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Parsha with Rabbi David Bibi
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What really happened in the camp of Israel after the sin of the Golden Calf? The Torah opens Parashat Vayaqhel with a seemingly simple line: “Moshe assembled the entire congregation of the children of Israel.” But according to the Or HaḤayim and the Zohar, this was not just a speech or a construction meeting for the Mishkan. It was something far more dramatic. Even after the sin had been forgiven and the second tablets had been given, a dangerous spiritual residue still hovered over the camp. The prosecuting force—the Satan—still had standing among the people. Moshe understood that before Israel could build a sanctuary for the Shekhinah, the nation itself had to be rebuilt.
In this class we explore how Moshe reorganized the camp step by step—through gathering, discipline, boundaries, generosity, and holy order—transforming a nation that had collapsed into chaos into a people worthy of divine presence. Drawing on the Zohar, the Or HaḤayim, Midrash, and Talmud, we uncover how the Mishkan became not just a building but a repair of creation itself. The lesson is as relevant today as it was in the desert: holiness does not return through inspiration alone. It returns through structure, responsibility, and the rebuilding of a camp—and a life—where the Shekhinah can dwell.
Something extraordinary is unfolding in Jewish history — something deeper than politics, deeper than headlines, deeper even than war. In this morning's class, “The Lion Awoke Again — From Refuge to Power to Purpose,” we explore a powerful idea articulated by Nir Menussi and shared by Rabbi Yoseph Geisinsky: that the return of the Jewish people to their land is unfolding in three historicstages. First came refuge — a wounded people seeking safety after centuries ofexile, persecution, and the unspeakable trauma of the Holocaust. Then camepower — the realization that survival alone is not enough, and that Israel nowstands as a central force reshaping the Middle East. But even that is not thefinal stage.
Through the lens of Torah, Hazal, and Jewish history, this morning’s class asks thedeeper question: What is Israel ultimately meant to become? Drawing on sourcesfrom Bil‘am’s prophecy of the rising lion, the midnight harp of David HaMelekh,the silence of Ḥizkiyahu after his miraculous salvation, and the timelessvision of the prophets, we explore the possibility that the Jewish people arebeing pushed toward their true mission — not merely to survive or to wieldpower, but to become a beacon of Torah, faith, and blessing for the entireworld. The lion has awakened again — but the real question of our generation iswhat kind of lion it will become.
When the Prosecutor Became the Builder — The Secret of Betzalel
In the aftermath of the sin of the Golden Calf, the nation of Israel carried more than guilt for idolatry. According to the Midrash, they also carried the terrible burden of having murdered Ḥur — the man who stood up and tried to stop them. Yet only a short time later, when the Mishkan is finally built, Moshe introduces its master builder with a striking genealogy: “בְּצַלְאֵל בֶּן־אוּרִי בֶן־חוּר.” Why does the Torah insist on reminding us who his grandfather was? The Arizal, cited by the Shvilei Pinchas, reveals a breathtaking answer: HaShem deliberately chose the grandson of the man they killed to build His sanctuary. In doing so, He showed the nation that the very place of accusation could become the place of healing — that the prosecutor himself had become the advocate.
In this morning's breakfast and a class we explore the extraordinary spiritual chain that runs from Miriam to Ḥur to Betzalel — a family whose defining trait was the courage to stand for truth even when success seemed impossible. From Miriam challenging the leader of the generation, to Ḥur confronting a violent mob, to Betzalel building the Mishkan with divine wisdom, the Torah teaches that redemption is often born from the very wounds of failure. The Mishkan was not only a structure of gold and wood — it was the transformation of guilt into repair, and the proof that when one generation stands for what is right, another generation may be chosen to rebuild the world.
The 720-Hour War — From Purim to Pesach and the Hidden Battle With Amalek
Why does the Gemara instruct us to begin studying the laws of Pesach exactly thirty days before the festival—a date that lands precisely on Purim? Is this merely practical preparation, or is something deeper unfolding within the Jewishcalendar?
Drawing on a remarkable teaching of רבי צבי אלימלך מדינוב, the בני יששכר, this morning\'s breakfast and a class reveals that the thirty days between Purim and Pesach contain exactly 720 hours—corresponding to three spiritual battles against עמלק, whose numerical value equals 240. These days form a hidden campaign fought in the realms of thought, speech, and action, a struggle against doubt, cynicism, and spiritual cooling. Purim quietly begins the battle; Pesach reveals the victory.
