Yossi Feintuch: Divine pragmatism; when God opts for the lesser of two evils

What is the connection between this week’s Torah portion's permission to Israelites, soldiers in a war zone to abduct an enemy female woman and God’s permission to Noah (following the end of the flood) to kill animals for food?

Yossi Feintuch: On eating meat – The Torah's view

Evidently, this week’s Re’eh portion wants to regulate and minimize the craving for frequent meat consumption seeking to limit it to the rate ‘’as the deer or as the gazelle is eaten’’ (v. 22). Namely, only quite infrequently would man eat meat from such animals for they could only be hunted.

Yossi Feintuch: To Walk in God's Ways‎‎

This weekly Torah portion Ekev calls upon us to walk in all God’s ’’ways, and to cleave unto Him’’ (Deuteronomy 11: 22). But how is it possible to do so if only because ‘’God is a devouring fire, a jealous God’’ (Deuteronomy 4:24)?

Yossi Feintuch: The love for God is contingent…

Our weekly Torah portion demands of us to ‘’love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your being and with all your might’’ (Deuteronomy 6:5). When we recall the highly dramatic narrative of the Binding of Isaac, it is quite apparent after a cursory reading of the text (Genesis 22) that Abraham loved his God even more than he loved Isaac…

Yossi Feintuch: After three strikes Aaron is out

In Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. words: ‘’…He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it’’. Or as in baseball, three strikeouts and you are out…

Yossi Feintuch: Korah’s inciteful claim that Israel is a holy people

What was so terribly wrong in Korah and his followers’ contention with his cousin Moses, that the Talmud singled out as a dispute that “is not for the sake of Heaven”? Contrarily, the Talmud defined the dispute between Hillel and Shammai as positive, the kind of which was for the sake of Heaven

Yossi Feintuch: On No! and Yes! leaders

Why did Moses send twelve scouts, or 12 tribal leaders, to tour the Promised Land before entering it?  Twelve is too large a number of folks who go on an espionage mission and must, therefore, stay covert. 

Yossi Feintuch: Trom Yom Ha-shoah to Yom Ha’Atzmaut

When the Torah portion of Sh’mini was timed a  l o n g time ago in Babylon to fall soon after Passover no one could anticipate that many centuries later it would fall in very close proximity to the State of Israel’s day of commemorating the Holocaust (Yom Ha-Shoah) on 27 Nissan…