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In this episode of Judaism in the 21st Century, Dr. Steven Labkoff and Rabbi Daniel Cohen tackle the tension between privacy and transparency—two values that shape our digital, ethical, and spiritual lives. Steven introduces the topic through a modern lens, observing how people routinely trade privacy for convenience in a hyperconnected world. Rabbi Cohen offers a deeply Jewish perspective rooted in Torah, revealing that privacy is not merely a social courtesy but a sacred obligation.
Citing the phrase “Vayedaber Hashem el Moshe leimor” (“God spoke to Moses, saying…”), Rabbi Cohen explains that the word leimor implies permission—God granting Moses explicit authority to share divine words. Without such consent, Moses would be obligated to keep God’s message private. From this, Judaism teaches that we must never assume we have the right to share information unless given express permission.
The discussion extends into the ethics of modern communication—emails, blind copies, social media—and how easily private information can spread. Steven reflects on how this lesson challenges his own habits around openness, especially in an age where personal boundaries are often blurred online.
The episode closes with a reminder that words hold tremendous power: they can create worlds or destroy them. Rabbi Cohen emphasizes that speech must be used to bring light, unity, and healing—echoing God’s own creative use of words at the beginning of time.
By SLabkoffIn this episode of Judaism in the 21st Century, Dr. Steven Labkoff and Rabbi Daniel Cohen tackle the tension between privacy and transparency—two values that shape our digital, ethical, and spiritual lives. Steven introduces the topic through a modern lens, observing how people routinely trade privacy for convenience in a hyperconnected world. Rabbi Cohen offers a deeply Jewish perspective rooted in Torah, revealing that privacy is not merely a social courtesy but a sacred obligation.
Citing the phrase “Vayedaber Hashem el Moshe leimor” (“God spoke to Moses, saying…”), Rabbi Cohen explains that the word leimor implies permission—God granting Moses explicit authority to share divine words. Without such consent, Moses would be obligated to keep God’s message private. From this, Judaism teaches that we must never assume we have the right to share information unless given express permission.
The discussion extends into the ethics of modern communication—emails, blind copies, social media—and how easily private information can spread. Steven reflects on how this lesson challenges his own habits around openness, especially in an age where personal boundaries are often blurred online.
The episode closes with a reminder that words hold tremendous power: they can create worlds or destroy them. Rabbi Cohen emphasizes that speech must be used to bring light, unity, and healing—echoing God’s own creative use of words at the beginning of time.