From Midrashic parables about Amalek “cooling the boiling bath,” to the Zohar’sinsight into the deeper meaning of חמץ, and even to the way history itselfunfolds in hidden chains of events—much like the story of Megillat Esther—thisclass explores how the war against Amalek continues in every generation. Onlyin hindsight do we begin to see the Divine hand guiding events. The question iswhether we can recognize the pattern while we are living through it.
After the Megillah — The Real Work of Purim Begins
The Megillah has been read. The noise has faded. Now what?
In this powerful Purim morning class, we step beyond the costumes and the wine and ask the uncomfortable question: why do so many of us experience Purim — and remain exactly the same? Drawing from Ḥazal, the Ramban, the Rambam, and the living fire of Rav Shalom Arush’s teaching of radical “todah,” this episode lays out a clear, demanding path for how to live one Purim day that actually shifts something inside you.
From uprooting “mikreh” and training your eye to see hashgaḥah, to turning the Megillah into personal Hallel, to using Purim as a 24-hour open gate for tefillah, to drinking like a Jew and not like a Persian — this is not inspiration for children. It is a serious avodah plan for adults who want their Purim to matter.
If you have ever felt that Purim comes and goes too quickly, this conversation will show you how to make one day echo for a lifetime.
There was no breakfast this morning, but maybe we gained a touch of clarity.
On the thirteenth of Adar — what Ḥazal call yom ha-nikhalim — the Jews of Shushan faced a strange and terrifying reality: they had royal “permission” to defend themselves, but the original decree to annihilate them still stood in everyarchive of the empire. Two edicts. One promising their destruction. One allowing them to assemble and stand for their lives. The question was simple and brutal: Would they live as a people who merely survive on paper, or as a nation willing to act?
In this class we explore the tension inside Megillat Esther that has echoed through Jewish history ever since — from Shushan to the modern State of Israel.What does the Torah really mean when it says, “If someone comes to kill you,rise early to kill him first”? Is pre-emption aggression — or halachic necessity? And when the world says, “You have a right to defend yourself,” who actually grants that permission? This is not a comfortable conversation. It is, however, a necessary one.
In a world where headlines shout and images flash across ourscreens without pause, the holiday we are about to celebrate feels startlinglycurrent. Purim recounts the salvation of the Jewish people in Persia — notthrough open miracles, but through hidden turns of history, politicalreversals, sleepless nights, and subtle timing. The Megillah never mentions theName of HaShem. And yet His presence saturates every line. It is a נֵס נִסְתָּר— a hidden miracle — teaching us how to detect divine guidance inside whatlooks like ordinary geopolitics.
Today, as news reports speak of strikes, strategy,collapsing threats, and shifting power in the modern Persian arena — withTehran once again in the center of world attention — the parallels aredifficult to ignore. “Hester Panim in Tehran — Purim in Real Time” is not aboutpolitics. It is about perspective. It is about learning how to read events theway Mordechai read them — listening for the pasuk beneath the noise. Even whenHaShem’s face appears hidden, His hand is steady. And our job is not merely toreact to headlines, but to recognize the deeper Script being written throughthem.
Purim is the holiday where HaShem’s Name never appears in the Megilah— and yet His Presence is everywhere. In this Breakfast & a Class, we explore the hidden codes in Megillat Esther, the quiet orchestration behind what looks like coincidence, and the powerful truth that Divine Providence does not replace human action — it waits for it. From Esther’s courageous “כַּאֲשֶׁר אָבַדְתִּי אָבָדְתִּי” to the hidden Shem HaShem embedded in the text itself, we uncover how the Megillah trains us to see the Hand behind the curtain.
But Purim is not only about seeing — it is about stepping forward. Through two unforgettable real-life stories — one of mesirut nefesh that shaped generations, and another of breathtaking precision involving a simple Shabbat muffin — we confront the deeper message of the day: the strings of history are already in place, but they move when we do. Hashgachah is real. Participation is required.
In this week's Tuesday class, we explore the mystery of Parashat Tetzaveh — the only parashah after Moshe’s birth where his name vanishes from the text. Is it a consequence of “Mecheni na”? A subtle act of humility? Or something far deeper? As we uncover the hidden structure of the parashah — the 101 verses, the language of “Ve’ata,” the crushed olive oil that becomes light — we discover that Moshe does not disappear at all. He moves inward. From personality to principle. From name to essence.
And from there, we cross into Purim. Haman saw only Moshe’s death in Adar — he calculated the end but missed the beginning. The Megillah hides Hashem’s Name just as Tetzaveh hides Moshe’s. In both, absence becomes presence. In both, what vanishes on the surface becomes more powerful at the core. This is not merely a literary pattern — it is the secret of Jewish endurance. When the name disappears, the light remains.
