In addition to berakhot (blessings) recited after the portion, every haftarah is introduced with a berakhah (blessing) praising God for having “chosen good prophets and accepted their words, spoken in truth.” The formula goes on to note that God shows favor to “the Torah, Moses His ...
TORAH PORTION; What Does It Mean to Listen With Your Heart?Sultar, Jeff
The oral Torah enjoins us to read the weekly Torah portion, to light Sabbath candles, and to attend synagogue to offer prayer. Consider further the laws of inheritance or the execution of the various civil laws of Israel. The Torah assumes people will get married but it does not provide an...
The Weekly Portion of Torah How to study the Weekly Portion of the Torah. Preparing for Shabbos. A Deeper Understanding of Reviewing the Parshah. When to Study the Parshah. Preparing for Shabbos How the Children of Israel prepared for Shabbos in the Desert, and how we prepare for Shabbos tod...
More עברית Torah Portion Holidays Scholarship & Faith Current MoreWhen God Punishes Israel: What Will the Gentiles Say? Will the gentiles really say that because Israel “forsook the covenant that YHWH, God of their fathers, made with them when He freed them from the land of ...
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The Ordeal of the Bitter Water September 25, 2023 ByT.V. Antony Raj A vital element of the Torah portionNaso(orNasso), found in the Book of Numbers in theHebrew Bible(Tanakh), concerns a treatise of the Talmud. It explains theordeal of the bitter water, an ancient Israelite religious pr...
Judaismbelieves that marriage is a spiritual bonding between two people, which fulfills God’s commandment, according to the Torah and Talmud. In Hinduism, there are many different types of marriages, but each is a sacred union that marks two individuals becoming a joint entity and living a ...
So wouldn’t you know it, when I went to look up this week’s Torah portion, Naso, guess what I found? Three lines, shaped like a hand, containing one of the oldest blessings known to our people. I’ve said these words at our b’nai mitzvah, confirmation, weddings, and baby naming...
According to the Torah,Shabbat commemorates the day that God rested from creating the world; the word Shabbat literally means “he rested.” Exodus 34:21 states: “Six days you shall work, but on the seventh day you shall rest.” Shabbat is considered a day of peace and holiness. ...