July 4, 2008 | 7:49 am

It sounded like a typical summer trip the Holy Land for 32 members of L.A.’s Temple Isaiah, many making their first pilgrimage. They toured ancient ruins and Jerusalem; they hiked and kayaked and floated in the Dead Sea; they visited American Friends of Magen David Adom so some could donate blood. They donated blood? Only in Israel can I imagine vacationers seeing the expediency of rolling up their shirtsleeves and asking someone to needle them.
And they were right. Fourteen hours later, on Wednesday, a terrorist in a bulldozer plowed through Jerusalem’s streets, injuring 66 and killing three.
“We gave blood yesterday,” said Cantor Evan Kent. “How sad that our blood was needed so very soon.”
More information from , the Israeli rep for American Friends of Magen David Adom, after the jump.
Posted by Brad A. Greenberg in 0 Comments — Leave your comment
6.30.08 at 9:39 am | Christianity Today takes a look at Obama’s theological reasoning ... (2814)
How can you say you are not hateful? Just look at some of your statements: “Obama or any other candidate for that matter, does not owe Arabs squat.” “. . . a few people (in power) in the Arab countries have some major blood on their hands.” We wouldnt know of the depravity in the Moslim world ...
By Ben Plonie on 2008 06 28
You seem to be having trouble with one of your eyes . . . Visine - gets the red ...
By Ben Plonie on 2008 06 28
And we’re done ...
By Brad A. Greenberg on 2008 06 05
5.14.08 at 6:05 am | It’s a $7 billion-a-year-business, and a secular New York Jew takes us deep ...
8.30.07 at 9:34 pm | The Jewish community finally admits that awful deeds were done upon the ...
8.16.07 at 1:11 pm | Yes, people find my Jewish name and Christian beliefs confusing, which is why The Forward asked for an explanation. Here it ...
5.8.08 at 10:07 am | Kevin MacDonald’s books about Jews have been compared to ‘Mein ...
12.14.07 at 11:16 am | One on one with the man behind “The Amazing Adventures of Kavailer & Clay,” “Yiddish Policemen’s Union” and “Wonder ...
11.26.07 at 1:21 pm | A college football ref talks dirty to the other ...
academia america american jews anti-semitism atheism barack obama books capitalism catholicism christianity crime death education entertainment europe evangelicals god holidays holocaust iran iraq islam israel jesus jihad john mccain judaism los angeles media middle east mormonism personal politics president bush president 08 science sexuality sports the law war
Advertisement
July 2, 2008 | 2:36 pm
I’m man enough to admit when I’ve been wrong. It turns out that substitute teacher I had in sixth grade, the one who told me I wasn’t special, was right. He didn’t know it, but he was right.
Since becoming a religion reporter, and particularly since joining The Jewish Journal last year, I thought there was something unique about being a Christian named Greenberg—get out! In fact, I am not alone.
David Brody, Christian Broadcasting Network’s senior reporter, was raised Jewish and converted to Christianity, as did Joshua Goldberg, whose very, very Jewish byline I stumbled across yesterday at ChristianPost.com.
I e-mailed Goldberg to confirm what I suspected. He said he met Jesus during college, still appreciates his Jewish background and now considers himself a “Jewish Christian.” Sounds pretty Messianic, but he didn’t elaborate.
Unlike the former Jews reporting for Christian media, I became a Christian quite young and am now embracing my Jewish roots more than before. But, to reiterate, I do not consider myself a Messianic Jewish hybrid of keeping kosher and sacred Shabbats and Easter Sundays and prayers to Yeshua; I’m a Christian with curly hair, plenty of guilt and, at times, lots of beard.
Posted by Brad A. Greenberg in 1 Comments — Leave your comment
July 2, 2008 | 1:09 pm
Opening the gate to gay marriages in California was unavoidably as much a religious story as it was a legal one.
But just how religious folk feel about same-sex marriage, well, as this LA Times article demonstrates, that depends on who’s being asked:

“Homosexual intimacy is out of bounds. It’s not what God created us for,” said Richard Mouw, president of the evangelical Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena.
Mouw cites Romans 1 in the New Testament that decries men and women abandoning “natural relations” and men “inflamed with lust for one another” committing “indecent acts with other men”—behavior that carried death as punishment.
“Sexuality within the context of marriage is the order of creation,” he said.
Muow is a respected figure in the evangelical community, like a thinking-man’s Pat Robertson if Robertson really were relevant. But, clearly, his words mean little to the non-like-minded. Which prompted Mouw to muse on his blog about the role of Scripture in public policy.
The basic rule for understanding the present-day relevance of Old Testament prohibitions for the New Testament church is whether the New Testament reaffirms what we find in the Old. And I take it as obvious that the first chapter of Romans does reaffirm the prohibition against same-sex intimacy. This is turn reaffirms the more general teaching of the Old Testament about God’s creating purposes—what is “natural”—for human sexuality.
In the debates about public policy, however, I know that I cannot simply quote Scripture or cite ancient theologians in order to defend my position. I do not believe that everything that is declared sinful in the Bible ought to be decalred illegal in contemporary pluralistic societies. Here we enter a more pragmatic arena where we need to explore with our fellow citizens whether we have any common assumptions about what makes for a healthy society, and whether we can then figure out a workable arrangement that can accommodate our respective moral convictions.
Mouw goes on to say his “worries are variations on the old slippery-slope concern.”
Suppose, after five years of legal same sex unions three lesbians insist that their three-way relationship should be given the same legal status. (A case like this has actually come up in the Netherlands.) Or suppose the claim is made on behalf of, say, a forty year old man and a 13 year old boy ...
Possibly to the dismay of my gay friends—actually, I doubt they care what I think God thinks—I agree with Mouw’s reading of the book of Romans. I understand homosexual behavior to be one looked down upon by God. So too is gossip and gluttony and arrogance and avarice. But there are very few sins for which God’s children are generally treated as others and outsiders.
What disappoints me about Mouw’s “slippery-slope” statement is that he essentially uses a weak premise to foretell tolerance of NAMBLA. Yes, the California Supreme Court has forever changed the definition of “marriage.” But the beginning of the end? I doubt it.
(Hat tip: My now-retired college pastor, Rhett Smith)
Posted by Brad A. Greenberg in 4 Comments — Leave your comment
July 2, 2008 | 9:08 am