Living Inside the Megillah – Iran, Haman, and the Hidden Hand of HaShem
In a year when headlines from the Middle East carry talk of missiles, drones, intelligence operations, and existential threats, Jews from Jerusalem to Hoboken find themselves asking a startling question: Is history repeating itself? When Iran’s leadership openly talks about eliminating the State of Israel and its nuclear ambitions loom over the region, ancient texts like Megillat Esther begin to feel eerily relevant. Iran has a history of public hostility toward Israel, including repeated threats of annihilation and sustained military pressure that has, at times, erupted in direct missile barrages on Israeli cities and institutions this past year. Israeli forces have responded with retaliatory strikes on Iranian and allied targets, illustrating the broader, turbulent dynamics between the two nations—dynamics that many have likened to a modern-day Shushan under threat.
And yet, Purim is not simply ancient history, nor is it merely a metaphor; it frames how Jews have understood the survival of Am Yisrael for millennia. Megillat Esther is the paradigmatic story of a people threatened with annihilation, of kings and fanatics, of hidden heroes, and of a hidden Director orchestrating the outcome from beyond the stage. In this class we will step beyond surface comparisons and explore how Torah sources illuminate our moment—not as pundits but as Jews reading history through the lens of HaShem’s providence. We will ask not only who in the current drama resembles Achashverosh, Mordekhai, Haman, or Esther, but why the pattern matters for our faith, our strategy, and our prayers today.
Not Glued On– Torah as a Child’s Identity, Not an Accessory
Why does theTorah spend so many words describing Achashverosh’s 187-day party — the marblefloors, the gold goblets, the purple cords — and then, in the very same weeksof the year, devote equally obsessive detail to the Mishkan? Because both areteaching us something about intensity. One palace is built for spectacle andego. The other is built for Presence. And at the very center of the Mishkan,hammered from the same piece of gold as the Aron itself, stand two Keruvim —childlike faces, wings stretched upward. Not glued on. Not decorative. Onepiece. The message is radical: Judaism is not something we attach to ourchildren later. It must be what they are made of.
In this recordingbased on our Seudah Shelishi shiur, we explore what the Keruvim are reallysaying about chinuch, identity, and raising children in an open world. Do weprotect or prepare? Insulate or expose? The Torah refuses that false choice.When Torah is organic — when it is hammered into the gold of the soul — wingsare not dangerous; they elevate. Drawing from Terumah, Tetzaveh, and MegillatEsther, we will ask how to build homes that are Mishkan, not Shushan — and howto raise children whose Judaism is not glued on, but grown from within.
Parashat Terumah is not just about donations. It’s about what you refuse to build. Right after the Torah commands the Mishkan, we meet the Golden Calf — the same gold, two opposite outcomes. Chazal say the women would not give their jewelry for the Egel, but when it came time to build a home for the Shechinah, the women came first. That contrast isn’t a nice vort. It’s a diagnostic: when fear takes over, people grab for something visible and immediate — and that is exactly how idols are born.
From there we go back to Har Sinai and the pasuk most people read right past: “כֹּה תֹאמַר לְבֵית יַעֲקֹב” — speak first to the women. Rashi and Chazal explain why: because if the women are in, Torah lives in the next generation; if not, it doesn’t. This is a class about the architecture of Jewish continuity — built quietly, stubbornly, and faithfully, through the emunah and middot of nashim tzidkaniyot.
**The Joy Beneath the Surface — Living the Hidden Mazal of Adar**
*Rosh Ḥodesh Adar and the Hidden Joy of ה–ה–י–ו*
When Chazal teach, “מִשֶּׁנִּכְנַס אֲדָר מַרְבִּין בְּשִׂמְחָה” (Taanit 29a), they are not instructing us to manufacture cheerfulness or drown reality in noise. Adar’s mazal is דַּגִּים — fish — life that moves beneath the surface, protected from the evil eye, growing quietly under the water. Purim itself unfolds this way: no open miracles, no explicit Divine Name, only the steady unfolding of a hidden script. The joy of Adar is not naïveté; it is the confidence that even when events appear chaotic, a deeper current is carrying the story exactly where it must go.
This episode explores the spiritual architecture of the month — from Yosef’s blessing of “וְיִדְגּוּ לָרֹב,” to Esther’s world of “הַסְתֵּר אַסְתִּיר,” to the mysterious tziruf ה–ה–י–ו drawn from Ya‘aqov’s berakhah in Book of Genesis. We examine how Adar teaches us to rejoice before the reversal, to recognize birth hidden within apparent endings, and to plant emunah even when fruit is not yet visible. This is not the joy of denial. It is the discipline of seeing beneath the surface — and trusting the turn before it arrives.
