Yom HaAtzmaut: Living the Miracle with Rav Shlomo Katz

6. Would You Change A Word Of Rav Kook's 1907 Invite for Jews to Come Home Today?

50 min · 16 de oct de 2025
Portada del episodio 6. Would You Change A Word Of Rav Kook's 1907 Invite for Jews to Come Home Today?

Descripción

n this riveting shiur, Rav Shlomo Katz opens one of Rav Kook’s earliest and most passionate writings — his 1907 Kol Koreh (“Call to Come Home” from Jaffa) — and asks: Would anything need to be changed if we sent this same invitation today? Rav Shlomo reads through Rav Kook’s thunderous proclamation, line by line, together with his students: “Come to Eretz Yisrael, pleasant brothers and sisters… save your souls and the souls of your generations.” What begins as a century-old letter unfolds into a mirror for our own times — where love for Jews outside Israel, fear of sounding “pushy,” and the deep longing for home all meet. Through laughter, honesty, and tears, Rav Shlomo explores how Rav Kook’s words cut through excuses, politics, and guilt, offering not condemnation but chesed: a love that believes in Klal Yisrael’s destiny to return home and remove the zuhama — the spiritual fog — left by the meraglim. You’ll hear about: * Rav Kook’s 1907 call: “Come to Eretz Yisrael, run for your souls.” * Why speaking about Aliyah requires deep love, not judgment. * The connection between the meraglim and our modern fear of belonging. * What it means to “remove the contamination” of doubt and reclaim holy longing. * How to read Rav Kook’s words today without changing a single one.

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8 episodios

episode 7. The Avoda of Yom HaAtzmaut artwork

7. The Avoda of Yom HaAtzmaut

What’s the avodah of Yom Ha’atzmaut? Beyond the flags and barbecues, Rav Shlomo Katz opens Tehillim 107—“Hodu laHashem ki tov, ki le’olam chasdo”—to uncover the inner work of the day: cultivating awareness of the miracles we’re living through right now. Drawing parallels between Yetziat Mitzrayim and the modern return to Eretz Yisrael, Rav Shlomo explains that just as we retell the Exodus every year, we must also learn, teach, and feel the miracle of 1948 and everything that’s unfolded since. This isn’t only about gratitude. It’s about recognition. With heartfelt stories, laughter, and prayer, he invites us to step into Tehillim’s words—“ומארצות קבצם ממזרח וממערב מצפון ומים”—and realize: David HaMelech was writing about us.

16 de oct de 202511 min
episode 6. Would You Change A Word Of Rav Kook's 1907 Invite for Jews to Come Home Today? artwork

6. Would You Change A Word Of Rav Kook's 1907 Invite for Jews to Come Home Today?

n this riveting shiur, Rav Shlomo Katz opens one of Rav Kook’s earliest and most passionate writings — his 1907 Kol Koreh (“Call to Come Home” from Jaffa) — and asks: Would anything need to be changed if we sent this same invitation today? Rav Shlomo reads through Rav Kook’s thunderous proclamation, line by line, together with his students: “Come to Eretz Yisrael, pleasant brothers and sisters… save your souls and the souls of your generations.” What begins as a century-old letter unfolds into a mirror for our own times — where love for Jews outside Israel, fear of sounding “pushy,” and the deep longing for home all meet. Through laughter, honesty, and tears, Rav Shlomo explores how Rav Kook’s words cut through excuses, politics, and guilt, offering not condemnation but chesed: a love that believes in Klal Yisrael’s destiny to return home and remove the zuhama — the spiritual fog — left by the meraglim. You’ll hear about: * Rav Kook’s 1907 call: “Come to Eretz Yisrael, run for your souls.” * Why speaking about Aliyah requires deep love, not judgment. * The connection between the meraglim and our modern fear of belonging. * What it means to “remove the contamination” of doubt and reclaim holy longing. * How to read Rav Kook’s words today without changing a single one.

16 de oct de 202550 min
episode 5. Time To Return To Abba's Shabbos Table artwork

5. Time To Return To Abba's Shabbos Table

Rav Shlomo Katz opens Tehillim’s promise—“Atah takum, terachem Tzion… ki va mo’ed”—and asks: when does the time of geulah actually arrive? Drawing on the Kuzari and the Or HaChaim, he answers with a heart-level call: redemption awakens when we yearn—takh’lit hakisuf—and when we cherish every stone and speck of dust of Eretz Yisrael. This shiur reframes Yom HaAtzmaut’s miracle not as a date on a calendar, but as a lived return to our Father’s Shabbos table—home, belonging, and song.  Rav Shlomo urges us to replace judgment with love, guilt with longing, and to daven to actually feel the land’s holiness. You’ll hear about: * Why “the time has come” depends on our longing (ki ratzu avadecha et avaneha). * The Or HaChaim’s simple litmus test for geulah: waking hearts. * How to invite others home without guilt—only kisufin. * Turning weekly Shabbos into a national return.

16 de oct de 202513 min
episode 4. Eretz Yisrael Needs Better PR | Rav Kook artwork

4. Eretz Yisrael Needs Better PR | Rav Kook

In this passionate and deeply relevant shiur, Rav Shlomo Katz confronts one of the most overlooked mitzvot of our generation — becoming loving, articulate spokespeople for the holiness of the Land of Israel. Amid the emotional weight of Yom HaShoah, Yom HaZikaron, and Yom HaAtzmaut, Rav Shlomo turns to Rav Kook’s writings to reveal that much of the world’s spiritual “exile” stems from our failure to speak about the beauty, wisdom, and kedusha of Eretz Yisrael. The tikkun for the sin of the meraglim, he explains, is not more politics or defense. It’s teshuvat hamishkal: learning to speak about the Land with awe, gratitude, and love. Through heartfelt discussion, Rav Shlomo challenges listeners to see the holiness of daily life here — not by putting down chutz la’aretz, but by raising our awareness of the sacred ground beneath us. True connection, he says, requires prayer: to feel the Land’s holiness, not just live on it.

16 de oct de 202554 min