Judges, Gateways, and the Power of Inner Discipline
ב״ה

 
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Torah Portion: Shoftim
 

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

 
 
Rabbi's Message
Message from the Rabbi
 
 

Dear Friends,

This week’s Torah portion, Shoftim (Judges), begins with the command: “Appoint judges and officers in all your gates.” The simple meaning refers to a judicial system, but Chassidic masters explain that the “gates” also symbolize the human senses, our eyes, ears, and mouth. Just as a city requires guards at its entrances, so too a Jew must guard what he allows into and out of his heart and mind.

The Lubavitcher Rebbe once emphasized that true freedom is not the absence of limits, but the mastery of self. A young man once asked the Rebbe how to overcome distractions that pulled him away from Torah study. The Rebbe answered: “You are not a slave to your impulses. Just as a king posts guards at his palace, you must post inner guards, habits, discipline, and awareness, that protect your mind from wandering where it doesn’t belong.”

This teaching reminds us that the Torah does not only call for judges in a courtroom, it calls for us to be judges within ourselves. To pause before speaking, to filter what we watch and listen to, and to guide our hearts toward holiness. When we guard our gates with awareness, we create an environment where our divine soul can flourish.

As we enter the month of Elul, the season of introspection and return, the message of Shoftim is deeply relevant. Each of us is empowered to be the “judge at our own gates,” shaping a life of
integrity, clarity, and closeness to G-d.

Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Zushe Cunin

 
 
 
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Friday, Aug 29
Kabbalat Shabbat 7:30 PM

Shabbat, Aug 30
Shachrit 10:00 AM
Followed by Kiddush Lunch
Shabbat Ends 8:34 PM

Sunday, Aug 31
Shachris 8:30 AM

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Please text Rebbetzin Zisi at (310) 628-4446 with any questions.

 

 
 
 
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Parshah
Parshah in a Nutshell

Parshat Shoftim

The name of the Parshah, "Shoftim," means "Judges" and it is found in Deuteronomy 16:18.

Moses instructs the people of Israel to appoint judges and law enforcement officers in every city. “Justice, justice shall you pursue,” he commands them, and you must administer it without corruption or favoritism. Crimes must be meticulously investigated and evidence thoroughly examined—a minimum of two credible witnesses is required for conviction and punishment.

In every generation, says Moses, there will be those entrusted with the task of interpreting and applying the laws of the Torah. “According to the law that they will teach you, and the judgment they will instruct you, you shall do; you shall not turn away from the thing that they say to you, to the right nor to the left.”

Shoftim also includes the prohibitions against idolatry and sorcery; laws governing the appointment and behavior of a king; and guidelines for the creation of “ cities of refuge” for the inadvertent murderer. Also set forth are many of the rules of war: the exemption from battle for one who has just built a home, planted a vineyard, married, or is “afraid and soft-hearted”; the requirement to offer terms of peace before attacking a city; and the prohibition against wanton destruction of something of value, exemplified by the law that forbids to cut down a fruit tree when laying siege (in this context the Torah makes the famous statement, “ For man is a tree of the field”).

The Parshah concludes with the law of the eglah arufah—the special procedure to be followed when a person is killed by an unknown murderer and his body is found in a field—which underscores the responsibility of the community and its leaders not only for what they do, but also for what they might have prevented from being done.

Learn: Shoftim in Depth
Deep-Dive: Shoftim Parshah Columnists
Prep: Devar Torah Q&A for Shoftim
Read: Haftarah in a Nutshell
Play: Shoftim Parshah Quiz

 

 
 
 
Today's Quote
Today's Quote
Think good, and it will be good
— Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Lubavitch (1789-1866)

 
 
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