The AJR Center for Judaism and Science has an annual competition for the best student D’var Torah infused with science. Click here to view the entries that have won our לדעת חכמה (Lada’at Hokhmah) Award.

Parashat Ki Tavo -5785

September 8, 2025

Rabbi Greg Schindler (’09)

Teach Your Children Well A D’var Torah for Parashat Ki Tavo By Rabbi Greg Schindler From the moment she stepped into the home in Tuscumbia, Alabama on March 3, 1887, 21-year old Anne Sullivan faced a daunting challenge.  Not only was her new 6-year old pupil blind (like Anne), but she was also deaf, mute, and very unruly. Anne immediately began signing words into the child’s hand.  It took a month of constant repetition, but eventually the girl began to comprehend that the words drawn on her hand represented things in the world. Anne understood that teaching this child would best be achieved by focusing on touch, smell, and taste.  And so, many of their lessons took place outdoors where they could touch the animals, smell the flowers, and taste the fruits. One concept, however, proved extremely challenging —  the difference between the “mug” and the “milk” that it held. ...

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Parashat Ki Teitzei – 5785

September 2, 2025

Hazzan Rabbi Luis Cattan ('20)

A D’var Torah for Parashat Ki Teitzei By Hazzan Rabbi Luis Cattan As we enter the month of Elul, preparing for Rosh Hashanah, many of us begin to plan who will be seated at our festive tables — and realize also, who will not. For some, this season stirs joy. For others, it stirs old and new grief. Rabbi Naomi Levy, a contemporary liturgist, offers a powerful “Prayer When a Parent Dies” in her book Talking to God: “I miss you. You gave me my life. You were my protector, my teacher, my moral compass, my comfort. I feel so alone without you. No one worries about me the way you did. No one loves me the way you did… Please forgive me for the times I caused you pain, and for the times I took you for granted… I will always treasure the lessons you taught me. I will...

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Parashat Shoftim – 5785

August 26, 2025

Rabbi Enid C. Lader ('10)

One to Keep Before You… And One to Carry with You A D’var Torah for Parashat Shoftim By Rabbi Enid C. Lader As Moses continues his instructions to all the people of Israel as they are preparing to enter the Promised Land, he says: “You shall be free to set a king over yourself, one chosen by the Eternal your God…  He shall not keep many horses… He shall not have many wives, lest his heart go astray; nor shall he amass silver and gold to excess. When he sits on the throne of his kingdom, he is to write himself a Mishneh Torah – a copy of this Instruction – in a scroll, before the presence of Levitical priests. Let it remain with him and let him read in it all the days of his life, so that he may learn to revere the Eternal his God, to observe...

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Parashat Re’eh – 5785

August 19, 2025

Rabbi Rob Scheinberg

The Torah of Vacation A D’var Torah for Parashat Re’eh By Rabbi Rob Scheinberg, PhD Here’s a good question to ask in August: What does the Torah teach us about how to go on vacation? Our initial answer might be: not so much. You would have a hard time coming up with references to vacation in the Torah. Perhaps one could refer to Shabbat as a weekly vacation, but that uses the word “vacation” very differently from how we tend to use it. There is a lot of discussion of travel in the Torah: Abraham moves to the land of Israel; the people of Israel go down to Egypt, and then take a long and scenic route for forty years back to the land of Israel. But most of this travel is desperate wandering and displacement, rather than the vacation travel that many experience today. Surprisingly, though, every summer we read a...

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Parashat Eikev – 5785

August 11, 2025

Rabbi Greg Schindler (’09)

The Heart of the Matter1  A D’var Torah for Parashat Eikev by Rabbi Greg Schindler (2009) In this week’s D’var Torah, Rabbi Greg Schindler digs deep to see if there is a central lesson hidden in our Parashah. If you are a frequent reader of Divrei Torah, then you are probably familiar with some of the great Torah commentators: Rashi, Ramban, Ibn Ezra and many others have helped generations to better understand the weekly parashah. But what if I told you that there was a Torah commentator even more ancient than these great scholars, older even than the Talmud? And more “plugged in” than any of them. Well, there is such a commentator, and it has been hiding in plain sight for millennia. That commentator is the Torah itself2. No, this does not require any Torah “codes” or the use of gematria (ascribing numbers to letters). Rather, the Torah comments upon itself using certain literary techniques3.  For example, the...

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