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Matmonim: Daf Yomi by Rabbi David Lapin
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Matmonim: Daf Yomi by Rabbi David Lapin

Author: Rabbi David Lapin

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Matmonim means "hidden treasures." In less than 20 minutes each episode highlights, develops and explains one actionable insight from the Daf Yomi Talmud study cycle. People around the world, from uninitiated seeker to seasoned scholar, are finding inspiration, meaning, and relevance in the wisdom that the Matmonim exposes from every page of Talmud. Matmonim will give you skills to deepen your own learning to get greater satisfaction from the effort you are investing. The podcast is given as a live class each morning at the Raanana Kollel in Israel and focuses on the Daf of the day.
839 Episodes
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Trust, whether in Hashem in another or even in oneself, is empowering and transformative.Source Sheet
Effort is always needed to avoid danger and remove danger from others. But the reality is that the world, and life itself, is dangerous. The quest for work environments that are safe and free of toxicity is unrealistic. A healthy environment is not one where there is no danger, but one where danger is mitigated and navigated. Source Sheet
Gifts from Hashem should be seen as rights that He has given us, not as property, לה' הארץ ומלואו.Source Sheet
Moral conscience is not a humanistic term but a religious term that stems from an awareness of the Divine.Source Sheet
The Torah is not a set of fundamentalist laws. Every Mitzva and Halacha has reason and rationale. Understanding the reason provides context and meaning to the Mitzvah beyond the axiom of it being G-d’s will. Source Sheet
Truth is to be found in the mastery of apparently contradictory polarities. This is the complexity of a life of meaning.Source Sheet
Source Sheet
Making a concession even when we are not legally required to, saves us from the devastating impact of negative energy.Source Sheet
We are responsible for our own choices. Yet, there are times when intentionally or unintentionally we enable others to do wrong. In these cases, we share responsibility with the other for his or her wrongdoing. Similarly, when we play a part in enabling others to make positive choices, we share in some of the credit for the outcomes of those choices. Source Sheet
We reveal the soul of the prohibition of charging interest as the foundation of the Torah’s economic model of free market capitalism governed by strict principles of Divine Law and Ethics and recognizing that only in true partnership with labor (whether physical or intellectual) can capital create value and wealth. Source Sheet
Context determines when a statement is merely an effort to provide a reassuring voice to the other party and when it reflects contractual intent.Source Sheet
The intentions of deeds and transactions can sometimes be determined by words, agreements, and contracts. Often however, deeds need to be interpreted by the context in which they occur. Source Sheet
Trade Finance presents interesting challenges in the laws of interest bearing credit.Source Sheet
Lending and borrowing with interest is a unique law that is foundational to faith and community.Source Sheet
“Everything we hear is an opinion, not a fact. Everything we see is a perspective, not the truth.” – Marcus Arelius, Meditations. How applicable is this in Torah? Source Sheet
We can cause damage to the property of others or to their persons. Perhaps the worst damage that we can cause though, is damage to their heart.Source Sheet
The right to cancel a sale can stem either from one party having mislead the other, or from having transgressed the prohibition of אונאה Source Sheet
When a transaction is designed for a spiritual reason rather than an economic one, money is valued subjectively rather than by the currency market.Source Sheet
The Torah expects high levels of personal mastery from us. Even to having a grievance against one who wronged us needs us to have an Halachik basis that permits such a grievance.Source Sheet
An item sold by an individual from his or her personal collection has a narrative attached to it unlike a generic item bought in a store. The narrative attaches a different value to the item. Source Sheet
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