Kol Bo has ended and with it my third year, so although not yet a four year I am no longer a third year. But am rather in that wired between space. Kol Bo was interesting largely on Illistrated Haggadot (The Golden, the Birds Head, and the Rylands). But we were really looking more generally at what can be learnt about art and the world(s) from which it came simply by looking.
Very interesting but I was very tired during it, just because it comes at the end of a very very long semester.
I have been making good progress with the Limmud Project, although there is still quite a bit to do. And on Saturday I am off to WCS to lead services, read Torah and to preach. (I always like going to WCLS they are such a lovely community.)
Jobs left over from the 3rd. A) Meeting about JC-Norwood (should get on that one soon), B) Contact RHF (also better sooner rather than latter), C) contact and set up a meeting with RJ (nothing serious so no real pressure there).
Looking forward I need to sort out what is happening with the High Holy Days in more detail and be more pressing on my 4th year placement.
Next week there is the HHD practicum at LBC not sure how much of it I'll be going to although as gabi I'll be going in for services (and will probably go and work in the library there after). And then that really is it.
I will be very glad to get a brake from college as I really feel that I need it.
Thursday, 27 June 2013
Monday, 24 June 2013
Kol Bo and Sermon
Today was the first day of Kol Bo, which looks like it is going to be very interesting this year. Kol Bo started with a morning service lead by Rene, Emily read Torah and I gave a d'var Torah. (See Below). I also feel that I am making good progress with the project for Limmud so all in all. Things are going well.
Good Morning. (Smile and pause)
Max Weber, the
eminent German sociologist, once suggested that there were three
forms of authority: Legal (which is based on either on a system of
bureaucracy or a standardised set of normative laws), Traditional
(which is based on custom-or the principle that 'this is the person
who has always held authority'), and Charismatic (which depends on
the characteristics of the individual and the demands of the moment).
It
is possible to identify each of these three types of authority within
the structure of ancient Israelite society. The traditional authority
of the heads of houses, and the kings. The Legal authority of
officers and advisors for example those appointed by Moses, and of
course the charismatic authority of the Prophets and Judges.
But the nature of
authority and leadership are still a topic of scholastic (and indeed
popular) research. Walk into any bookshop and you are likely to find
shelves and shelves of books on the topic of leadership, and a
summation of this week's Paraha, Parasha Pinchas, could be 'authority
and leadership'.
Because leadership
is a major focus of this Parasha. From the dealing with the
consequences of Pinchas' dynamic and deceive actions during a moment
of potential political crisis impaling Zimri and Cozbi (this dramatic
incident actually concluded last week's Parash.)
The motif of
leadership continues with Moses' considered application of a legal
frame-work to a new situation in response to the request brought to
him by the Daughters of Zelophehad, and parasha concludes with
Moses handing on authority and leadership to Joshua.
This Parasha really
is concerned with and focused on leadership. In its many forms and in
its different styles.
But in describing
the investment of Joshua the Torah uses the verb, VaYis-M'ch.
From which the word Semicha (rabbinic ordination) is taken.
The Rabbis of the classical period, and indeed latter, wanted to link
their forms and style of leadership with those that had operated in
the Biblical period.
But the challenges
of Jewish life have continued to evolve as has the types of
leadership necessary to meet these challenges.
(pause)
Leo Baeck College,
has been providing leadership and leaders for the progressive Jewish
community not just in Britain but across the world for almost 60
years.
But just as the
leadership of Moses and then of Joshua would not have been possible
without the active support of other leaders within the community, so
too the college relies upon the support, in many different forms from
the members of the wider progressive community.
In the modern world,
work place and indeed rabbinate, leadership is often separated from
authority, in a way which Weber would almost certainly have found
compelling.
But with the help of
the College, aided and supported by the members of the progressive
community, I am certain that the current generation of students can
follow in the footsteps of the current rabbis, and those who came
before, and meet and even more than meet the challenges of providing
the necessary leadership in partnership with the broader membership
of the progressive and wider Jewish community.
Ken Yehi Ratzon.
Saturday, 22 June 2013
MA Bibliography (and a short posting)
This is going to be a rather odd posting, as mostly its going to be a bibliography. But first yesterday was a nice day it had a really Shabbat like feeling, kind of like being back in Jlem. Partly this may have simply been down to the weather which was kind of like Israel very warm and muggy. But it was also that on my walk to synagogue, and just by chance the people I met where on their way to synagogue as well. So it was nice to exchange greetings of 'Shabbat Shalom', even as I left the flat I hadn't decided which shul I was going to. In the end I opted for FPS. It was a really nice services and I got to have a very pleasant chat with Kathy who was there as well. Its been ages since we have run into each other.
