Sodom
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The Roots of Megillat Ruth: Lot and Avraham
Dr. Yael ZieglerRuth the Moabite if s descendant of Lot, who chose to separate from Abraham and move to Sodom. While he escaped the fate of Sodom, his family adopted the faulty Sodomite sexual and moral culture. While Ruth is a descendant of Moab, she chooses to join the nation of Israel, offering a tikkun to Lot’s actions, and to the rampant immorality of the Israeli nation in the era of Judges.
Ruth and Orpah, Abraham and Lot: The Power of Choices
Part 3
Dr. Yael Ziegler |Why are Chazal extremely critical of Orpa? Looking back at Lot’s separation from Avraham, we see that catastrophe followed Lot’s decision to live in cruel Sedom. Orpa, his descendant, returns to a corrupt and immoral society. Ruth chooses to return to Avraham’s path from which Lot broke away, and she becomes the vehicle to bring the Israelites back to the way of Avraham.
"A Possession Before the Lord" (Audio)
Rabbi Chanoch Waxman | 32 minutesWhy is Moshe so upset at the tribes of Reuben and Gad for asking for land east of the Jordan River - land suitable for their many cattle? Is their request worse than the "Sin of the Spies"? To understand Moshe's anguish, we must examine parallels in the story of Abraham and Lot, their cattle conflicts, and Lot's vision of Sedom as fertile and resembling Egypt.
A Possession Before the Lord (Bamidbar 32:22)
Rabbi Chanoch WaxmanThe request of Bnei Gad and Reuven positions them outside of the Promised Land, outside of God's plan for the historical future of His people, and even outside of the heritage of Avraham. Moshe’s counter-offer depends on the the loyalty Bnei Gad and Reuven promise their brothers, as well as loyalty to the land of their brothers, and to God.
Lot's Questionable Journey (from the) East
Rabbi David SilverbergIdealism vs. Cynicism: The Opposing Worldviews of Malkitzedek and the King of Sodom
Rabbi David SilverbergGod Descends to Judge Sodom - Seeking the Good
Rabbi David SilverbergGod, Avraham, and Sodom: Defending Sinners
Rabbi David SilverbergSedom vs. Shalem-Jerusalem
Rabbi David SilverbergWhy was Avraham Offered Gifts?
Rabbi David SilverbergCould Sedom Become the Garden of Eden?
Rabbi David SilverbergWhat Paradise Means to Lot
Rabbi David SilverbergAvraham and the King of Sodom: No Partnership Here
Rabbi David SilverbergSedom and Avraham's Home: Two Different Worlds
Rabbi David SilverbergSedom: Institutionalized Corruption
Rabbi David SilverbergVayera and its Haftara: Creditors and Sodom, Avraham and the Shunamite
Rabbi David SilverbergLooking for the Good in Sodom
Rabbi David SilverbergAvraham's Uplifted Hand
Rabbi David SilverbergThe Cry of Sodom
Rabbi David SilverbergRamban on Vayeira - Sedom and Pilegesh baGiv'a
Rabbi Ezra Bick | 36 minutesRamban has a lengthy comment comparing the story of Sodom to the story of the Concubine at Giveah. This shiur explores those parallels and raises questions about the various parties involved. Beyond the specific elements that are unique to both stories, they each involve a corrupt society. In the case of Sodom, God destroys the city, but in the case of Giveah, the rest of the tribes band together to wage war against Binyamin. But was this the right thing to do? Did they properly consult with God? When a society has a problem within it, it is the responsibility of that society to fix it. The story about Giveah is a tragedy wherein none of the survivors are blameless. Before embarking on something as severe as civil war, the parties involved must seriously and carefully determine whether it is something that God wants.
Behaving like a Sodomite
Rabbanit Dr. Michal Tikochinsky