Printed fromChabadWestMichigan.com
Ask the Rabbi
Contact
Home
About
Login
Chabad of Western Michigan
UPCOMING
EVENTS
High Holidays at Chabad 2022 Sukkot & Simchat Torah 2022 Chanukah 2022 Purim in Grand Rapids 2023 Pesach at Chabad Lag B'Omer Shavuot
RH Experience 2022 Registration High Holiday Reservations Shofar Factory & High Holiday Fun
Purchase Lulav & Etrog CTEEN Sukkot Under the Stars RSVP Sukkot Party RSVP Simchat Torah Celebration 2022 10 Tips for an Amazing Sukkot at Home 10 Tips for an Amazing Simchat Torah at Home Shemini Atzeret / Simchat Torah Sukkah Mobile
JWC Pre-Chanukah Workshop RSVP Menorah Building Workshop RSVP CTEEN & CTEEN JUNIOR Chanukah bash RSVP Grand Menorah Lighting RSVP CGI Winter Camp Registration 2022 Chopstix Chanukah Party RSVP Daily Lighting at the Calder Plaza Schedule Menorah at the Woodland Mall Chanukah Guide
MASQUERADE & MEGILLAH READING! ANNUAL PURIM DINNER 2023 About Purim Purim in Kalamazoo Purim in East Lansing
Passover Seder Seder In A Box Sell Your Chametz Form Buy Matzah Model Matzah Bakery
Lag B'Omer Sponsorship Opportunities
Shavuot at Chabad
Holidays
What is Chabad Contact Us Synagogue Kosher Food Weekly newsletter Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Instagram Donate Chai Club Chicken Soup for the Quarantined Soul The Sholom Solmon Tree of Life
Kosher Meal Service
Welcome
JLI COURSE - Book Smart Chabad Virtual Programming Jewish Trivia for Adults Jewish Womens Circle Online Study Shabbat in the Heights
RSVP JWC Women's Torah Class Shabbat Candle Lighting Times
Adults
CTEEN JTEXT CKids Club Gan Israel Judaism UnBoxed Hebrew School
About us Register to be a Member CTeen & CTeen JR RSVP CTEEN CALENDAR & EVENTS CTeen Sponsor an Event JTEXT ~ JEWISH TRIVIA for Teens! CTeen NYC International Shabbaton CTeen Leadership
JewQ
About Us Info Camp Registration 2023 Camp Gan Izzy Gallery 2022 Camp Gan Izzy 2021 ~ week #1 Camp Gan Izzy 2021 - week #2 Camp Gan Izzy 2019 CGI Kiddy Camp Waiver CGI Winter Camp Registration 2022 Application/Medical Form
Parent Handbook 2022
Youth
Donate
About Search Contact
ב"ה
Adults

JLI COURSE - Book Smart

WHEN (IN PERSON)

6 Wednesdays, 7:30-9:00PM
Jan 24th - March 1st 2023

Instructor: Rabbi Mordechai Haller

 
JOIN NOW

WHEN (VIRTUAL)

6 Tuesdays, 7:30-9:00 P.M.
Jan 23rd - Feb 28th 2023

Instructor: Rabbi Moordechai Haller

 
JOIN NOW

LOCATION

Chabad of Western Michigan
2615 Michigan ST NE

MORE INFO

www.chabadwm.com
[email protected]
269.903.7916
Fee: $99 (Textbook included)
Sponsorship opportunities available 

 

Course Overview

Book Smart:
Course through Judaism's Most Important Titles, and the Authors Who Inscribed Them


A panoramic overview of 3000 years of Jewish learning, this course introduces you to the works that earned us the title "The People of The Book." You will experience the different genres that shape Jewish life, including Tanach, Midrash, Talmud, Halachah, Philosophy, Kabbalah, Musar, Chasidism, and meet the influential personalities who drove thirty centuries of Jewish scholarship. Whether you're meeting these texts for the first time or as a seasoned scholar, this course will inform and enrich all your Jewish learning.
 

Lesson Outline

 

Lesson 1
The Torah

We begin by addressing the question, "What is the Torah?" We discover how the whole of Jewish teaching ("the Torah" in its broader meaning) derives from the Chumash ("the Torah" in its narrower meaning). We also discuss the relationship between the "Written Torah" and the "Oral Torah," and how these two components of Torah constitute a "partnership" of Divine revelation and the human toil of the mind.

