Parsha (double) B’har-B’chukoti: A Choice Torah

This week is a special parsha.  We finish up the third book written by the hand of Moshe (Moses):  Vayikra (Leviticus), and it is also another double parsha.  The first parsha is called B’har which means, “At the mountain,” as in, “And haShem (god) spoke to Moshe at Mount Sinai saying.”  The name of the second of our parshas is called B’chukoti which means, “In my laws,” as it says in the first verse of the second parsha:  If you … Continue reading

Day 7 of Passover: At Last a Choice

Why is Pesach (Passover) 7 days?  We have the first night seder meal, and then the next day (the first day of Pesach), we leave Egypt.  Done.  Why drag it out? The only thing I can think is that there must be something that happens on the 7th day that is at least as important. Let’s see… according to the Torah, we leave Egypt and travel 3 days and then turn around and back-track for 3 days until we come … Continue reading

Parsha Key Tisa: Anger Management

This week’s parsha (weekly Torah portion) is called, “Key tisa,” which literally means, “That you will raise.”  The verse continues with, “The heads of the children of Yisrael to redeem them and give a man atonement of his soul to haShem (god) in redeeming them and there will not be in them a plague in their redemption.”  Basically we are talking here of the first census of the people, but I do find it interesting that the raising of the … Continue reading

Parsha Mishpatim: Torah Beyond the Words

This week we read a parsha (weekly Torah portion) called Mishpatim, which means sentences in Hebrew.  The word can be used just like the English word; for both a sentence like the one you are reading, or what a judge pronounces.  In the parsha it is used in the latter way, for the parsha Mishpatim is almost all about laws concerning how to live.  First, we read about how to treat a Hebrew slave.  We then read of laws regarding … Continue reading

Parsha Vayichi: Communicating for Life

I hope everybody is doing well.  This week we finish the book of Genesis or Breisheit as it is referred to in Hebrew.  We also saw the end of Jacob/Israel and Yoseph.  Before Israel passes from us, however, he does give us some final pointers on how to interact with people. The parsha (weekly Torah portion) starts out with Yaakov/Jacob knowing he is near death and so he asks his son Yoseph to swear to bury him at the ancestral … Continue reading

Parsha Haazinu: Torah and Parenting

Hello everybody, This Shabbat we read the torah portion (parsha) which is the song that haShem (god) told Moshe (Moses) to teach to the people.  As with most songs, this one is very poetic.  The parsha is entitled, “My ears,” which is the first significant word in the parsha, and it starts with a request to listen to the words about to come.  God is perfect and just, problems come from the children.  (Stay with me folks; I know to … Continue reading

Parsha Vaetchanan: Getting to the Promised Land (For Jerry)

hello everyone, Last week’s parsha (weekly Torah portion), we listened to Moshe review our journey from Mount Sinai to the edge of the promised land. In this week’s parsha, Moshe (Moses) talks about haShem (god) turning down his request to enter the land, all that haShem has done to get the people to this point, what will happen if the people forget haShem, which cities east of the Jordan are safe havens for unintentional murderers, the 10 statements (commonly referred … Continue reading

Parsha D’varim: YOU and Torah

Hello everybody, This week we start the final chapter in the drama that we call the Torah.  The book is called D’varim (Deuteronomy) which means “words” in Hebrew, for these are Moshe’s (Moses) final words to the family of Yisrael before they go and take the land haShem (god) has promised them.  This week’s parsha (weekly Torah portion), btw, is also called D’varim. 🙂 So, what does Moshe tell the people?  Before I start, remember that he is talking, not … Continue reading

Parsha Balak: A Hidden Torah

Hello everyone, Welcome to the whacky world of Torah where things are not as they seem.  This week’s parsha (weekly Torah portion), at the beginning, seems one way, and then ends another way.  It is called Balak, and we start talking a lot about him.  That, however, is only to introduce our main character Bilim, who is hired to curse the children of Israel.  However, he tells his employer, Balak, that he will only do what haShem (god) tells him.   … Continue reading

Parsha Chukat: The Red Hefer of the Torah

Hello folks and welcome to the latest installment of ideas I have had or heard regarding the weekly torah portion… This week’s parsha (portion) jumps 38 years as we go into the last year of being in the wilderness.  However, before we get there, we read about how the ashes of a red cow can make a not pure person pure while making a pure person not pure.  Right after the details on how this process works, we read about … Continue reading