This quarterly issue of the magazine is available both online and in hard copy. The full online articles are only available to subscribers and NSP members — subscribe or join now to read the rest!
Tikkun (https://www.tikkun.org/category/archive/2017/32-4-fall/)
This quarterly issue of the magazine is available both online and in hard copy. The full online articles are only available to subscribers and NSP members — subscribe or join now to read the rest!
Our education system and methods of learning are linked to the fate of our environment in the new, digital age.
Get insight into the spiritual healing that accompanies cover artist Orly Faya’s process of painting people in the world.
Philip Terman confronts the heartbreaking, cyclical nature of life in his poem “My Mother Died on Simchat Torah.”
In Joy Ladin’s poem “Psalm 11:16,” creation becomes an act of connection and love.
Jennifer Michael Hecht’s poem “Gardener in the Wild” is an invigorating look into identity and the natural world.
Jennifer Michael Hecht’s poem asks us: how does it feel to be post-exilic, post-textilic,
and post-Cyrillic?
A critical discussion of Zionism in the midst of present and historical anti-Semitism by a widely respected teacher of non-violent communications.
Spiritual cocreation, participatory pluralism, relaxed spiritual universalism, participatory epistemology, the integral bodhisattva, and much more.
In the era of a new Enlightenment, there must be new understanding of shared power and community to help our environment thrive.
Highlighting the mystery of a new wholeness in community, text, organization or a piece of artwork.
Delve into visions and religion on Easter eve in Patrick Donnelly’s poem “Blood Moon.”
Goddess and God in the World: Conversations in Embodied Theology by Carol P Christ and Judith Plaskow.