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Is Religion Without Ritual Possible?
"Religious ritual comes to the great moments of human experience to lift them up and relate them to a universe of meaning." In exploring his question on March 4, 1962 — is religion without ritual possible? — Rabbi Olan's focus was to understand the very meaning of ritual itself, from the Bible to modern day... how it supports us, why some choose to ignore it, and ultimately the...
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Science is Not Enough
“The sickness of modern man is caused by the imbalance of a strong science and a terribly weak religion, great power but no control.” On February 25, 1962 #RabbiOlan preached on science and religion. Just …
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Can a Modern Man Pray?
“Prayer is neither magic nor miracle. In its basic nature it is a quest, an attempt to cross the bridge from our desires to the great spiritual reality which is embedded in life itself. ” …
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Levi Olan with his sister, Bertha, in 1925
Photograph of Levi Olan with his sister in August of 1925. Bertha Olan (1908-1985) married Jack Cravets. They lived in Rochester, New York, where Bertha served as the librarian at Temple B’rith Kodesh. Image courtesy …
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What is Right, and What is Wrong?
“There have been other ages confused about what is right and what is wrong, but could any of them have been as hopelessly bewildered as we are today?” “Certainly, among nations, we must very soon …
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If a Man Dies, Shall He Live Again?
“It is impossible to escape the thought that [humanity] is equipped for more than just life here on earth. We do not know what that more is and we may never know, but its essence …
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A Skeptic’s Faith
"Faith is not living by what you absolutely know to be true; rather, it is to risk everything on a great adventure into the unknown." While the thrust of Rabbi Olan's sermon on January 28, 1962 was about religious faith, it's interesting to put the timing of his discussion on faith and skepticism into historical context. The day before...
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Is There Really a God?
"Religion is essentially psychological and not theological, which is to say, that such practices as worship and prayer exist whether there is or there is not God." On January 21, 1962, Rabbi Olan didn't shy away from the challenging and fundamental notions about...
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I must please God
“Whether my neighbor likes it or not, I must please God before I please him, and if what God asks of me is not pleasing to my neighbor, I choose God first.”
Rabbi Levi A. Olan. From “Good Will – The Fact and the Illusion,” a radio sermon broadcast on January 14, 1962.
(#43, originally posted September 26, 2018)
