Sermons

One of the strangest, most difficult and at times most exciting responsibilities of being a rabbi is preparing and delivering a sermon. It is a strange form of communication, almost completely “one way,” with little opportunity for the congregation to respond or for the rabbi to know how it was received. The blank sheet of paper before beginning to write is so daunting: what should I talk about? What should I say about it? How should I say it? But looking back now over forty years of sermons, I realize that being required to stand up in front of the congregation and open my mouth and speak has forced me to think deeply about my own life, Judaism, and our world. Below are many recent sermons and some of the sermons from the past which capture important moments in my life, or the life of our community or the world.

Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

We Jews

April 21, 2023

April is the month in which we grapple as a people with our history, both ancient and recent. In April, we face the consequences of what it has meant and what it means for each of us today to say “we Jews.”

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Intimacy and Physicality

Friday night, March 24, 2023

many traditional Jews to this very day look forward to the rebuilding of the Temple in Jerusalem and the restoration of the sacrifices. I do not. But just as I missed the physicality of being together during the endless zoom gatherings of the Covid lockdown, I miss the physicality of the korbanot. The powerful intimacy that comes from being together, in the presence of fire and smoke and the pleasing fragrance of praying by cooking.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Protect the Shabbat

March 10, 2023

The word v’shamru means “they shall guard.” They shall watch and observe. They shall protect. With this word, the Torah evokes the fragility of Shabbat, it’s vulnerability to all the storms and tides and winds that threaten to erode it.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Our Move to Trinity

February 3, 2023

We are here in a church, Trinity Lutheran Church, whose members have welcomed us into their home. Not just for tonight, but for virtually every Friday night and Saturday morning for the next year and a half. As you can see, the cross--which declares the essence of their faith-- is concealed by this curtain. Our friends here at Trinity have allowed us to obscure their most sacred symbol during our services, so that we can feel at home here. It is a breathtaking, inspiring, heart-warming gesture of hospitality.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Groundbreaking for Building Dreams

January 22, 2023

… it’s not easy getting ready to leave now, for a year and a half, or however long it’s going to take. We had better have a good reason, for all this hassle. I want to say as clearly as possible: We are not going to all this trouble, just to make this place more beautiful. It is already beautiful. We are disrupting our life so that this sacred place can undergo a metamorphosis. The most important transformation of this home of ours since it was first built almost sixty years ago. We are changing what it means to be a synagogue.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Land of the Living, Land of the Dead

Friday, January 6, 2023

As I sat in the theater watching Coco, like people everywhere, I wished desperately to be part of that vibrant Mexican culture.  But I also thought to myself:  This is very  Jewish.  “Recuerdame, Remember Me” the song at the heart of the film expresses the deep idea embedded in our Jewish tradition of Yizkor.  The redeeming power of memory.  Our beloved dead depend upon us, here in the land of the living, to remember them. 

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Becoming Israel

December 9, 2022

I know that fear is also normal. There are many good reasons to be afraid in this dangerous world. But Tally, and Linda and Ben, like our father Jacob nearly four thousand years ago, each in their own way are teaching us, showing us that it is possible to be unafraid, to step boldly out of our comfort zone, and to increase the peace of God’s world.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

The Blessing

November 25, 2022

Before blessing our children on Friday night, we might ask them “come close and kiss me.” And take a deep breath…smelling the odor of their breath and skin, remembering all the times we have kissed them in our lives. And then we might speak their names, since speaking a person’s name can awaken our love for them. And then offer words of blessing. Love first, then bless.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Abraham

November 4, 2022

I believe that Abraham was moved to open his home, and himself, to the people around him because of his great discovery. Abraham was the first to look into the face of another person, and to see in that other face the God of his own soul.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Eve

October 21, 2022

the question that hit me hardest, that left me completely unsettled, was from Sabrina, a very thoughtful young woman in the class, who asked: “why does the Torah tell this story which leads to the long history of women being treated as inferior to men?”

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Who By Fire?

Yom Kippur 5783/2022

Yom Kippur summons us to these truths.  We are mashul kacheres hanishbar, we are like broken pottery,…k’avak poreach…like dust, floating.”  And Yom Kippur is the holiest day of our lives because on it we declare “af al pi chen. Nevertheless.  N’kadesh et shimcha ba-olam. We will sanctify Your name in this world.  We reject cynicism and despair.  Tonight and tomorrow, we commit ourselves once again to hope, to trust, to goodness and to love.”

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

A Jewish Center

Rosh Hashanah 5783/2022

In the midst of all this living and creating and enjoying, we will also pray together. And sing together. And study our sacred texts. This was Mordecai Kaplan’s vision: a Jewish Center for Culture and Community, with prayer and song and study at its heart.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Gratitude

August 19, 2022

Like “I love you” and “I’m sorry,” if the words “thank you” are forced or faked, then what’s the point? Much more difficult, and much more important than teaching our kids manners, is the question: how do we teach our children to feel honestly grateful? For that matter, how do we bring ourselves to feel honestly grateful?

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

In the Cave of Lascaux

August 5, 2022

We have not forgotten the entrance to the cave.

We remember how to go in and to bring that cave to life.

Deep in the caves of Lascaux, I discovered that our Jewish tradition is not a lost cause.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

The Purpose of a Sermon

July 1, 2022

The purpose of a sermon is to remove our sandals, so that with the sensitive soles of our souls, we may feel all the pain and all the joy of being alive in this beautiful broken world.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Lies and Truth

June 10, 2022

We are living in a time when it often seems as though truth lies gasping on the ground.  In our haste, we may decide that kol ha-adam kozev, everybody lies.  But if we care for this fragile but marvelous creation, democracy, we will interrupt our haste, our rushing around.  We will pay attention to the seriousness of this moment in history, and we may be blessed to see the miraculous return of truth imagined in the midrash.  Emet mei-eretz titzmach.  Truth will sprout forth from the earth. 

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Backpacking and Braver Angels

May 13, 2022

The temptation is so strong to withdraw, to listen only to music on the radio, and to have nothing to do with the brawling, the name calling, the derision and contempt and demonization that have become the norms in our political discourse. I’m so tired of it. And yet, here we are, trying to create something together.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Choose Life

April 29, 2022

God declares, “if this human being chooses correctly, then this entire creation will endure.  But if this human being chooses badly, the heavens and the earth will disintegrate, and return to tohu vavohu, the primordial chaos.  In our generation, we have come face to face, at last, with the planetary implications of our life choices.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Go Down Moses

April 8, 2022

it came to pass that in the middle of the 20th century, American Jews discovered a body of songs which combined both: our ancient Jewish story and one of the richest and most profound forms of American music, the African American spirituals.

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Steve Cohen Steve Cohen

Esther and Zelenskyy

Friday night, March 11, 2022

In this moment also, in our own terrifying moment in history, a Jew named Volodymir Zelenskyy is recapitulating Esther’s act of kiddush hashem.

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