Then it was back to the flat for a meal I'd cooked, I really must get back into the habit of cooking more. The next day I went back to FPS, Rene was leading and again it was a very pleasant service.
Next week we have Kol Bo., and I still have one or two big things on but apart from that I am so much less busy than I was until recently.
This brings me to the bibliography. I have updated my MA bibliography which was entitled, "Incest in the Ancestry of David: A Combined reading of Genesis 19, Genesis 38 and the Book of Ruth''.
I think that its a pretty good thesis and the bibliography is I think useful to others researching in this area so I wanted to put it on line and via my blog seemed like the easiest way of so doing.
Then it was back to the flat for a meal I'd cooked, I really must get back into the habit of cooking more. The next day I went back to FPS, Rene was leading and again it was a very pleasant service.
Next week we have Kol Bo., and I still have one or two big things on but apart from that I am so much less busy than I was until recently.
This brings me to the bibliography. I have updated my MA bibliography which was entitled, "Incest in the Ancestry of David: A Combined reading of Genesis 19, Genesis 38 and the Book of Ruth''.
I think that its a pretty good thesis and the bibliography is I think useful to others researching in this area so I wanted to put it on line and via my blog seemed like the easiest way of so doing.
Alexander, T., Desmond. ''Lot's
Hospitality: A Clue to His Righteousness'' Journal of Biblical
Literature (1985) Volume 104:2
289-291.
Alter, Robert The Art of Biblical
Narrative. New York: Basic
Books, 1981
Anderson,
A., Arnold. ''The Marriage of Ruth.'' Journal of Semitic
Studies (1978) 22
171-183.
Astour,
C, Michael. ''Tamar the Hierodule an Essay in the Method of
Vestigial Motifs.'' Journal of Biblical Literature (1966)
85:192-196.
Arbeitman,
L., Yoel. ''Tamar's Name or is it?'' Zeitschrift fur die
altterstamentilche Wissenschaft
(2000) 112 Number 3 341-355.
Barker,
R. James Women's rights in the Old Testament times. Salt
Lake City: Signature Books, 1992.
Bergson,
Henri. La rire: Essai sur la Signification du Comique
Paris: Presses Universitaires de
France, 1900.
Brenner,
Athalya. ''Naomi and Ruth'' Vetus Testamentum
(1983) 33 Number 4 385-397.
-''On
the semantic field of humour, laughter and the comic in the Old
Testament: On Humour and Comedy in the Hebrew Bible''.
Journal for the study of the Old Testament Supplement
Series 92. (1990).
-Ed.
''Are we Amused? Humour about women in Biblical Worlds'' Journal
for the study of the Old Testament Supplement Series 383.
(2003).
Brown,
F., Driver, S., R., and Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon
Peabody Ma: Hendrickson
Publishing, 1979.
Brooks,
A., Beatrice. ''Fertility Cult functionaries in Old Testament''
Journal of Biblical Literature 60:
227-253 (1941)
Bush,
W., Fredrick Word Biblical Commentary Number 9: Ruth and
Ester. Dallas: Word Books
Publishing, 1996.
Campbell,
F., Edward The Anchor Bible: Ruth. Garden
City NY: Doubleday and Company, 1975.
Childs
S., Brevard Introduction to the Old Testament as Scripture
London: SCM Press, 1979.
Eissfeldt,
Otto. Hexateuch-Synopse Leipzig,
1922.
Emertonn,
J., Adney. ''Some Problems in Genesis XXXVIII. Vetus
Testamentum (1975) Number 25
338-361.
- ''An Examination of recent structuralist interpretation of Genesis XXXVIII'' Vetus Testamentum (1976) Number 26 79-98.
- ''Judah and Tamar'' Vetus Testamentum (1979) Number 29 403-415.
Fish,
Harold. ''Ruth and the Structure of Covenant History'' Vetus
Testamentum Number 32 423-437.
Fuchs,
Esther ''Sexual Politics in the Biblical Narrative'' Journal
for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series 310,
(2000).
Golder, C., M.
''Genesis 38 in the Context of the Joseph Story'' Ph.D diss. The
University of
Manchester. 1985.
Goldin, Judah.
