Parashat Teruma: Sanctifying the heart
Each person is a walking Temple; each has the power to build a dwelling place for the Creator of the world within his or her heart.
Each person is a walking Temple; each has the power to build a dwelling place for the Creator of the world within his or her heart.
Even the loftiest goal on Earth must never be achieved through harming or insulting another person.
Even now, our hearts beat together with those of the heroes and freed hostages, who for two years suffered in the tunnels of darkness and the shadow of death.
Just as Noah emerged from the ark to rebuild civilization, Israel emerges from centuries of dispersion to rebuild its land and infuse it with holiness.
Miracles should serve as wells of faith for the future. Before we begin our daily prayers, we recall past miracles and past redemptions.
The images of young men starved and tortured in propaganda videos released by their evil Hamas captors seared the conscience of our people.
A person who lives wrongly not only harms himself but also those around him.
As we celebrate Sukkot this year, amid the shadows of Oct. 7, let us draw strength from the songs of Moses and David.
Between heaven and Earth lies a sheltering presence, a glimpse of eternity, and the promise of unity beneath the wings of the divine.
If Israel raises its voice with confidence and persistence, its light will break through, its righteousness will be seen by the nations, and its glory acknowledged even by kings.
The clash with Hamas is not merely a contemporary conflict – it is part of a divine drama stretching across millennia.