Hadar Institute Online Learning

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Welcome to Hadar's online learning library, a collection of lectures and classes on a range of topics.

Hadar Institute


    • Dec 22, 2022 LATEST EPISODE
    • weekdays NEW EPISODES
    • 29m AVG DURATION
    • 802 EPISODES

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    Latest episodes from Hadar Institute Online Learning

    Yael Jaffe: I Know of Nothing But Miracles, Part 2

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2022 20:01


    What do miracles tell us about God's presence? How do we define the miraculous? Where does one miracle begin and human agency end? In this series, originally recorded in December 2021, we'll explore a text from Hadar's Hanukkah 5782 Companion, illuminating the evolving relationship between humanity and miracles. 

    R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat Mikeitz: Facing the Truth

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2022 6:55


    How are we meant to admit sin in our prayers? What is the model for confession after having done something wrong?

    R. Avi Killip: I Know of Nothing But Miracles, Part 1

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2022 18:09


    What do miracles tell us about God's presence? How do we define the miraculous? Where does one miracle begin and human agency end? In this series, originally recorded in December 2021, we'll explore a text from Hadar's Hanukkah 5782 Companion, illuminating the evolving relationship between humanity and miracles. 

    R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat VaYeishev: The Meaning of Judaism

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2022 11:17


    As we begin to close the Amidah, in the penultimate blessing that we call Modim, we say to God: “modim anahnu lakh,” we modim you. Drawing from the root י-ד-ה, the word modim has multiple meanings, each offering very different understandings of this blessing. This root word is also core to what it means to be a Jew, as it is the root word of Judaism (יהדות) and describes two aspects of the name of our ancestor Judah/Yehudah (יהודה). What does modim mean?

    R. Avi Strausberg: The Before and After - The Sudden Deaths of Nadav and Avihu

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2022 46:45


    The sudden death of Aaron's sons Nadav and Avihu leaves readers stunned and grappling for answers. By turning to a modern midrash in the form of an original short theatre piece written by R. Avi Strausberg, we attempt to pause time and make space to not only understand the motivations for their offerings, but also how their sudden deaths impacted their mother, their father, and their remaining brothers.This session was originally delivered at Hadar's Summer Learning Retreat in June 2021.

    R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat VaYishlach: Dressing for Prayer

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2022 7:40


    Ya'akov is preparing to encounter God directly through sacrifice, an analog to our experience of prayer. It has been decades since Ya'akov actually encountered God in this way, and now he is preparing for this transition back into direct relationship. Critically, Ya'akov prepares by asking everyone to purify themselves and to change their clothes. What is the significance of changing clothes?

    R. Deborah Sacks Mintz: Many Names, Many Melodies

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2022 39:35


    The many names of and metaphors for God sprinkled throughout the song genres of Jewish tradition - Psalms and piyyutim, traditional melodies and contemporary compositions - give us ample opportunity to explore diverse touchpoints of connection to the Divine. R. Deborah Sacks Mintz explores a variety of music designed to deepen connections and unlock new questions inherent in the act of singing to God.This lecture was originally delivered at Hadar's Summer Learning Retreat in June 2022.

    R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat VaYeitzei: The Meaning of God's Holiest Name

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2022 7:06


    In our prayers, we do not shy away from calling God directly by name, using the most holy four-letter name of God (although we don't pronounce it explicitly). What might this name mean, and what might it mean in the context of prayer?

    R. Aviva Richman: Living in God's Shadow

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2022 32:24


    Our tradition sometimes uses the image of a shadow to describe human experience with God. This rich metaphor, which captures both a sense of safety and shelter as well as darkness and fear, helps R. Aviva to reflect on where we find ourselves in the complex and ongoing story of God and the Jewish people.This lecture was originally delivered at Hadar's Summer Learning Retreat in June 2022.

    R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat Toldot: Blessing God

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 9:32


    A major theme of Parashat Toldot is “ברכה - blessing.” This root appears 32 times in this parashah, more than in any other in the Torah. In prayer, we use the Hebrew root ב.ר.כ as the main verb of our blessing formula. What does it mean to say, “ברוך אתה ה׳ - barukh attah Adonai,” usually translated as, “Blessed are You, God”?