How quickly do we judge—our children, our students, our neighbors—without ever truly standing in their place? In this morning’s class on Parashat Mishpatim, we explored the Torah’s demand that cuts against our instincts: אַל תָּדִין אֶת חֲבֵרְךָ עַד שֶׁתַּגִּיעַ לִמְקוֹמוֹ—don’t judge another until you reach his place. But what if we can never really get there? Drawing on Pirkei Avot, the story of Ḥannah and Eli HaKohen, and the Torah’s repeated warning not to oppress the ger, this class challenges the easy assumptions we make when we look only at the outside and ignore the unseen storm within.
The Torah does not deny struggle—it redefines how we respond to it. “Because you were strangers in Egypt” is not a license to toughen others up; it is a command to soften. Through powerful stories and Chazal’s piercing insights, this class confronts a dangerous trap: turning our own suffering into a measuring stick for others. If you’ve ever thought, “I had it harder—so why can’t they handle this?” this shiur asks you to pause, rethink, and transform your past pain into empathy rather than judgment. This is not a feel-good message—it’s a demanding one. And it may change how you look at the people closest to you.
Parashat Mishpatim opens with a surprise. The Torah’s first case of civil law is not murder or assault, but a thief who cannot repay what he stole — an eved Ivri, placed by Beit Din not into a cell, but into a Jewish home. In a country where nearly two million people sit behind bars and recidivism remains stubbornly high, the Torah offers a radically different model of justice. Instead of warehousing criminals, Mishpatim asks a far more demanding question: what does it take to actually repair a broken human being?
In this mornings class, we contrast the modern prison system — built around deterrence and incapacitation — with the Torah’s deeply counterintuitive approach to rehabilitation. Drawing on Chazal, Ramban, and a penetrating insight from Rav Frand, we explore how dignity, responsibility, emotional attachment, and even carefully measured pain are used not to crush the sinner, but to awaken conscience and restore sensitivity. Mishpatim becomes a laboratory for moral repair, challenging us to rethink punishment, ownership, and what it truly means to take something that belongs to another person.
Parashat Mishpatim is where the Torah moves from revelation to responsibility. After the thunder of Sinai, the Torah turns to contracts, damages, accountability, and justice — not as social convenience, but as spiritual necessity. According to the Zohar, these laws are the mechanisms through which balance is restored in the world, and through which souls repair what was left unfinished. Mishpatim is not only about how people live together; it is about why souls sometimes must return again.
This morning’s class weaves the Zohar’s teachings on gilgul neshamot together with a powerful true story from the world of Telz and London, as told by Rabbi Hanoch Teller. It is a story of misunderstandings carried for decades, of grievances left unresolved, and of how Heaven orchestrates encounters so that accounts can finally be closed. The message is both sobering and hopeful: what we fail to repair may follow us — but what we choose to repair now can change everything.
Judaism cannot be lived from a distance. It is not a religion of spectators, summaries, or spiritual drive-bys. In this morning’s Breakfast and a Class on Parashat Yitro, we explored why Torah only truly takes root when it is lived immersively—through consistency, community, and presence. Drawing on a powerful teaching of the Kotzker Rebbe, we reframed the warning at Har Sinai—“do not touch the edge of the mountain”—as a challenge to avoid superficial engagement and instead climb fully, wholeheartedly, into avodat HaShem.
The class weaves together classical sources, a vivid Hasidic story about Rav Simcha Bunim of Peshischa, and a living contemporary example: a group of women who have been learning Torah together every morning for six straight years, culminating in a recent siyum. At its heart, this episode is about the courage to show up daily, the role of simcha in sustaining spiritual growth, and the quiet power of being “all in.” Not touching the edge—but climbing the mountain.
Kayin Returns to Sinai: Yitro and the Long Road to Techiyat HaMetim is not a historical class—it is an exploration of why revelation itself had to wait. Why does the parashah of Matan Torah bear the name of Yitro? What does reincarnation, brotherhood, gratitude, and resurrection have to do with standing at Sinai? Drawing on Chazal, the Arizal, the Zera Shimshon, and classic mefarshim, this class traces the long spiritual journey from the first murder in history to the moment Torah could finally descend.
Through Yitro’s arrival, the repair of Kayin and Hevel begins, emunah finds its final home after the splitting of the sea, and techiyat ha-metim emerges not only as an end-of-days belief, but as a way a Jew is meant to live every morning. This is a class about hearing and moving, healing old fractures, and living with gratitude for life returned. Join us for a thoughtful, source-based journey that reframes Sinai—and our own lives—through the lens of repair, humility, and resurrection.




