For 17 years, Cantor Mark Levine has given voice to the prayers of Congregation Brith Shalom and heart to its community.
He has stood with his congregants at their most sacred thresholds: under the chuppah, beside hospital beds, at conversions and through the rhythmic cycle of countless Sabbaths.
Through song, teaching and a steady presence, he has shaped spiritual lives, leaving behind a legacy where children carry his melodies and adults lean on his wisdom. His voice has been the constant, carrying the shul through every season of joy and sorrow alike.
The cantor’s path to Houston was a long, melodic journey that began in a traditional Jewish home in New Jersey. After earning a bachelor’s degree in psychology and a Judaic degree from the Jewish Theological Seminary, he received his master’s degree as a hazzan at the Manhattan School for Cantors.
His career has spanned decades, from the Nanuet Hebrew Center in New York to Dallas – where he served Congregation Shearith Israel for 14 years – and eventually to California, before Brith Shalom brought him to Houston as director of Education.
Now, as he prepares to retire in early May and move to Phoenix to be closer to family, the cantor reflects on a life filled with community. This will be the first time he will live in the same community as his extended family since he began his cantorial career at age 26.
Cantor Levine wears a lot of kippahs – working with the religious school and adult education programs, conducting life-cycle events, giving sermons and, of course, performing cantorial duties. One thing is for certain: Variety inspires the cantor.
A highlight of his tenure at Brith Shalom has been cultivating relationships, particularly with his colleague and friend, Rabbi Ranon Teller.
“One of the things I would say very, very clearly: I’m blessed with a rabbi who loves to sing and so we have created positions that are undefinable,” Cantor Levine told the JHV. “He does about half the singing, I do about half the sermons, and it’s been a blessed career challenge.”
Rabbi Teller, who has worked with the cantor all 17 years, echoes that sentiment, noting that the cantor has “infused the community with enthusiasm, kindness and authenticity.”
From the time he was a child, Cantor Levine loved singing in synagogue. As he prepared for his Bar Mitzvah, his mother would sit at the bottom of the stairs and listen to him sing the Shabbat service.
“My mom was a Jewish traditionalist,” said the cantor. “Her view of life was through a very strong Jewish lens. For my Bar Mitzvah, she insisted that I lead all the services.”
Although Cantor Levine initially pursued pre-med, his roots and a nudge from his childhood rabbi proved stronger. His early Judaic training laid the groundwork for a career defined by connection.
“A number of my former students in the day school in Dallas are now actively engaged in their Jewish communities all over the world. Four of them actually are members of the congregation here at Brith Shalom and [they] will be splitting the Haftarah on the Shabbos that I’m honored here.”
Music moves Cantor Levine. He particularly is drawn to the High Holy Days prayer “Hineni.”
“To me, it is a prayer in which it’s a recognition of personal limitations and personal responsibilities … and the plea that goes on within the text is ‘don’t punish everyone because I’m not worthy.’ It stuck with me.”
Every year, on the day before Rosh Hashanah, the cantor goes for a walk to clear his head and enter the space of taking on what he describes as “a very serious responsibility.”
This depth of personal reflection fuels his passion for the community’s future.
“I’ve worked very hard … to convey the message that Judaism is not a pediatric experience. It is an adult, mature, sophisticated approach to life that we want to share with our kids.”
Beyond the bimah, Cantor Levine helped foster a more inclusive Houston, co-founding Keshet shortly after his arrival to provide social and spiritual opportunities for the LGBT community. In 2014, he was a founding member of Neighbors 4 Neighbors Network at Alexander Jewish Family Service, which linked volunteers (neighbors) to seniors to help with everything from transportation to home services.
Although the cantor is retiring and moving from Houston, he isn’t slowing down. He plans to teach adult education and explore new horizons.
“I have zero artistic talents and I’m going to try my hand at every one of them,” he laughed. “I’m going to try everything and see how badly I can butcher them.”
In honor of his 17 years of service, the synagogue is establishing the cantor as a clergy emeritus. A sponsorship initiative has been established to support the values Cantor Levine championed: adult education, financial aid for trips to Israel and scholarships for Jewish camps. These funds will ensure that the journey of Jewish connection continues for generations to come.
To send him off with love and blessings, Brith Shalom will hold a Retirement Celebration Weekend, May 1-2, and create a tribute book in his honor.
Looking back at his newly ordained 26-year-old self, Cantor Levine offers this simple advice: “Live each moment. Take note of the moments, appreciate them and, definitely, worry less.”
As the final notes of his tenure approach, the cantor feels the weight of the love he has received.
“I’ve been blessed to work with a team here that has been incredibly supportive. … it’s been a loving community that’s been very caring and has taken me under its wing. And whatever I’ve given them, they’ve given back to me twice.”