Friday night I went to Tree of Life again. The turnout was small;
I wonder how much of that was due to the time being listed wrong
in the Chronicle and how much was just normal fluctuation. (No
bar mitzvah, winter, threatening bad weather...)
Rabbi Berkun had larnygitis (I bet I've misspelled that but I'm
not sufficiently motivated to look it up), so it's just as well
he had a guest cantorial type. He could barely talk; singing would
have been a Bad Idea. I offered to take over most of the English
reading that he normally does, but he had already scared up someone
for that job. He still tried to give a sermon, but he cut it short.
The "sermon" was really more of a report from a conference he attended
last week. It was a joint conference of Conservative entities with
acronyms; I'm sorry, but I don't know who they all were. The rabbinical
body, the cantors' association, something tied to education, a couple
more... Anyway, some of the speakers, the rabbi said, had talked about
ways of increasing individual observance levels, and Rabbi Berkun
rattled off suggestions like lighting Shabbat candles, at least
dropping pork and shellfish from the diet if not keeping fully kosher,
and so on -- really basic stuff, in other words. I was surprised;
the Conservative movement is a halachic one and -- officially -- considers
all of these things obligatory, but either this speaker was out in
left field or they are having big problems with this among the rank and
file. These were suggestions I've often heard from Reform rabbis, but
in that movement individual autonomy is encouraged, not shunned.
I wonder what it all means.
This Friday was one of the nights that the intergenerational choir
at Temple Sinai was singing -- oops. I didn't know about that at
the time I scheduled Tree of Life or I would have tried for a different
night. But I'm not sure how to discretely get a choir schedule, and
I still feel like I'm "moonlighting" and thus don't really want to
spread around my real reason for asking.
Saturday morning Rabbi Freedman led the informal minyan, which is
unusual. He did ok for the most part (he doesn't usually come so
he doesn't know the drill), though he lost control during his drash.
(He allowed it to turn into a general conversation that went longer
than we really had time for given that he had to go upstairs and
do a bar mitzvah after this.) Oops. We still got some Torah study
in, and after he left we just continued on our own.
Ok, I have a question about the various "personal offerings" (as opposed
to specified communal ones) that were brought. (Maybe Rabbi Gibson
will be able to help out next week.) One of these is often translated
as the "peace-offering", though Plaut (and the Hebrew speakers in the
room) assert that something like "offering of well-being" is closer to
the mark. What I don't know is when, and how often, one typically
brought these. And was this a case of "things are going well; time
to give thanks", or one of "things are going badly; time to ask for
help"? (Most people there seemed to think it's the former.) Was
this something you did once or twice a year, or any time you wanted
to have a festive meal, or what? (The offering could be anything from
a bull on down to small birds... not sure if meal-offerings were part
of this.)
The talmud talks at some length about making sure that procedures for
handling "peace-offerings" and sin-offerings are the same, because we
don't want to embarrass the person who brought the latter. The
presumption, then, is that peace-offerings are at least as
common as sin-offerings, because you're trying to set up the presumption
that of course Shlomo over there is bringing a peace-offering, but
that only begs the question. (We haven't gotten to sin-offerings yet.)
Were people running to the Levites with offerings several times a week,
or was this a special thing you did once or twice a year, or what?
(I'm confident that the answer is between those extremes, but I
don't have any better information.)
Saturday night I went to shiva for a fellow congregant. I didn't actually
know the person who died, but I know his wife and she's on the board
so I thought I should go. I still don't really understand the protocols.
I'm also not sure why Rabbi Gibson has the idea in his head that I've
offered to run shiva minyanim; I'm willing if asked, but no, this really
isn't something that's calling to me, at least until I learn how to
comfort the mourner better. (He asked me if I could run it one night
later this week, but the night he wanted was bad and he said not to
worry about it -- he has other people he can ask. That's reassuring.)