Absolutely brilliant! Thank you for your incredible teaching, dear Rabbi Richman. The key phrase: "Open your heart deeper than ever before" is a true jem! May you and your loved once be blessed by Hashem. 🙏❤️✡️
I look forward every Friday morning here in Florida soon California to hear your heart on the Torah Portion of the Bible Shabbat Shalom may ABBA Bless you and keep you make His Face shine upon you and be gracious unto you and give you Shalom 🛐🕊♥️
Thank you Rabbi Chaim Richman for this beautiful teaching that you've shared with us. May your daughter's neshama make aliyah by the merit of this incredible learning. May the Almighty comfort you and your family, and all who mourn.
I'm sorry to hear of your loss Rabbi. My you have received the comfort you have spent these many years blessing others with each week. My heart does open deeper each Shabbat because of teachers such as you and my Temples Rabbi. Thank you
Thank you Rabbi. This is one of the most important teachings ever, the importance of prayer and the proper way is akin to a father and son relationship. Shabbat Shalom Abijah Ben Arronson.
SHABBAT SHALOM! Thank you very much for your faithful teaching of Abba's Word. I recently found Your Channel, subscribed and all that. I'm about 5 years deep in Discovering TORAH and The Permanent Validity! The Teaching is enabling clarity and Focus on Messiah! Thank You! ❤
TODA RABA K'VOD haRAV FOR THIS BEAUTIFUL, MEANINGFUL TEACHING, MAY HASHEM FORGIVE,BLESS AND PROTECT ALL OF US,AND MAY HE LISTEN TO ALL OUR PRAYERS,ESPECIALLY, IN THIS VERY HARD TIMES,MAY WE ALL FIND DERECH HASHEM, MAKE TESHUVA, AND BRING MASHIACH VERY SOON AMEN ve AMEN!!!MAY HASHEM BLESS AND PROTECT YOU, ALL JERUSALEM LIGHTS,AND ALL YOUR LOVED ONES ALWAYS AMEN ve AMEN!!!AND MAY THE MEMORY OF YOUR DOUGHTER BE BLESSED FOR EVER AMEN ve AMEN ISHTABACH SHEMO laADDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!💕✡️🕎💕
Ur words penetrated so deeply as i felt the pain u must be going through and yet allow us to uplifts ourselves through ur teachings . May hashem console all of us and soon rejoice in the holy temple Shabby shalom
"From there you shall seek Hashem your God and you will find Him, but you must search for Him with all your heart and all your soul" (Deuteronomy 4:29). The Kotzker Rebbe taught that even after you have found Hashem, you must continue to seek Him wholeheartedly. This is because He is infinite, and you may think that you have discovered Him, but there is always so much more.
Consider looking at the hebrew letters of "Adom"(man) and "Mit Palelel"(Hebrew word for prayer) the word for prayer is found in Adom Hashem telling us our life force us prayer our soul duty is prayer. SHABBAT SHALOM! LOVE YOUR CONTENT Rabbi 😊👏 Blessings upon you and your family
Meet-Pah-Lel (prayer in English) - writing “adom” (ALEF,lamed,pey - DALET,lamed,tav - MEM,mem) read it backwards and you get “mit-pah-lel” (prayer) and in that word is in the heart of man.
May I share something with you that verses from this parsha always remind me of from 5 years ago? I was born into an evangelical Christian family. My father was a missionary with what in the 1950s was called The Barbican Mission th the Jews (it is now called Christian Witness to Israel) and he worked in Algeria, Tunisia and Libya. He had a great love for Jews, but his perspective was typically Christian. Several of his Jewish friends reinforced this by referring to themselves as "completed" Jews - what today would be called Messianic Jews. I was brought up to love the Jews and was always taught that the Jews had a much deeper understanding of the scriptures. The message I took from this was that Jews knew best. I studied Biblical Studies at Sheffield University and Theology at Oxford University before being ordained in the Church of England where I served for 27 years as a priest. From 1999 for the last 10 years of my ministry I was increasingly feeling drawn to Judaism, I spent the summer in Israel in 2007 helping out on the City of David excavations doing "grunt" work. I fell in love with Israel. The years 2007-2009 were a real struggle for me as I found more and more of my Christian faith becoming unsatisfying, questionable or just plain wrong. In 2009 I resigned from the Church because I could no longer be a priest with integrity. I continued to read widely, to study and to ask questions, in the end I felt I had no alternative but to begin the 2 year process of conversion. I studied with a lovely (and very patient) rabbi and finally sat before the Beit Din, my Bris followed a week later. My father had died in 1985, but I still had to speak to my mother (in her 90s) about what had happened. I expected tears, arguments and the rest, but all she did was smile and ask me why I had done it. I assumed she meant why had I become a Jew, so I started to explain but she waved me to be quiet and went on to explain that her grandparents were both Jews, their name had been Fuchs but when they fled Austria-Hungary in the 1870s they changed their name to Fox as it sounded more English. My grandma was one of 3 children and, while she went her own way and became very secular, even marrying a Christian, she was of course Jewish, which meant that while there had never been as much as a whisper of it, my mum was also Jewish ... she looked at me and smiled and said, so you were already Jewish. She showed me the verses from this week's parsha in her Bible (Deut 4:25-31) and said, "see He did it after all these years: you sought Him with all your heart and He remembered His covenant with your ancestors and brought you home." I've never looked back, I'm so proud to be a Jew and so humbled, every time I open my siddur I'm filled with joy, yet tears run down my face.
