L'Shanah Tovah U’metukah! We Move Together Toward a Good New Year.

The High Holy Days – A time to open our hearts and minds to the finest within us and one another. A time when we can allow ourselves to be vulnerable. The High Holy Days – Our annual homecoming at Temple Israel. In this place, we find strength, insight, and the wisdom from our tradition. And we know that home is wherever we find ourselves in prayer.

High Holy Days

Where are we now? Where are we going?

In the Garden of Eden, God called out to the first human beings, “Ayeka?” — Where are you? Surely, God must have known their physical location. The question resounds on a much deeper level:

Where do you find yourself at this moment in time? Where are you on your life’s path? What has led you to this place? What direction are you facing? Where do you want to go from here?

These High Holy Days call out to us with the same burning question — Ayeka? We use this question to get our bearings, to feel our feet on solid ground, and notice where we are. What is the path you’re laying out before you? How can we get there together?

Important Dates

S’lichot: September 13

Rosh Hashanah: September 22 –  24

Kol Nidre: October 1

Yom Kippur: October 2

Sukkot: October 6 – 13

Simchat Torah: October 13 – 14

High Holy Day Services

We invite you to join us for any of the service options listed below. Please allow extra arrival time on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur for security.

This High Holy Day season, we gather as one sacred community, joyfully welcoming the new year through music, prayer, connection, and celebration. Find the service that is right for you and your family.

This year, Yizkor, our memorial service, will be included in the Afternoon Service on Yom Kippur and again on Erev Simchat Torah and Simchat Torah.

Temple Israel of Boston strives to ensure that our services are accessible and inclusive. Learn more>

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S'lichot Services and Mini-Retreat

TI congregants holding candles during the S'lichot service

S’lichot

Saturday, September 13

3:00 – 6:00 p.m. S’lichot Mini-Retreat with Noah Aronson. Onsite. Registration required.


4:45 p.m. Family S’lichot Dinner, Service, and Activity (Village and Elementary age). Onsite.


7:00 p.m. Community Dinner. Onsite.


7:30 p.m. Spiritual Practice Lab with Noah Aronson or Text Study with the Rabbis, Onsite and Online.


9:00 p.m. Candlelit S’lichot Service. Onsite.

Rosh Hashanah Services

TI clergy singing

Rosh Hashanah

Erev Rosh Hashanah: Monday, September 22

5:30 p.m. Young Family Erev Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite. (Age 0 – Grade 1).


6:15 p.m. Family Erev Rosh Hashanah Schmooze with Dinner. Onsite. (Grades 2 – 7).


6:15 p.m. Riverway Project Erev Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite and Online. (20s & 30s).


7:30 p.m. Community-Wide Erev Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite and Online. Followed by the Grand Homecoming Schmooze. Onsite.

 

Rosh Hashanah Day 1: Tuesday, September 23

9:00 a.m. Family Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite. (Grades 2 – 7).


9:00 a.m. Community-Wide Rosh Hashanah Service (Early). Onsite and Online. Followed by Tashlich.


9:15 a.m. Young Family Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite (Age 0 – Grade 1). Followed by Tashlich.


11:30 a.m. Community-Wide Rosh Hashanah Service (Late). Onsite and Online. Followed by Tashlich.

 

Rosh Hashanah Day 2: Wednesday, September 24

10:00 a.m. Lay-Led Rosh Hashanah Day 2 Service and Lunch. Onsite and Online (via Temple Israel livestream or Facebook).


2:00 p.m. Reverse Tashlich. Offsite.

Yom Kippur Services

Congregation on the bima during Torah reading

Yom Kippur

Kol Nidre: Wednesday, October 1

4:30 p.m. Young Family Service. Onsite. (Age 0 – Grade 1).


5:45 p.m. Community-Wide Kol Nidre Service (Early). Onsite and Online.


6:00 p.m. Family Kol Nidre Service. Onsite. (Grades 2 – 7).


7:00 p.m. Riverway Project Kol Nidre Service (20s & 30s). Onsite and Online.


8:15 p.m. Community-Wide Kol Nidre Service (Late). Onsite and Online.

 

Yom Kippur: Thursday, October 2

9:00 a.m. Family Yom Kippur Service. Onsite. (Grades 2 – 7).


9:00 a.m. Community-Wide Yom Kippur Service (Early). Onsite and Online.


