Shabbos Malkesa - Appreciate and Enjoy Shabbos

Ep. 89 – All Wisdom Is from Hashem

24 min · 23 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Ep. 89 – All Wisdom Is from Hashem

Descripción

Why does Judaism insist on so many physical mitzvos if holiness is “spiritual”? Rabbi Ari Klapper tackles a deep misconception: that body and soul are enemies, so the only path to kedushah is to escape the physical world. Torah disagrees. The episode explains that all forms of chochmah ultimately trace back to Hashem, and mitzvos were given specifically to guide the body until it becomes a כלי for kedushah. Not by starving the body or denying life, but by elevating it: eating with brachos, building holiness through action, and bringing Hashem into the ordinary. In that sense, the “wisdom” Judaism aims for isn’t abstract; it’s lived — through hands, mouth, time, money, and desire. And that’s where it becomes personal. If your spiritual life lives only in shul, but your temper, habits, and cravings live “down here,” you’ve split yourself in two, and you’ll feel the inner friction. Torah’s path is integration: transform the animal drive into a servant of Hashem. When you take something physical and do it with Hashem in mind, you’re pulling Shamayim into aretz and making space for the Shechinah. Practical takeaway: choose one routine physical act today (food, phone, work, conversation) and add a two-second intention: “I am serving Hashem with my body right now.” Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Real Judaism series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don’t forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our daily lessons and timeless Torah insights!

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96 episodios

Portada del episodio Ep. 95 – The Exact Same Moment

Ep. 95 – The Exact Same Moment

What if the deepest truth of Shabbos is that two things happen at once — and never separate? Rabbi Klapper brings a vivid mashal of a mirror. A painting receives an image and then later reflects it. But a mirror is different: in the very same instant that it receives, it gives. What you see in it is both the one reflected and the reflection itself, together, inseparably. That, he explains, is Shabbos. Shabbos receives from Hashem and gives to the world in the exact same moment. It is not first one thing and then the other. It is the point where the Shechinah enters and the world is blessed in one single movement. That is why Shabbos is doubled — zachor and shamor, chosson and kallah, Shabbos and Shechinah. Even “Bo’i Kallah” carries both meanings at once. We are greeting the day, and we are greeting the Divine Presence shining through the day. The practical takeaway is as direct as it gets: to deepen your Shabbos, keep one thought alive again and again — “It’s Shabbos. Hashem is here.” That remembrance is not a side detail. It is the mirror itself. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Real Judaism series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our daily lessons and timeless Torah insights!

Ayer22 min
Portada del episodio Ep. 94 – Giving and Receiving

Ep. 94 – Giving and Receiving

Can you really call yourself a giver if you’ve forgotten where your gifts came from? This episode cuts straight into a subtle spiritual danger: the illusion that because something now sits in your hands, it must have come from you. Rabbi Klapper uses the example of wealth, success, and human generosity to show how easily a person begins to see himself as the source. But Shabbos tells a different story. Shabbos is called the source of blessing, yet it never presents itself as independent. Why? Because Shabbos receives from Hashem and gives to the world at the very same moment. It is a pure channel, a holy pipeline, never confusing the flow with the Source. That is the challenge for us as well. To give without arrogance. To build, provide, and help while never forgetting that all shefa begins with Hashem. This does not weaken human action; it purifies it. The practical reflection is powerful: the next time you give something — money, time, encouragement, wisdom — pause before you do it and remember, “I am passing on what Hashem first placed in my hands.” That one moment can turn ego into humility and kindness into avodah. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Real Judaism series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our daily lessons and timeless Torah insights!

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Portada del episodio Ep. 93 – Your Essence: In Your Place

Ep. 93 – Your Essence: In Your Place

If your soul gives life to your body, why is the neshamah spoken of as a receiver? This episode begins with a strange paradox and then opens into a profound answer. Yes, the neshamah is what animates the body. Yes, it is the giver of life, awareness, and spiritual direction. But Rabbi Klapper explains that the true identity of something is defined not only by what it does, but by where it belongs. And the neshamah does not really belong here. Its home is above. Its source is under the Kisei HaKavod. Its being in this world is a mission, not a natural resting place. That changes everything. We are not bodies that happen to have a spiritual side; we are heavenly souls traveling through a physical world to accomplish something eternal. The world is not “home” in the deepest sense. It is the field of avodah, the place where mitzvos can be done, choices can be made, and closeness to Hashem can be earned. The practical takeaway is simple and steadying: when life feels too heavy, remember that not every discomfort means something is wrong. Sometimes it means your neshamah remembers where it truly belongs — and is trying to pull you upward. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Real Judaism series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our daily lessons and timeless Torah insights!

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Portada del episodio Ep. 92 – The Spiritual Aspects of Male and Female

Ep. 92 – The Spiritual Aspects of Male and Female

What if giving and receiving are not opposites, but two halves of one holy process? This episode explores one of the deepest structures built into creation: the Torah’s picture of zachar and nekeivah, not as a social slogan, but as a spiritual pattern. Rabbi Klapper traces how one side carries potential and flow, while the other receives, shapes, and brings that potential into lived form. A husband and wife, a father and mother, even the moon and the sun all become windows into this mystery. The one who receives is not passive. Receiving is itself a form of greatness, because it is what turns possibility into a home, a family, a future, a world. From there, the episode becomes intensely practical. Spiritual life is not built only through abstract ideals or individual inspiration. It is built through partnership, through knowing your place, through understanding what you are meant to draw down and what you are meant to bring forth. That is why Torah is not merely “learned”; it is housed, nurtured, and made real. The takeaway is to stop treating giving as the only strength that matters. Sometimes the deepest avodah is to become the kind of vessel that can truly receive what Hashem wants to send. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Real Judaism series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our daily lessons and timeless Torah insights!

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Portada del episodio Ep. 91 – From Potential to Reality

Ep. 91 – From Potential to Reality

Why does Shabbos, the holiest day of the week, need a partner at all? This episode opens with a surprising Midrash: every day of creation has its pair, its counterpart that takes hidden potential and brings it into lived reality. The first days prepare the world; the later days draw that preparation out into life, movement, and use. But Shabbos seems different. Shabbos is not just another layer of creation. It is the arrival of kedushah itself, the entrance of the Shechinah, the revelation of something far above the ordinary structure of the world. So what could possibly “complete” Shabbos? What could take something so lofty and make it real here below? Rabbi Klapper answers with a bold idea: Klal Yisrael are Shabbos’s partner. Shabbos brings the possibility of holiness, but the Jewish people are the ones who receive it, live it, and draw it into the world. That means Shabbos is never just a day that happens to us. It is a relationship, a calling, a task. The practical takeaway is both empowering and demanding: every time you bring calm, kedushah, and awareness into Shabbos, you are doing what only Klal Yisrael can do — turning holy potential into holy reality. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Real Judaism series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our daily lessons and timeless Torah insights!

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