Your Jewish neshama thirsted for hearing Torah. It had to get back with its people. Baruch Hashem. May you and your family each be inscribed in the Book of Life for a good and sweet year, filled with an abundance of blessings!
Rabbi, thank you for this beautiful lesson. Could your team add a thanks button to your videos to make it easier to make a small donation directly through RUclips?
May the memory of your daughter be a blessing. And thanks for the teaching
Absolutely brilliant!
Thank you for your incredible teaching, dear Rabbi Richman.
The key phrase: "Open your heart deeper than ever before" is a true jem!
May you and your loved once be blessed by Hashem. 🙏❤️✡️
My deepest condolences to you and your family. May HaShem be close to the brokenhearted. Thank you for a beautiful teaching. 💙🤍
I look forward every Friday morning here in Florida soon California to hear your heart on the Torah Portion of the Bible Shabbat Shalom may ABBA Bless you and keep you make His Face shine upon you and be gracious unto you and give you Shalom 🛐🕊♥️
Baruch HaShem! Toda rabah Rabbi! Shabbat Shalom!
So sorry for your loss rabbi
Thank you Rabbi Chaim Richman for this beautiful teaching that you've shared with us.
May your daughter's neshama make aliyah by the merit of this incredible learning.
May the Almighty comfort you and your family, and all who mourn.
Thankyou so very much for these wonderful words. May Hashem bless and comfort you always. Shabbat Shalom.
I'm sorry to hear of your loss Rabbi. My you have received the comfort you have spent these many years blessing others with each week. My heart does open deeper each Shabbat because of teachers such as you and my Temples Rabbi. Thank you
May HaShem abundantly comfort your family during this time ♥️
Thank you
So inspiring! Thank you. Shabbat Shalom! ❤
Thanks Rabbi. It’s a beautiful message. Bless HaShem .
May Hashem comfort us all, even in the darkest hour. Shalom. Thank you for the comfort you have given me through this videos
Amen! God bless Israel! Shalom!🙏💥👑
Thank you Rabbi! Shabbat Shalom! ❤
Shabbat Shalom. May Hashem console all Klal Israel.!
Amen.
Since 2005 I have followed your torah portion teachings. Rabbi, Abba's blessings upon you, pressed down, shaken together and flowing over. Amen
Thank you Rabbi Chaim for this Torah portion. Have a blessed week
BH💝 so very very very much for you dear Rabbi this was deeply powerful in me.
Sorry for your loss, Dear Rabbi.
Same here in Abuja Nigeria I am so happy to have been following you dear rabbi for 4 years now listening to you every week, delights my heart
Thank you Rabbi. This is one of the most important teachings ever, the importance of prayer and the proper way is akin to a father and son relationship.
Shabbat Shalom
Abijah Ben Arronson.
Thank you Rabbi 👏🏻🙏💜🇬🇧🇮🇱🪷🦋
SHABBAT SHALOM!
Thank you very much for your faithful teaching of Abba's Word.
I recently found Your Channel, subscribed and all that.
I'm about 5 years deep in Discovering TORAH and The Permanent Validity!
The Teaching is enabling clarity and Focus on Messiah!
Thank You!