''The Youngest Son or Where Does Genesis 38 Belong'' Journal of
Biblical Literature (1977) Volume 96:1 27-44.
Hall,
Sarah. ''Tamar, a polemic on Tamar? An intertextual discussion of
the Juxtaposition between male and female comprehensions of the
rules of relationships within 2nd
Samuel 13 and Genesis 38 narratives'' MA. Diss. The University of
Manchester, 2000.
Hamilton,
P., Victor. The Book of Genesis (Chapters 18-50). New
International Commentary on the Old Testament. Grand Rapids:
William B. Eerdmans Publishing.
Hubbard,
L., Robert Jr. Ruth New
International Commentary on the Old Testament. Grand Rapids:
William B. Eerdmans Publishing.
Huddelstun,
R., John. ''Unveiling the version: the tactics of Tamar in Tamar in
Genesis 38:15'' Journal of Hebrew Studies (2001)Volume
3 325-343.
Ho Y.,
S., Graig ''The Stories of the Family Troubles of Judah and David: A
Study of Their Literary Links'' Vetus Testamentum Volume
49:4 514-531
Jackson,
Melissa. ''Lot's Daughters and Tamar as Tricksters and the
Patriarchal Narratives as Feminist Theology'' Journal for
the Study of the Old Testament
(2002) Number 98 29-46.
Kim,
Dohyung ''The Structure of Genesis 38: A Thematic Reading'' Vetus
Testamentum (2012) Number 62
550-560.
Lasine,
Stuart. ''Guest and Host in Judges 19: Lot's Hospitality in an
inverted World'' Journal for the Study of the Old
Testament. (1984) Number 29
37-59.
Leach,
Edmund and Alan D, Aycock Structuralist Interpretation of
Biblical Myth. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1983.
Malamat,
Abraham. ''Naamah, the Ammonite princess, King Solomon's Wife''
Revue Biblique 106
35-40.
Mars, Leonard.
''What was Onan's Crime'' Comparative Studies in Society and
History (1984) Volume 26:3 429-439.
Morschauser,
Scott ''Hospitality, Hostilities, and Hostages: On the Legal
Background to Genesis 19:1-9'' Journal for the Study of
the Old Testament (2003), Number
27 461-485.
Myers,
J., Martin. The Linguistic and Literary form of the Book
of Ruth Leiden: Brill, 1955.
Niditch
Susan ''The Wronged Woman Righted: An analysis of Genesis 38'' The
Harvard Theological Review (1979)
Number 1-2 143-149.
Noble,
R., Paul ''Esau, Tamar and Joseph: Criteria for Identifying
Inner-Biblical Allusions'' Vetus Testamentum (2002)Number
52:4 219-252.
Rendsburg,
A., Gary ''David and His Circle in Gensis XXXVIII'' Vetus
Testamentum (1986)
Number 36 438-446.
Schungel-Straumar,
Helen. ''Judah and Tamar'', in Great Couples of the Bible
Soelle, Dorothee and Katharina Elliger., eds., Augsburg: Fortress
Publishing, 2006.
Sharon,
M., Diane ''Some Results of a Structural Semiotic Analysis of the
Story of Judah and Tamar '' Journal for the Study of the
Old Testament (2005) Volume 29:3
289-318.
Soggin, J.,
Alberto. ''Judah and Tamar (Genesis 38)'' Of Prophets' Visions
McKay, A., Heather and David, J., Clines eds., Journal for the
Study of the Old Testament Supplementary Series.
Tonson,
Paul. ''Mercy without Covenant: a Literary Analysis of Genesis 19''
Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Number
95 95-116.
Trible,
Phyllis. Text
of Terror Literary-Feminist Readings of Biblical Narrative:
Overturnes to Biblical Theology 13
Philadelphia: Fortress Press.
Vesco,
Jean-Luc. ''La Date du Liver du Ruth'' Revue
Biblique (1967)
Number 74 235-247.
West,
A., Struat. ''Judah and Tamar: A scriptural enigma'' Dor
le Dor (1984)
12:4 246-252.
Wolde
Van, J., Ellen Ruth
and Naomi London:
SCM Press, 1997.
-''Texts in Dialogue with Texts: Intertextuality in Ruth and Tamar
Narratives.'' Biblical Interpretatio: A Journal of Contemporary
Approaches (1997) Volume 5:1 1-28.
Wenham,
J., Gordon Word
Biblical Commentary 2 Genesis 16-50
Nashvile: Nelson Publishing, 1994.
