and we have some special guests in honor of lgbtq pride month, and we have maxine, and rabbi reuben zellman, and welcome back .>>> you were talking about the shift in language, and your relative experiences in the jewish community around the lgbtq issues and landscape, and i wonder if you could talk a little bit about the institutional changes you have seen over the years and in the places in which you work that cover maybe some of the social shifts and theological shifts. shift that people do not necessarily think of because they are not miss their late overtly political or something that the news reports on. >>> rabbi, what you reflect on in that way?>> i've worked in synagogues for 15 years, and it is an ongoing evolution to figure out how to we not just say sure, lgbtq people are welcome to walk in here. but when we do walk-in, does what is going on in the synagogue speak to our life and reflect who we are? does it include the things that are most important to us, and that is where some parts of the jewish community have done wonderful work, and others have not started that part yet. fo