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GA 760 N
In this final overview of 'Journey Through the Mitzvos' series, Rabbi Geller reviews the following key ingredients to live a wholesome Jewish life: blessings and prayer, the beauty of Sabbath, symbols of Jewish living, and the holidays. Rabbi Geller is energetic and entertaining, and guaranteed to give you a speedy crash course in Jewish thought and practice.

JO 079 B
Tehillim is known as a book full of praises of G-d. Why then does it start off praising man? The powerful answer - man's existence, when done well, can be the greatest praise of G-d ever. How can we hold on to the keys of happiness and goodness that were given to us from the moment we were born, and shield them from the negativity that is intent on destroying them?

JO 079 C
What we do is important, but more essential is where we're going. If our direction in life is spurring us closer to G-d, or to repent our ways even if we're coming from a less than savory place, that is what takes precedence even over our actions.

JO 079 H
David's reaction to having been found wanting in the spiritual realm caused him to try his utmost to rectify the blemish he created. He showed us that the only way to do so is by turning to G-d with a broken heart. Later on, when men he respected and loved turned against him to follow his son Avshalom's rebellion, he urges them to contemplate their actions and return, sharing his love and lessons with them.

JO 079 J
We can sing G-d's praises all day, decide that we realize He is completely in control, and speak about his omnipotence constantly. But can we make the leap to trust in that knowledge, even when all seems to go haywire, and life is out of control?

JO 079 K
People are complex. Despite our desire to think people love us and are out for our benefit, we must shed our naivet̩ and come to terms with the fact that they may have a hidden agenda underneath their smiling faces. How did David deal with those who presented themselves as his friends, and worked to destroy him? And how can we learn the lesson of respecting people but being aware at the same time?

JO 079 O
King Saul was actually on a higher spiritual level than David, but David had a quality that Saul lacked - the ability to be what a king needed to be. Mrs. Juravel defines which attributes a king must have beyond wearing a gold crown and sitting on a throne. See how David the man was able to allow God to shine through him - no matter what trials or tribulations were placed before him.

JO 079 R
David had many enemies, and unabashedly asked G-d to punish them for all they did. Yet this seemingly human need for revenge is far from what it seems. David considered his enemies based on G-d's desires, not his own. How does that alter our perception of self that is so a part of us, we take it for granted?

KI 780
Is it really possible for God to have been the designer of this crazy upside-down world we live in? Well the truth is - He's not. His intention was for us to live in the Garden of Eden, but it was 'man' who dragged the world down to its current pitiful state. Rabbi Kahn traces the steps of mankind's decline from Adam and Eve until the times of Noah and Abraham, and explains what our potential is to put ourselves and the entire world back on its feet.

PS 941 A
People in general love being close to the illustrious - somehow hoping a bit of their wealth, wisdom, or prestige will rub off on them. But Rav Pincus explains that God's favor does not work along the same lines. Could it be that God prefers the modest, honest prayers of the lowly far more than those of the illustrious? And will a puny prayer of the simple person really make any difference on the grand scale of things? Hear a remarkable perception on the workings of tefillah.