Jewish Meditation · Online

Flourish: Jewish Mindfulness Certification Program

Institute for Jewish Spirituality
Jewish Meditation Online Certificate in Jewish Mindfulness Practices

Flourish: A Mindfulness Certification Program - Institute for Jewish Spirituality About About IJS What Are Jewish Spiritual Practices? Mission and Vision Our Impact People IJS in the News Foundation Support Financial Statements Career Opportunities Resources IJS Newsletter Sign Up Calendar Free Offerings Kol Dodi Spiritual Director Listings Shevet Young Adult Community IJS Podcasts Blog Starter Kit Books Wise Aging Online Programs IJS Program Catalog Sacred Response-Ability Cultivating the Soul Mindful Speech as a Spiritual Practice Text Study 5786 Awareness in Action The Gift of Awareness The Gift of Awareness for Educators Retreats Refuge in the Ark: A Jewish Mindfulness Retreat Silent Jewish Mindfulness Retreat for Young Adults Cohort Programs Kivvun: Mindful Jewish Leadership Clergy Le

12 weeks
Duration
Online
Format
Jewish Meditation
Tradition
Certificate in Jewish Mindfulness Practices
Accreditation
April 2026
Last reviewed

What this program is

Flourish: Jewish Mindfulness Certification Program is a meditation teacher training run by Institute for Jewish Spirituality, based in Online. It sits in the Jewish Meditation tradition and is offered fully online. The program runs 12 weeks. Jewish meditation pathways draw on Hasidic, Kabbalistic, and Mussar contemplative traditions. Modern programs (Institute for Jewish Spirituality, Romemu, Or HaLev, Aleph) translate these practices into structured teacher trainings inside Jewish communal life. Institute for Jewish Spirituality positions this training inside that lineage. The accreditation listed for the program is Certificate in Jewish Mindfulness Practices, which signals where graduates sit in the wider teacher community. Practical detail matters here. Flourish: Jewish Mindfulness Certification Program is a meditation teacher training run by Institute for Jewish Spirituality, based in Online draws students who want to teach in wellness, community, and small-group settings. OMP lists this program in its Meditation Teacher Training directory so practitioners can compare it on tradition, hours, format, and accreditation alongside several hundred other pathways. Source notes describe it as: Flourish: A Mindfulness Certification Program - Institute for Jewish Spirituality About About IJS What Are Jewish Spiritual Practices? Mission and Vision Our Impact People IJS in the News Foundation Support Financial Statements Career Opportunities Resources IJS Newsletter Sign Up Calendar Free Offe. Practice forms inside this tradition typically include silent sitting, hitbonenut (contemplative reflection), text study from Tanakh and Hasidic sources, niggun (wordless melody), Mussar character work, and chant. Students entering Flourish: Jewish Mindfulness Certification Program should expect to meet those forms in cohort sessions, in their own daily practice, and in supervised teaching with peers and faculty. Honest teacher trainings in this field share a few markers: a real practice requirement, a named faculty with verifiable lineage, supervised teaching of real students, and inquiry-based feedback. The directory entry above gives the structural facts; the school's own materials are the place to confirm faculty bios, the practicum format, and what graduates are authorized to teach.

Curriculum and topics

hitbonenutJewish text studyMussarniggun

Practice forms inside the curriculum follow the Jewish Meditation tradition. Students work with silent sitting, hitbonenut (contemplative reflection), text study from Tanakh and Hasidic sources, niggun (wordless melody), Mussar character work, and chant. Across 12 weeks, the cohort moves through foundational practice, teaching skills, and supervised practicum. Institute for Jewish Spirituality structures the work around the standard arc for this tradition: deepening of personal practice, study of source materials, observation and co-teaching of groups, written reflection, and feedback from faculty. Where the program lists named modules, those appear in the school's own curriculum sheet; the directory does not invent module names that are not on the source page. Inquiry is central. In the Jewish Meditation tradition, the teacher's job is less to deliver content than to hold a frame inside which participants can notice their own experience. Most credible teacher trainings in this field weight inquiry skill heavily across the curriculum. Students should expect daily personal practice across the program, plus retreat or intensive components depending on the tradition. The school's onboarding materials list specific reading, recordings, and pre-program participation requirements.

How it's taught

Institute for Jewish Spirituality delivers the training fully online over 12 weeks. The structure usually combines cohort sessions, individual practice, mentorship, and supervised teaching. In the Jewish Meditation tradition, the standard expectations are a daily personal sit, regular meetings with a mentor or supervisor, and either a silent retreat component or a residential intensive depending on the program. The online format relies on live video sessions, recorded practice, and dyad or small-group practicum work between sessions. Feedback comes through inquiry transcripts, recorded teaching, and direct observation by faculty.

Who this program is for

Rabbis and Jewish educators
Clergy and educators bringing serious contemplative practice into synagogues, schools, and Hillels.
Jewish lay leaders
Practitioners who want to lead meditation in Jewish communal settings outside the rabbinate.
Cross-tradition meditators
People with non-Jewish meditation backgrounds returning to or entering Jewish practice through this lens.

Outcomes

Graduates earn the certificate issued by Institute for Jewish Spirituality. The credential carries the weight of Certificate in Jewish Mindfulness Practices, and graduates teach inside the scope the school authorizes. Graduates teach within the scope the program defines and within their own existing professional license where one applies.

Prerequisites

Most programs in this category expect an established personal meditation practice and a clear teaching context. The school's application page lists the specific prior training, retreat history, or screening required.

How this compares

Jewish meditation trainings differ from MBSR by being grounded in a religious tradition with a specific text canon. They sit alongside other tradition-rooted teacher pathways (Buddhist, Christian, Sufi) and are evaluated on teacher lineage and Jewish learning, not protocol fidelity.

A Jewish meditation teacher training at Institute for Jewish Spirituality, rooted in classical text and contemplative practice.

Frequently asked questions

Who is Flourish: Jewish Mindfulness Certification Program for?
Flourish: Jewish Mindfulness Certification Program fits practitioners in the Jewish Meditation tradition who want a structured route into teaching. It works best for people with prior personal practice and a clear context to teach in, whether clinical, educational, or community-based. Institute for Jewish Spirituality screens for practice depth in its application, so casual interest is rarely enough.
How long is the training?
The program runs 12 weeks. It is delivered fully online. The full arc usually includes personal practice, cohort sessions, mentorship, and supervised teaching, so the calendar time and the actual practice load are not the same number.
What does it cost?
Tuition is listed as the figure listed by the school. That figure usually covers cohort sessions, faculty time, and the certificate. Travel, retreat fees, and supervision after the program may be separate. Prospective students should confirm exactly what tuition includes with Institute for Jewish Spirituality before applying.
Is the credential recognized?
The training is associated with Certificate in Jewish Mindfulness Practices. In the Jewish Meditation world, recognition depends on faculty lineage and the credentialing body. Hospitals and universities usually weigh MBI-TAC assessment and university-affiliated programs more heavily; community and corporate settings are more flexible.
LocationOnline
CountryUnited States
TraditionJewish Meditation
FormatOnline
Duration12 weeks
AccreditationCertificate in Jewish Mindfulness Practices
Last reviewed: April 2026 · Information may change — always verify with the program directly.
OMP is not affiliated with this program and receives no commission. This listing is maintained as an independent research resource.
Independent research: Online Meditation Planet maintains this database without affiliation to any training program, lineage, or certifying body. We receive no commissions or fees from listed programs. Pricing and program details change — always verify current information directly with the program before making decisions.

← Back to all meditation teacher training programs