We then introduce the twenty-four books of the Tanach. We explain the differences between Torah, Neviim, and Ketuvim, and review the contents of each. We also see how the roots of the different "genres" of Torah-Midrash, Halachah, Kabbalah, Musar, etc.-are all in the "Written Torah," as will be further demonstrated in each of the next five lessons.

 

Lesson 2
The Midrash

"Midrash" is both a methodology and a body of literature. In this lesson, we explore both aspects of Midrash. We study the various methods by which additional layers of meaning contained within the words-or between the lines-of the Torah are expounded. We also acquaint ourselves with some of the major Midrashic works that record the expositional teachings by the sages of the Talmudic era (approximately 100 BCE to 500 CE).

Midrash includes Halachic (legal) expositions, which extrapolate the details of the Torah's laws from the text, as well as Agadic Midrashim-moral, philosophical, and mystical teachings, as well as historical narratives and parables. We study examples from both of these varieties of Midrash, including a number of intricate legal expositions, and an esoteric parable relating to a celestial battle over the creation of the human being and the paradox of goodness and truth.

 

Lesson 3
The Talmud

More than any other work, the Talmud defines "Jewish learning." In this lesson, we review the history of the Talmud, explore the structure of this intricate and fascinating work, with its 63 volumes of teachings and deliberations by hundreds of sages over a period of six centuries on virtually every subject under the sun. We also engage in the in-depth study of a Talmudic sugya ("subject discussion") and experience the unique twists and turns of the Talmudic dialectic.

In the process, we discover how Talmudic learning leverages the "flaws" of the human mind-its circuitous reasoning, its contentiousness, and its inconsistencies-to reveal the multifaceted nature of the Divine wisdom and apply it to the complexities of human life.

 

Lesson 4
Halachah

Halachah is the "bottom line" of Torah, where the biblical commandments, rabbinical ordinances, and Talmudic deliberations translate into the dos and don'ts of daily life. Halachah addresses every part of a Jew's life, from waking to bedtime, from birth to burial, from everyday activities to the most extraordinary situations.

In this lesson, we explore the history of Halachah, from its sources in the Written Torah, through the Halachic Midrashim, the Talmud and its commentaries, the various "codes" compiled through the centuries, and the many thousands of Halachic respons authored through the centuries. We survey the great variety of issues and dilemmas that Halachah addresses. We then bring it all to life via a case study that traces a Halachic issue from its biblical origins through more than a dozen citations across the entire spectrum of Halachic literature.

 

Lesson 5
Musar and Jewish Philosophy

Musar is the body of Torah teachings that deals with ethics, character development, and spiritual self-improvement. The field of Jewish philosophy, also known as "Chakirah," includes works devoted to discussing the philosophy and ideology of Judaism. While these constitute two distinct areas of Torah literature, there is also a certain degree of overlap between them; indeed, some of the fundamental works of Jewish philosophy are also works of Musar, and vice versa.

In this lesson, we review the history and the primary authors and works in these two fields. We then study a number of texts covering three related topics in both these fields: the doctrine of creation ex nihilo ("something from nothing"), bitachon (trust in G‑d), and the emotion of anger.

 

Lesson 6
Kabbalah and Chasidism

Kabbalah is the Torah's mystical dimension, containing its most powerful and empowering ideas. But for many centuries, the teachings of Kabbalah were carefully guarded secrets, transcribed only in the guise of esoteric terminology and metaphors, and taught only to a small, exclusive circle of mystics in each generation. Chasidism is both an extension of Kabbalah as well as a field of Torah in its own right, revealing the inner "soul" that unites the Torah's various components and applying its most abstract spiritual teachings in personally meaningful ways.

In this lesson, we survey the history of Kabbalah and Chasidism. We address the question of why these teachings were kept secret, and why and how they were eventually revealed. We then explore one of the core subjects of Kabbalah-the doctrine of the "Ten Sefirot"-beginning with a mysterious passage in the Zohar, followed by a series of Kabbalistic and Chasidic texts that examine the great paradox of G‑d's relationship with us, and the body-soul dichotomy that defines our own lives.

 
Adults
JLI COURSE - Book Smart
Chabad Virtual Programming
Jewish Trivia for Adults
Jewish Womens Circle
Online Study
Shabbat in the Heights
Quick Links
calendar
Contact
Donate

Chabad of Western Michigan 2615 Michigan Street NE Grand Rapids, MI 49506-1238
616-957-0770

Powered by Chabad.org © 1993-2023 Privacy Policy