Problems playing the video? Click Here to reload
Watch Videos: Random | New | Popular
All Essays | Report Video
|
Share Video
- Buy Us a Coffee -
In this Torah Conversation, The Jerusalem Scribe and Rabbi Eli Deutsch, a renowned Torah scholar, author, and teacher of Jewish mysticism (Kabbalah), explore profound teachings on the true power of humility.
Some of the sources discussed:
- Babylonian Talmud, Megillah 31a, Perek 12* (ברכות מא א)
https://www.sefaria.org/Megillah.31a.12?lang=bi&with=Megaleh%20Amukot&lang2=bi
- *Maharal of Prague* – Rabbi Yehuda ben Betzalel Loew’s teachings on the nature of God’s attributes and their reflection in the world.
In this enlightening conversation, The Jerusalem Scribe and Rabbi Eli Deutsch delve into the intricate relationship between Divine might and humility, exploring how this duality offers invaluable lessons on leadership, character, and spiritual growth.
As Rabbi Yoḥanan teaches in the Talmud, wherever you find the might of the Holy One, Blessed be He, you will also find His humility in parallel. This timeless lesson reveals that true strength is not found in pride or domination but in the capacity for humility, even when possessing immense power. It resonates deeply within Jewish philosophy and is central to our understanding of how God interacts with the world.
The conversation also highlights the perspective of the Maharal of Prague, an ancestor of Rabbi Deutsch, whose teachings emphasize the balance of divine traits as foundational principles for ethical and spiritual development.
in english
Some of the sources discussed:
- Babylonian Talmud, Megillah 31a, Perek 12* (ברכות מא א)
https://www.sefaria.org/Megillah.31a.12?lang=bi&with=Megaleh%20Amukot&lang2=bi
- *Maharal of Prague* – Rabbi Yehuda ben Betzalel Loew’s teachings on the nature of God’s attributes and their reflection in the world.
In this enlightening conversation, The Jerusalem Scribe and Rabbi Eli Deutsch delve into the intricate relationship between Divine might and humility, exploring how this duality offers invaluable lessons on leadership, character, and spiritual growth.
As Rabbi Yoḥanan teaches in the Talmud, wherever you find the might of the Holy One, Blessed be He, you will also find His humility in parallel. This timeless lesson reveals that true strength is not found in pride or domination but in the capacity for humility, even when possessing immense power. It resonates deeply within Jewish philosophy and is central to our understanding of how God interacts with the world.
The conversation also highlights the perspective of the Maharal of Prague, an ancestor of Rabbi Deutsch, whose teachings emphasize the balance of divine traits as foundational principles for ethical and spiritual development.
in english
Commenting disabled.





