Mitzvah Day is an annual parish-wide day of service held on a Saturday in late October. Over one hundred volunteers serve at local project sites and there are opportunities to serve for all ages and abilities. The parish also hosts a blood drive. There is extensive publicity in the parish bulletin and registration begins online in late September. The planning committee begins meeting in the spring. Contact the Parish Office to join the planning committee.
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What’s a mitzvah?
"Mitzvah" is a Hebrew word that most commonly translates as "good deed" – a charitable, beneficial act for another.
The literal translation of the word, however, is "commandment." In Jewish tradition there are actually over 600 commandments. They include positive commandments (what to do) and negative commandments (what not to do).
Many of us in the Western world are uncomfortable with the idea of being “commanded” to do anything, because it seems to deprive us of the right to choose how we behave. But the vast majority of the Jewish community today, from Orthodox to Reform, have come to believe that obeying the commandments-- whether performing good deeds, complying with ritual laws, observing religious holidays, etc-- is not simply and blindly following the law for its own sake, but that these actions have a creative and positive impact not just in our own lives, but also in the fabric of our families, our community and for entire creation. In our own tradition, Jesus commands us to love one another and we know the creative and positive impact of that command!


