Shabbat Rosh Hodesh: At the threshold of renewal
Shabbat Rosh Hodesh is an invitation to renew not only the month but also ourselves.
Shabbat Rosh Hodesh is an invitation to renew not only the month but also ourselves.
Even the ark’s imperfect measurements teach a profound lesson: living God’s will is a human endeavor, full of effort, devotion, and partial success.
Loyalty to a path means saying, “I belong. Sometimes I will fail, sometimes I will err, but I am all in.” This is completely different from saying “I like this, but I don’t like that.”
God’s will does more than guide individual behavior. It provides direction for building societies grounded in justice and compassion.
Moses understood that genuine service of God is not found in thunder and lightning but rather in the place of fog, confusion, and lack of clarity.
Whenever people are convinced that they are acting in the name of higher goals – especially when they believe they are serving God – moral boundaries become fragile.
The mitzvah of honoring one's parents is not a narrow religious demand but a foundational moral duty.
A segment of Israeli society – largely comprising traditional, Religious-Zionist, and secular Jews – carries the overwhelming weight of military service.
Recounting for the first time the story of an entire people who, after long years of harsh and grueling bondage, emerge into freedom.
Empires crumble, pain persists, yet Israel survives; Jeremiah’s words offer reassurance across generations.
'The Protocols of the Elders of Zion' was a crude forgery that peddled the myth of a clandestine Jewish cabal manipulating institutions under the guise of doing good.