3,391 related texts · Page 208 of 377
And when it comes to the divine, the question of watchfulness, of attentiveness, becomes even more profound. The ancient text Sifrei Devarim, a commentary on the Book of Deuteronom...
A storm raging, the earth trembling... It's a primal feeling, isn't it? The Psalmist certainly understood it. Psalm 29 paints a vivid picture of G-d's voice thundering across the l...
The Sifrei Devarim, a collection of legal interpretations on the Book of Deuteronomy, presents us with a fascinating paradox. It cites Deuteronomy 11:12, which says, "Always the ey...
Here, Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, a towering figure in Jewish mysticism – tradition ascribes the authorship of the Zohar to him – uses a powerful analogy to illustrate our relationshi...
Our tradition has a powerful image for that feeling, and it all revolves around… rain. Specifically, rain in its proper time. Deuteronomy 11:14. Let's take a look: "And I shall giv...
The book of Kohelet, Ecclesiastes, that wise and sometimes cynical exploration of life, touches on this very feeling. "The lover of silver will not be sated with silver," it tells ...
We often take it for granted, but in Jewish tradition, even something as fundamental as rain carries layers of significance, tied to specific times of the year and even reflecting ...
Sometimes, those little asides open up a whole world of understanding. Take this one, from Sifrei Devarim 43, connected to the verse "And I shall give grass in your field to your b...
But the Sifrei Devarim offers a fascinating, and perhaps unsettling, perspective. It wasn't just about being "bad." It was about something far more insidious: complacency born of a...