By Betzy Lynch in La Jolla, California

As we continue our journey from Passover to Shavuot through the counting of the Omer, Saturday night we arrive at Day 10, which invites us to explore Gevurah within Tiferet (balanced judgment).
Gevurah represents discipline, boundaries, and the strength to restrain. Tiferet embodies compassion, harmony, and truth, the ability to balance opposing forces. When combined, they transform judgment into compassionate discernment, where boundaries are guided by empathy and truth is expressed with both honesty and care.
This balance is essential for building and sustaining a community. At the J, fairness is not about making everyone happy, it’s about making thoughtful, values-driven decisions that allow the entire community to thrive.
Each day, we hold a meaningful tension: what serves one person may not serve everyone. True care for community requires boundaries, not as barriers, but as structures that protect belonging, safety, and shared purpose.
Gevurah within Tiferet asks us:
- Are our boundaries rooted in wisdom and experience, or in fear?
- Are we listening deeply to those impacted?
- How do we hold individual needs alongside the wellbeing of the whole?
- How do we compassionately guide others when boundaries feel difficult or limiting?
In everyday moments, this balance becomes real. When the pool temperature is set to 80 instead of your preferred 82, when the check-in process for pickleball changes, or when security procedures slow your entry, these are not meant as obstacles to your experience. They are invitations to a different kind of growth: the practice of accepting that decisions are made with both individual and collective needs in mind.
Even when you express concerns respectfully, the outcome may not change. This does not mean you are unheard, it means your perspective has been considered alongside many others, and a decision has been made for the community as a whole.
Being part of a community asks something deeper of us:
- Can I stay connected even when I don’t fully agree?
- Can I seek understanding before withdrawing?
- Can I choose a community not because it always fits me perfectly, but because it helps me grow?
Healthy communities are not built on total agreement, they are built on trust, clarity, and a shared commitment to something larger than ourselves. Our tradition reflects this. Hillel and Shammai offered differing perspectives, yet the Talmud teaches, “These and those are the words of the living G-d.” Multiple truths can coexist. Hillel’s teachings were most often followed not because they were “right,” but because they were offered with humility, presenting opposing views first and holding space for dialogue.
At the J, we draw on this wisdom to remind us that truth is not fixed in a single voice. It emerges through ongoing conversation, reflection, and adjustment. Disagreement is not failure, it is part of refining our collective judgment. Jewish wisdom does not seek perfection; it seeks alignment over time. That is why your voice matters. This is our community.
What we ask in return is a shared understanding:
- Fairness is not a fixed answer, it is a living question
- Boundaries are not permanent, they evolve with context
- Leadership is not certainty, it is thoughtful, ongoing recalibration
As we practice balancing Gevurah with Tiferet, we invite everyone into this process with curiosity, respect, and a willingness to assume good intentions. Together, we can shape a community that is both grounded in strong values and responsive to the people within it.
Additional Reflections for the Coming Days:
Day 10 – Balanced Judgment
Am I too harsh or too lenient?
How do we decide what’s fair?
Day 11 – Consistent Boundaries
Do I follow through on my limits?
What happens when rules change too often?
Day 12 – Humble Restraint
Can I admit when I’m wrong?
Why is it hard to say “I was wrong”?
Day 13 – Trustworthy Limits
Do people feel safe with my boundaries?
What makes someone trustworthy?
Day 14 – Empowered Discipline
How do my limits make me stronger?
How can structure help us grow?
Week 3: Tiferet (Compassion & Truth)
Day 15 – Loving Compassion
Do I lead with empathy?
How can we show someone we understand them?
Day 16 – Disciplined Compassion
Can I care for others without losing myself?
Can helping ever go too far?
Day 17 – Truth & Harmony
Am I honest in a kind way?
Is it always right to tell the truth?
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Betzy Lynch is the CEO of the Lawrence Family JCC.