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Kirzner, Rabbi Yitzchak ztl
Kirzner, Rabbi Yitzchak ztl on |
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KY 042 A
Moshe could have delayed the war with Midian to delay his imminent death - why didn't he? Do we see physical threats as greater than spiritual ones? Sure we do. But perhaps we should look again. Physical death still leaves the next world as a possibility to continue living - but spiritual death means death on all levels. How does this view hold the key to Moshe's choice, as well as connect to the Three Weeks of mourning that fall out at this time?
KY 043 A
The forty year journey through the desert was a spiritual one as well as physical. The two great leaders of our nation, Moses and Aaron each represented a step in the process of moving out of Egypt and forming a relationship to G-d. What are the two ways of fighting evil that each of these great men represented, and how did following them help develop our spiritual greatness?
KY 044 A
Our lives are haunted by two categories of spiritual negativity. One openly eggs us on to fail the tests placed before us, but the other is disguised and has a far more insidious influence. Which commandment protects us from both of these, and why was that command given just before our entrance into our Promised Land? Understanding this sheds light on why this parsha is placed just before the tragic day of Tisha B'Av, and the lesson it is trying to teach us.
KY 045 B
Isn't praying for anything 515 times a bit extreme? And what is really so important about entering the Land of Israel that prompted Moshe to plead to God to such an extent? Hear a fascinating description of the potential relationship we are able to forge with God, and how to appreciate such an effort even if your pleas seem to go unanswered.
KY 046
The book of Deuteronomy has a specific style that differs from the rest of the Torah. Rabbi Kirzner analyzes a section of Parshas Aikev to point to a pattern within the entire book, and builds the concepts it is based on. The look at Judaism's approach to warfare, a subject we find morally objective in the 21st century, teaches great lessons about the necessity to take a spiritual stand, and the Torah's holistic view of the human being.
KY 047 A
Moses makes us aware of a choice we face. Follow G-d, and receive blessing - don't follow, and receive the opposite. But can it be that there is one commandment in particular that is being spoken about? Rabbi Kirzner delves into the mitzvah of Shema, and how it encompasses the totality of our belief in G-d, and in the way He relates to us... and brings blessing and protection to those who know how to access it.
KY 050
The first fruits brought with great celebration to the Temple take on enormous proportions as Rabbi Kirzner sifts through the layers of meaning surrounding them. This small offering of the seven fruits of Israel point to deeper lessons of the seven main branches of character, and the energy that explodes into ourselves and the world when we overcome our desires and say no.
KY 051 A
We stood before G-d as a nation and accepted a new covenant that carried over to each subsequent generation of the Jewish People. What is the significance of what we agreed to do, based on the incredible clarity of vision we had at the time? And how does this explain G-d's promise to never give up on us, and how we receive seeming punishments from on High? And what message does this give over about the upcoming days of Rosh Hashana?
KY 079 A
The goal of Tehillim is to tap into the emotional core of a person, bringing them past the intellect to generate the presence of G-d. David, through his humility, was able to react to the incredible suffering in his life by composing songs of the soul that bound him in a close tie with G-d. How was the beauty of his life and writings a completion of Adam, the first man's life?
KY 079 AA
Anyone who has experience feeling as if they've sunken to the spiritual point of no return can relate to the despair that comes along with it. Yet King David illuminates how to fill the aching cavity of inner emptiness by calling to God in a way that allows us to use the depths to which we've fallen to achieve just that much spiritual fulfillment.