9:15 a.m. Young Family Yom Kippur Service. Onsite. (Age 0 – Grade 1).


11:30 a.m. Community-Wide Yom Kippur Service (Late). Onsite and Online.


2:00 – 3:00 p.m. Between Services: Stay in the Day. Deepen Your Yom Kippur Experience:

  • Ask the Clergy. Onsite and Online.
  • Poetry as Prayer; Prayer as Poetry. Onsite and Online.
  • An Hour of Action. Onsite.
  • Riverway Gathering Space for 20s & 30s (Unfacilitated). Onsite.
  • Outdoor Mindfulness Walk. Offsite.

3:45 p.m. Torah Service, Afternoon Service, Yizkor, Neilah, Havdalah. Onsite and Online. Followed by a light and delicious break fast to share the end of Yom Kippur together.

Sukkot Services

Rabbi Slipakoff showing a congregant how to shake the lulav in the Sukkah

Sukkot October 6 – 13

Erev Sukkot: Monday, October 6

5:15 p.m. Schmooze and Festive Meal for All Ages. Onsite.


6:00 p.m. October 7 Commemoration. Onsite and Online.


6:00 p.m. Family Program.


6:30 p.m. Erev Sukkot: Festival Service in the Sukkah of Justice and Compassion and a Festive Oneg. Onsite and Online.

Tuesday, October 7

9:00 a.m. Sukkot Festival Service and Torah Study. Onsite and Online. Followed by a Sukkot Festival Qiddush.


9:30 a.m. Village Sukkot Celebration (Ages 0 – 5). Onsite. Followed by Qiddush.

 

Friday, October 10

6:45 p.m. Riverway Shabbat: Sukkot Edition (20s & 30s). Onsite and Online.

Simchat Torah Services

Clergy with a large group of young children holding miniature Torahs

Simchat Torah

Erev Simchat Torah: Monday, October 13

4:30 p.m. Yizkor Memorial Service. Onsite and Online.


5:00 p.m. Consecration for Kindergarten and All New Students. Onsite.


5:00 p.m. Festival Meal for All Ages. Onsite.


6:00 p.m. Erev Simchat Torah: Creative Service Experience. Onsite and Online. Followed by dancing and tasty treats.

 

Simchat Torah, Tuesday, October 14

9:00 a.m. Simchat Torah Festival Service and Yizkor Memorial Service. Onsite and online. Followed by Simchat Torah Qiddush.


9:30 a.m. Village Simchat Torah Celebration (Ages 0 – 5). Onsite. Followed by Simchat Torah Qiddush.

Looking for Just Your Service?

Find the complete schedules here, organized by service type:
Community-Wide Services

S’lichot

Saturday, September 13

3:00 – 6:00 p.m. S’lichot Mini-Retreat with Noah Aronson. Onsite. Registration required.

7:00 p.m. Community Dinner. Onsite.

7:30 p.m. Spiritual Practice Lab with Noah Aronson or Text Study with the Rabbis, and Candlelit S’lichot Service. Onsite and Online.


Rosh Hashanah

Erev Rosh Hashanah: Monday, September 22

7:30 p.m. Community-Wide Erev Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite and Online. Followed by the Grand Homecoming Schmooze. Onsite.

 

Rosh Hashanah Day 1: Tuesday, September 23

9:00 a.m. Community-Wide Rosh Hashanah Service (Early). Onsite and Online. Followed by Tashlich.

11:30 a.m. Community-Wide Rosh Hashanah Service (Late). Onsite and Online. Followed by Tashlich.

 

Rosh Hashanah Day 2: Wednesday, September 24

10:00 a.m. Lay-Led Rosh Hashanah Day 2 Service and Lunch. Onsite and Online.

2:00 p.m. Reverse Tashlich. Offsite.


Yom Kippur

Kol Nidre: Wednesday, October 1

5:45 p.m. Community-Wide Kol Nidre Service (Early). Onsite and Online.

8:15 p.m. Community-Wide Kol Nidre Service (Late). Onsite and Online.

 

Yom Kippur: Thursday, October 2

9:00 a.m. Community-Wide Yom Kippur Service (Early). Onsite and Online.

11:30 a.m. Community-Wide Yom Kippur Service (Late). Onsite and Online.

