Friday Night Services
Come join us on Zoom. Our next in person service is June 14th, hope to see you there.
Come join us on Zoom. Our next in person service is June 14th, hope to see you there.
Come join us on Zoom. Our next in person service is May 10th, hope to see you there.
Lag BaOmer, also Lag B'Omer or Lag LaOmer, is a Jewish religious holiday celebrated on the 33rd day of the Counting of the Omer, which occurs on the 18th day of the Hebrew month of Iyar. The holiday celebrates a break in a plague that is said to have occurred during the days of Rabbi…
Come join us on Zoom. Our next in person service is May 10th, hope to see you there.
Come join us on Zoom. Our next in person service is June 14th, hope to see you there.
The festival of Shavuot (or Shavuos, in Ashkenazi usage; Shabhuʿoth in Classical and Mizrahi Hebrew Hebrew: שבועות, lit. “Weeks”) is a Jewish holiday that occurs on the sixth day of the Hebrew month of Sivan (late May or early June). Shavuot commemorates the anniversary of the day G-d gave the Torah to the entire Israelite nation…
Come join us for services, we are located in the Educational Building at the Good Shepard Presbyterian Church in St. George. In person Services are the 2nd Friday of every month at 7:00 pm unless otherwise noted. If you can't be there, come join us on Zoom.
Come join us on Zoom. Our next in person service is July 11th, hope to see you there.
Come join us on Zoom. Our next in person service is July 12th, hope to see you there.
Tisha B'Av, the ninth day of the Jewish month of Av, is recognized as the saddest day on the Jewish calendar. It is a day of mourning for tragedies across Jewish history, most particularly the destruction and loss of the first and second Temple and Jerusalem nearly 2,000 years ago.
Rosh Hashanah (Hebrew: ראש השנה), (literally “head of the year”), is the Jewish New Year. It is the first of the High Holidays or Yamim Noraim (“Days of Awe”), celebrated ten days before Yom Kippur. Rosh Hashanah is observed on the first two days of Tishrei, the seventh month of the Hebrew calendar. It is described…
The goal of Tashlich is to cast both our sins and the Heavenly prosecutor (a.k.a. the Satan) into the Heavenly sea. And when we shake our clothes after the Tashlich prayer, this is a tangible act to achieve the spiritual goal of shaking sins from our soul. Needless to say, the physical motions near the water and fish…