Torah Portion

Parshat Naso: Rich people’s problems

When you live a life filled with meaning, spiritual fulfillment ... you receive a remarkable gift: a profound inner peace and emotional serenity that no material wealth can offer.

 An illustrative image of businessmen jumping across a chasm for money.

Parashat Bamidbar: In memory of Sarah Milgrim

 Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Lynn Milgrim.

Parashat Bamidbar: ‘Each man by his banner’

 EVERYONE IS rooted in his place

Parashat Behar-Bechukotai: Live and let live 

 WHOSE LIFE comes first?

Parashat Emor: ‘Guest mode’

'This world is not mine. It existed before me and will continue after me...I have entered, as a guest, into a perfect system run by God.'

 Religious man holds bundle of wheat (Illustrative).

Parashat Acharei Mot-Kedoshim: ‘Holiness,’ ‘abstinence,’ and what lies between

Don’t aim for lofty, angelic separation “like Mine” but live a human holiness – the kind of life for which I created the world.

 FIND HOLINESS at your Shabbat table

Parashat Tazria-Metzora: Skin afflictions as a warning sign

Just as a bad word can destroy, a good word can build – and that, after all, is the purpose of creation: “The world will be built with kindness.”

 An illustrative image of a megaphone.

Parashat Shemini: Food of truth

Our portion lists four animals that lack one of the two signs of purity. The midrash associates these four animals with the four exiles the Jewish people have experienced over the generations.

 Cattle cool off near Hispin.

Parashat Vayikra: Sacrifices, essence, and meaning

Someone who sins is meant to bring something of himself – his heart and emotions – and to experience a sense of closeness to God and love for Him through the offering.

Over-indulging in worldly desires can take one down a negative road.

Parashat Pekudei: Don’t walk away

We know who we are. They cannot fathom it. Our tireless efforts to explain may fall on deaf ears – but we hear, and we know.

 MOSES PROVIDED a meticulous accounting of every donation collected for the Mishkan.

Parashat Pekudei: The beauty of transparency

Nothing in the Torah is superfluous. From every word – and even from each letter – our sages derived halachic rulings or ethical teachings.

A LEADER should choose the alternative path.

Parashat Vayakhel: Giving from the heart

look at the beauty of the Temple, built in harmony and generosity, and let this be the foundation of your own home – built on love and overflowing kindness.

 THE MESSAGE: Give what you can, but from the heart.

Parashat Tetzaveh: Yes, you can!

A person can build, act, create, contribute, and make the world a better place. Just as easily, however, the same person can wither, stagnate, and waste his or her life in idleness.

 An illustrative image of a young girl holding outlines of dumbbells.

Parashat Teruma: ‘Its interior is filled with love’

An exploration into the meaning and significance of the cherubim (angels) that sat upon the Ark of the Covenant in the Tabernacle.

 THE OBJECT permanently placed in the holiest site on Earth had the pure faces of innocent children.