10-16-2025 Breysheet
שאלו שלום ירושלים
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem
Two years ago, as we prepared for Simchat Torah, the Jewish people faced the greatest acts of terror and murder since the German Holocaust. It was a dark day in Jewish history. As we began the yearly cycle of Torah reading in 5784, dark clouds hovered not only over the Jewish world but also over the entire world. Ironically, two years to the day, not only is the first stage of peace within sight, but Israel has welcomed to the Knesset the President of the United States, the United States Secretary of State and Secretary of War. In less than a century we have gone from the horrors of Auschwitz to the miraculous 2,000-year hope of a reborn and determined Israel, a nation that has made the desert bloom and become one of the strongest countries in the world.
Now in this new world, and hopefully post-war world, we return to the simplest and most complicated book of Hebrew Scripture. No matter how often we study Genesis, there seems to be more to learn. The book appears to be a theological and philosophical well, a well that never runs dry. Genesis opens with the words: “B’reysheet bara Elokim…(meaning: In the beginning of–, G-d created…)” Or does it? Perhaps it is not “reysheet” (meaning “in the beginning of”) but rather “rsheet” (meaning “a beginning”). In that case, the sentence reads: In a beginning, G-d created the heavens and the earth.”
The first Hebrew word of the first sentence – provides enough material for long philosophical positions. For example, if the word means “in the beginning of…”, then where is the noun that should follow? If the word means “in a beginning” then is Genesis arguing that there are (and perhaps may well be) other creations or many new beginnings? Genesis poses the problem: are we alone in the universe? Is our universe infinite or finite? Is creation permanent and static or dynamic, with a consistency of births and deaths? Is time static or do we live in a state of eternal new beginnings?
No matter how one chooses to read Genesis’ first words, one thing is clear. This week is a week of new beginnings and rebirth. Can we break the cycle of hate that has caused so much anguish? Can we become G-d’s partners in creation? What is our role in Tikkun Olam? Tikkun Olam is a Hebrew word meaning the constant repairing of a broken world. Just as Genesis teaches us that even G-d had to experiment with creation so too we must be courageous enough to seek new beginnings not only on the macro level for the Middle East and the entire world, but also on the micro level for each of our lives.
Simchat Torah 5786 is now part of history. It brought the holiday season to its yearly conclusion and also reminded us that the creation of life encompasses eternal hope. It is for this reason that Israel’s national anthem is Ha’Tikvah, “The Hope.” As such we live with the hope expressed by the Prophet Micah (4:4) when he dared to dream of a time when “Each person shall sit under their vine and under their fig tree and none shall make them afraid.”
May 5786 be a year of new beginnings in your life, in the life of the Jewish people and in the world.
YouTubes for the week
Four versions of Ha’Tikvah (The Hope)
Israel’s national anthem
Holocaust survivors in 1945 singing Ha’Tikvah
A child sings Ha’Tikvah
Soldiers singing
Please pray for Israel’s soldiers and the safe return of all of the remaining hostages.