    R. Shai Held: A God Who Weeps

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2022 38:14


    In several passages in the book of Jeremiah, the prophet seems to cry over the bitter suffering of his people; accordingly, Jeremiah has sometimes been referred to as "the weeping prophet." But there is another, very different way to read these passages, according to which it is God, and not Jeremiah, who is crying. In this lecture, Rabbi Shai Held explores the arguments for seeing the God of Jeremiah as "the weeping God," probing the theological implications of this startlingly anthropomorphic image. This lecture was originally delivered at Hadar's Summer Learning Retreat in June 2022.

    R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat Hayyei Sarah: Personal Prayer and the Amidah

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2022 9:55


    How are we meant to pray words that we didn't write? And how are we meant to pray those same words, multiple times a day?

    R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat VaYera: Compromise and Acceptance

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2022 7:29


    Avraham alludes to a phrase found in our daily Amidah: "the King Who loves justice (tzedakah) and judgment (mishpat)." What does this phrase mean, and how might it relate to our own prayer lives? 

    R. Ethan Tucker: Do We Really Think Monotheists Believe in the Same God?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2022 63:50


    Questions of theology pervade efforts to facilitate cooperation and dialogue across religions.  We often search for what is common in order to build a sense of shared purpose across religious spaces that can look very different in practice.  In this lecture, R, Ethan Tucker looks at some of the laws surrounding Avodah Zarah - the rabbinic term for foreign or forbidden worship - and explores whether a claim of shared monotheism is sufficient to ground a sense of overlapping religious purpose. How far we might stretch the definition of monotheism in order to facilitate sharing social and religious space? This lecture was originally delivered at Hadar's Summer Learning Retreat in June 2022.

    R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat Lekh Lekha: Searching for Unexpected Moral Heroes Through Prayer

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2022 8:16


    In this week's parashah, we meet a character who teaches us a lesson in morality, and also ends up in the first blessing of the Amidah, one of our most important prayers. Surprisingly, this character, Malki-Zedek, is not part of the Jewish people! Yet Malki-Zedek teaches Avram - and, in turn, all of us - how to avoid moral pitfalls.

    R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat Noah: Praying a Few Words at a Time

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2022 6:23


    What happens when we try to pray, but we just can't make it work? Is there any hope, or any strategies, for those of us who can't always reach the heights of connection with God in every moment of prayer? A particular interpretation to a strange phrase in this week's parashah offers us some guidance.

    R. Elie Kaunfer on Parashat Bereishit: Relational Prayer

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 6:13


    From the beginning of the Torah, humans have a fraught relationship with knowledge. The essence of da'at—knowledge—in Adam's world is the tree of knowledge (עץ הדעת) of good and evil (Genesis 2:9). Adam is instructed to eat of all the trees, but not from the tree of knowledge (Genesis 2:17). When the snake speaks to the woman about the tree, he claims that once they eat of this tree, they will be like God, “knowing good and bad”—יודעי טוב ורע (Genesis 3:5).

    Dena Weiss: Can We Reverse the Irreversible?

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2022 53:19


    We repent in order to go back to the way that things were, to repair what has broken, and to retrieve what we have lost. We often think of teshuvah as a type of reset button that enables us to erase the past, emerging healed and forgiven. But what if this understanding is erroneous? What if teshuvah does not change what we hope it will change and fix what we need it to fix? This lecture was originally recorded in Elul 2021.

    R. Mich'ael Rosenberg: Return, Ascent, and Bloodied Wings

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2022 20:27


    The High Holidays are a murky time of transition. How can we balance the need to both take stock of our past and look forward to the future? In this lecture, Rabbi Micha'el Rosenberg considers different visions of teshuvah to guide us through this important part of the calendar. This lecture was originally recorded in Elul 2021.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Nitzavim: Torah of Teshuvah, Part 1

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2022 13:59


    Parashat Nitzavim falls in the thick of the season of teshuvah in the calendar. This is no coincidence—it is the primary source in the Torah for the concept of teshuvah. Although we will sin and face the consequences of our failures, Nitzavim teaches that we can find our way back to a life of blessing.