2:00 – 3:00 p.m. Between Services: Stay in the Day. Deepen Your Yom Kippur Experience:

  • Ask the Clergy. Onsite and Online.
  • Poetry as Prayer; Prayer as Poetry. Onsite and Online.
  • An Hour of Action. Onsite.
  • Riverway Gathering Space for 20s & 30s (Unfacilitated). Onsite.
  • Outdoor Mindfulness Walk. Offsite.

3:45 p.m. Torah Service, Afternoon Service, Yizkor, Neilah, Havdalah. Onsite and Online. Followed by a light and delicious break fast to share the end of Yom Kippur together.


Sukkot

Erev Sukkot: Monday, October 6

5:15 p.m. Schmooze and Festive Meal for All Ages. Onsite.

6:00 p.m. October 7 Commemoration. Onsite and Online.

6:30 p.m. Erev Sukkot: Festival Service in the Sukkah of Justice and Compassion and a Festive Oneg. Onsite and Online.


Simchat Torah

Erev Simchat Torah: Monday, October 13

4:30 p.m. Yizkor Memorial Service. Onsite and Online.

5:00 p.m. Festival Meal for All Ages. Onsite.

6:00 p.m. Erev Simchat Torah: Creative Service Experience. Onsite and Online. Followed by dancing and tasty treats.

 

Simchat Torah, Tuesday, October 14

9:00 a.m. Simchat Torah Festival Service and Yizkor Memorial Service. Onsite and online. Followed by Simchat Torah Qiddush.

Riverway Project High Holy Day Services (20s & 30s)

Young adults greeting each other at Riverway Shabbat

Rosh Hashanah

Erev Rosh Hashanah: Monday, September 22

6:15 p.m. Riverway Project Erev Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite and Online. (20s & 30s).


Yom Kippur

Kol Nidre: Wednesday, October 1

7:00 p.m. Riverway Project Kol Nidre Service (20s & 30s). Onsite and Online.

Yom Kippur: Thursday, October 2

2:00 – 3:00 p.m. Between Services: Stay in the Day. Deepen Your Yom Kippur Experience:

  • Riverway Gathering Space for 20s & 30s (Unfacilitated). Onsite.

Sukkot

Friday, October 10

6:45 p.m. Riverway Shabbat: Sukkot Edition (20s & 30s). Onsite and Online.

Family High Holy Day Services (Grades 2 - 7)

S’lichot

Saturday, September 13

4:45 p.m. Family S’lichot Dinner, Service, and Activity (Village and Elementary age). Onsite.

 


Rosh Hashanah

Erev Rosh Hashanah: Monday, September 22

6:15 p.m. Family Erev Rosh Hashanah Schmooze with Dinner before joing the Community-Side Service. Onsite. (Grades 2 – 7).

7:30 p.m. Community-Wide and Family Erev Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite and Online.

Rosh Hashanah Day 1: Tuesday, September 23

9:00 a.m. Family Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite. (Grades 2 – 7). Followed by Tashlich. Offsite.

 


Yom Kippur

Kol Nidre: Wednesday, October 1

6:00 p.m. Family Kol Nidre Service. Onsite. (Grades 2 – 7).

 

Yom Kippur: Thursday, October 2

9:00 a.m. Family Yom Kippur Service. Onsite. (Grades 2 – 7).


Sukkot

Erev Sukkot: Monday, October 6

5:15 p.m. Schmooze and Festive Meal for All Ages. Onsite.


6:00 p.m. Family Program.

Tuesday, October 7

9:00 a.m. Sukkot Festival Service and Torah Study. Onsite and Online. Followed by a Sukkot Festival Qiddush.


Simchat Torah

5:00 p.m. Consecration for Kindergarten and All New Students. Onsite.


5:00 p.m. Festival Meal for All Ages. Onsite.


6:00 p.m. Erev Simchat Torah: Creative Sevice Experience. Onsite and Online. Followed by dancing and tasty treats.

Young Family High Holy Day Services (Age 0 - Grade 1)

S’lichot

Saturday, September 13

4:45 p.m. Family S’lichot Dinner, Service, and Activity (Village and Elementary age). Onsite.


Rosh Hashanah

Erev Rosh Hashanah: Monday, September 22

5:30 p.m. Young Family Erev Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite. (Age 0 – Grade 1).

