Netiv.net - Weekly Torah Class
Latest Episodes
The Importance of Torah Study
Rabbi Yaakov Wolbe teaches the community about the importance of Torah study. He will use the text of the Mishneh to to give us a clear call to elevate ourselves in study no matter...
Refining Ourselves Through Sifaras HaOmer
The Torah itself dictates the counting of the seven weeks following Passover: “You shall count from the eve of the second day of Pesach, when an omer of grain is to be brought as...
Overcoming Fear with Wisdom | COVID 19
We will examine the power of wisdom to defeat fear. Wisdom helps to put all things in perspective. Though not what’s considered an observant Jew, I’ve done some unsystematic reading about Judaism, and...
Laws of Idolatry | Mishneh Torah | Part Fifteen
Chapter 11 | Part Fifteen Who is a necromancer? He who starves himself and then proceeds to lodge on the cemetery so as to bring the dead up in his dream and make known...
The Divine Origin of the Torah | Part Two
A person immersed in Torah study, who encounters ever deeper layers of meaning, who looks into the precise chain of Jewish transmission, the names and dates of whose figures are known to us today...
The Laws of Idolatry | Rambam’s Mishneh Torah | Part Fifteen
Adam Itamar continues with the Rambam Mishneh Torah laws of Idolatry. Dealing with the subject of foreign worship and customs of the nations. Please considering supporting netiv visit http://www.paypal.me/netiv.
How Involved is G-D, in the Affairs of Humanity
If you look at the way the very first word in the Book of Leviticus (which we begin reading publicly this Shabbos) is written in any Torah scroll anywhere in the world, you will...
What Does Sukkot Mean For the Noahide?
One of the unique features of the Sukkot service in the Beit HaMikdash was the daily offering of bulls, with the number declining from thirteen on the first day to seven on the seventh...
Sukkot As It Applies To The Righteous Non-Jew | Rabbi David Weissman
Beginning five days after Yom Kippur, Sukkot is named after the booths or huts (sukkot in Hebrew) in which Jews are supposed to dwell during this week-long celebration. According to rabbinic tradition, these flimsy...