    R. Elie Kaunfer: The Deeper Meaning of Avinu Malkeinu

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 54:12


    Where does Avinu Malkeinu come from, why do we say it on Rosh Hashanah, and what does it mean to call God “Our Father, Our King?” Rabbi Elie Kaunfer considers these questions in his lecture, which was originally recorded in Elul 2021.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Ki Tavo: Reenacting Sinai

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 11:24


    In Parashat Ki Tavo, Moshe instructs the people to do an extensive ceremony when they come to a specific mountain after they enter the land. Many aspects of this ceremony are reminiscent of Sinai. A mountain, words of Torah written on stones, building an altar and offering sacrifices. It looks like a reenactment of entering into a covenant with God at Sinai and all of the obligations entailed by berit. But why is there a need to reenact Sinai? Wasn't that one-time event powerful enough on its own to solidify entry into covenant for all future generations?

    R. Elie Kaunfer: Who By Fire? The Most Controversial Prayer in Jewish Life

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2022 52:44


    Rabbi Elie Kaufner explores the themes and intertextual references in Unetaneh Tokef. This lecture was originally recorded in Elul 2021.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Ki Teitzei: Sexual Ethics - Consent, Community, Covenant

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 9:54


    Exercising leadership means taking responsibility. At the end of last week's parashah, Shoftim, elders of a town closest to an unsolved murder proclaim they bear no responsibility for the murder and ask for atonement. Yet the Talmud learns from this ceremony of disclaiming guilt that leaders nonetheless bear responsibility—for example, to provide proper accompaniment as travelers leave their city. Blood of the heifer drips down their hands as they claim they have no blood on their hands.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Shoftim: Torah Fueled by Our Questions

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 11:58


    Parashat Shoftim deals with the structures and nature of leadership. Early in the parashah, one passage explains that someone who has a hard question should go to the centralized leadership to ask, and then must obey the answer, on penalty of death. The point seems to be about reinforcing the power and authority of central religious leadership. But in the arc of ongoing interpretation, these verses become a provocative jumping off point to reflect on the nature of the encounter between an individual's religious question and religious experts. It becomes possible to find in them a voice for the importance of asking our questions, not primarily to ensure obedience but because our questions have an important role to play in the unfolding of Torah itself.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Re'eh: Eat, Crave, Love

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2022 11:56


    Parashat Re'eh speaks of “desire” multiple times. From a religious perspective, we often think of desire in terms of how we may control it, or even completely suppress it. But actually religious life without desire is flat and one-dimensional. Ultimately, the richness and depth of our religious experience hinges on appreciating, valuing, and even cultivating desire.In Parashat Re'eh, we can trace an approach that embraces human craving and desire as a powerful mechanism to fully live a life of mitzvot, meaning and integrity.

    Recreating Ourselves Trhough Teshuvah

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 47:55


    In Halakhic Man, Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik suggests that teshuvah - usually translated as “repentance” - is not to be narrowly defined as turning from sin. Rather, teshuvah prompts us to reconsider all our habits and routines, including those that are not necessarily sinful. Doing teshuvah is really an expression of our capacity for self-creation and identifying and realizing our own potential. The goal is to attain our individuality, autonomy, uniqueness and freedom As we move through the Aseret Yemei Teshuvah (“Ten Days of Repentance”), we will explore Soloveitchik's approach and grapple with what we are called to do during this important period.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Eikev: Being Like God

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 12:51


    Note: this Devar Torah relates to difficult subject matter, including loss and pregnancy loss. In Parashat Eikev, we are instructed to “walk in all of God's ways,” but how is that possible for mortals? R. Yitz Greenberg has taught prolifically about being like God through a zealous commitment to the “triumph of life,” even when that is a challenging commitment to hold. Building upon his teachings, we can focus on an embrace of life that also involves integrating loss. Instead of loss as an obstacle that we try to defy, we can understand our capacity to hold loss as exercising a divine capacity we have, part of what it means to be created in the image of God.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Va'Ethanan: On Prayer and the Possible

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2022 12:35


    In Parashat Va'Ethanan, Moshe beseeches God. He doesn't get his request. Interestingly, the sages peg this moment of prayer as the entryway to explore the meanings of prayer more widely, jumping off from the word va'ethanan to list ten kinds of prayer connected to different verbs and different figures in the Torah. Taking Moshe's unanswered prayer as the lens, we are invited into an exploration of what prayer is, entirely detached from the question of whether prayer is answered.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Va'Ethanan: On Prayer and the Possible

