Parsha

Parashat Tazria-Metzora: Turning lemons into lemonade

These parashot deal at length with a unique phenomenon described in the Torah – tzara’at, which are marks or changes that appear on the walls of a house, on clothing, or on the body.

'Spirituality can grow without diminishing anyone,' says the writer.
SUSAN B. ANTHONY was an American social reformer and women’s rights activist between 1900 and 1906.

Your Investments: The smart way to handle an inheritance portfolio

A pile of books.

Parashat Vayakhel-Pekudei: Wisdom of the wise

Like the red heifer's ashes, the destruction of Iran's instruments of death can become the catalyst for cleansing. A woman walks on the street following an Israeli and U.S. strike on a police station, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Tehran, Iran, March 3, 2026.

Purification by fire: The red heifer and Iran


Parshat Pekudei: Partnering with the Divine

I have always found much of the end of Exodus tedious, centered as it is on the endless details of instruction for building the Tabernacle and weaving the priests’ garments.

Mishpatim, Exodus 21:1-24:18, is read on February 13, Illustrative photo

Parashat Pekudei: Just as you were told

This week’s Torah portion – Parashat Pekudei – concludes the description of the building of the Mishkan, a description that’s spread over five portions.

mishkan tabernacle 311

Parshat Pekudei: Mystery of the cloud

Although the Torah tells us that the cloud fills the sanctuary, there is predictable pushback against the idea of the cloud of glory being physical.

Illustrative photo of a cloudy sky

Parshat Vayakhel: The importance of what we create and build

That the mishkan is the focus of the parasha speaks of the importance of the mishkan.

 'Ye shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations upon the Sabbath day.' (Exodus 35:3)

Parashat Bo: Our story

Imaginations are transformed when people sense their personal lives are part of a 'larger story.'

 Illustrative.

Parashat Bo: The conundrum of darkness

When locusts are swarming in the sky, or hail is pelting the ground, human beings are helpless. You cannot trap every frog that infests the land. But we all know how to counter darkness – candles.

‘THE SEVENTH Plague of Egypt’ (1823) by English Romantic painter John Martin

Va’era: Feeling the suffering of others - opinion

The Jewish people are one nation with one heart. They should act together with concern. To stand by fellow Jews in distress, to aid those in need, to give their full support to Israel.

 IT IS believed that about 22 million people from Christian backgrounds are expressing a new openness to Torah.

Parashat Vayigash: Interpreting dreams

How was Joseph able to rise?

JOSEPH’S CUP is found in Benjamin’s sack in the biblical story

Parashat Vayigash: Incitement as the little secret

We must look closely: What was the background of this incitement? Why did the king of Egypt incite his nation against the Israelites and why was he so successful?

DETAIL FROM ‘Moses Leaving to Egypt’ by Pietro Perugino, c. 1482. Zipporah is in blue.

Parashat Miketz: All things dark and bright

Judaism is not binary – it does not teach that there are forces of light and darkness that are wholly separate and distinct. Rather, there is an interdependence and an intertwining.

 Josephs Dream, as in Genesis 37:9–10, illustration from the 1890 Holman Bible.