Hosea 3:5 ” 5 Afterward the children of Israel shall return and seek the Lord their God and David their king. They shall fear the Lord and His goodness in the latter days.”
Join Ross, Jason & Jono and discover amazing and curious facts about the Tent of Meeting, the Ark of the Covenant, the Mercy Seat, Cherubim, Show Bread, Menorah, Horns of the Altar, Badgers, and much more!
Aaron shall lay both his hands on the head of the live goat, confess over it all the iniquities of the children of Israel, and all their transgressions, concerning all their sins, putting them on the head of the goat, and shall send it away into the wilderness by the hand of a suitable man. […]
Thus you shall separate the children of Israel from their uncleanness, lest they die in their uncleanness when they defile My tabernacle that is among them. – Leviticus 15:31
And now, Israel, what does the Lord your God require of you, but to fear the Lord your God, to walk in all His ways and to love Him, to serve the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul, and to keep the commandments of the Lord and His statutes […]
“Who has ascended into heaven, or descended? Who has gathered the wind in His fists? Who has bound the waters in a garment? Who has established all the ends of the earth? What is His name, and what is His Son’s name, If you know?” — Proverbs 30:4
Are all sacrifices “sin sacrifices”? Is there a male lamb sin sacrifice that takes away the sin of the world? Plus, St. Patrick’s Day, Israeli election results, what hospitalized Jason last week, and much more in this week’s Torah Pearls!
…that you may tell in the hearing of your son and your son’s son the mighty things I have done in Egypt, and My signs which I have done among them, that you may know that I am YHVH. – Exodus 10:2.
It shall be a statute forever in your generations concerning the offerings made by fire to the Lord. Everyone who touches them must be holy. – Leviticus 6:18. This episode was filled by Ross Nichols in place of Rabbi Tovia Singer.
Rabbi Tovia Singer illustrates how the book of John stereotyped the Jewish people for all time as an icon of unredeemed humanity: the image of a blind, stubborn, carnal and demonic nation. This dehumanization, no doubt, is the vehicle that formed the psychological prerequisite to the Church’s unrelenting atrocities against Jewish people centuries later.