Beit Midrash

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75 Lessons
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    The Coronavirus Pandemic

    Frustration

    There is no question that the most prevalent and constant feeling during our lifetime is that of frustration. However, there is also a very bright silver lining that is to be found within this dark cloud of frustration.

    Rabbi Berel Wein | Elul 5 5781
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    34 min
    Ein Aya

    Would It Spoil Some Vast Eternal Plan- If I Were a Wealthy Man?!

    Ein Aya, Shabbat 2,, 244

    Most people would like to be wealthy, and even pray that God should grant it to them. Obviously wealth enables giving more tzedaka, but on the other hand, all of life is challenges, and money is a difficult one (although everyone wants it!). Judaism says that it's best to be middle-class, not too rich and not too poor, yet Torah is found mostly among the poor! The class deals with the importance in finding scholarships davka for those who need them will probably be the best students. There are many logical reasons for this, yet most ignore them. Aside from the problems of spoiling one's children, wealth often leads to arrogance and exaggerated self-worth, inflating one's ego and losing touch with reality, humility and more.

    Rabbi Ari Shvat | Kislev 13 5781
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    35 min
    Ein Aya

    What's The Solution to the 'Imposter Syndrome' & The Fear of Being Exposed?

    Ein Aya, Shabbat 2, 236

    Rav Kook explains that there is no way to pretend and hide one's shortcomings and be an "imposter", for they eventually will be exposed and revealed, at least through Freudian slips. The solution is to focus, not on the façade, and not on the hidden self, but rather on improving my real inner self. This approach to truth explains how real tshuva actually turns even one's purposeful sins into benefits.

    Rabbi Ari Shvat | Av 15 5780
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    Additional Lessons

    Play Write

    At the Shabbat Table

    A teacher who wrote a letter to his student out of anger. The letter got sent accidentally...

    Rabbi Daniel Kirsch | Sivan 5 5780
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    Ein Ayah

    Not Washing Away One’s Personality

    Various Rabbis | 5775
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    Shlach Lecha

    Shidduchim and Loshon Hora

    How should one ask and answer shidduch- related questions? How to ask and What not to tell?

    Rabbi Yirmiyohu Kaganoff | 5769
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    Emuna

    Humility

    Being humble benefits the health. A person who pursues prestige destroys his health and ends up dying prematurely, for his life is nothing but misery and bitterness, anger and irritation. “Whoever seeks out honor, honor flees from him” (Eruvin 13b).

    Rabbi Mishael Dahan, ztvk”l | 5769
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    The Meaning Sefirat Ha'omer

    Days of the Omer and Refining Character Traits

    Rabbi Akiva’s 24,000 students died during the Omer counting period. Why did they die precisely during these days? Is there any connection between the Torah commandments applying to the Omer period and the deaths of Rabbi Akiva’s students at this time?

    Rabbi Chananya Malka | Iyar 5768
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    Additional Lessons

    Plagiarizing, Loshon Hora, and Employee Responsibility

    Halachikly is there a Isur to Plagiarize? Am I obliged to stop someone from Plagiarizing?

    Rabbi Yirmiyohu Kaganoff | Iyar 5768
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    Humility, Holiness and Fearing Hashem

    Fear of Sin - Punishment and Loftiness

    Ideally, a person should distance himself from sin due to God's loftiness. How can man, God's own handiwork, even consider acting in opposition to the will of his Creator? Such fear, fear of God's loftiness, befits wise and enlightened individuals.

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed | 5762
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    Humility, Holiness and Fearing Hashem

    Fear of Sin - Punishment and Loftiness

    Ideally, a person should distance himself from sin due to God's loftiness. How can man, God's own handiwork, even consider acting in opposition to the will of his Creator? Such fear, fear of God's loftiness, befits wise and enlightened individuals.

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed | Tuesday, 14 Elul 5767
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    Humility, Holiness and Fearing Hashem

    51. Sanctity

    Sanctity is the highest rung on the ladder of desired character traits: Torah leads to caution, caution to alacrity, alacrity to cleanliness, cleanliness to abstinence, abstinence to purity, purity to piety, piety to humility, to fear of sin, to sanctity.

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed | Monday, 8 Menachem Av 5767
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    Humility, Holiness and Fearing Hashem

    49. The Components of Humility

    A person should hate possessing authority but not avoid positions of authority. One should accept such positions with a desire to serve the public, not to control the public. Hence the sages tell us to “love labor and hate authority.”

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed | Sivan 5762
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    Anava - Humility

    48. Acquiring Humility

    Acquiring humility is one of the peaks in the development of a person's personality, for it covers all aspects of an individual's behavior. If one truly wishes to acquire humility, he must train himself to speak humbly, walk humbly, and sit humbly.

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed
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    Anava - Humility

    47. The Distinction of Humility

    The more talent and capacity a humble person possesses, the more humble he becomes. For example, Moses, the greatest of the great, was also the humblest of the humble: "And the man Moses was more humble than any other person on the face of the earth".

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed
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    Humility, Holiness and Fearing Hashem

    46. Humble and Happy

    It is important to realize that a humble person is not miserable and unhappy. Neither is a conceited person happy and blissful. To the contrary, it is humility that brings happiness and bliss, while pride leads a person to misery and discontent.

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed
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    Humility, Holiness and Fearing Hashem

    45. Conceit and Divine Service

    God said to Israel: I treasure you, for even as I bestow greatness upon you, you humble yourselves before me. Abraham said, "I am but earth and dust." Moses and Aaron said "What are we worth?" And King David said "I am not a man - I am but a worm."

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed
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    Pathways in Personality Development

    44. Tales of the Sages

    Reading stories about the virtuous deeds of great rabbis is a most effective way to nurture desirable character traits. Parents who wish to instill in their children a love for the Torah should give them books on the lives of the sages of Israel.

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed | Adar 5676
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    Pathways in Personality Development

    43. Cautiously Stringent

    Pious individuals follow the more stringent rulings and sway clear of all doubt. However, it is precisely here that a truly pious person must be on guard. He must be careful that his stringent practices do not lead him to belittle the lenient rabbis.

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed | Adar 5676
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    Pathways in Personality Development

    42. Fitting Admonition

    When it comes to pious additions to the commandments, practices which are likely to cause ordinary people to laugh, and thus transgress, it is certainly more proper and pious to refrain from them altogether, for these practices are not obligatory.

    Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed | Adar 5676
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