Feb 18, 2026

A Prayer for Australia: May This Land Know Peace

A Prayer for Australia: May This Land Know Peace
Rabbi Menachem Creditor


Sydney Airport. My heart is full.


As I prepare to travel home, I carry with me profound gifts - of healing, of presence, and of unexpected joy. This journey has been sacred in ways I could not have anticipated. To sit with survivors. To listen. To embrace. To pray. To witness courage that does not erase pain but grows around it. I have been blessed not only to offer strength, but to receive it.


One afternoon, my beloved sister Tzeira and I walked through the Royal Botanic Gardens. We came upon this ancient eucalyptus tree. The moment I saw it, I felt drawn in. Its vast branches stretching outward, its trunk impossibly wide, roots gripping the earth with quiet insistence. When I placed my hand upon it, I felt time itself pulsing - rising from deep within the soil into my palm. The land carries memories. All of them. Sorrow and celebration. Trauma and tenderness. Standing there, I felt the ache of recent violence and the deeper, older resilience of life that refuses to disappear, something I’ve witnessed and appreciated in Australia’s culture - acknowledgement and reverence for the land and those who have walked it.


Healing is not forgetting. It is choosing to remain open. It is choosing presence. It is choosing joy when joy returns.


I am deeply grateful to my UJA-Federation of New York family for making this journey possible, for standing behind the sacred work of Jewish solidarity, for ensuring that no Jewish community feels alone, and for supporting me in being physically present here in this tender time. That embrace was felt across oceans.


As I board my flight, I offer a prayer for safety and protection for our Jewish family here in Australia, for all Australians, and for the world we share. May our roots hold firm. May our branches reach wide. And may the memories yet to be written on this land be blessed with peace.



We Each Bring Our Gifts | Terumah | #Broadcast1492

 

Feb 11, 2026

The Aftershock of Revelation (Mishpatim)

The Aftershock of Revelation (Mishpatim)
Rabbi Menachem Creditor


Parashat Mishpatim is dense, an intricate weave of civil laws: torts, damages, guardianship, personal injury, property, and responsibility. Case after case unfolds in careful detail. It does not read like poetry. It does not soar. It arrives immediately after Sinai, after thunder and lightning, after a mountain aflame, after what Rabbi Jonathan Sacks z”l, called God’s entry into history. Our ancestors had just seen the sounds and trembled before the Infinite, and then the Torah turns to oxen, loans, damages, lost property, Shabbat rhythms, and judicial integrity. The transition is jarring; it feels like spiritual whiplash.

The Israelites had walked through walls of water and survived plagues that dismantled an empire. They stood at the foot of Revelation itself. These moments, the splitting sea, the trembling mountain, the Divine Voice, are the peaks of biblical Jewish memory. And then comes Mishpatim. No fireworks, no spectacle, only law. It can feel almost disappointing. How can a list of ordinances compete with a sea that splits or a mountain that burns?

Perhaps that is precisely the Torah’s point. Life cannot be lived at Sinai every day. If the only places we encounter God are in the miraculous, then we will miss God almost all the time. The sea does not split each morning, and mountains do not regularly blaze with revelation. But neighbors borrow and lend, workers labor, property is damaged, words are spoken, and power is exercised. The Torah moves us from spectacle to structure, from ecstasy to ethics. Mishpatim teaches that the aftershock of Revelation is responsibility. The thunder fades. Justice must endure.

There are miracles in the quiet textures of daily life: the flower that stops you mid-stride, the unexpected kindness that softens a difficult day, the subtle shift in air when winter loosens its grip and hope returns. These, too, are revelations. Yet Mishpatim insists on something even more radical: that a society committed to fairness, accountability, and dignity is itself a sustained miracle. The connective tissue of this parashah is justice, protection of the vulnerable, limits on power, sacred regard for the stranger, the widow, and the orphan. Financial systems are infused with compassion, and courts are animated by integrity. God is not only in the thunder but in the terms of the loan, in the boundaries of ownership, and in the restraint of the strong.

I think of my beloved teacher, Rabbi Elazar Diamond z”l, who taught that God is in the details and embodied that truth. He once described stepping off a bus moments before Shabbat began, holding a challah he was bringing to a meal. As the sun dipped and Shabbat arrived, he still had miles to walk. The halachic challenge was real, for one may not carry from domain to domain on Shabbat. So, he walked less than four cubits and stopped, then less than four cubits and stopped, again and again. To an onlooker, it might have seemed like a strange, halting promenade. To him, each measured step was an act of devotion, each pause a recalibration, each movement a conscious invitation to the Divine. He was not merely transporting bread; he was sanctifying space and bending time as he walked with God.

Mishpatim is that walk. Law at its best is not dry regulation but disciplined love. It is a framework that trains the heart toward attentiveness and insists that every action matters, that no encounter is trivial, and that justice is enacted step by careful step. As Dr. Jacob Milgrom z”l taught, Leviticus is not merely a book of law but a book of love, and Mishpatim prepares us for that truth. Law becomes the architecture through which love enters public life.

How we step matters. Every vote cast, every policy shaped, every interaction at work, every moment of restraint when we could dominate but instead choose dignity, these are Sinai extended into the street. We are still standing at Sinai if we understand that Sinai was not meant to remain on the mountain but to descend into contracts, courts, kitchens, and marketplaces. Revelation becomes real only when it transforms the mundane.

Rabbi Diamond held a challah, but he was also holding covenant, community, and sacred time with trembling care.

That is the purpose of law: to carry God carefully through the world.

May the next action we take, whether small or large, be infused with intention. May we walk in a way that might seem peculiar to those who measure life only by spectacle, and may we walk as those who know that every step can hold Presence. Sinai echoes still, not only in thunder but in the steady, unceasing building of a just society. May we find God in the details, and may our careful steps make the world more compassionate, more beautiful, and more whole.


How to Walk (with God) Through the World | | Mishpatim | #Broadcast1489

 

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A Prayer for Australia: May This Land Know Peace

A Prayer for Australia: May This Land Know Peace Rabbi Menachem Creditor Sydney Airport. My heart is full. As I prepare to travel home, I ca...