Westenholz,
G., Joan ''Tamar, Qedesa, and Qadistu and Sacred Prostitution in
Mesopotamia'' Havard Theological Review (1989) Volume 82:3 245-266.
Whedbee,
J., William The
Bible and the Comic Vision Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1989.
Wilson,
R., Robert ''The Old Testament Genealogies in Recent Research''
Journal of Biblical Literature Number
94 169-189.
Labels:
ancestry of King David,
FPS,
Friends,
Genesis 19,
Genesis 38,
school,
Shabbat,
The Book of Ruth
Sunday, 16 June 2013
Brussels and Back
I have returned from my, very brief, visit to the Liberal Jewish Community in Brussels. I had a great time. The journey there was uneventful and even peaceful (even for a person who is not a big fan of travelling). The Eurostar is so easy to use really beats flying.
The train services between Brussels Midi-and Leuven where I was staying were so easy to use, even though I don't speak French or Flemish and cheap. But, is nevertheless clean, fast and efficient. Leuven itself is a such a Beautiful town. A University town much like Oxford or Cambridge medieval and very small.
I was being put up in a very pleasant hotel operated by Brian who is one of the mainstays of the community and teaches in the theology faculty. As it happens this weekend was the communities last weekend in the current home so a rather special event.
I had a chance to meet with people and the next day I was reading some Torah (went well) and I gave a D'var Torah (also went well).
In the afternoon I had a chance to go around Leuven, which had markets and beautiful medieval buildings. I brought some very very pleasant chocolates for Emily and I to share and a small snow globe for Emily as very little gift.
Generally I had a very pleasant time all though it was rather tiring.
Latter today I am going to meet up with Daisy and people for drinks in Kentish town.
The train services between Brussels Midi-and Leuven where I was staying were so easy to use, even though I don't speak French or Flemish and cheap. But, is nevertheless clean, fast and efficient. Leuven itself is a such a Beautiful town. A University town much like Oxford or Cambridge medieval and very small.
I was being put up in a very pleasant hotel operated by Brian who is one of the mainstays of the community and teaches in the theology faculty. As it happens this weekend was the communities last weekend in the current home so a rather special event.
I had a chance to meet with people and the next day I was reading some Torah (went well) and I gave a D'var Torah (also went well).
In the afternoon I had a chance to go around Leuven, which had markets and beautiful medieval buildings. I brought some very very pleasant chocolates for Emily and I to share and a small snow globe for Emily as very little gift.
Generally I had a very pleasant time all though it was rather tiring.
Latter today I am going to meet up with Daisy and people for drinks in Kentish town.
Monday, 10 June 2013
Feeling a little bit better
I am gradually decompressing for from the assessment period and indeed from the third year. So feeling both less stressed and more open. I still don't know how any of them did but am trying not think about it too much.
This weekend I go to Brussels to meet with the community there, this means that I am practicing my Torah reading and writing my D'var Torah. Latter in June I go to WCS (I am really looking forward to this, they are such a lovely and welcoming community.)
There is of course still Kol Bo to come, and I need to organise a couple of meetings but basically my third year is really done and I have almost caught up on the things I have been meaning to do. This includes reading for my own interest. Currently I am reading. Jewish Liturgical Reasoning. by Steven Kepnes (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).
And somewhat less heavy weight. Silence. Susan Cain. Looking slightly further forward there is Ordination for the almost rabbis, in July. And then I shall really need to try and get sorted for the High Holy Days. (Especially as they are so early this year).
Shortly, I need to head off to my clinical-Ophthalmologist, nothing serious just a regular checking up appointment.
So basically I am in one of those in-between times. Relatively uninteresting, but very useful for space and growth. And after all although interesting is interesting it can also be stressful.
This weekend I go to Brussels to meet with the community there, this means that I am practicing my Torah reading and writing my D'var Torah. Latter in June I go to WCS (I am really looking forward to this, they are such a lovely and welcoming community.)
There is of course still Kol Bo to come, and I need to organise a couple of meetings but basically my third year is really done and I have almost caught up on the things I have been meaning to do. This includes reading for my own interest. Currently I am reading. Jewish Liturgical Reasoning. by Steven Kepnes (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).
And somewhat less heavy weight. Silence. Susan Cain. Looking slightly further forward there is Ordination for the almost rabbis, in July. And then I shall really need to try and get sorted for the High Holy Days. (Especially as they are so early this year).
Shortly, I need to head off to my clinical-Ophthalmologist, nothing serious just a regular checking up appointment.