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2022 12:35


    In Parashat Va'Ethanan, Moshe beseeches God. He doesn't get his request. Interestingly, the sages peg this moment of prayer as the entryway to explore the meanings of prayer more widely, jumping off from the word va'ethanan to list ten kinds of prayer connected to different verbs and different figures in the Torah. Taking Moshe's unanswered prayer as the lens, we are invited into an exploration of what prayer is, entirely detached from the question of whether prayer is answered.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Devarim: Moshe's Second Song

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 12:42


    In Parashat Devarim, Moshe gives an account of Torah, reframing the journey in the desert for the next generation that will enter the land. Some commentaries find not so subtle subtexts in Moshe's introductory remarks that create a bleak picture of Israel's propensity to sin. Parashat Devarim always falls before Tisha b'Av, and this motif of rebuke aligns with a day that brings failures and destruction to the forefront of our minds. But taken in context, as the beginning of Moshe's final speech to the people, an emphasis on sin is a depressing frame for a recapitulation of Torah. Perhaps the focus on rebuke is meant to motivate the people to be more careful in their actions. Even so, some interpretations veer away from a theology that constantly points a finger at our failures. Instead, we encounter a sense of God who takes responsibility to proactively steer humanity towards success.

    R. Aviva Richman: Words That Make Or Break Our World

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 53:08


    Proverbs teaches that "life and death are in the hands of the tongue." Rabbi Aviva Richman explores the power of words and how we can use speech to heal, rather than harm others. This lecture was originally delivered in January 2022 as the Dr. Eddie Scharfman Memorial Lecture.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Mattot-Masei: Moshe's Second Song

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022 9:10


    In Parashat Masei, Moshe receives detailed instructions about setting up cities of refuge. Unlike other mitzvot introduced as being relevant to when the people enter the land, Moshe can actually fulfill this mitzvah, at least in part. He makes sure to set aside three cities on the east side of the Jordan river before he dies. This may seem tragic, a desperate grasp for a taste of entering the land when the full experience is entirely shut off. Instead, we can see his efforts as a climax of his life's work, a moment when his heart sang because he so deeply appreciated the meaning and importance of refuge.

    R. Yitz Greenberg: The Triumph of Life, Part 3

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2022 67:49


    In the final part of this lecture series, Rabbi Yitz Greenberg speaks with Rabbi Tali Adler about how we can maximize the potential for life in our everyday actions. This lecture was originally recorded in Winter 2022 as part of a series in partnership with Adas Israel Congregation in Washington, DC.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Pinchas: Moshe's Mitzvah for God

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 9:52


    In this week's parashah, we find a slight variation on one of the most common verses in the Torah. This minor shift in words reflects a profound revolution. At the end of his life, Moshe takes a leap in how he speaks to God, and how he shows up for the people.

    R. Yitz Greenberg: The Triumph of Life, Part 2

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2022 63:55


    In the second part of his lecture series, Rabbi Yitz Greenberg speaks with Rabbi Aaron Alexander. Rabbi Greenberg explores the commandment to have children, quality of life, and situations where preserving life overrules religious obligations. This lecture was originally recorded in Winter 2022 as part of a series in partnership with Adas Israel Congregation in Washington, DC.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Balak: A People's Prophet, A Prophet's People

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 11:07


    In Parashat Balak, the ruler of Moav calls on Bilam to curse Israel. God ends up putting words of blessing in his mouth, and he speaks prophetically about the people of Israel. The episode raises questions about prophecy—when it is and isn't present, and for whom.

    R. Yitz Greenberg: The Triumph of Life, Part 1

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2022 68:47


    What does it mean to choose life in an imperfect world? Rabbi Yitz Greenberg, in conversation with Rabbi Lauren Holtzblatt, offers examples of how Judaism teaches us to repair the world in an effort to uphold the value of life. This lecture was originally recorded in Winter 2022 as part of a series in partnership with Adas Israel Congregation in Washington, DC.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Chukkat: Critique and Creativity

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 9:24


    In Parashat Chukkat, the people complain again about their food in the wilderness, but this complaint is different from earlier complaints. They don't remember the food in Egypt with nostalgia, nor do they crave a particular item. They are disgusted with manna.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Korach: Fire and Flower

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2022 10:54


    In Parashat Korach, there are multiple accusations against Moshe and Aharon's leadership and dramatic responses. Instead of viewing these through the lens of rebellion and punishment, one can view the various “demonstrations” as conveying divergent messages about the nature of God and what religious leadership looks like. Between the cracks of a fiery and violent display of God's power, there is also a hint of a gentle, nourishing, but no less powerful, force.

