Parshas Shelach: When Seeing Becomes Deceiving episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 12, 2026 · 27 MIN

Parshas Shelach: When Seeing Becomes Deceiving

from The Weekly Parsha - With Michoel Brooke · host Michoel Brooke

One word in Parsha Shelach changes the way we read the whole story: “Lo Sasuru.” We usually hear it as “don’t stray after your heart and your eyes,” but the Torah uses that same root earlier for the spies who “scouted” the Land of Canaan. That connection is not just literary, it’s a map of how temptation works and why the spy story ends with the mitzvah of tzitzit. We walk through the spies’ failure, the nation’s panic, and the painful decree of forty years, then zoom in on tzitzit as a visibility based practice. The Torah says to see the fringes and remember every commandment, and that sight is meant to interrupt the inner drift that pulls us toward ego, pleasure, honour, and shortcuts. We also touch the Shema’s closing lines and the remembrance of the Exodus, because spiritual freedom starts with what we train ourselves to notice. Rashi lands the punch: the heart and eyes are “meraglim,” spies for the body. The eye sees, the heart covets, and the body acts. But here’s the empowering twist: the same scouting system can work in the other direction. When what’s deepest in us is service of Hashem, our eyes and heart start scanning the world for kindness, restraint, blessings, charity, and mitzvah opportunities. If you want a sharper lens on Jewish mindfulness, Mussar, and the psychology of desire through Torah, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves Parsha insights, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Support the showJoin The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content!------------------Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content!SUBSCRIBE to The Motivation Congregation Podcast for daily motivational Mussar!Listen on Spotify or 24six!Find all Torah talks and listen to featured episodes on our website, themotivationcongregation.orgQuestions or Comments? Please email me @ [email protected]

One word in Parsha Shelach changes the way we read the whole story: “Lo Sasuru.” We usually hear it as “don’t stray after your heart and your eyes,” but the Torah uses that same root earlier for the spies who “scouted” the Land of Canaan. That connection is not just literary, it’s a map of how temptation works and why the spy story ends with the mitzvah of tzitzit. We walk through the spies’ failure, the nation’s panic, and the painful decree of forty years, then zoom in on tzitzit as ...

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Parshas Shelach: When Seeing Becomes Deceiving

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This episode is 27 minutes long.

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This episode was published on June 12, 2026.

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One word in Parsha Shelach changes the way we read the whole story: “Lo Sasuru.” We usually hear it as “don’t stray after your heart and your eyes,” but the Torah uses that same root earlier for the spies who “scouted” the Land of Canaan. That...

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