So basically I am in one of those in-between times. Relatively uninteresting, but very useful for space and growth. And after all although interesting is interesting it can also be stressful.
Labels:
health,
High Holy Days,
Kol bo,
Reading,
synagogues
Sunday, 2 June 2013
Book Review (may contain spoilers!)
I have just read Chaim Potok's 'Old Men at Midnight Night'. (New York: Alfred K. Knopf, 2001)., and I thought that I'd like to post a review of it. So now after my essays are done here it is. Please not although I will try and keep spoilers to a minimum there still might be some, so please don't read if you haven't read Old Men at Midnight and intend to do so.
Chaim Potok is probably my favourite author, and certainly the Chosen is my favourite novel so I was please to find a Potok novel that I was yet to read. Structurally Old Men at Midnight, is formed out of three loosely interconnected novellas each centred around the 'heroin' Davita. Any Potok fan will recognise many of the themes and tropes of the whole novel and of the individual novellas. However they are refreshingly new, there is not a central theme of religious crisis. And the hero is female, although she takes a back seat to the three men whose stories she hears (and creates?).
The first story the Ark builder, is the most recognisably Potokian. Set in post war New York: Brown stone houses, hassidic vs. non-hasidic orthodoxy yiddish culture meets America. In this story, Divita (the a Teenager) teaches English to a Holocaust survivor, who slow opens up to her and tells his story. Themes are: Memory, survival, evil, the holocaust, art and the cathartic power of stories and story telling.
There are many links here with Potok's other works, although cultural back grounds were somewhat different.
1st person Divita.
The Second story 'The War Doctor' a defector from Stalin's Russia recounts, in letter form his actives during the war and as an officer in KGB. Again there are links to some of Potok's other works: Notably 'My Name is Asher Lev', and 'The gift of Asher Lev'.
Themes are: Memory, Totalitarianism, Russia, Academic, Evil, and again the Power of Story telling.
Complex: Short intro third person, then first person from perspective of KGB officer.
Third Story: 'The Trope teacher', an academic of war, writes about the author who moves in next door. She (Davita) engages him in conversation and draws out his, story (Holocaust related again). This story is highly symbolic and resonant with pain and lose.
Themes: Memory, lose, evil, academics. The power of stories and the negtive power of silence.
first person: the academic.
My ideas:
Only the first story is 'genuine', the other two are stories written by the writer herself. (So stories within stories). There is a progression from the more simply narrative-though to the highly symbolic and complex final story. As time moves (40's, 50's and 90's).
I would say that this is most literary of Potok's novels and not necessarily the most straightforwardly readable. It is nevertheless very enjoyable and in fact readable if you are prepared to give it time.
I would advice that maybe start with another of his other works and built towards this more technically challenging texts such as this and 'In the Beginning'.
Chaim Potok is probably my favourite author, and certainly the Chosen is my favourite novel so I was please to find a Potok novel that I was yet to read. Structurally Old Men at Midnight, is formed out of three loosely interconnected novellas each centred around the 'heroin' Davita. Any Potok fan will recognise many of the themes and tropes of the whole novel and of the individual novellas. However they are refreshingly new, there is not a central theme of religious crisis. And the hero is female, although she takes a back seat to the three men whose stories she hears (and creates?).
The first story the Ark builder, is the most recognisably Potokian. Set in post war New York: Brown stone houses, hassidic vs. non-hasidic orthodoxy yiddish culture meets America. In this story, Divita (the a Teenager) teaches English to a Holocaust survivor, who slow opens up to her and tells his story. Themes are: Memory, survival, evil, the holocaust, art and the cathartic power of stories and story telling.
There are many links here with Potok's other works, although cultural back grounds were somewhat different.
1st person Divita.
The Second story 'The War Doctor' a defector from Stalin's Russia recounts, in letter form his actives during the war and as an officer in KGB. Again there are links to some of Potok's other works: Notably 'My Name is Asher Lev', and 'The gift of Asher Lev'.
Themes are: Memory, Totalitarianism, Russia, Academic, Evil, and again the Power of Story telling.
Complex: Short intro third person, then first person from perspective of KGB officer.
Third Story: 'The Trope teacher', an academic of war, writes about the author who moves in next door. She (Davita) engages him in conversation and draws out his, story (Holocaust related again). This story is highly symbolic and resonant with pain and lose.
Themes: Memory, lose, evil, academics. The power of stories and the negtive power of silence.
first person: the academic.