Rosh Hashanah Day 1: Tuesday, September 23

9:15 a.m. Young Family Rosh Hashanah Service. Onsite (Age 0 – Grade 1). Followed by Tashlich.


Yom Kippur

Kol Nidre: Wednesday, October 1

4:30 p.m. Young Family Kol Nidre Service. Onsite. (Age 0 – Grade 1).

Yom Kippur: Thursday, October 2

9:15 a.m. Young Family Yom Kippur Service. Onsite. (Age 0 – Grade 1).


Sukkot

Erev Sukkot: Monday, October 6

5:15 p.m. Schmooze and Festive Meal for All Ages. Onsite.

6:00 p.m. Family Program.

Tuesday, October 7

9:30 a.m. Village Sukkot Celebration (Ages 0 – 5). Onsite. Followed by Qiddush.

How to Access Livestream Services

All community-wide High Holy Day services and Riverway Project High Holy Day services will be available on livestream.

If you are unable to join us in person, we invite you to connect with our community online. We’ve thoughtfully invested in making the life of our congregation accessible and meaningful from wherever you are.

 

There are three easy ways to access our livestream services:

Temple Israel of Boston logo1. Stream on our website

Go to our livestream page at: www.tisrael.org/live-stream

 

Youtube2. Subscribe to our Youtube channel

You will be notified when we go live.
Find us at: youtube.com/@TempleIsraelofBoston

 

Facebook3. Join us on Facebook Live

Follow us to view services and connect with our community in real time.
Go to: facebook.com/TempleIsraelBoston

 

Joining us online? Borrow a Prayerbook

For an optimal online prayer experience, we suggest you have our prayerbook physically in front of you. During the month of September, we will lend out copies of Mishkan HaNefesh, the Reform Movement High Holy Day machzor, to TI members in good standing, while supplies last. Stop by Reception any time TI is open. We ask that you return it after the High Holy Days. Questions? Email tickets@tisrael.org or call 617-566-3960.

Tickets

Tickets are required for all onsite Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur services except the Lay-Led Rosh Hashanah Day 2 service.

Digital Tickets

This High Holy Day season, we are excited to introduce digital tickets as a new way to welcome you into our sacred spaces.

How will I receive my digital tickets?

Whether you are joining us for Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, or both, you will receive a personalized digital ticket by email approximately 24 hours before the holiday.

How do I present my ticket when I arrive for services?

Your ticket will include your name, your service time, and a unique QR code that will be scanned when you arrive. You can show your ticket on your phone or bring a printed copy — whatever makes you most comfortable. Tickets are non-transferable and are meant just for you.

Who will receive a ticket?

Tickets will be emailed to all members in good standing (meaning those who have made a payment toward this year’s membership or have been in touch with the office to make a plan), as well as to those who have purchased tickets, and guests attending through reciprocal arrangements.

If you’re not yet a member, need to renew, or wish to purchase tickets, contact us at tickets@tisrael.org soon to ensure you receive your digital tickets in time for the holidays.

If you need help with accessing your ticket…

We will be offering office hour help sessions in the weeks leading up to the holidays. You can also reach us anytime at tickets@tisrael.org.

Purchasing Tickets

Tickets can be purchased by completing this form. Please contact tickets@tisrael.org for more information.


Reciprocal Tickets

If you are unable to attend services at Temple Israel and would like to secure reciprocal tickets to a fellow URJ congregation, or if you are a member of a URJ congregation and would like to attend services at Temple Israel, please do one of the following:

Complimentary Tickets

We are pleased to offer complimentary tickets to military personnel and full-time undergraduate students. Please contact tickets@tisrael.org.


Tickets for Riverway Services (20s & 30s)

We are grateful to be able to offer our Riverway Erev Rosh Hashanah and Kol Nidre services at no cost to those in their 20s and 30s in the Boston area. Registration is required for each service:


Tickets for Young Family Services (Age 0 – Grade 1)

Families with children in Grade 1 and under may register for tickets to our onsite High Holy Day services for young families at no cost.


Questions?

Please reach out to tickets@tisrael.org

Getting Here

Getting here by public transportation

Temple Israel is a 5-minute walk from the Longwood station of the D branch of the Green Line.
Directions >


Getting here by car

Directions >


Parking

Parking will be available along the Riverway (for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur), at the Winsor lot, and in the 375 Longwood Avenue Garage. If you are attending the early service, we request that you leave promptly after each service so that parking will be available for congregants attending the late service.

