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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Lech lecha. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Lech lecha. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, October 31, 2014

Lech Licha and new shiurim

New Shiurim:
Unraveling the Travels of Avraham 
http://www.yutorah.org/showShiur.cfm?shiurID=819589
האם יש מצוה באכילת פירות שביעית
ברכת הארץ כאשר שמיטה מדרבנן


Lectures and Essays Lech L’cha

New Echoes of Eden Project:

Lectures:
Follow the Money
http://www.yutorah.org/lectures/lecture.cfm/798566/Rabbi_Ari_Kahn/Follow_the_Money

Becoming Holy

The Enlightenment of Avraham

The Acts of the Fathers (and Mothers)

Revelation

Deconstructing and Reconstructing Abraham

Avraham -From the Universal to the Particular

Love and Fear

The Development of Avraham

Essays:

Deconstructing and Reconstructing Abraham

Love and Fear
or

The Universal and the Particular
or

Four Against Five

Acts of the Fathers

Abraham's Discovery





Thursday, November 7, 2019

Lectures and Essays -Parashat Lech Lecha

Parashat Lech Lecha  Lectures and Essays


 

New Shiur:

Avraham's Coronation


 

Origin Story


 

 

Video-

YouTube Meaning and Purpose

YouTube Leaving Terach

YouTube - Avraham’s Apple

YouTube - On a Mission from God


5 - minute audio

Meaning and Purpose

Leaving Terach

 

Audio:

The Great Pretender

Video

Last 2 minutes of the Shiur:

 

Planting Seeds

At Least Ten Tests

Saying Goodbye to Terach

The House of Avraham

Video full lecture The House of Avraham (Making Souls #2)

Avraham's Apple

Survival

A Mission from God

Making Souls

חיי אברהם

The Blessings in Avraham's life

The Chronology of events in Avraham's life

Unraveling the Travels of Avraham

Lech-Lecha: Making of a Gadol 

Follow the Money

Deconstructing and Reconstructing Abraham

Love and Fear

The Development of Avraham

The Enlightenment of Avraham

Avraham -From the Universal to the Particular

 

 

Essays:

On a Mission from God

Covenant

Luminosity

Deconstructing and Reconstructing Abraham

Love and Fear

The Universal and the Particular

Four Against Five

Acts of the Fathers

Abraham's Discovery

Silence, Speech - and Silence

http://arikahn.blogspot.com/2021/10/parashat-lech-licha-silence-speech-and.html

 

PDF

or

https://www.yutorah.com/lectures/lecture.cfm/1013762/rabbi-ari-kahn/silence-speech-and-silence/

 

One of the most brilliant people who ever lived was Avraham. He had the ability to see something which had eluded the entire world. However, even genius needs inspiration. The famous story is told of Sir Isaac Newton – who was inspired by an apple.

While the apocryphal version of the story has Newton struck in the head – when Sir Isaac told the story to his biographer – there was in fact, an apple in the story:

 

“After dinner, the weather being warm, we went into the garden and drank thea, under the shade of some apple trees…he told me, he was just in the same situation, as when formerly, the notion of gravitation came into his mind. It was occasion’d by the fall of an apple, as he sat in contemplative mood. Why should that apple always descend perpendicularly to the ground, thought he to himself…”

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2170052-newtons-apple-the-real-story/

 

 

So my question is – what was Avraham’s apple? For the answer – 

(Video) Avraham’s Apple

 

 

(Audio) - Avraham’s Apple

 

 

 

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Parashat Lech Lecha 5778 On a Mission from God

Echoes of Eden
Parashat Lech Lecha 5778
On a Mission from God
Rabbi Ari Kahn

Avraham lived in interesting times.[1] He had to overcome myriad challenges just to survive - but mere survival was never his goal. Avraham had a vision, a mission: His goal was to spread knowledge of God, both “horizontally” and “vertically” – to his own generation and to future generations. Sometimes, though, Avraham faced challenges (referred to in rabbinic tradition as “tests”) that seemed diametrically opposed to his overarching goal.

The midrashic narrative describes Avraham’s impossible situation: He was forced to make the choice between worshipping the false gods of his father and his king (Nimrod), which would enable him to survive but would be a public display of hypocrisy that would undermine his monotheistic message, or become a “burnt offering,” standing firm in his rejection of polytheism even to the point of martyrdom. No matter which path he chose, his mission seemed doomed before it even got off the ground; when Avraham chose martyrdom, he sacrificed not only his life but the future of his mission. The nascent monotheism movement appeared doomed to die with him.

Avraham was thrown into the furnace; God intervened and saved his life, but Avraham was forced to flee. He resettled in a new town, where he was far more successful: His message was well-received, and his “movement” gained considerable momentum. Inexplicably, just at that point God called upon him to relocate once again, to abandon what he had managed to build, to pick up and travel to an unknown destination.

With no heir, Avraham’s prospects for future success seemed bleak. How would he leave his mark on future generations? In successive Divine revelations, Avraham is told that he will succeed, and that even though it seems impossible, he and his wife will have progeny: His ideology, his mission, would live on. Just as he had miraculously survived the fiery furnace, so would his belief in God be miraculously sustained.

Even after arriving in the Promised Land, Avraham is continually put to the test. When he is pulled into local geo-political conflicts, he goes to war and bests an army that had defeated a confederacy of kings. He travels through hostile lands, where the challenges he faces range from religious to political to military to sexual, yet he and his wife emerge unscathed.

An impartial actuarial assessment of the probability of Avraham and Sarah’s survival would have given infinitesimally small odds in their favor. No one would have predicted that, despite the trials and tribulations they faced, Avraham and Sarah would eventually die of natural causes at advanced ages, after bringing an heir into the world - just as no one could have predicted that Avraham would walk out of King Nimrod’s furnace unharmed, or that Sarah would escape the clutches of Pharaoh and Avimelech, that Avraham would survive the war against far superior military forces, or, for that matter, that their son Yitzchak would rise from the altar to which he had been bound.

Individually, each of these events is impossible; collectively, they form a paradigm for what would one day be known as Jewish survival. The life and times of Avraham and Sarah were so “interesting,” so miraculous, because they were the forerunner, the harbinger, and the model for Jewish survival.

We – individually and as a nation – have survived, and will continue to survive, simply because it is the will of God. We have a role to play in world history; we are all on a mission from God. Like Avraham and Sarah, God keeps us alive, energizes and invigorates us in miraculous ways and in the face of insurmountable odds and impossible choices. Like Avraham and Sarah before us, we are tasked with spreading knowledge of God “horizontally” and “vertically.” If we were to attempt to calculate our chances of success, we would do well to heed the lesson our own history teaches us: Our existence is based on factors that are impossible for the human mind to calculate. Like Avraham and Sarah, we, their children, are here today only because it is the will of God. In our case, the only rational explanation is miraculous.

© Rabbi Ari Kahn 2017
For more lectures and essays: