Ep 16 – “Faith and Friendship” with Rabbi Matthew Gewirtz

Listen / Subscribe

Apple Podcasts

Spotify

YouTube

RSS

Ep 16 – “Faith and Friendship” with Rabbi Matthew Gewirtz

Introduction

Guest Rabbi Matthew D. Gewirtz joins me to discuss his journey towards becoming a rabbi, the challenges faced in his role, and his deep involvement in interfaith work. The discussion also covers the Hebrew concept of machloket (disagreeing without rancor), its relevance in the current crisis between Israel and Gaza, and the importance of interfaith dialogue both for religious leaders and the wider community.

Guest Bio

Rabbi Matthew D. Gewirtz began his tenure as the Senior Rabbi of Temple B’nai Jeshurun in July 2006. Previously he served as Senior Associate Rabbi of Congregation Rodeph Sholom.

A strong advocate of social justice, Rabbi Gewirtz was a founding executive committee member of the Newark Coalition for Hope and Peace, an interfaith organization of Jews, Christians and Muslims that was committed to ending gang violence in Newark from 2007-2017. Rabbi Gewirtz currently serves at the President of the Coalition of Religious Leaders for the State of New Jersey.

A regular contributor to numerous professional publications, including the CCAR Journal, The American Rabbi and The Wisdom Daily. He is the author of “The Gift of Grief: Finding Peace, Transformation and Renewed Life after Great Sorrow” (Random House). His second book, “To Build a Brave Space: The Making of a Spiritual First Responder” came out in November, 2022 (Post Hill Press).

Rabbi Gewirtz is a Fellow at the National Jewish Think Tank CLAL. He appears as a commentator on religion on MSNBC’s Morning Joe and CNN’s State of the Union. He was a tri-anchor of PBS’s (NJTV), A Matter of Faith with an Imam, Bishop and Rabbi from 2016-2020 along with Imam W. Deen Shariff and myself.

Rabbi Gewirtz is married to Lauren Rutkin, a philanthropy advisor. They are the proud parents of Jake, Natalia and Sadie. Rabbi Gewirtz is also an ardent fan of baseball (NY Mets) and football (NY Jets).

 

Guest Links

————-

If you enjoy this podcast and would like to find more content like this, please visit my website at www.markbeckwith.net, where you can listen to more episodes (and read episode transcripts), read my blog, and sign up to get weekly reflections in your inbox. I also explore the themes of this podcast further in my book, Seeing the Unseen: Beyond Prejudices, Paradigms, and Party Lines.

This episode of the Reconciliation Roundtable podcast was edited, mixed, and produced by Luke Overstreet.

 

Transcript:

[Coming Soon]

 

Copyright © 2024 Mark Beckwith. All rights reserved. Contact for questions involving permission to use portions of the audio or transcript elsewhere.

 

Transcripts are created with the assistance of automatic tools. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of this podcast is the audio record.

Atonement and Scapegoat: An Important Difference

The Day of Atonement, known as Yom Kippur, is the highest holy day of the Jewish calendar.  It begins at sundown on Friday, October 11.  It was the only day of the year when the high priest entered the holy of holies at the temple in Jerusalem. Atoning sacrifices were...

Probing Pre-Election Fear and Anxiety

Two weeks ago I left my phone and laptop chargers in my hotel room after checking out of a hotel room.  The next day I found out that I gotten the date wrong for the funeral of a close friend I had agreed to preach at.  These were mistakes of distraction and/or...

Love Never Ends, Despite Our Efforts to Restrict It

I was in the midst of an intense reverie in my living room at home.  I was sixteen years old, a junior in high school. The Tet offensive (February 1968) had just claimed the lives of hundreds of American troops in Vietnam.  At the time I supported America’s war...

Addressing Spiritual Warfare

We are engaged in spiritual warfare.  So claims the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR), a loosely organized network of extreme conservative Christian leaders and congregations, which has steadily and stealthily moved from the fringes of our culture into the mix of the...

Ep 17 – “A Campaign for Kindness” with Rev. Adam Hamilton

Adam and I discuss working to promote kindness and depolarize America through initiatives like the Campaign for Kindness and Braver Angels. Adam shares insights on his church’s growth, guiding principles and the importance of fostering intellectual and spiritual discourse within diverse congregations. We also explore how faith communities can model respectful political dialogue. Cathy Bien, lead director of communications and public relations at Church of the Resurrection, also joins to discuss their collaborative projects and campaigns to encourage kindness and empathy in advance of the 2024 election.

Un-American: an American Slur

“Take that necklace off.  It’s un-American”, was the greeting a woman gave me while working as a door-to-door salesman in Indianapolis after my sophomore year in college.  I knocked on thousands of doors that summer. I was always unannounced, and unexpected.  Many...

Pre-Election Challenge: Holding On and/or Entering a Space

“I had to hold on for dear life.”  Most of us have said this at one time or another, accompanied with some degree of breathless panic or abject fear.  Many of us can recall situations when we felt that if our grip wasn’t tight enough, we were certain we would fall...

Ep 15 – “Reckoning with The New Apostolic Reformation” with Dr. Matthew D. Taylor

Dr. Taylor shares his faith journey and we discuss his involvement in religious pluralism and extensive research on the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) movement. The episode delves into the implications of this movement, the need for intra-Christian dialogue, and the challenge of addressing radicalization within American Christianity.

Privilege and the Temptation to Insulate

It was perhaps my most embarrassing experience while serving as a bishop.  We were in Canterbury, England in 2008, all 800 of us – bishops from across the world, plus spouses and staff, gathered for a three-week gathering called the Lambeth Conference.  It was not...

Race in America: A History of Unmet Expectations

“Expectations are resentments under construction,” wrote author Anne Lamott, a phrase which has been quoted many times and which aptly describes many moments in my life.  In recent weeks I have brought my own expectations into various gatherings – some personal, some...
Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Join my mailing list to receive the latest blog updates.

You have Successfully Subscribed!