Elul: A Month of Spiritual Preparation

Elul (אלול) is the name of the month in our Jewish calendar that immediately precedes the Jewish New Year and High Holy Days. As an acronym, the letters spell “Ani l’dodi, v’dodi li” — I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine — an expression of sweetness and commitment to drawing closer together. The month of Elul is one that fulfills the promise of drawing closer, awakening our inner lives through the call of the shofar, and preparing ourselves for the joy and renewal of the holiday season.

Spiritual Practice and Learning


High Holy Days 101: Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur

High Holy Days 101: Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur

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Date

August 19, 2025

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Time

7:00 PM - 08:00 PM EDT

The High Holy Days can be a time of incredible spiritual growth and deep personal introspection. Yet, for many of us, the sheer breadth of these holi...

Deeper Breathing for a Better Year with Yaakov Ginsberg-Schreck

Deeper Breathing for a Better Year with Yaakov Ginsberg-Schreck

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Date

August 26, 2025

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Time

6:30 PM - 07:30 PM EDT

Join us for a gentle, grounding session of breath and peace practice, rooted in Jewish wisdom, to prepare our hearts for the journey of the High Holi...

High Holy Days 101: Sukkot and Simchat Torah

High Holy Days 101: Sukkot and Simchat Torah

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Date

August 26, 2025

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Time

7:00 PM - 08:00 PM EDT

What is a sukkah and why do we eat outside in it for a week? What is a lulav and etrog? What exactly are we commemorating and celebrating on Sukkot a...

A Different High Holidays with Rabbi Ebn Leader

A Different High Holidays with Rabbi Ebn Leader

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Date

September 2, 2025

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6:30 PM - 08:00 PM EDT

Most North American liberal congregations are rooted in the Ashkenazi tradition. In this tradition Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur are known as "Days of ...

S'lichot Mini Retreat with Noah Aronson

S'lichot Mini Retreat with Noah Aronson

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Date

September 13, 2025

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Time

3:00 PM - 06:00 PM EDT

Join us for an extraordinary afternoon and evening of spiritual preparation as we welcome beloved musician and teacher Noah Aronson back to Temple I...

Soundtrack to the High Holy Days

Prepare your heart and spirit for the Days of Awe with our curated playlist of live High Holy Day music, prepared by Cantor Alicia Stillman. This collection of music from our congregation, drawn from traditional liturgy, contemporary interpretations, and soulful melodies, invites reflection, connection, and a sense of sacred anticipation. Whether you’re walking, driving, cooking, or simply pausing to breathe, let this soundtrack accompany you on your journey toward Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.

Listen now and let the season begin!

Qabbalat Shabbat During Elul

Fridays, August 29, September 5, 12, 19 at 6:00 p.m. Onsite and online

For each week of Elul, we will gather for Qabbalat Shabbat to sing melodies and explore texts that bring us into the themes of the High Holy Days in which we immerse ourselves. Each week will feature a deep dive into one of the chapters of our Congregational Read, The Sabbath, as we spiritually prepare ourselves for awakening and renewal; for t’shuvah, t’filah, and tzedakah.

 


Congregational Read

The Sabbath

The Sabbath, by Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel

Beloved by generations of seekers, Abraham Joshua Heschel’s The Sabbath is a timeless invitation to behold the majesty of creation — even as we are wearied by the noise and urgency of modern life. In this lyrical and profound work, Shabbat is not a day of restriction, but a cathedral in time — a sacred pause that lifts the soul, offering rest, reflection, and connection with the Divine beyond the material.

As we prepare our hearts for the Days of Awe, Heschel’s words offer a path to reflection, connection, and meaning. We invite you to engage with this accessible and powerful text as we journey through Elul and into the High Holy Days, studying together and drawing near to holiness.

 


Self-Guided Exploration

We invite you to explore our interactive High Holy Day materials. Journey through the High Holy Days at your own pace through various thematic lenses, or build your own High Holy Day experience based on which materials in the online library are most meaningful to you.

Start now!

