Friday Night Services
Join us this evening for services on Zoom.
Join us this evening for services on Zoom.
Megillah reading & lunch Sunday March 24th @ 11:00am at Michael & Rabbi Helene's home. It will be a dairy lunch and we are asking for fruit, desserts and salads. Told in the Book of Esther (“Megillah”) and celebrated on the holiday of Purim. The Purim story takes place in ancient Persia following the destruction of the first Holy Temple.…
Join us this evening for services on Zoom.
Come join us on Zoom. Our next in person service is April 12th, hope to see you there.
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 May 10th, hope to see you there.
Tues. 4/23/24 congregational 2nd night seder. Passover is an 8-day festival celebrating the Israelites' Exodus from Egyptian slavery. The most important event in Jewish history is marked by eating matzah and bitter herbs, drinking wine, telling the Passover story and not eating leaven (chametz).
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 May 10th, hope to see you there.
The day remembers the killing of six million Jews, two-thirds of Europe's Jewish population, and millions of others by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. It was designated by United Nations General Assembly resolution 60/7 on 1 November 2005. The resolution came after a special session was held earlier that year on 24 January to mark the 60th anniversary…
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.
For American Jews, celebrating Yom Ha’atzmaut has been a way to express solidarity with the state of Israel and to strengthen their alliance with it. In many communities, it is one of few occasions in which Jewish organizations and synagogues of different ideologies and denominations cooperate in forming a common celebration. There is not yet…