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What’s With Yitro and Elokim?
In this morning’s class we looked at a small nuance in the opening pesukim of Parashat Yitro that changes the whole way we see Yitro, Amalek, and even our own lives. Why does the Torah say that Yitro heard “all that Elokim did for Moshe and for Israel,” but then in the very same pasuk switch to “for HaShem took Israel out of Egypt”? Why are Yitro’s korbanot described as “to Elokim,” when almost everywhere else in the Torah korbanot are tied to Shem Havaya? From there we traced Yitro’s journey: how he sees midah keneged midah at Yam Suf, how he understands the frightening precision of din in Moshe’s life, and how, as a gilgul of Kayin who once said “ein din ve’ein dayan,” he comes back into the world specifically to fix that mistake by declaring “atah yadati” and helping Moshe build a system of justice “lifnei haElokim.”
We then asked: if Yitro is so moved by Divine justice, why is the war with Amalek the final piece that pushes him to convert? The answer takes us into the tension between a world where HaShem can drown Egypt in a moment, and a world where Amalek still walks around attacking the weak and “cooling off” emunah. We spoke about Rabbi Akiva’s mashal of wheat and bread, the unfinished world that needs human partners, and the quiet places where Shekhinah rests — at a simple table “lifnei haElokim,” where people choose justice, chesed, and responsibility. The class closes with three very practical “Yitro moves” for the week: learning to see din in our own lives, accepting that HaShem’s expectations of us change as we grow, and stepping up as partners in a world that He deliberately left unfinished.
By JewishPodcasts.fm5
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What’s With Yitro and Elokim?
In this morning’s class we looked at a small nuance in the opening pesukim of Parashat Yitro that changes the whole way we see Yitro, Amalek, and even our own lives. Why does the Torah say that Yitro heard “all that Elokim did for Moshe and for Israel,” but then in the very same pasuk switch to “for HaShem took Israel out of Egypt”? Why are Yitro’s korbanot described as “to Elokim,” when almost everywhere else in the Torah korbanot are tied to Shem Havaya? From there we traced Yitro’s journey: how he sees midah keneged midah at Yam Suf, how he understands the frightening precision of din in Moshe’s life, and how, as a gilgul of Kayin who once said “ein din ve’ein dayan,” he comes back into the world specifically to fix that mistake by declaring “atah yadati” and helping Moshe build a system of justice “lifnei haElokim.”
We then asked: if Yitro is so moved by Divine justice, why is the war with Amalek the final piece that pushes him to convert? The answer takes us into the tension between a world where HaShem can drown Egypt in a moment, and a world where Amalek still walks around attacking the weak and “cooling off” emunah. We spoke about Rabbi Akiva’s mashal of wheat and bread, the unfinished world that needs human partners, and the quiet places where Shekhinah rests — at a simple table “lifnei haElokim,” where people choose justice, chesed, and responsibility. The class closes with three very practical “Yitro moves” for the week: learning to see din in our own lives, accepting that HaShem’s expectations of us change as we grow, and stepping up as partners in a world that He deliberately left unfinished.

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