i think it's great and funny that youtube now (un)officially has a rabbi, when i saw it i was like great...a virtual (but full of good virtue i hope)youube community, who thought of this?
SHALOM! Did you know that Yeshua (JESUS) the Messiah suffered and died for the atonement of sins and resurrected on the third day. He was pierced for our transgressions and crushed for our iniquities, therefore he was sacrificed as the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world by the sheding of his precious holy blood (see Isaiah 53:5-7 & 10, John 1:29, Hebrews 9 & 13:11-12, 1 Peter 1:18-19, and Revelation 1:5). Yeshua HaMashiach is the atonement on Yom Kippur, AMEN.
Wrong region1111, Yeshua HaMashiach is the Suffering Servant Messiah in Isaiah 53. He is the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world by His sheded precious holy blood.
region1111=I'm not gonna shut up and definitely and absolutely not a fanatic at all. I'm testifying the truth and one day you will bow down on your knees and confess that Yeshua is the true and authentic Jewish Messiah, the Son of God. That's for sure and that is definite.
Any explanation to a Mitzva, is more akin to "seasoning" of the Mitzva. It Something for us Human Beings to learn from and use in our lives. It enhances OUR performance of the Mitzva. It is certainly not the whole purpose or the entire purpose.If G-d has Given us a Mitzva to do, we cannot meet our obligation unless we psychically perform the Mitzva. even if we feel that we can draw inspiration from elsewhere.
It would be even better, if your pronunciation of the words Rosh HaShana and Yom Kippur wasn's so awfully "gringo"... it wouldn't hurt if you pronounced a bit more like hebrew.
Thank you so much, Rabbi. Your spiritual and energetic explanation of the key elements of Judaism has raised my interest another notch. I'm going to take in your other videos as well.
I think this is great. Rather than hearing about the Hebrew people. I can actually hear from one! Thanks so much for the explanation. I am a Catholic Priest who loves to hear about the faith of others.
hey, im the other half of jtrnBOTHER93, (2 ppl share the acccount) i m a 13 year old orthodox jewish girl, i have one question about rosh hashana, it only says in the Torah that there is a Yom Tov on the first day of tishray, from where did it become the beggining of the jewish year, and how did it replace Nissan, which according to the Torah is the first month.
i think your shiurim on youtube are an inspiration, please try to get back to me about my question
In the orthodox (or religiously observant) way, when a girl is 12 years old she BECOMES a bat mitzva (which means daughter of the mitzvot or commandments). So, you're there! I encourage you to light Shabbat (Sabbath) candles. You can google a search (try a Chabad search) on how to do that, what prayer to say, etc. You can even look up Chabad in your area and they'll teach you with great kindness. All the best!
Am I as a Jew allowed to read the Christian (aka new testament) Bible???? Someone answer plllleeeaaaaassseee I want to know if I can read it without it being a sin!
By the way, thanks for the videos! I am just a person interested in lots of different beliefs, and growing up in Sydney I haven't really come across many jews hehehe
I have two questions which maybe you could answer later on. The first one I have been trying to find out on the net but i cant find the answer. How is the daily life of an orthodox jew different to that of other jews. and secondly, just a question about the clothing of orthodox jews. Where did it come from? It doesnt look middle eastern or european. Is it a mix of both?
I'm only 13 - but according to Jewish law, having my bar mitzvah in September, I guess I'm a man.. so...
The daily life of an orthodox jew (me) is much different than conseravtive jews. Orthodox jews...
wear tzizit everyday, yamakas on our heads, put on tefillin every morning, cant do electricity on Sabbath which is Saturday, eat kosher, (nothing from pigs!!), go to temple on sabbath ....
Orthodox is a word used to describe "observant" Jews, or Jews who follow biblical law; it's the observance of those laws that make our lives different, from daily prayer & dietary laws to modesty. We are required to dress modestly but within that there is a lot of room for different styles, all affected and influenced by the many cultures we've lived among (and other internal influences).
I think what you are doing with these videos is awesome, I just have one suggestion, and that is, will you eventually get to the topic of jewish converts, what is the ceremonies involved, etc. I am hoping to become jewish one day by conversion that is why I am asking, thank you.
