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    tumah

    Explore " tumah" with insightful episodes like "What Else Is Meaningful About Tzitzit and Kashrut? (Season Finale)", "What’s Meaningful About Not Eating Bacon?", "Positive #59 - For a Kohen to Attend a Relative's Funeral" and "What do Kingdom people look like?" from podcasts like ""Meaningful Judaism", "Meaningful Judaism", "Adam's Torah" and "Ascend Global"" and more!

    Episodes (4)

    What Else Is Meaningful About Tzitzit and Kashrut? (Season Finale)

    What Else Is Meaningful About Tzitzit and Kashrut? (Season Finale)

    Season 1 of Meaningful Judaism is ending, but before we go, we just have to share some extra Torah that didn’t make it into earlier episodes. There’s the beautiful idea about angels that got cut from our episode on tzitzit – but we’ve found some amazing new evidence, so we’re bringing it back! And then there’s the problem of fish and birds. They got left out of the episode on kosher animals, so how do they fit into our theory of why some animals are kosher and not others? Join Imu Shalev and Beth Lesch as they reveal the answers to these questions, reflect on the reactions to our first season, and look ahead to Season 2.

    Have feedback for us? Want to suggest topics for Season 2? Let us know: info@alephbeta.org

    Meaningful Judaism is a project of Aleph Beta Labs. Aleph Beta is a Torah media company dedicated to spreading the joy and love of meaningful Torah learning worldwide. For our full library of over 1,000 videos and podcasts, please visit www.alephbeta.org.

    To support this podcast, subscribe to Aleph Beta.

    What’s Meaningful About Not Eating Bacon?

    What’s Meaningful About Not Eating Bacon?

    It’s one of the most famous of the Torah's laws: no eating bacon! But is there any particular reason for this restriction? Why does God permit us to eat cow but forbid pig? In this episode, Imu Shalev and Beth Lesch look for clues in the Torah’s language and zoom in on something that’s easy to miss: The Torah never actually says "Pigs aren't kosher." Actually, the word “kosher” doesn't appear at all in the Chumash (the Five Books of Moses). The Torah uses an entirely different word to describe those animals which we are permitted to eat, a mysterious word that most people wouldn't associate with the topic of kashrut at all. Could it be a clue to the deeper meaning behind why the Torah allows us to eat certain animals and not others?

    Meaningful Judaism is a project of Aleph Beta Labs. Aleph Beta is a Torah media company dedicated to spreading the joy and love of meaningful Torah learning worldwide. For our full library of over 1,000 videos and podcasts, please visit www.alephbeta.org.

    To support this podcast, subscribe to Aleph Beta.

    What do Kingdom people look like?

    What do Kingdom people look like?
    A study of the Beatitudes - Jesus first sermon. A popular new Rabbi, he presents a yoke that is easy, and a burden that is light; He emphases heart attitudes over keeping all the laws. There are a lot of people at the end of the day, who think they're in, but they're actually out. Tzedak (Righteousness) always produces Tzedakah (Generosity, or righteousness-revealed). Jeremiah 22:16 "He took care of the poor and the afflicted, so it is well with him. Is this not what it means to know Me, declares the Lord, your God". The happiest people set their passions on meeting the needs of others.