn't; neither does my congregation.)
I've heard varying rumors about whether ToL has hired a cantor for next year. (Maybe they have, or maybe they have just hired her for the high holy days.) The scheduling person called me a few days ago and signed me up for a Shabbat in September, so I know I've got at least one more. (The person they might or might not have hired becomes available in July, so a job could start any time thereafter.)
We had a pretty good turnout Saturday morning. Torah study addressed only one verse (Lev 19:17), and we spent a lot of time talking about rebuke and whether it's ever appropriate and if so how it should be done. This led into a discussion of authority (who can issue rebuke?) and community standards. It was interesting, and there was less off-topic chit-chat than we've sometimes had recently. (One of the major sources of that wasn't there today.)
Tonight I had close to 100 pieces of spam waiting for me. Ok, the spam problem has gotten worse; it wasn't that long ago that I averaged 10-15 pieces a day.
Kafka
I did pretty much nothing for Shavuot this year except go to services. Since I am now also the religious chair of my congregation, for next year I am going to try to rectify the lack of stuff at our shul on Shavuot. Perhaps you have some pointers.
Anyway, I will post my thoughts in my own LJ one of these days...
Re: Kafka
no subject
Fascinating: I've read a modest amount of Kafka, but never that story before. Simple, effective, and I agree -- just a bit chilling. The kind of story that takes no time to tell, but which you can mull for a lifetime. I like it...