❤
TODA RABA K'VOD haRAV FOR THIS BEAUTIFUL, MEANINGFUL TEACHING, MAY HASHEM FORGIVE,BLESS AND PROTECT ALL OF US,AND MAY HE LISTEN TO ALL OUR PRAYERS,ESPECIALLY, IN THIS VERY HARD TIMES,MAY WE ALL FIND DERECH HASHEM, MAKE TESHUVA, AND BRING MASHIACH VERY SOON AMEN ve AMEN!!!MAY HASHEM BLESS AND PROTECT YOU, ALL JERUSALEM LIGHTS,AND ALL YOUR LOVED ONES ALWAYS AMEN ve AMEN!!!AND MAY THE MEMORY OF YOUR DOUGHTER BE BLESSED FOR EVER AMEN ve AMEN ISHTABACH SHEMO laADDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!💕✡️🕎💕
(sabbath) shalom eleichem. fam. Jews.
Ur words penetrated so deeply as i felt the pain u must be going through and yet allow us to uplifts ourselves through ur teachings . May hashem console all of us and soon rejoice in the holy temple
Shabby shalom
"From there you shall seek Hashem your God and you will find Him, but you must search for Him with all your heart and all your soul" (Deuteronomy 4:29).
The Kotzker Rebbe taught that even after you have found Hashem, you must continue to seek Him wholeheartedly. This is because He is infinite, and you may think that you have discovered Him, but there is always so much more.
Consider looking at the hebrew letters of "Adom"(man) and "Mit Palelel"(Hebrew word for prayer) the word for prayer is found in Adom Hashem telling us our life force us prayer our soul duty is prayer. SHABBAT SHALOM! LOVE YOUR CONTENT Rabbi 😊👏 Blessings upon you and your family
Meet-Pah-Lel (prayer in English) - writing “adom” (ALEF,lamed,pey - DALET,lamed,tav - MEM,mem) read it backwards and you get “mit-pah-lel” (prayer) and in that word is in the heart of man.
❤
May I share something with you that verses from this parsha always remind me of from 5 years ago?
I was born into an evangelical Christian family. My father was a missionary with what in the 1950s was called The Barbican Mission th the Jews (it is now called Christian Witness to Israel) and he worked in Algeria, Tunisia and Libya. He had a great love for Jews, but his perspective was typically Christian. Several of his Jewish friends reinforced this by referring to themselves as "completed" Jews - what today would be called Messianic Jews. I was brought up to love the Jews and was always taught that the Jews had a much deeper understanding of the scriptures. The message I took from this was that Jews knew best. I studied Biblical Studies at Sheffield University and Theology at Oxford University before being ordained in the Church of England where I served for 27 years as a priest. From 1999 for the last 10 years of my ministry I was increasingly feeling drawn to Judaism, I spent the summer in Israel in 2007 helping out on the City of David excavations doing "grunt" work. I fell in love with Israel. The years 2007-2009 were a real struggle for me as I found more and more of my Christian faith becoming unsatisfying, questionable or just plain wrong. In 2009 I resigned from the Church because I could no longer be a priest with integrity. I continued to read widely, to study and to ask questions, in the end I felt I had no alternative but to begin the 2 year process of conversion. I studied with a lovely (and very patient) rabbi and finally sat before the Beit Din, my Bris followed a week later. My father had died in 1985, but I still had to speak to my mother (in her 90s) about what had happened. I expected tears, arguments and the rest, but all she did was smile and ask me why I had done it. I assumed she meant why had I become a Jew, so I started to explain but she waved me to be quiet and went on to explain that her grandparents were both Jews, their name had been Fuchs but when they fled Austria-Hungary in the 1870s they changed their name to Fox as it sounded more English. My grandma was one of 3 children and, while she went her own way and became very secular, even marrying a Christian, she was of course Jewish, which meant that while there had never been as much as a whisper of it, my mum was also Jewish ... she looked at me and smiled and said, so you were already Jewish. She showed me the verses from this week's parsha in her Bible (Deut 4:25-31) and said, "see He did it after all these years: you sought Him with all your heart and He remembered His covenant with your ancestors and brought you home." I've never looked back, I'm so proud to be a Jew and so humbled, every time I open my siddur I'm filled with joy, yet tears run down my face.
What a beautiful life story! Thank you for that! Baruch Hashem ❤
What a beautiful story, Thanks for sharing it with us 🙌🏻⚡️
@@robc938 welcome back home.!!!
Hashem is bringing us back home! Thank you for sharing your story!
Your Jewish neshama thirsted for hearing Torah. It had to get back with its people. Baruch Hashem.
May you and your family each be inscribed in the Book of Life for a good and sweet year, filled with an abundance of blessings!
Rabbi, thank you for this beautiful lesson. Could your team add a thanks button to your videos to make it easier to make a small donation directly through RUclips?
What's the name of the book that you quote in min 6.30?
Revealing the Hidden -Megaleh Amukot