
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


There are moments
in life when a person feels, “I missed it.” Not because he didn’t care—but
because life intervened. A responsibility, a loss, a distance, a moment that
passed and cannot be reclaimed. And then comes Pesach Sheni and introduces a
radical idea: not every missed opportunity is final. When a group of Jews stood
before Moshe Rabbeinu and cried out לָמָּה נִגָּרַע—“Why
should we be left out?”—they were not asking for an exemption. They were asking
for connection. And in response, HaShem gave them something unprecedented: a
second chance.
In
this class, we explore not only the halachic framework of Pesach Sheni, but the
deeper message it carries—about longing, about responsibility, and about the
doors that can reopen even after they seem closed. From those who became tamei
while doing a mitzvah, to Rabbi Shimon bar Yoḥai learning how to see the world
again, to the haunting Pesach Sheni observed in Buchenwald after liberation—we
uncover a Torah that does not give up on a Jew who still wants in. Because
sometimes, the door doesn’t reopen on its own. It opens when someone has the
courage to knock again.
By JewishPodcasts.fm5
1313 ratings
There are moments
in life when a person feels, “I missed it.” Not because he didn’t care—but
because life intervened. A responsibility, a loss, a distance, a moment that
passed and cannot be reclaimed. And then comes Pesach Sheni and introduces a
radical idea: not every missed opportunity is final. When a group of Jews stood
before Moshe Rabbeinu and cried out לָמָּה נִגָּרַע—“Why
should we be left out?”—they were not asking for an exemption. They were asking
for connection. And in response, HaShem gave them something unprecedented: a
second chance.
In
this class, we explore not only the halachic framework of Pesach Sheni, but the
deeper message it carries—about longing, about responsibility, and about the
doors that can reopen even after they seem closed. From those who became tamei
while doing a mitzvah, to Rabbi Shimon bar Yoḥai learning how to see the world
again, to the haunting Pesach Sheni observed in Buchenwald after liberation—we
uncover a Torah that does not give up on a Jew who still wants in. Because
sometimes, the door doesn’t reopen on its own. It opens when someone has the
courage to knock again.

557 Listeners

255 Listeners

82 Listeners

8,447 Listeners