Thursday, January 27, 2011

Sharing Lessons Learned (and Taught) by One of My Teachers ...

One of my teachers in rabbinical school was Rabbi Paul Kipnes (he writes a great blog which can be found here:  http://rabbipaul.blogspot.com/) .  He recently posted the following on his blog ... which I liked so much, I decided to share here.  : )
  
Rabbi Kipnes shares "18 Lessons from 18 Years as a Rabbi" ... here it is:

As I celebrate my 18th year since I was ordained Rabbi, I take stock of lessons learned along the way:



1.  Jewish spirituality without social justice can become narcissism.
2.  Social justice without Jewish spirituality might feel good but might not compel future activism.
3.  The role of the rabbi is to passionately comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.
4.  The role of the rabbi is to quietly point in a direction and then get out of the way.
5.  A healthy, organic Jewish community is not afraid to experiment.
6.  A healthy, organic Jewish community is not afraid of failure, because failure is inevitable when experimenting and innovating.
7.  People who really feel warmly welcomed when they walk through the doors of the synagogue will be more likely to come back to celebrate and learn.
8.  People who answer the telephones are more important than the person standing up on the bimah; a community feels warm and welcoming when the receptionist and bookkeeper exude that warmth.
9.  Dysfunction comes easily; warm, respectful partnerships between clergy and lay leaders require patience, vulnerability, and openness.
10.  Judaism has many things to say about every thing; no issue it was or is too controversial, personal, or political to escape the moral lens of Torah and Jewish tradition.
11.  How a rabbi teaches is as important as what a rabbi teaches. Difficult lessons and controversial teachings are more easily heard when alternative perspectives are respected.
12.  God exists. God loves. God cares.
13.  The lights can be on, but if we close our eyes, we think it is dark.
14.  Jewish music has the power to touch hearts and souls more deeply than any sermon.
15.  Torah teachings and Jewish music, when combined artfully, have the potential to transform lives and touch eternity.
16.  Fear not social media or technology; like the printing press, telephone, and two stone tablets from the mountaintop, they are merely tools for spreading Torah teachings.
17.  Israel is at once ancient and modern, historic and mythic, spiritual and bricks-and-mortar. Walking its streets and alleys transforms the soul.
18.  A community that takes care of its rabbi and his family ensures that the rabbi has deep sources of strength and love to care for the community.

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