    Dena Weiss: Making Shabbat Your Own, Part 2

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2022 26:49


    Dena Weiss studies the Meor Einayim and explores what it means to refrain from spiritual work, not just physical labor, on Shabbat. This lecture is part 2 in a series originally recorded in November 2021.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Shelach: Believing in Ourselves, Owning Our Inheritance

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2022 9:32


    In Parashat Shelach, twelve scouts scope out the promised land. They are on a mission to gain answers to specific questions, some about the land itself, and what kind of home it would be, and others about strategy for conquering the land. Fundamentally, it is a story of receiving an ancestral inheritance and doing the work to figure out what it will take to make it home.

    R. Shai Held: Wanting God Near Us

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 63:44


    Rabbi Shai Held conducts a close reading of Psalm 139. He looks at the original Hebrew and multiple translations, arguing that the literary ambiguity showcases the psalmist's relationship with God. This lecture was originally recorded in Summer 2020.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat BeHa'alotekha: A Small and Steady Light

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 9:19


    In the simple instruction to kindle lamps in the mishkan, our interpretive tradition leaps into a theological spiral. What is the relationship between human light and divine light? The human role in creating light in the world becomes an opportunity to delve into the question of significance, or insignificance, of our efforts, and whether a sense of embarrassment is constructive or inhibiting.

    R. Avi Strausberg: I Cannot Tell a Lie... Or Can I?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 49:17


    If someone you wouldn't endorse asks you for a recommendation, what would you say? Discussing the ethics around truth and lying, Rabbi Avi Strausberg presents multiple approaches to the topic and asks what to do when there may not be a clear answer. This lecture was recorded at the Hadar Rabbinic Yeshiva Intensive in 2020.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Naso: One Mitzvah at a Time

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2022 8:39


    Parashat Naso includes the ritual of sotah. A husband brings his wife whom he suspects of adultery to the mikdash (sanctuary) where a kohen gives her a potion of “cursed waters” that either acquit her or punish her. From our earliest sages to the present moment, many nuanced interpretations of this anomalous and troubling ritual have emerged. We will focus on one Rabbinic principle that applies to the procedure of sotah, but has much wider implications for other rituals, and paves the way towards a theology of mitzvot embedded in honoring the dignity of each individual.

    R. Tali Adler: Words That Cannot Be Written

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 48:20


    It's easy to emphasize the giving of the written Torah at Mt. Sinai. But what if the focus should be on Oral Torah? R. Tali Adler looks at the essential role oral Torah plays as a part of the covenant between God and the Jewish people.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Bemidbar: Dismantling Holiness with Love

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 9:03


    As Israel traveled through the desert, they frequently erected the mishkan (tabernacle) anew. This means that they also deconstructed the mishkan frequently, dismantling what had been sacred. When we are so aware of the logistics involved in creating spaces to facilitate a sublime experience, it can become demystifying, for better and for worse. In Parashat Bemidbar, we get a behind the scenes view of the logistics of holiness, and a profound message about how to balance the mystique of kedushah alongside the very mundane—and relentless—work to sustain it.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat BeHukotai: From Curse to Catalyst

    Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2022 8:52


    The curses of BeHukotai resonate, and we can point to various societal failures that have contributed to this reality, reasons for God to be “angry” at us. Perhaps there is some efficacy in the fear and guilt that undergird the curses as we reach for a sense of control and agency. But severe problems are hardly so simple. As we face what is not a nightmarish curse but a harsh reality of uncertainty about sustainability and abundance, the punishment and guilt model might not serve us well. We have to stare these problems in the face, together, and find pathways forward.

    Dena Weiss: Making Shabbat Your Own

    Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 60:00


    What does it mean to have respect for Shabbat? Dena Weiss discusses how we can respect shabbat by making the day feel different through our clothing choices.

    R. Aviva Richman on Parashat Behar: Shemittah - A Restrained and Wild Love

    Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 10:29


    Shemittah (the sabbatical year) is considered one of the hardest mitzvot. But the mitzvah might not only be about inculcating discipline to the extreme. We can also understand Shemittah and Yovel (jubilee) as mitzvot meant to inculcate an extreme love.

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