Kol HaLev is Baltimore's new synagogue community in the making.

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  קול הלב

Kol HaLev is Baltimore's new synagogue community in the making.  We feature regular weekend services and a variety of programs.   Everyone is welcome to participate so please stop by for services should you be in the neighborhood.

Take a look at our current events below and
click here to find out what makes us different.   

Click here to read the latest Jewish Times article about Kol HaLev.
Baby Naming Event at Kol HaLev - click here to see photos!
May 2008
Up and Coming Events

Shabbat Services

Friday, May 16th, 6pm, Kabbalat Shabbat
Parsha: Beha

Saturday, May 24th, 11:30am, Food for Thought, Light lunch served

“Coming of Age,” with noted author Arthur Magida

What is wrong with us?  The news is full of such inappropriate behaviors, and it seems that we, as a people and a society, have lost our moorings. 

One analysis is that we have lost our transitional markers, our rites of passage that once helped us navigate from youth to the rights and privileges and responsibilities of adulthood.  The stories and traditions that once helped us define who we are and what we are supposed to do seem to have lost their power.

What are these “rites of passage”?  How are they supposed to operate?  What is their potential power and effect?  Do they have any effect?   

Noted author Arthur Magida will share with us insights from his recent book, “Opening the Doors of Wonder,” which features interviews with influential thinkers from diverse traditions regarding their experiences of “initiation” and “coming of age.”

This presentation and conversation should be of interest and significance to all of us, not only those with adolescent or teenage children. 

Arthur Magida is currently Writer-in-Residence at the University of Baltimore.  He has been a columnist, editorial director of Jewish Lights Publishing, and editor of the Baltimore Jewish Times.  He is the author of the non-fiction works “Prophet of Rage” (about Louis Farrakhan), “The Rabbi and the Hit Man,” and “How to be a Perfect Stranger: A Guide to Other People’s Religious Ceremonies.”


Special dates: 

Friday, May 23rd Lag Ba’omer

Adult Education 

Sunday, May 18th, 4-6pm. Location: Kleinman/Erlichman (Note to those who may be allergic, they have a dog).  Call 410-327-0043 or serlichman@mlsc.org or edkleinman@objectivemanagement.com
 

Contact Shirley Levin for locations. 410-484-1898


B'nai Mitzvah Family Classes
April dates to be announced; check calendar.
Children's Programs (ages 6 - 10)
To be announced.  Contact Margo Pyes, 410-296-9337 or mpyes@comcast.net.
Special Events

Exploring Judaism for Interfaith Couples and Families
Contact Rabbi Basik or Joanne Giza 410-542-4166,
jhgiza@aol.com. 
 
Looking Forward

Kol HaLev’s Members Meeting, Sunday, June 1st. 1:30-3:30 at the church hall.   Hold the date.

Thanks to all who sponsored onegs and kiddushim, and made donations to KHL.

Volunteer & Sponsorship Opportunities
Are you interested in playing a role in our new and exciting synagogue community but aren't sure how to help?  Many hands are needed for a variety of things.  We need assistance setting up weekend events, building committees, and Oneg Shabbat sponsorships to name just a few.   If you would like to get involved, please contact Bernie Guyer at bguyer@jhsph.edu for more information. 
Our Services
Kabbalat Shabbat

The Friday evening prayers of "Kabbalat Shabbat" refer to the Sabbath as a bride: "Come my friend, towards the bride; let us greet the Sabbath". What does this metaphor mean?


The Sabbath is a time of close connection to Torah and spiritual enlightenment. Through the light of the 'extra Sabbath soul', our "neshama yeteira", we are able to grasp that which was distant and concealed from us during the weekdays.

This special receptive quality towards the Torah on the Sabbath day is like the relationship of a bride towards her new husband. The bride does not know her husband in a deep, intimate way like a couple married for many years. Yet there is a tremendous joy in the bride's love, which comes from the newness of the relationship.


The Sabbath is a 'taste' of the World to Come. One day a week we feel some of the holiness and knowledge that will fill the universe in the future era, a time of pure and continual Sabbath.

Our weekly Shabbat does not have the depth of enlightenment that will bless the World to Come. But there is the delight of newness, just like a young bride. This bridal joy is particularly appropriate in the very start of the Sabbath, as we celebrate to greet her with "Lecha Dodi".


The future world will also be graced this newly wed joy. "Like the rejoicing of a groom over his bride". The enlightenment of those days will continually increase, and the soul will rejoice in its constant renewal. May we speedily merit that great light, in a permanent acquisition.

[adapted from Olat Re'iyah vol. II p. 21]



Services held at:  1700 South Road Baltimore, MD 21209  (Lower Hall of St. Johns Church)  
Contact Us:  info@kolhalevmd.org
Bernard Guyer, President: bguyer@jhsph.edu  410-366-2760     
Rabbi Geoff Basik:  gbasik@comcast.net

Kol HaLev is Baltimore's new synagogue community in the making.

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