Love Your Fellow As Yourself
ב״ה

 
This Week at Chabad of Pacific Palisades
Candle Lighting
Candle Lighting Times for
Pacific Palisades:
Friday, May 9
7:27 pm
Torah Portion: Acharei-Kedoshim
 

Chabad of Pacific PalisadesEmail: [email protected]Phone: 310-454-7783www.ChabadPalisades.com

 
 
Rabbi's Message
Message from the Rabbi
 
 

Dear Friends,

In the weekly double Torah reading, we are given one of the most revolutionary calls in the Torah, “ואהבת לרעך כמוך” - “Love your fellow as yourself.”  

Rabbi Akiva said, This is the great principle of the Torah.

But how can we love someone who hurt us, disappointed us, or is simply so different from us?

The Alter Rebbe, in Tanya (chapter 32), explains, if you focus only on the external, the body, the ego, the flaws, you’ll always see separation. But if you look deeper, to the soul, you’ll see that we are all truly one. Your friend’s soul and your soul are two rays from the same Divine sun. Loving the other is loving the spark of G-d inside them, even if the outer layers seem broken.

A true story:

In the early years after the Holocaust, the Bobover Rebbe, Rabbi Shlomo Halberstam, was rebuilding his shattered community in America. One day, a young man came to him, filled with anger, bitterness, and defiance, he had lost his entire family and wanted nothing to do with Judaism. 

Instead of rebuking him, the Rebbe embraced him tightly and whispered, “You are my brother, your pain is my pain.”

The young man broke down crying, not because of arguments, but because of love. 

This is our mission as Jews, to live with kedusha, holiness, by seeing each soul’s Divine essence and choosing love even when it’s hard.

Good Shabbos,
Rabbi Zushe Cunin

 
 
 
Service Times
Shabbat Schedule

Friday, May 9
Evening Services 7:00 PM

Shabbat, May 10
Torah class 9:00 AM
Shabbat Morning Services 9:30AM
Followed by Kiddush & Refreshments

Minyan Notice – Chabad Castellammare
Services will take place at Chabad Castellammare.We would be truly grateful for your help in making the minyan. Your presence would mean a great deal to our community.

If you have any questions, please text Rebbetzin Zisi at (310) 628-4446. Thank you in advance for your support!

 

 
 
 
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Parshah
Parshah in a Nutshell

Parshat Acharei-Kedoshim

The name of the Parshah, “Acharei Mot,” means “after the death of” and it is found in Leviticus 16:1. The name of the Parshah, “Kedoshim,” means “holy [ones]” and it is found in Leviticus 19:2.

Following the deaths of Nadav and Avihu, G‑d warns against unauthorized entry “into the holy.” Only one person, the kohen gadol (“high priest”), may, but once a year, on Yom Kippur, enter the innermost chamber in the Sanctuary to offer the sacred ketoret to G‑d.

Another feature of the Day of Atonement service is the casting of lots over two goats, to determine which should be offered to G‑d and which should be dispatched to carry off the sins of Israel to the wilderness.

The Parshah of Acharei also warns against bringing korbanot (animal or meal offerings) anywhere but in the Holy Temple, forbids the consumption of blood, and details the laws prohibiting incest and other deviant sexual relations.

The Parshah of Kedoshim begins with the statement: “You shall be holy, for I, the L‑rd your G‑d, am holy.” This is followed by dozens of mitzvot (divine commandments) through which the Jew sanctifies him- or herself and relates to the holiness of G‑d.

These include: the prohibition against idolatry, the mitzvah of charity, the principle of equality before the law, Shabbat, sexual morality, honesty in business, honor and awe of one’s parents, and the sacredness of life.

Also in Kedoshim is the dictum which the great sage Rabbi Akiva called a cardinal principle of Torah, and of which Hillel said, This is the entire Torah, the rest is commentary—“ Love your fellow as yourself.”

Learn: Acharei-Kedoshim in Depth
Browse: Acharei-Kedoshim Parshah Columnists
Prep: Devar Torah Q&A for Acharei-Kedoshim
Read: Haftarah in a Nutshell
Play: Acharei-Kedoshim Parshah Quiz

 

 
 
 
Today's Quote
Today's Quote
Why [are mourners fed] lentils? Just as the lentil has no mouth, so is the mourner speechless...Just as the lentil is round, so mourning comes round to all the inhabitants of this world
— Talmud, Bava Batra 16b

 
 
Chabad World News
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