Printed fromChabadPlace.org
ב"ה

Beshalach 5765 - January 21, 2005

Call Me Classic

It’s got to be one of the toughest marketing problems of all time: selling Orthodox Judaism. You’ve got all this long black stuff. And then there are the hats . . .
Parshah
Beshalach in a Nutshell
Pharaoh changes his mind, and chases the Israelites. Trapped between their pursuers and the Reed Sea, the Israelites panic, and G‑d splits the sea for them. In the desert G‑d provides water, manna and quails. Two portions of manna must be collected on Fridays, enough for Friday and the Sabbath.
Why Don't Miracles Happen Today?

I don't mean the "miracle of childbirth" and "every sunrise is a miracle" -- I'm talking about splitting seas and voices-from-heaven kind of miracles. Why did the people of the Bible get all the special effects and we don't?
Jonathan's Time Machine

Jonathan builds a time machine out of a cardboard box, aluminum foil, duct-tape, and six explosions. But Rabbi Kadoozy has his own ideas about time travel
Miriam: Tambourines of Rebellion

You feel the pain and bitterness, even more deeply than the others, yet you carry in your heart an inextinguishable flame of faith, hope and optimism. You are Miriam, the quintessential Jewish woman.
A Night of Opportunity

The righteous and the wicked, the wise and the foolish, the leaders alongside the lay people -- all were running about collecting the treasures of Egypt. One man, however, did not join the frenzy.
The Rebbe
Yud Shevat
The 10th of Shevat marks the 54th anniversary of the Rebbe's assumption of the leadership of Chabad-Lubavitch in 1951. Click here for an overview of the Rebbe's life and teachings; for stories and personal accounts, click here and here.

Shevat 10 is also the 55th yahrtzeit of the Rebbe's father-in-law and predecessor, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak of Lubavitch. For more on Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak, click here. For a sampling of his teachings, click here.
Behold, I shall rain down to you bread from heaven.
— Exodus 16:4
Print Magazine

It’s G-d’s world. Everything He gives is good, the sweetest good.

But it is often a good far too great for us to understand. We imagine it is not good, because that’s the only way to make sense of it with our small minds.

Yet the truth is, He gives us all the good we can handle. If we could take more, He would g...

New on ChabadPlace.org