This week’s Torah portion, Lech Lecha, begins with the story of a man who stood alone, Abram who became Abraham. It is hard ...
Milei, who studies regularly with a rabbi but is not Jewish, name-checked the week's Torah portion, Lech Lecha.
With each verse here It is most clear No further embarrass I will vote for Harris ...
Last week, we celebrated Sukkot, dwelling in the temporary shelter of the sukkah. There, we were exposed to the elements, reminded of our vulnerability. This week, we read parsha Noach, ...
We are, in some sense, responsible for the society of which we are a part. It is not enough to be good. We must encourage ...
Our sages remind us that even in a time of chaos, our world relies on values and principles. Our learning, prayer, and good ...
Like Noah who survived the flood and promptly drank himself into a stupor, we may be fighting despair. To get free of it, ...
When you peel back Noah's Ark to the man himself, Noah may have been righteous only relative to the evil era in which he ...
This is clearly a societal problem. The Hebrew word for the great flood in Noah’s time is mabul. Indeed, this a mabul of madness!
The Shabbat Project begins every year following the Torah portion Vayera, which shows the hospitality of Abraham ... He added that Shabbat gives "one day each week and we are free and blessed. And it ...
The Holiday. The rabbis considered it the ideal festival because of its joyous nature. In the liturgy, it is called ...
Gaining the wisdom of Torah every week is an unusual way to honor the memory of the worst day in Israeli history. But by ...