
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


From the stones of the Kotel at sunrise to the darkness of Yosef’s prison cell, this episode is about the kind of power we forget words carry. Parashat Miketz opens with “Vayehi miketz shenatayim yamim” — two years that Chazal trace back to two phrases Yosef says: “zekhartani… ve-hizkartani.”
How can Yosef—Mr. Bitachon—be “punished” for a simple request? We unpack
Midrash Tanchuma’s sharp language and discover something unsettling: speech
doesn’t only describe reality — it can set the terms of reality.
And in a week when Jewish hearts are already
raw—especially after the deadly antisemitic attack at a Ḥanukkah gathering in
Sydney, Australia (December 14, 2025) —the message lands even harder: our words must keep HaShem as the
Source, while people remain only vessels. Through Yosef’s two words, Ya‘aqov’s
“few and bad,” Yosef’s silence for kavod av, and Moshe’s “rav” that comes back
to him, we learn one clear takeaway for Ḥanukkah: speak like a Jew who knows
speech is real. Listen now — and share it with someone who needs chizuk this
week.
By JewishPodcasts.fm5
1313 ratings
From the stones of the Kotel at sunrise to the darkness of Yosef’s prison cell, this episode is about the kind of power we forget words carry. Parashat Miketz opens with “Vayehi miketz shenatayim yamim” — two years that Chazal trace back to two phrases Yosef says: “zekhartani… ve-hizkartani.”
How can Yosef—Mr. Bitachon—be “punished” for a simple request? We unpack
Midrash Tanchuma’s sharp language and discover something unsettling: speech
doesn’t only describe reality — it can set the terms of reality.
And in a week when Jewish hearts are already
raw—especially after the deadly antisemitic attack at a Ḥanukkah gathering in
Sydney, Australia (December 14, 2025) —the message lands even harder: our words must keep HaShem as the
Source, while people remain only vessels. Through Yosef’s two words, Ya‘aqov’s
“few and bad,” Yosef’s silence for kavod av, and Moshe’s “rav” that comes back
to him, we learn one clear takeaway for Ḥanukkah: speak like a Jew who knows
speech is real. Listen now — and share it with someone who needs chizuk this
week.

555 Listeners

256 Listeners

83 Listeners

8,518 Listeners