Live Stream

Saturday morning, from anywhere.

Our Sabbath service streams live every Saturday at 10:30 AM Eastern Time. The player below goes live at service time. Past services stay on our YouTube channel; you can watch any of them afterward.

A young woman with auburn hair pulled into a loose top-knot, wearing an oatmeal-colored chunky knit sweater, sings into a microphone with eyes closed, mid-lyric, smiling broadly.
On the stream Worship, sung in the room you'll join.

Saturdays at 10:30 AM ET

This Sabbath, live

The player below shows our current live stream when the service is on. Outside service hours it shows our most recent recording.

A note for first-time viewers

What you'll see and hear.

  1. Close portrait of the drummer in a teal polo, turned toward the camera with an open-mouthed expression of mock surprise; a conga drum and wind chimes sit beside the kit.
    I.

    Worship

    Service runs about ninety minutes. We open with שָׁלוֹם Shalom (peace, wholeness) , then move into worship — songs in English and Hebrew, sometimes with Davidic dance at the front, never with stage lighting tricks. Scripture is read in both languages.

  2. A wide angle of the Torah service: pianist at the keyboard at far left, a young girl in a pink dress with a child-size Torah, a bearded man in a tallit holding the full Torah scroll, the rabbi at the podium speaking. The Aron Kodesh and seven-branch menorah are visible at the rear.
    II.

    The teaching

    The teaching most weeks works through the פָּרָשָׁה parashah (the week's Torah portion) and its companion reading from the prophets, with the rest of Scripture brought in to show how every page points to Yeshua.

  3. The Torah procession through the back of the sanctuary: a bearded man carries the dressed Torah scroll over his shoulder; an older woman in the foreground reaches toward it with the corner of her tallit.
    III.

    The blessing & the meal

    We close with the בִּרְכַּת כֹּהֲנִים Birkat Kohanim (the Aaronic Benediction from Numbers 6) sung in Hebrew. It is our custom for the room to hold hands, so that no one stands alone for the blessing — even on the stream, you are welcome to take the hand of whoever is in the room with you. Then we bless the bread and the wine and head downstairs for עֹנֶג שַׁבָּת Oneg Shabbat (the joy of Sabbath, our shared meal) . The fellowship is part of the morning, not an afterthought.