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ב"ה

Shemot 5767 - January 12, 2007

Living
Brain Shutdown Syndrome

What the GPS taught me
Parshah
Shemot in a Nutshell
Pharaoh enslaves the Hebrews, and orders all male babies killed. Moses is born, placed in a basket on the Nile, and discovered and raised by Batyah, Pharaoh’s daughter. Moses leaves the palace and discovers his brethren’s hardship. G‑d appears to him in a burning bush, and sends him to advocate for the Israelites’ freedom.
Story
An Audacious Promise

“So they’ll say that Avrohom Yehoshua is not a real rebbe, Avrohom Yehoshua is a liar. But at least for a week I succeeded in bringing some peace into a broken Jew’s life . . .”
The Shtetl Jew: Relic or Role Model?

If Tevye’s Judaism is anything to go by, don’t you think it’s time for an updated version?
I Am

One of the first things that Moses asked G-d at the Burning Bush: They're going to ask me, "What is His name?" What is the significance of this question? And what is the meaning of G-d's elusive answer?
In the Burning Bush, Moses beheld the heart of the simple Jew, who lacks the learning and spiritual achievement of the "fruit bearing trees," and whose heart therefore burns with an insatiable yearning for G-d
— Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov
Print Magazine

Due to the limitations of your reality, some of your best friends can enter only incognito.

In fact, the really big ones sometimes sneak in disguised as ugly monsters and vicious enemies. Otherwise, the guards at the gate would never permit them entry.

These are the events optimists call “blessings in disguise.”

Here’...

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