Temple Isaiah - Stony Brook
Yom Sheini, 21 Tishri 5786
RSS
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Temple Leadership
      • Our Rabbis
        • Sermons
      • Our Staff
      • Our Leadership
      • Our Cantors
    • Mission & Diversity Statements
    • Our History
    • Reform Judaism
  • Worship
    • Shabbat
      • Tot Shabbat
      • Oneg Sponsorship
    • High Holy Days
    • Life-Cycle Events
  • Youth
    • Tot-Spot
    • Religious School
      • K-7th Grade
      • Confirmation (8th – 10th grade)
      • Post Confirmation (11th & 12th grade)
      • Religious School Staff
    • B’nai Mitzvah
      • B’nai Mitzvah Prayers
      • B’nai Mitzvah Programs
    • Temple Youth Group
  • Community
    • Membership
      • Membership Registration
    • Brotherhood
    • Caring Committee
    • Parents’ Association
    • Sisterhood
    • Social Action
  • Calendar & Events
  • Temple Times
  • Donations & Payments
    • Donations & Payments
    • Donation Categories

Parshat Vaera – January 12, 2024 / 3 Shvat, 5784

Temple Isaiah SB January 4, 2024 Sermons Shabbat Sermon

The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. First met Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel in 1963 at a conference regarding race and religion. Dr. King and Rabbi Heschel formed a close relationship, with King even referring to Heschel as “my rabbi.” There is perhaps no series of images depicting black-jewish relations more famous than those of Dr. King and Rabbi Heschel walking side-by-side during the march for African-American voting rights from Selma to Montgomery Alabama on March 21, 1965. Having become fast friends, Dr. King was planning to attend a Passover Seder at the Heschel family home in 1968. Tragically, he never made it to that seder. He was assassinated on April 4, 1968. While the history of the relationship between African American people and Jews is not to be reduced to this one friendship and partnership, as it is much more complicated than this, can we allow ourselves this space…celebrating this man’s legacy, to remember the good? To recall such moments of togetherness so that we can strive for them again?

I found myself reading this week’s Torah Portion Va’eira, and how it describes Moses and Aaron pleading for the release of the Israelites from Egyptian bondage. We read of the first 7 of the 10 plagues that are brought upon the land of Egypt due to the Pharaoh’s refusal to set the Children of Israel free. I imagine the Pesach Seder at the Heschel household, beginning on April 16th, 1968 only 12 days after Dr. King was killed in Memphis Tennessee. I imagine the Maggid, the telling of the Exodus story, which includes this week’s plagues and pleas for freedom. I imagine the hardened heart of a Pharaoh, and the hateful heart of a man at a hotel in Memphis. I remember the name for Passover is z’man cheyruteinu…the season of our freedom. Most of all, I imagine the empty seat at the seder table in the Heschel household. A seat not reserved for an important black leader, or a politician, an activist, or a set of ideas.A seat reserved for a fellow human being. A seat reserved for a friend. 

Dr. King was a man who spent his life fighting non-violently for a world that could exist as z’man cheyruteinu…the season of our freedom. We celebrate this brave and amazing man, as perhaps we remember the extra chair at the Heschel household. The bitterness of the herbs and the saltiness of the water exacerbated in 1968 now inform us of the relationships that we need to foster between communities to move forward with common purpose. We as Jews have always known to be true what Dr. King said…”No one is free until we are all free.” In the spirit of togetherness, and to honor Dr. King’s life and legacy, it is my absolute pleasure to welcome to the lectern, Reverend Lisa Williams of the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church of Setauket…Our neighbor and friend.

– R

Parshat Vayigash – December 22, 2023 / 11 Tevet, 5784 Parshat Bo – January 19, 2024 / 10 Shvat, 5784

Related Posts

Sermons

Yom Kippur Afternoon Sermon – 5786

To get into the spirit of tonight, I would like to begin by inviting anyone, but preferably an attorney here with us tonight to come up to the bimah, don a white robe, and recite with all of their heart and soul the most moving and soul-wrenching sections of United States Federal Tax law. Actually, […]

Sermons

Yom Kippur Morning Sermon – 5786

This past December, I was on the phone with my own mother, helping her to close the book of life for her own mother, my grandmother. As I couldn’t make it up to Troy New York in time before she passed, I had my phone on speaker, and was singing some psalms and then finally […]

Sermons

Rosh Hashanah Afternoon Sermon – 5786

“Everyone loses when bright people play small.” This quote by Dr. Valerie Young is a comment on her area of research expertise, Impostor Syndrome, or Impostor Phenomenon. The term itself was coined and explored in 1978 by researchers Pauline Rose Clance and Suzanne Ament Imes. They studied 150 women who had earned their PhDs, but […]

Contact Info

Temple Isaiah
1404 Stony Brook Road
Stony Brook, NY 11790

P: (631) 751-8518
F: (631) 751-4932

Donate to Temple Isaiah

Temple Isaiah Charity of Choice

Temple Isaiah's Charity of Choice
Ronald McDonald House Charities Logo
Donate Now
© URJ 2025