American Torah at 250
Goals
1. Mark America’s 250th anniversary through a Jewish lens.
The volume should explore how Jewish texts, history, and values can illuminate “the American experiment” and how America has impacted Judaism and the Jewish community.
2. Provide usable sermons for the Jewish year 5787.
Contributions should connect and explore democratic themes to particular Torah portions and perhaps holidays.
3. Strengthen democratic culture without promoting partisanship.
The collection can address difficult public questions while remaining nonpartisan. Its focus should be democratic principles, civic responsibilities, moral formation, the importance of virtue, and the health of the republic.
4. Encourage both gratitude and moral accountability.
The book should make room for appreciation of American freedom and Jewish flourishing, while also confronting the gaps between America’s founding ideals and its historical and present realities.
Call for Contributions
In celebration of the 250th anniversary of the United States, Rabbi Charlie Savenor and Rabbi Menachem Creditor will be publishing a collection of original sermons for the weekly Torah portions of the Jewish year 5787. At this historic moment, we invite rabbis, cantors, scholars, educators, and Jewish communal leaders to help communities encounter the American story through Torah, and Torah through the responsibilities of American citizenship. Together, these sermons will offer a year of Jewish learning and civic reflection for America at 250.
The Torah-reading cycle gives Jewish communities a shared language through which to confront enduring questions of freedom, , justice, leadership, power, responsibility, disagreement, memory, and belonging. During America’s 250th anniversary year, these weekly readings offer a unique opportunity to consider the achievements, tensions, and unfinished work of American democracy.
For over two and a half centuries, life in America has created extraordinary opportunities for Jewish freedom, religious expression, civic participation, and communal flourishing. At the same time, the nation has repeatedly struggled to live up to its own aspirations ideals expressed in its founding documents. This anniversary invites both gratitude and honest reflection, celebration and renewed commitment.
We are seeking sermons that connect a specific weekly Torah portion with themes related to American democracy and civic life. Contributions might explore subjects including liberty and responsibility, covenant and Constitution, equality and human dignity, citizenship, immigration, religious freedom, political leadership, character, protest, pluralism, civil disagreement, minority rights, public trust, truth, national memory, civic friendship, or the pursuit of a more perfect union.
Authors might consider questions such as:
· What does this Torah portion teach about the responsibilities of citizenship and leadership?
· How can Jewish tradition illuminate the promises and contradictions of "the American experiment" in self-government?
· What obligations accompany freedom?
· How should communities respond to injustice, exclusion, polarization, or the abuse of power?
· What can the Jewish traditions of covenant, argument, memory, repentance, and communal responsibility contribute to democratic life?
How should we approach a hyphenated American Jewish identity today?
· How does this weekly Torah reading help us imagine America's next chapters?
Submissions should be written as sermons intended for delivery to a congregation and should be rooted substantively in the assigned Torah portion. They may express gratitude, critique, concern, aspiration, or hope, but they should promote civic reflection rather than partisan advocacy.
The collection will include one or two sermons for each weekly Torah portion, contributors are encouraged to select up to two parshiot they would be willing to address. The sign up for parshiot are available is here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Zfpwnl89MUEPqPb83ByWGDHU5PW3u1vhgM0wqUZIBLY/edit?usp=sharing.
Submissions should be sent to torahwithin@gmail.com by September 1. Sermons should not exceed 1,200 words and must be submitted in Word format. Please include the author’s name, title, institutional affiliation, short biography, and the Torah portion for which the sermon is submitted.
NOTE: The editors may not be able to include every contribution and that accepted pieces may be edited for length, clarity, style, and consistency. Final assignments may be coordinated by the editors to ensure broad coverage of the Torah-reading cycle and a diverse range of civic themes.
#AmericanTorahAt250 #America250 #Torah #JewishLearning #JewishCommunity #Democracy #CivicLife #FaithAndDemocracy #AmericanJewish #MorePerfectUnion
.png)
.png)