More to Know

Tzedakah Row

Each year we select several organizations to support through our communal tzedakah effort. Please consider a donation into one of the tzedakah boxes in the Atrium. This year’s partners are: La Colaborativa, Dror Israel, and Keshet.  Learn more >

Food Drive Donations

For the 27th year, Temple Israel is proud to partner with the Greater Boston Food Bank for our annual Yom Kippur Food Drive. Paper bags will be available on Rosh Hashanah for you to fill with non-perishable food and return on Yom Kippur when the Food Bank truck will be on Nessel Way. Learn more >

Machzor Bookplate

Our High Holy Days machzorMishkan HaNefesh, is the result of collaboration between rabbis, cantors, lay leaders,  and members of Reform congregations. Consider dedicating a bookplate, in the amount of $72, to be placed in the front of our beautiful machzorim to remember or honor a loved one, teacher, or friend. Please fill out the Machzor Bookplate form, email Emma Savitz, or call 617-566-3960.

Past High Holy Day Sermons

5784 High Holy Days Sermons

Erev Rosh Hashanah 5784

“We Are the Earth, Wind, Water, and Fire,” Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Community-Wide Service


“A Skeptical Grown-Up’s Guide to the High Holy Days,” Rabbi Andrew Oberstein, Riverway Project Service

 

Rosh Hashanah 5784

“Towards an Abundance of Empathy,” Rabbi Dan Slipakoff,  Community-Wide Service


“A Tale of Two Buckets,” Rabbi Andrew Oberstein, Rosh Hashanah Young Family Service


“Ask Big Questions,” Rabbi Suzie Jacobson, Rosh Hashanah Sermon, Family Service

 

Kol Nidre 5784, Sunday, September 24, 2023

“Jewish Virtue Ethics: Finding Goodness in a Complicated World,” Rabbi Suzie Jacobson, Community-Wide Service


“Welcome to Jewrassic Park,” Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Family Service


“Days of Awe, Days of Enchantment,” Rabbi Andrew Oberstein, Riverway Project

 

Yom Kippur 5784, Monday, September 25, 2023

“Deal with Demons Daily,” Rabbi Dan Slipakoff, Family Service


“Give and Take,” Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Yizkor Services


“Jonah: The Son of Truth,” Rabbi Dan Slipakoff, Community-Wide Service


“May Israel Be,” Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Yom Kippur Sermon, Community-Wide Service

 

 

 

 

 

 

5783 High Holy Day Sermons
Erev Rosh Hashanah 5783, Sunday, September 25, 2022

Rabbi Suzie Jacobson, Young Family Service


“A Judaism of Enthusiasm!” — Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Community-Wide Service


“Everything Old is New Again,” Rabbi Andrew Oberstein, Riverway Project (20s/30s) Service

 

Rosh Hashanah 5783, Monday, September 26, 2022

Rabbi Andrew Oberstein, Young Family Service


“Enough,” Rabbi Dan Slipakoff, Community-Wide Service Service


Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Rosh Hashanah 5783 Family Service Sermon

 

Kol Nidre 5783, October 4, 2022

“It Takes More than Thirty-Six,” Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Community-Wide Service


“Go Be AWESOME,” Rabbi Suzie Jacobson, Family Service


Rabbi Suzie Jacobson, Young Family Service

 

Yom Kippur 5783, October 5, 2022

Rabbi Dan Slipakoff, Young Family Service


Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Family Service


“The Responsibility to Remember,” Rabbi Suzie Jacobson, Yizkor Service


“Avinu Malkeinu: God of Life, God of Love, God of Change,” Rabbi Suzie Jacobson, Community-Wide Service

5782 High Holy Day Sermons
Erev Rosh Hashanah, September 6, 2021

Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Community-Wide Service


Cantor Alicia Stillman, Family Service


“Here I am, Full of Compassion, Ready to Rebuild,” Rabbi Andrew Oberstein, Riverway

 

Rosh Hashanah, September 7, 2021

 “Masking Ourselves in Holiness,” Rabbi Suzie Jacobson, Family Service


“Comfort in Your Space, Courage in Your Place,” Rabbi Dan Slipakoff, Community-Wide Service

 

Kol Nidre, September 15, 2021

Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Family Service


Rabbi Andrew Oberstein, Riverway


Rabbi Elaine Zecher, Community-Wide Service

 

Yom Kippur, September 16, 2021

Teshuvah and Israel: Honesty, Bravery, and Patience,” Rabbi Suzie Jacobson, Community-Wide Service