West Deal Torah Center

Rabbi Moses Hidary – Shaar Habitachon Perek 4(j) | Monday Night Class

36 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Rabbi Moses Hidary – Shaar Habitachon Perek 4(j) | Monday Night Class

Descripción

Rabbi Moses Hidary hosts classes every Monday at 8:15 PM at West Deal Shul. In this class, Rabbi Hidary continues learning Shaar HaBitachon Chapter 4, focusing on how to maintain proper bitachon when dealing with people who are socially above or below you. Using the mashal of a farmer planting seeds, the Chovos HaLevavos teaches that just as a farmer uses the ground as a conduit but thanks Hashem for the produce, so too when we ask someone for a favor, that person is merely a conduit and our true reliance must be on Hashem alone. Rabbi Hidary explores both sides of the equation: when someone succeeds in helping you, you thank both Hashem and the person, since Hashem typically brings good things through good people; and when someone fails to come through, you must not blame them but rather thank Hashem, trusting that this outcome was divinely intended for that moment. The class also addresses the flip side — when you are the one asked to do a favor, you should give sincere effort, thank Hashem if you succeed, and not torment yourself if you fall short after genuinely trying. These principles are shown to apply across all relationships, including business partnerships, employees, and even family members at home. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (0:00) Intro: Bitachon with Friends (2:21) Person as Conduit: The Farmer Mashal (5:45) Finding the Right Person (Hishtadlut) (8:00) Bitachon When Choosing a Doctor (9:19) Thank Hashem When Things Work Out (13:30) Don't Blame Others When They Fail You (16:07) Can You Blame Yourself for Poor Hishtadlut? (20:07) Thanking Someone Who Tried but Failed (21:37) Bitachon vs. Business Accountability (26:54) Applying This to Family and Kids (31:30) When Someone Asks YOU for a Favor (33:19) Don't Be Hard on Yourself If You Fall Short (35:07) Summary and Closing Thoughts - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Visit: westdealshul.org Sponsorships: west.deal.classes@gmail.com

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217 episodios

episode Rabbi Joseph Dana – Halacha from Berachot 22b | Weekday Gemara artwork

Rabbi Joseph Dana – Halacha from Berachot 22b | Weekday Gemara

Rabbi Joseph Dana hosts classes every day at 6:50 AM at West Deal Shul. The class picks up from the previous session's discussion of Ba'al Keri — the laws governing one who has had a seminal emission — and the question of whether immersion in a mikveh is required before prayer and Torah study. Rashi explains that when the Gemara says 'Hilcheta,' it is referring only to those who still observe the stringency, while the practical ruling follows Yehuda ben Betera, who holds that Torah cannot become impure and therefore no immersion is required at all. Tosafot is then analyzed, with the Ri ruling that there is no distinction between Torah learning and prayer — neither requires immersion. The Rambam is brought to show the historical progression of the decree: originally instituted by Ezra for Torah study, later extended to prayer by a subsequent Beit Din, and ultimately repealed because it never spread to the entire Jewish people. The class closes by raising a pointed question about the Shulchan Aruch: why does Maran cite only the Rambam's reason for the decree — discouraging overly frequent relations among scholars — while omitting the Tur's reason, that Torah must be approached with seriousness and gravity rather than lightheadedness? - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (0:00) Recap: Ba'al Keri & Mikveh rules (1:19) Rashi resolves the Hilcheta issue (4:22) Tosafot on Ba'al Keri ruling (6:58) Debate: Torah vs. Tefillah immersion (9:16) Rambam: Hilchot Tefillah (12:10) Why the decree was repealed (15:40) Sephardic custom re: Ba'al Keri (17:03) Shulchan Aruch & Mishnah Berurah (22:48) Two reasons for the Ba'al Keri decree (24:05) Why Maran quotes only Rambam's reason - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Visit: westdealshul.org Sponsorships: west.deal.classes@gmail.com

Ayer25 min
episode Rabbi Ike Hanon – Pesahim 46b | Weekday Gemara artwork

Rabbi Ike Hanon – Pesahim 46b | Weekday Gemara

Rabbi Ike Hanon hosts classes every morning at 6:10 AM at West Deal Shul. The class covers Pesachim 46b, focusing on the dispute between Rabbi Eliezer and Rabbi Yehoshua regarding chalah dough that may become chametz on Pesach. The Gemara reframes their argument around the concept of ho'il — meaning 'since' — which holds that because a person could theoretically undo a designation through hatarat nedarim, the item is still considered his, obligating him to prevent it from becoming chametz. The class then transitions to a major sugya about cooking on Yom Tov for a weekday, where Rav Chisda and Rabba dispute whether doing so violates a Torah prohibition or merely a rabbinic one, with ho'il again at the center of the debate. Eruv tavshilin is examined as a rabbinic mechanism that permits cooking on Yom Tov for Shabbat, with two classic reasons offered — serving as a reminder and ensuring food availability for Shabbat. The class concludes with the case of slaughtering a sick animal on Yom Tov, where Rav Chisda and Rabba debate whether the permission is rooted in ho'il or in the principle of financial loss. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (0:00) Intro: Eliezer vs. Yehoshua (1:25) Ho'il explained (2:00) She'elah on Chalah (4:32) Practical Chalah case (5:27) Cooking on Yom Tov for weekday (6:50) Rabba's ho'il loophole (8:52) Eruv Tavshilin challenged (11:05) Two reasons for Eruv Tavshilin (13:46) Recap of three challenges (14:38) Sick animal on Yom Tov (17:26) Rabba vs. Rav Chisda: animal case - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Visit: westdealshul.org Sponsorships: west.deal.classes@gmail.com