Nice vid. For us Rosh Hashana, like other holidays revolves around food and family. Yom Kippur is more personal as you said. I'm not religiose and I would like to know more (may be in another video) about your praying experience both alone and in the synagogue. Do you feel a spiritual uplifting or is it just a compulsory routine for you.
Prayer (which I will be doing a video on in the near future) is what you make of it. It can be routine and meaningless or it can be the deepest expressions of existence with the realization that you are connecting with the Almighty. It's our daily job to make it count!
iwish i was a jew i am not but i study kabala whit doctor laitman at bnei baruch lerning center
jackesdmollay79930 6 months ago
God bless you , your family and all your beloved once.
Love from the Netherlands:-)
marjola75 1 year ago
The nay-saying comments are your best testimonies [ref Luke 6:26].
1SpiritNTruth 2 years ago
blessings, I appreciate your enthusiasm
max19942012 2 years ago
i think it's great and funny that youtube now (un)officially has a rabbi, when i saw it i was like great...a virtual (but full of good virtue i hope)youube community, who thought of this?
54321emb 3 years ago
SHALOM! Did you know that Yeshua (JESUS) the Messiah suffered and died for the atonement of sins and resurrected on the third day. He was pierced for our transgressions and crushed for our iniquities, therefore he was sacrificed as the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world by the sheding of his precious holy blood (see Isaiah 53:5-7 & 10, John 1:29, Hebrews 9 & 13:11-12, 1 Peter 1:18-19, and Revelation 1:5). Yeshua HaMashiach is the atonement on Yom Kippur, AMEN.
knightsofstjoan2004 3 years ago
knightsofstjoan2004:
> Did you know that Yeshua (JESUS) the Messiah
> suffered and died for the atonement of sins
Fail.
region1111 2 years ago
Wrong region1111, Yeshua HaMashiach is the Suffering Servant Messiah in Isaiah 53. He is the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world by His sheded precious holy blood.
knightsofstjoan2004 2 years ago
oh shut up you damn fanatic.
region1111 2 years ago
region1111=I'm not gonna shut up and definitely and absolutely not a fanatic at all. I'm testifying the truth and one day you will bow down on your knees and confess that Yeshua is the true and authentic Jewish Messiah, the Son of God. That's for sure and that is definite.
knightsofstjoan2004 2 years ago
"one day you will bow down on your knees and confess that Yeshua is the true and authentic Jewish Messiah"
Dream on fruitcake. I'm an atheist.
region1111 2 years ago
Why do u need so many laws, holidays and customs to remind yourselves to become more deeper spiritually. I don't and you shouldn't either.
meak911 4 years ago
The laws and Mitzvos are G-d's laws. Mortal beings can never grasp the full scope and meaning for His commandments.
baseballleaguestar 3 years ago 2
Any explanation to a Mitzva, is more akin to "seasoning" of the Mitzva. It Something for us Human Beings to learn from and use in our lives. It enhances OUR performance of the Mitzva. It is certainly not the whole purpose or the entire purpose.If G-d has Given us a Mitzva to do, we cannot meet our obligation unless we psychically perform the Mitzva. even if we feel that we can draw inspiration from elsewhere.
baseballleaguestar 3 years ago 2
my post here was in response to meak911 (1 year ago)
Great presentation!
baseballleaguestar 3 years ago
Thank you !
It would be even better, if your pronunciation of the words Rosh HaShana and Yom Kippur wasn's so awfully "gringo"... it wouldn't hurt if you pronounced a bit more like hebrew.
ticotrax 4 years ago 2
This is wonderful! You are an inspiration... and I'm not even Jewish!
OlgaSoprano 4 years ago 5
If YOU would have taught Saturday school i sure would have listened. Thank you for doing this.
Shalom!
thewatchful1 4 years ago 2
This comment has received too many negative votes show
STINK
huevosdetoroviejo 4 years ago
I love your entusiasm...! Great Rabbi....
liberal07pa 4 years ago 4
Yeah baby!!!!!!
5768tovah 4 years ago
Thank you so much, Rabbi. Your spiritual and energetic explanation of the key elements of Judaism has raised my interest another notch. I'm going to take in your other videos as well.