“I am what I am.”
Posted by Brad A. Greenberg in 1 Comments — Leave your comment
July 2, 2008 | 7:03 am
This spring, we saw a flashbang in Jewish-black relations with the saga of Daphna Ziman and the Rev. Eric Lee. Those waters have smoothed, and this week in New York, a former colleague of Martin Luther King Jr’s (no, not this one) said it is essential to both blacks and Jews that the communities identify their shared needs:
“As blacks and Jews, the wind may blow, the rain may beat down on an old house, be it a house in Brooklyn, Atlanta, America, Israel or Africa, but we all live in the same house,” Rep. John Lewis, a leader of the civil rights movement who stood behind Martin Luther King, Jr. on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in 1963, told a group of Jewish and black leaders in Brooklyn this week.
“We are one people, one family and we must stay together and build a society at peace with itself.”
Agreed. Interestingly, though, in an increasing number of cases, Lewis’ comment that “we all live in the same house” is especially true. What do I mean? Well, beside the reality that blacks and Jews have similar political sentiments, and the fact that Jews have historically felt the brunt of persecution whenever a society discriminated against anyone, there is a growing community of African American who are, in fact, Jewish.
Would you believe it numbers 150,000?
Posted by Brad A. Greenberg in 2 Comments — Leave your comment
July 2, 2008 | 6:11 am

“At one point he [the driver] yelled out “Allah Akhbar” [God is great] and stepped on the gas pedal,” Plesser recalled. “I drew the weapon of the civilian who was with me and shot the driver three times in the head. I think I did what is expected from every soldier and citizen.”
Posted by Brad A. Greenberg in 1 Comments — Leave your comment
July 1, 2008 | 10:01 pm

Two weeks ago, Julia Duin, the religion reporter for the Washington Times, dropped a bombshell: Commonwealth Catholic Charities of Richmond arranged for a 16-year-old immigrant girl in its care to receive an abortion. These action clearly violated Catholic doctrine and also possibly Virginia law. But the story didn’t end there.
Duin kept on it and Monday unloaded an even bigger shocker: Bishop Francis X. DiLorenzo knew about the plans and “did not try to prevent the procedure.”
Both DiLorenzo and the head of Catholic Charities are now scrambling and hiding behind deflected responsibilities and feigned ignorance. “It is very awkward, it is very embarrassing. A human life was taken. He certainly has not taken it lightly in any way. He is clearly opposed to abortion,” the bishop’s flak told Duin.
The public isn’t really buying it, and rightfully so. Here’s what the Crunchy Con, Rod Dreher, had to say:
Bullsh*t. A bishop of the Church is told a day in advance that an abortion is going to take place under the Church’s auspices ... and he doesn’t try his damnedest to stop it?! The director of Catholic Charities is supposedly distraught about the planned abortion because it “went against all she stood for” ... and she didn’t try to stop it?! They’re covering their butts, and doing a poor job of it.
We may never know what really happened here. The U.S. Catholic Church has proven its skillfulness at covering up its mistakes—at least for a long time, until they fester and swell and burst in a public fiasco like the clergy sex abuse scandal. Easy lessons, it seems, are hard to learn for those afraid of owning up to their mistakes.
Posted by Brad A. Greenberg in 2 Comments — Leave your comment
July 1, 2008 | 8:58 pm
The Lord works in mysterious ways. Baron Davis, the best player to come out of UCLA since Reggie Miller, is set to make his return to Los Angeles. Suddenly, I think I’m a Clippers fan. The guy has more style than Jack Nicholson, who roots for that other L.A. team. Just watch Davis’ moves in the montage above from his Bruin days.
Posted by Brad A. Greenberg in 0 Comments — Leave your comment
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
Yaron Amitai was the oldest soldier killed in the Second Lebanon War. At 45, he was past the required age for army reserve duty. Amitai nevertheless volunteered to serve as a combat medic in the Paratroopers Brigade scheduled to go into Lebanon
The earnest message was delivered in an opulent setting. First, the customary cocktails and hors d'oeuvres were served in the Sheinbaum's plush backyard, where a clover-shaped pool, statues and sculptures seemed fixed into the landscape of the Brentwood Hills.
Not only are survivors alive in large numbers -- estimated at 700,000 worldwide, with about 85,000 in the United States -- but they are projected to be a part of Jewish society for another 10 to 15 years, and even longer for child survivors.
Since last summer, when I volunteered for a Barack Obama event, I have received many nonsensical e-mails and heard many nonsensical arguments -- from friends and family as well as on TV -- about Sen. Obama's alleged lack of allegiance to the United States of America.
Parashat Chukat (Numbers 20:1-22:1) Who was Miriam? She is the only woman in the Torah who bears the title "Neviah" -- prophetess. So who was she?
I'm dying to tell you about a fascinating afternoon I spent with an Israeli scientist at the Sheba Medical Center in Tel HaShomer, but first, I want to tell you how I ended up there