Behar 5782-2022
“Understanding Hebrew and Canaanite Servitude”
(updated and revised from Behar 5763-2003
Parashat Behar presents two most perplexing and challenging statutes: Hebrew and Canaanite servitude. What seems on the surface to be two very difficult and primitive concepts are, in reality, rather enlightened, and there is much that contemporary society can learn from them.
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Emor 5782-2022
“Priests and Death: An Unusual Relationship”
(updated and revised from Emor 5765-2005)
In parashat Emor, the commentators explain why a lay priest may contaminate himself upon the death of his closest seven relatives, but may not be defiled for the death of strangers. Through the laws of death, the Torah teaches the Jewish people the infinite value of life.
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Kedoshim 5782-2022
“Giving Proper Reproof”
(updated and revised from Kedoshim 5763-2003)
Judaism maintains that if one has a justified complaint against another it is preferable to state it directly rather than to brood over it. However, giving proper reproof is an art, in and of itself. The great Chazon Ish declared that since we no longer know how to give proper reproof, it is preferable not to offer reproof.
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Acharei Mot 5782-2022
“The Jewish Method of Achieving Moral Perfection”
(Updated and revised from Acharei Mot 5763-2003)
In parashat Acharei Mot, G-d exhorts the Jewish people to observe His decrees and His laws in order to live a sanctified life, a life of dignity and a life of meaning. But how does one live an ethical and moral life in a world that seems to be constantly drawing us away from good? Judaism's educational methodology through ritual training has proven to be the most effective means of educating large numbers of people over long periods of time to ethical and moral living.
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Passover II 5782-2022
“Counting the Omer”
(Revised and updated from Passover II 5768-2008)
The period of the counting of the Omer commences on the second night of Passover. In ancient Temple times, it was on the second day of Passover that the barley offering was brought, allowing the use and consumption of the newly harvested crop. Today, the Omer period is an ambivalent period on the Jewish calendar. Although it is a period of semi-mourning, it is also a period of significant optimism, when Jews look forward toward redemption and revelation, just as the Exodus led the ancient Hebrews to Mount Sinai and the receiving of the Torah.
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