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Sefer Shemos is not just the story of leaving Egypt. It is the full architecture of freedom. The Torah measures redemption not by the end of suffering, but by the ability to receive. True freedom is reached when a vessel is built — when the Mishkan exists — teaching us that geulah is not escape, but alignment. This class explores freedom as an inner state, teshuva as a return to name and purpose, and why personal redemption always precedes collective redemption. Through the opening pasuk of Shemos, the season of Shovavim, and the three signs given to Moshe, we learn a practical path: confronting doubt, returning to light, and renewing ourselves again and again. Redemption is not a single moment — it is the slow, intentional becoming of a vessel capable of holding the Divine.
By Chaya AdamsonSefer Shemos is not just the story of leaving Egypt. It is the full architecture of freedom. The Torah measures redemption not by the end of suffering, but by the ability to receive. True freedom is reached when a vessel is built — when the Mishkan exists — teaching us that geulah is not escape, but alignment. This class explores freedom as an inner state, teshuva as a return to name and purpose, and why personal redemption always precedes collective redemption. Through the opening pasuk of Shemos, the season of Shovavim, and the three signs given to Moshe, we learn a practical path: confronting doubt, returning to light, and renewing ourselves again and again. Redemption is not a single moment — it is the slow, intentional becoming of a vessel capable of holding the Divine.