Prime Example of Parenting in 2024
ב״ה

 
This Week at Chabad of Pacific Palisades
Candle Lighting
Candle Lighting Times for
Pacific Palisades:
Friday, May 17
7:33 pm
Torah Portion: Emor
 

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

 
 
Rabbi's Message
Message from the Rabbi
 
 
Dear Friend,

During the times when the Holy Temple stood in Jerusalem, the Cohanim, priests, would bring sacrifices to G-d on behalf of the Jewish people. Some of these sacrifices were roasted and then taken home by the Cohanim to be eaten with their families.

In this week’s Torah portion, we learn about how Cohanim must conduct themselves, how they must be careful to remain pure and holy, so that they will be able to perform their holy work. They serve as conduits, connecting G-d with the Jewish people. They serve as channels for blessing; therefore, they must always remain pure, in body, heart and mind.

This state of purity attained by the Cohanim made it possible for them to eat of the consecrated sacrifices. However, we learn in this week’s Torah portion that the Cohanim can share the meat of these sacrifices with their servants, for their servants are a part of their household and the purity of the Cohanim impacts their entire household.

What Cohanim are to their household, parents are to their children. When a parent lives a life based on values and connection to G-d, their children can sense it, and are impacted on a soul level.

Our children today have tremendous opportunities and great challenges. With a swipe of a finger, they have a world of exposure and connection to any value system they choose to be exposed to. This means that we can no longer raise children to follow us blindly, to do what we say because we told them so. In this generation, we can only raise children by being a Cohen within our home, by being pure and certain in our G-dly connection and values, and thus, lead our children by example.

And when we create this environment, we, like the Cohanim, become a conduit of blessings. We draw down G-d’s light into our homes and into our children’s hearts.

Shabbat Shalom,

Rabbi Zushe Cunin

 
 
 
Service Times
Service Times

Friday Evening- Kabbalat Shabbat
6:30 pm

Shabbat Day
10:00 am

Kiddush and Refreshments
12:30 pm

 
 
Featured Event
Featured Events

 

Weekly Torah Class with Rabbi Zushe
Thursdays @ 2pm

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/643045892?pwd=VXB3bUlIcEdTQjU0dnRLSVFRWlNjdz09 

Weekly Tanya Class with Rabbi Shimon
Sundays @ 8:00-8:30am at Chabad 

 
 
Upcoming Events
Upcoming Events
JEC
Tuesday, May 21, 2024 - 3:30 pm - 5:30 pm
JLI-Decisions of Fate Lesson 2
Wednesday, May 22, 2024 - 7:30 pm - 9:00 pm
LAG BAOMER BBQ
Sunday, May 26, 2024 - 5:00 pm
More Info »
JEC
Tuesday, May 28, 2024 - 3:30 pm - 5:30 pm
JLI-Decisions of Fate Lesson 3
Wednesday, May 29, 2024 - 7:30 pm - 9:00 pm
JLI-Decisions of Fate Lesson 4
Wednesday, Jun. 5, 2024 - 7:30 pm - 9:00 pm
FC Sunday Circle
Sunday, Jun. 9, 2024 - 10:30 am - 11:30 am
SHAVUOT PARTY
Wednesday, Jun. 12, 2024 - 4:30 pm
More Info »
 
 
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This Week @ www.ChabadPalisades.com
  
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Parshah
Parshah in a Nutshell

Parshat Emor

The name of the Parshah, “Emor,” means “speak” and it is found in Leviticus 21:1.

The Torah section of Emor (“Speak”) begins with the special laws pertaining to the kohanim (“priests”), the kohen gadol (“high priest”), and the Temple service: A kohen may not become ritually impure through contact with a dead body, save on the occasion of the death of a close relative. A kohen may not marry a divorcee, or a woman with a promiscuous past; a kohen gadol can marry only a virgin. A kohen with a physical deformity cannot serve in the Holy Temple, nor can a deformed animal be brought as an offering.

A newborn calf, lamb or kid must be left with its mother for seven days before being eligible for an offering; one may not slaughter an animal and its offspring on the same day.

The second part of Emor lists the annual Callings of Holiness—the festivals of the Jewish calendar: the weekly Shabbat; the bringing of the Passover offering on 14 Nissan; the seven-day Passover festival beginning on 15 Nissan; the bringing of the Omer offering from the first barley harvest on the second day of Passover, and the commencement, on that day, of the 49-day Counting of the Omer, culminating in the festival of Shavuot on the fiftieth day; a “remembrance of shofar blowing” on 1 Tishrei; a solemn fast day on 10 Tishrei; the Sukkot festival—during which we are to dwell in huts for seven days and take the “ Four Kinds”—beginning on 15 Tishrei; and the immediately following holiday of the “eighth day” of Sukkot ( Shemini Atzeret).

Next the Torah discusses the lighting of the menorah in the Temple, and the showbread; (lechem hapanim) placed weekly on the table there.

Emor concludes with the incident of a man executed for blasphemy, and the penalties for murder (death) and for injuring one’s fellow or destroying his property (monetary compensation).

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

 

 
 
 
Today's Quote
Today's Quote
G-d looked into the Torah and created the world. Man looks into Torah and sustains the world.
— Zohar

 
 
Chabad World News
Chabad World News