PodParley PodParley

Life happens in the winter

An episode of the The Torah thru Traffic Minute podcast, hosted by yeruchem rakow, titled "Life happens in the winter" was published on February 20, 2024 and runs 1 minutes.

February 20, 2024 ·1m · The Torah thru Traffic Minute

0:00 / 0:00

The Torah Enclave The Torah Enclave Sharing divrei Torah with all our listeners!Check out our Website: thetorahenclave.com Jewish Stories to Inspire: Motivational & Spiritual Stories Based on the Torah's Ethics, Values and Wisdom Stories to Inspire A podcast dedicated to sharing inspirational Jewish stories that teach valuable and vital lessons from the Torah. Listeners will be moved by a daily story of spirituality. Featuring Jewish stories from the sages, the chassidic masters, and contemporary Jewish storytellers. From The Old City by Gutman Locks Gutman Locks Practical Torah means applying the Torah's timeless teachings to your life right now. This podcast will give you usable and down-to-earth Jewish wisdom to think about and to make real in your daily living. It will help you both in your inner growth and in your relationships with others, all based on the Torah portion of the week. Tetze Torah Ministries - Live Internet Studies Torah Teacher Ariel ben-Lyman HaNaviy This is the Torah Observant "Shomer Mitzvot" series. In Judaism, safeguarding and keeping the Torah is central to performing the will of HaShem. Indeed, as properly understood from HaShem’s point of view, the whole of Torah was given to bring its followers to the "goal" of acquiring the kind of faith in HaShem that leads to placing one’s trusting faithfulness in the One and only Son of HaShem, Yeshua HaMashiach. To this end, the Torah has prophesied about him since as early as the book of Genesis (3:15), and continues to speak of him until its conclusion in Revelation (22:20). In this capacity, the Torah acts like its etymological counterpart "yarah" (an archery term) in that it "teaches" its adherents how to properly identify with HaShem by helping them to "reach the mark.” To be sure, one of the most common Hebrew verbs used to identify sin “chatah” literally means, "to miss the mark.”
URL copied to clipboard!