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Rabbi Alan Yuter

Going to a baseball game during the "three weeks"

Rabbi Alan Yuter of the Orthodox Congregation of Downtown Baltimore responded to a question about the permissibility of attending a Baltimore Oriole baseball game during the three weeks between the 17th of Tammuz and the 9th of Av. Since the three weeks are not far off (Tammuz 17 is on July 9), I thought readers would be interested in Rabbi Yuter's responsum. It has ramifications beyond the Baltimore Orioles, and beyond baseball.

 

Question:         Is it proper to attend baseball games during the summer

three week mourning period between the 17th of Tammuz and the 9th of Av?


Questioning the Status of a Halakhic Conversion is anti-Halakhic and Unethical

Posted June 23, 2009 - 11:16am

Question: What is the status of the 'extra' conversion immersion [tevila leHumra] demanded by some Orthodox rabbis?

Answer:

1. The minimum standard required by Jewish law is that the rabbinical court consist of three observant laymen. Once the convert is accepted by the court, the conversion takes effect and without cause, may not be called into question.

2. a. The converting rabbinical court may include Orthodox rabbis who are themselves converts. [Hoshen Mishpat 7:1] Rabbis need not go through hoops to forbid the permitted on the part of parochials who either do not know or do not accept Jewish law.


Say No to Religious Coercion

Posted May 28, 2009 - 11:08am

      Real Orthodox Jews Reject Religious Coercion

                     By Rabbi Alan Yuter

 

In suburban Baltimore, MD


The Abortion Rhetoric Within Orthodox Judaism: Consensus, Conviction, Covenant

Posted March 11, 2009 - 11:32am

The abortion rhetoric provides the hermeneutic key whereby the contemporary contenders to the faith franchise called "Orthodox Judaism" reveal the moral essences of their alternative constructions of religious reality. At stake in this conversation is the meaning of Masorah, a culturally encrusted code word. According to the Judaism of the Rabbinic canon, or book-based Orthodox Judaism, it is the transmitted oral Torah as preserved for the collective of Israel in the public, vetted literature of the rabbis up to and including the Babylonian Talmud. Masorah is however also invoked as the retort of last resort to resolve the often occurring conflicts between the canonical Torah library and the living culture of affiliating Orthodox Jews.

Conversions, Covenant and Conscience

Posted November 24, 2008 - 9:59am

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