Todah Rabah v'Shalom!
swedgoy 4 years ago
I think this is great. Rather than hearing about the Hebrew people. I can actually hear from one! Thanks so much for the explanation. I am a Catholic Priest who loves to hear about the faith of others.
crstprst 5 years ago
hey, im the other half of jtrnBOTHER93, (2 ppl share the acccount) i m a 13 year old orthodox jewish girl, i have one question about rosh hashana, it only says in the Torah that there is a Yom Tov on the first day of tishray, from where did it become the beggining of the jewish year, and how did it replace Nissan, which according to the Torah is the first month.
i think your shiurim on youtube are an inspiration, please try to get back to me about my question
thank you,
rn
jtrnBOTHER93 5 years ago
hey unnoficial rabbi,
I'm not a orthodox jew but should I have an orthodox bat mitzvah?
MrsBillLol 5 years ago
In the orthodox (or religiously observant) way, when a girl is 12 years old she BECOMES a bat mitzva (which means daughter of the mitzvot or commandments). So, you're there! I encourage you to light Shabbat (Sabbath) candles. You can google a search (try a Chabad search) on how to do that, what prayer to say, etc. You can even look up Chabad in your area and they'll teach you with great kindness. All the best!
YoJewMama 4 years ago
YOU MUST STOP DRINKING CAFFEINE
Alahat 5 years ago
Am I as a Jew allowed to read the Christian (aka new testament) Bible???? Someone answer plllleeeaaaaassseee I want to know if I can read it without it being a sin!
AngelxOfxMusic 5 years ago
Please do a video about the proper Jewish response to Jesus!!! Thanks!!
nosralkire 5 years ago
you are very cute =))
hardtocracknut 5 years ago
By the way, thanks for the videos! I am just a person interested in lots of different beliefs, and growing up in Sydney I haven't really come across many jews hehehe
zarathustrad 5 years ago
I have two questions which maybe you could answer later on. The first one I have been trying to find out on the net but i cant find the answer. How is the daily life of an orthodox jew different to that of other jews. and secondly, just a question about the clothing of orthodox jews. Where did it come from? It doesnt look middle eastern or european. Is it a mix of both?
zarathustrad 5 years ago
I'm only 13 - but according to Jewish law, having my bar mitzvah in September, I guess I'm a man.. so...
The daily life of an orthodox jew (me) is much different than conseravtive jews. Orthodox jews...
wear tzizit everyday, yamakas on our heads, put on tefillin every morning, cant do electricity on Sabbath which is Saturday, eat kosher, (nothing from pigs!!), go to temple on sabbath ....
jtrnBOTHER93 5 years ago
yeah, im not orthodox jewish but ma folks want me to have an orthodox bat mitzvah. I do tzizit prayers every day at school.
MrsBillLol 5 years ago
Orthodox is a word used to describe "observant" Jews, or Jews who follow biblical law; it's the observance of those laws that make our lives different, from daily prayer & dietary laws to modesty. We are required to dress modestly but within that there is a lot of room for different styles, all affected and influenced by the many cultures we've lived among (and other internal influences).
YoJewMama 4 years ago
Yeah, I'd love if you could do one on conversion..
YourMomsDad 5 years ago
hey loooove it but could u have like shirs for like teenagers coz i sor tof understnd this but i wanna learn more. thanx.
genendel 5 years ago
gemar chatima tova v'tzom kal!
smaakaker 5 years ago
I think what you are doing with these videos is awesome, I just have one suggestion, and that is, will you eventually get to the topic of jewish converts, what is the ceremonies involved, etc. I am hoping to become jewish one day by conversion that is why I am asking, thank you.
ChineseRoom 5 years ago
hello! i can help with that, as a jew. i can link you to all kinds of websites that explain everything, from the begining.
daniitzhak 4 years ago
Nice vid. For us Rosh Hashana, like other holidays revolves around food and family. Yom Kippur is more personal as you said. I'm not religiose and I would like to know more (may be in another video) about your praying experience both alone and in the synagogue. Do you feel a spiritual uplifting or is it just a compulsory routine for you.
sbonzai 5 years ago
Hey sbonzai, thanks for your comment!
Prayer (which I will be doing a video on in the near future) is what you make of it. It can be routine and meaningless or it can be the deepest expressions of existence with the realization that you are connecting with the Almighty. It's our daily job to make it count!
UnofficialUTubeRabbi 5 years ago