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Shabbos can be the best day of the week and still feel strangely… normal. If we’re honest, routine can flatten holiness, and “been there, done that” can sneak into a mitzvah that is supposed to reshape our entire week. We want to bring Shabbos back, not as a vague self-care day, but as a Mikra Kodesh: a day that stands out so clearly you can’t confuse it with the other six.
We start with a provocative contrast from Parshas Emor: the Jewish calendar and the festivals are sanctified through Beis Din and witnesses, a breathtaking partnership where humans help set sacred time. But Shabbos is different. Shabbos is fixed by Hashem from creation. That raises the real question: if we don’t “declare” Shabbos into existence, what does the Torah mean when it calls Shabbos a Mikra Kodesh?
From there we dig into Onkelos and the Ramban. Onkelos frames Mikra Kodesh as ma’ora kadesh, a holy happening that befalls you. The Ramban explains mikra as a summons, a calling forward to assemble yourself for holiness. Then we bring it down to earth with halacha and practical Shabbos preparation: changing clothing, upgrading food and drink, setting the table, building a clean and calm home, marking the day with songs, meals, learning, and Havdalah. We also share a powerful story about a father whose joy at the Shabbos table becomes the definition of what a “remarkable” home can look like.
If you’ve been craving a more meaningful Shabbos experience, press play and choose one change to try this week. Subscribe for more Torah-rich conversations, share this with a friend who loves Shabbos, and leave a review with your best Shabbos upgrade idea.
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Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content!
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Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content!
Questions or Comments? Please email me @ [email protected]
By Michoel Brooke5
2626 ratings
Shabbos can be the best day of the week and still feel strangely… normal. If we’re honest, routine can flatten holiness, and “been there, done that” can sneak into a mitzvah that is supposed to reshape our entire week. We want to bring Shabbos back, not as a vague self-care day, but as a Mikra Kodesh: a day that stands out so clearly you can’t confuse it with the other six.
We start with a provocative contrast from Parshas Emor: the Jewish calendar and the festivals are sanctified through Beis Din and witnesses, a breathtaking partnership where humans help set sacred time. But Shabbos is different. Shabbos is fixed by Hashem from creation. That raises the real question: if we don’t “declare” Shabbos into existence, what does the Torah mean when it calls Shabbos a Mikra Kodesh?
From there we dig into Onkelos and the Ramban. Onkelos frames Mikra Kodesh as ma’ora kadesh, a holy happening that befalls you. The Ramban explains mikra as a summons, a calling forward to assemble yourself for holiness. Then we bring it down to earth with halacha and practical Shabbos preparation: changing clothing, upgrading food and drink, setting the table, building a clean and calm home, marking the day with songs, meals, learning, and Havdalah. We also share a powerful story about a father whose joy at the Shabbos table becomes the definition of what a “remarkable” home can look like.
If you’ve been craving a more meaningful Shabbos experience, press play and choose one change to try this week. Subscribe for more Torah-rich conversations, share this with a friend who loves Shabbos, and leave a review with your best Shabbos upgrade idea.
Support the show
Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content!
------------------
Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content!
Questions or Comments? Please email me @ [email protected]

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