Ayer18 min
episode Rabbi Moses Hidary – Shaar Habitachon Perek 4(j) | Monday Night Class artwork

Rabbi Moses Hidary – Shaar Habitachon Perek 4(j) | Monday Night Class

Rabbi Moses Hidary hosts classes every Monday at 8:15 PM at West Deal Shul. In this class, Rabbi Hidary continues learning Shaar HaBitachon Chapter 4, focusing on how to maintain proper bitachon when dealing with people who are socially above or below you. Using the mashal of a farmer planting seeds, the Chovos HaLevavos teaches that just as a farmer uses the ground as a conduit but thanks Hashem for the produce, so too when we ask someone for a favor, that person is merely a conduit and our true reliance must be on Hashem alone. Rabbi Hidary explores both sides of the equation: when someone succeeds in helping you, you thank both Hashem and the person, since Hashem typically brings good things through good people; and when someone fails to come through, you must not blame them but rather thank Hashem, trusting that this outcome was divinely intended for that moment. The class also addresses the flip side — when you are the one asked to do a favor, you should give sincere effort, thank Hashem if you succeed, and not torment yourself if you fall short after genuinely trying. These principles are shown to apply across all relationships, including business partnerships, employees, and even family members at home. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (0:00) Intro: Bitachon with Friends (2:21) Person as Conduit: The Farmer Mashal (5:45) Finding the Right Person (Hishtadlut) (8:00) Bitachon When Choosing a Doctor (9:19) Thank Hashem When Things Work Out (13:30) Don't Blame Others When They Fail You (16:07) Can You Blame Yourself for Poor Hishtadlut? (20:07) Thanking Someone Who Tried but Failed (21:37) Bitachon vs. Business Accountability (26:54) Applying This to Family and Kids (31:30) When Someone Asks YOU for a Favor (33:19) Don't Be Hard on Yourself If You Fall Short (35:07) Summary and Closing Thoughts - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Visit: westdealshul.org Sponsorships: west.deal.classes@gmail.com

Ayer36 min
episode Rabbi Abraham Hayoun – Tisha B'Av & the Sin of the Meragilim | Rosh Hodesh Av artwork

Rabbi Abraham Hayoun – Tisha B'Av & the Sin of the Meragilim | Rosh Hodesh Av

Rabbi Abraham Hayoun hosts classes every Monday at West Deal Shul. Rabbi Hayoun opens the class on the eve of Rosh Chodesh Av, framing the month as a call from our Heavenly Father that demands our attention and response. He explores the root cause of Tisha B'Av through the sin of the Meragilim, explaining that the spies did not lie but rather adopted a destructive mindset — declaring "they are stronger than us" and projecting their own feelings of worthlessness onto others, creating a self-fulfilling prophecy of failure. The Gemara in Maseches Taanis is cited to show how Hashem responded to the Jews' baseless crying by establishing Tisha B'Av as a day of genuine mourning for generations, and how this same principle works in reverse — gratitude without an obvious reason invites Hashem to provide abundant reasons for gratitude. Rabbi Hayoun illustrates this through the remarkable story of Ya'ir, a simple mover who repeatedly held Seudas Hodaya celebrations even as his troubles multiplied, ultimately meriting miraculous salvations and the marriage of all three daughters. The class concludes with a personal account from Rabbi Hayoun's own accident and a call to recognize the power of words — both destructive speech that created Tisha B'Av and positive, thankful speech that can transform one's entire reality. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Visit: westdealshul.org Sponsorships: west.deal.classes@gmail.com

Ayer42 min
episode Rabbi Joseph Dana – Berachot 22a | Weekday Gemara artwork

Rabbi Joseph Dana – Berachot 22a | Weekday Gemara

Rabbi Joseph Dana hosts classes every day at 6:50 AM at West Deal Shul. This class covers Berachot 22a and focuses on the laws of tevila (immersion) for a baal keri — one who experienced a seminal emission. The class opens with Rav Huna challenging the rabbis for being lenient and following Yehuda ben Betera's opinion, leading into a debate about whether immersion in hot water is valid. A key story involving Rav Zeira in a bathhouse introduces the question of whether a keli (vessel) is required for the pouring of nine kabin of water, with practical implications for whether a modern shower suffices according to Rav Wozner versus Rav Elyashiv. The sugyah then traces the layered development of the law, beginning with Ezra's original decree requiring a full 40 se'ah mikveh for a healthy person after relations, followed by rabbinic extensions to cover cases of a choleh (sick person) and involuntary emissions. The class concludes with Rava's final ruling that breaks the cases into four categories — healthy and willing, healthy and involuntary, sick and willing, sick and involuntary — each with a different level of obligation, setting up tomorrow's class on how we rule in practice today. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (0:00) Introduction to Sugyah (1:13) Rav Huna's Challenge to Rabbis (3:30) Rav Chisda's Rebuttal: Hot Water (5:53) Rav Zeira in the Bathhouse (9:51) Tisha Kabin: Keli vs. Ground (12:39) Rav Nachman's Bucket for Students (13:11) Tradition: Choleh vs. Margil (15:14) Ravin's Tradition from Eretz Yisrael (17:32) Back to Basics: Ezra's Original Decree (19:24) Amoraim Apply Decree to Choleh (21:00) Gemara Reframes the Whole Sugya (24:36) Rava's Final Practical Ruling - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Visit: westdealshul.org Sponsorships: west.deal.classes@gmail.com

13 de jul de 202626 min