By Rabbi Alicia Magal
The JCSVV offers services and classes which are life-affirming and soul enriching. All are listed on the synagogue website, jcsvv.org. Visitors are welcome to attend services after a security check. People who cannot attend or who live far away can access the service through zoom.
Erev Shabbat services begin on Friday evening, August 9, 2024, beginning at 5:30 pm in person and on Zoom led by Rabbi Alicia Magal. The Rabbi will chant a selection from the first chapters in the Book of Devarim, Deuteronomy, with Moses’ farewell speech to the Children of Israel near the end of their wandering in the desert before they will enter the Promised Land. He reiterates their experiences and history to emphasize their ethical teachings which are to be the basis of establishing settlements once each tribe has its assigned land. Included in the service are also healing blessings for those who are ill, a mazal tov for Simchas (happy occasions), and Kaddish, mourner’s prayer, recited for loved ones who have passed away. This prayer is only one way we honor the memory of people who have impacted our lives and who continue to live on in our own hearts, teachings, and kind deeds. Jewish tradition offers many ways to honor the dead and comfort the mourner.
On Wednesdays at 8:30 a.m. we offer a morning minyan on Zoom, with traditional prayers sung or read in Hebrew and English. Join through the website link to support each other needing a minyan to say Kaddish for a loved one.
Meditation class will meet on Wednesday, August 14, led by Rosalie Malter on zoom.
Torah study will be held on Thursday, August 15, at 4:00 pm on zoom, led by Anita Rosenfield. The Torah portion to be discussed is Va’etchanan, Deuteronomy 3:23 – 7:11, and contains the central affirmation Shema Yisrael, Hear O Israel, God is One, as well as a repetition of the Ten Commandments, and the beautiful verses beginning, “You shall love God with all your heart, soul, and might.”
The Social Action Committee is continuing to collect food for the local Sedona food pantry. Please drop off cans or boxes of non-perishable foods in the bin provided for collections at the bottom of the stairs leading up to the synagogue sanctuary.
The Jewish Community of Sedona and the Verde Valley, located at 100 Meadow Lark Drive off Route 179 in Sedona, is a welcoming, egalitarian, inclusive congregation dedicated to building a link from the past to the future by providing religious, educational, social and cultural experiences. Office telephone: 928 204-1286. Synagogue website – www.jcsvv.org.