My ideas:
Only the first story is 'genuine', the other two are stories written by the writer herself. (So stories within stories). There is a progression from the more simply narrative-though to the highly symbolic and complex final story. As time moves (40's, 50's and 90's).
I would say that this is most literary of Potok's novels and not necessarily the most straightforwardly readable. It is nevertheless very enjoyable and in fact readable if you are prepared to give it time.
I would advice that maybe start with another of his other works and built towards this more technically challenging texts such as this and 'In the Beginning'.
And Exhale
I have finally finished my assessments, yeah and in reasonably good time as I had until tomorrow at 5pm, all that remains is to get the very last of them bound and then hand it in. So that was seven essays completed, five oral presentations, and a piece of reflexive writing. I had a bit of panic yesterday when I thought that I had lost my nearly nearly finished essay and the earlier draft. Luckily although the, better, later version was not recoverable I was able to reconstruct it more or less from an earlier draft. I then had to spend sometime correcting what had gone wrong with the software. But, hey all is well that ends well as they say.
And on the assumption that I pass, I have almost completed my third year as a rabbinical student. All that remains is Kol Bo, not a big deal really and one last reflexive class with Indigo, also nothing to stress over. (At some point Emily and I need to have a meet with Charles and Debora and the people from JC NW and have a discussion about the third year placement.)
So I can turn my attention to other matters, which I have been neglecting badly Limmud stuff (Today and tomorrow's jobs) and the sermons I need to write. Although I have done (in draft at least) the one for the 24th and have ideas for the one for the 29th. (Good Job-Adam).
Currently I am sitting and blogging from a coffee shop. Enjoying looking at sunshine, which has been in very short supply this spring/summer so far. This is a nod to being on holiday. So reflections on the third year. Again looking back over the course of the year I feel as if I have learnt a lot. (In fact I think I have) but once again I find it impossible to say for certain when this learning and growth took place. I also think that its interesting how my interests have changed since I started the program. I would not have thought that when I started that my mine interests would be: Homiletics, Liturgy, and Pastoral care. (In that order). Don't get me wrong I am still really drawn towards Talmud (I am still pressing on though Daf Yomi) and Bible. I think its just that while my level in interest there has remained more or less static or increased only a little little bit, my interest in those three subjects has come up in leaps.
So apart from my family holiday in Devon, and my working myself to death over essays not that much has been happening. Expect for boiler related fun and games. Emily and I now have a new boiler so hot showers yeah! I did read old men at midnight. By Chaim Potok. I may even post a review of it latter. But for now. I'm off to do some shopping (not fun shopping household stuff). Although I need to do some clothes shopping soon. I am really getting low on wearable clothes.
And on the assumption that I pass, I have almost completed my third year as a rabbinical student. All that remains is Kol Bo, not a big deal really and one last reflexive class with Indigo, also nothing to stress over. (At some point Emily and I need to have a meet with Charles and Debora and the people from JC NW and have a discussion about the third year placement.)
So I can turn my attention to other matters, which I have been neglecting badly Limmud stuff (Today and tomorrow's jobs) and the sermons I need to write. Although I have done (in draft at least) the one for the 24th and have ideas for the one for the 29th. (Good Job-Adam).
Currently I am sitting and blogging from a coffee shop. Enjoying looking at sunshine, which has been in very short supply this spring/summer so far. This is a nod to being on holiday. So reflections on the third year. Again looking back over the course of the year I feel as if I have learnt a lot. (In fact I think I have) but once again I find it impossible to say for certain when this learning and growth took place. I also think that its interesting how my interests have changed since I started the program. I would not have thought that when I started that my mine interests would be: Homiletics, Liturgy, and Pastoral care. (In that order). Don't get me wrong I am still really drawn towards Talmud (I am still pressing on though Daf Yomi) and Bible. I think its just that while my level in interest there has remained more or less static or increased only a little little bit, my interest in those three subjects has come up in leaps.
So apart from my family holiday in Devon, and my working myself to death over essays not that much has been happening. Expect for boiler related fun and games. Emily and I now have a new boiler so hot showers yeah! I did read old men at midnight. By Chaim Potok. I may even post a review of it latter. But for now. I'm off to do some shopping (not fun shopping household stuff). Although I need to do some clothes shopping soon. I am really getting low on wearable clothes.
Labels:
assessment,
Daf yomi,
Emily,
kol bo.,
limmud,
Third year
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