Inviting God In, by Rabbi David Aaron
This warm, inspiring look at the Jewish holidays—by one of the most dynamic and accessible teachers of Jewish thought today—shows us how each holy day empowers us to recognize God's loving presence in our life everyday.
Inviting God Inby Rabbi David Aaron
Shambhala Publications Inc., Aug. 2006
Book Description
There are many books that discuss how to celebrate the holidays; Inviting God
In explains why we should celebrate. Using biblical references, anecdotes, and
teaching tales, Rabbi David Aaron takes us through the Jewish calendar year and
explains how each holiday—from the most joyous to the most somber—reveals
God's ever-present love for us. Passover, for example, celebrates unconditional
love; Shavuot reminds us of freedom and our power to take responsibility; Rosh
Hashanah is about the joy of accountability and Yom Kippur sanctifies compassion
and forgiveness. Rabbi Aaron helps us to awaken our soulful connection to the
dramatic events that occurred on those days, and to experience the holidays as
opportunities to revitalize our personal relationship with God.
Rabbi Aaron is an enthusiastic guide, and his fresh view of the holidays will
enliven and enrich traditional celebration. Inviting God In will inspire both
practicing Jews who want to reinvigorate their observance of the holidays and
secular Jews searching for a meaningful way to reconnect with their Jewish roots.
About the Author
Rabbi David Aaron, the son of a Holocaust survivor, has struggled since early
youth to understand the world's potential for hatred and paradoxical yearning
for meaning, love, and creativity. His own spiritual journey led him to Israel,
where he studied Torah and Jewish mysticism under the tutelage of the great masters.
He received his rabbinical ordination in 1979 from the Israel Torah Research
Institute (ITRI). A popular lecturer in North America and a frequent guest on
radio and TV, he is the founder and dean of Isralight (isralight.org), an international
organization with centers and programs throughout North America and in Israel.
Rabbi Aaron lives in Jerusalem with his wife, Chana, and their seven children.
Review from Publishers Weekly
Aaron, a teacher of mysticism in Jerusalem, focuses on one word not usually used
to describe Jewish holiday themes and observances: love. Yes, he says, Rosh Hashanah
is about accountability and Hanukkah is about hope. Yes, Yom Kippur is about
forgiveness and Purim is about trust. But every holiday shares one unifying ingredient
not usually stirred into the Jewish recipe for the holidays: God's love. A Jewish
holiday, called a mo'ed, a fixed time or date, allows us a "date with God" so
that we can remember a dramatic moment in God's loving presence. Each chapter
describes the "soul-meaning"-a term Aaron doesn't define-of a different
holiday, an aspect of God's unconditional love. Aaron's accessible explanations
make difficult mystical concepts easy to understand, especially when he offers
clever, offbeat analogies. The Torah is like a love letter you read and reread.
Revelation is like the traffic report on the radio, with God as the traffic helicopter
deciphering patterns from above. The tragedy, says Aaron, is that today many
of us are not even looking for God. For those who are, Aaron's book will provide
sincere guidance toward uncovering a tender, untarnished meaning of the Jewish
holidays.
Copyright © 2006 Reed Business Information.
Review from Library Journal
There are numerous volumes that take readers through the courses of time-tested
prayer and recurring ritual observance, Christian and Jewish alike many of them
having been reviewed in this column. This book, by Aaron (Seeing God: Ten Life-Changing
Lessons of the Kaballah), the son of a Holocaust survivor, differs from the lot
in its brevity and directness of approach to the meanings of Judaism's ritual
practice. Addressing the important holidays of Passover, Shavuot, Tisha B'Av,
Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Purim, and others, Aaron always finds a way even in
paradox to celebrate God or faith in God. As he says in his conclusion, "Each
Jewish holy day celebrates a vital aspect of God's timeless love for us." Most
Jewish readers will enjoy this charming and thoughtful book.
Copyright © 2006 Reed
Business Information.