Ta Shma

Hadar Institute
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Jul 12, 2023 • 9min

R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat Mattot-Mas'ei: Why Praise God in Prayer?

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Jul 10, 2023 • 54min

R. Tali Adler: The Hidden Destruction of Shiloh

Before the destruction of the first and second temples, Shiloh was destroyed. Discussed in Yirmiyahu and alluded to in Shmuel, Shiloh is the spiritual center that we often overlook in Jewish history, and whose destruction and its lessons we too often forget. How can Shiloh's destruction inform what we mourn for today? Recorded at Tisha B'Av 2022.
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Jul 5, 2023 • 8min

R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat Pinhas: Fixed and Spontaneous Words of Prayer

Why is there a fixed liturgy to the Amidah? After all, if I am meant to pray to God with focus and intention, shouldn’t I use my own personal words, and not words that were written by others long ago?
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Jul 3, 2023 • 6min

R. Avi Killip on 17 Tammuz: When Longing is the Relationship

Those who mourn tremendous losses know that the rupture is ongoing and often cannot be contained by marking a single anniversary. When was the last celebration we shared? When did they first get sick? When did hospice start? When was the last time we spoke? Marking several dates can be painful, but also sometimes enlivening. The annual moments of memory provide ongoing connection to relationships that would otherwise begin to fade. They allow us to keep the memory alive and ever present. To love someone who has died is to be in a constant state of longing for them. The longing is the relationship.
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Jun 28, 2023 • 7min

R. Elie Kaunfer on Hukkat-Balak: Praying to God as a King

What does it mean to call God a king in our prayers? What kind of king is God, and how might we as worshipers engage with that metaphor?
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Jun 26, 2023 • 42min

R. Shai Held: The Radical Social and Theological Vision of Deutoronomy

A close reading of Devarim 15 explores such questions as: What kind of social ethic does Devarim seek to instill? How does it work to ensure that there will be no permanent underclass in the land of Israel? What strategies does it use to motivate people to treat one another generously? How does Devarim radicalize the laws from Shemot? Recorded at Limmud NA 2023.
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Jun 21, 2023 • 9min

R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat Korah: Striving to be Holy

In ancient times, in order to come as close as possible to God’s presence in the Temple, one had to be considered holy—fully purified and separate. When we pray to God today, must we be in a similar state of holiness? How might we relate to the concept of human holiness in our prayer life?
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Jun 19, 2023 • 1h 3min

R. Micha'el Rosenberg: Righteous Anger, Useful Anger

Even though the dominant view of anger in Jewish tradition is that it is a bad character trait that should be avoided, there is one passage from the Talmud that suggests anger can be productive or even necessary in certain circumstances. In his class, “Righteous Anger, Useful Anger,” Rav Micha’el puts this sugya into conversation with modern philosophical takes on anger, especially an article by Amia Srinivasan. What comes out of this comparison is a fascinating and nuanced discussion of what anger is for and whether anger can ever be useful, productive—or even good.
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Jun 16, 2023 • 7min

Let it Move You: The Tisch with Dena Weiss #10

One of the distinctive features of traditional Jewish prayer and study is shuckling, moving back and forth. The Zohar explains that this movement of the body is more accurately understood as the movement of the soul. The spirit of holiness and purity moves in response to the connection that it feels when engaging with holy words. The body is moved by the passion and excitement that the soul feels in connecting with God.The Kedushat Levi links this motion back and forth with a core human trait: our fear of intimacy, going toward the fire of revelation, but pulling back as well. How can we navigate this tension?“Yemin Hashem” and “Nigun Hisva'adus” from RAZA Kapelya (2023) by Chana Raskin. Produced by Joey Weisenberg and Chana Raskin for Hadar’s Rising Song Records.
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Jun 14, 2023 • 7min

R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat Shelah: Speaking Directly to a God Who Sees Us

Moshe addresses God three times in one verse with the word “You.” In our prayers, we speak directly to God, calling God “You.” Why is this so, and what is the significance of addressing God in this way?

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