
Jewish Inspiration Podcast · Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe
TORCH·462 episodes
This Jewish Inspiration Podcast is dedicated to learning, understanding and enhancing our relationship with Hashem by working on improving our G-d given soul traits and aspiring to reflect His holy name each and every day. The goal is for each listener to hear something inspirational with each episode that will enhance their life.
Episodes
In this opening lesson of the Gate of Repentance (Shaar HaTeshuvah) from Orchot Tzaddikim, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe explains that repentance is one of the greatest gifts Hashem ever gave humanity. As we approach Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, the message is clear: no matter how far a person has strayed, the moment they sincerely turn back toward Hashem, they are welcomed with open arms. Repentance is not about perfection—it is about reaching out for Divine help and allowing Hashem to lift us from our mistakes and guide us toward a fresh beginning. The episode explores a remarkable Talmudic teaching that Teshuvah reaches all the way to the Heavenly Throne of Glory. Through a vivid description of Moshe ascending the seven firmaments, Rabbi Wolbe explains how each level of Heaven praises a different spiritual ideal, yet at the highest level the angels praise repentance. This demonstrates that teshuvah is among the most elevated forces in creation. In fact, the Talmud teaches that repentance was created before the world itself, alongside the Torah, Gan Eden, Gehenom, the Beis HaMikdash, the Throne of Glory, and the name of Mashiach. Rabbi Wolbe further explains that the Torah is the instruction manual for life. Just as every complex creation requires a blueprint, the world was created with a Divine manual to guide humanity toward success. Since human beings inevitably make mistakes, Hashem created repentance before creation itself, ensuring that failure would never be final. The lesson is one of hope, accountability, and optimism: every person can return, repair, and grow. The episode concludes with a vision of the Messianic era, when the world will be filled with Divine wisdom and clarity, and humanity will fully recognize its purpose—to know Hashem and serve Him. _____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on September 8, 2025, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on June 8, 2026_____________This series on Orchos Tzadikim/Ways of the Righteous is produced in partnership with Hachzek.Join the revolution of daily Mussar study at hachzek.com.We are using the Treasure of Life edition of the Orchos Tzadikkim (Published by Feldheim)_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Direc
In the concluding installment of the Gate of Slander from Orchot Tzaddikim, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe presents a powerful and uplifting message: while the tongue can be the source of humanity's greatest failures, it can also become the instrument of its greatest achievements. The author teaches that nearly every aspect of a person's life—for good or for bad—is shaped by speech. Slander, gossip, flattery, deceit, and negativity can destroy lives, yet words of Torah, kindness, encouragement, and truth can elevate both the speaker and everyone around them. A central theme of the episode is that many people mistakenly believe they lack the resources to perform great mitzvos. They may not have wealth to distribute charity, but they possess something far more accessible: the ability to speak positively. Through encouraging words, comforting mourners, uplifting the downtrodden, inspiring children, teaching Torah, and praising Hashem, every person has unlimited opportunities to create goodness and impact the world. The most valuable spiritual investments cost nothing but intention and thoughtful speech. Rabbi Wolbe concludes the entire Gate of Slander by emphasizing the enormous responsibility that accompanies the gift of speech. Relationships, marriages, families, friendships, and communities are built—or destroyed—through words. Positive speech creates positive environments, while negativity breeds negativity. The challenge and opportunity before every person is simple: speak good, see good, encourage good, and build a world filled with blessing._____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on February 2, 2026, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on June 4, 2026_____________This series on Orchos Tzadikim/Ways of the Righteous is produced in partnership with Hachzek.Join the revolution of daily Mussar study at hachzek.com.We are using the Treasure of Life edition of the Orchos Tzadikkim (Published by Feldheim)_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: awolbe@
In this installment of the Mussar Masterclass on the Gate of Slander, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe focuses on the practical path to overcoming harmful speech. The Orchot Tzaddikim teaches that someone seeking to repent from gossip, flattery, falsehood, idle chatter, and slander must build a strong protective fence around themselves. The first step is distancing oneself from environments and friendships that normalize negative speech. Just as bad habits are contagious, positive habits are cultivated by surrounding oneself with people who speak words of Torah, wisdom, and fear of Heaven. Lasting change begins with changing one's environment. The episode emphasizes the extraordinary power of silence and intentional speech. Rabbi Wolbe explains that a person who wishes to elevate themselves must reduce unnecessary conversation, increase Torah study, and become mindful of every word they utter. Speech is not merely communication—it is one of the most powerful forces available to a human being. Our words can heal, inspire, encourage, and elevate, or they can destroy relationships, reputations, and even entire communities. The class concludes with a memorable parable about a man who obtained milk from a lioness to heal a king. In a dream, the various organs of the body argued about which was most important, until the tongue demonstrated that it possessed the power to bring either life or death. The lesson echoes King Solomon's famous teaching: "Death and life are in the power of the tongue." Rabbi Wolbe leaves listeners with a powerful reminder that mastering one's speech is among the greatest forms of self-mastery and spiritual growth. _____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on February 2, 2026, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on June 3, 2026_____________This series on Orchos Tzadikim/Ways of the Righteous is produced in partnership with Hachzek.Join the revolution of daily Mussar study at hachzek.com.We are using the Treasure of Life edition of the Orchos Tzadikkim (Published by Feldheim)_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send you
In this Mussar Masterclass on the Gate of Slander, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe explores one of Judaism's most transformative principles: judging others favorably. Drawing from Orchot Tzaddikim, he explains that our obligation to judge favorably depends on the character of the individual involved. A righteous person should be given the benefit of the doubt even when circumstances appear questionable. An average person should be judged charitably whenever possible. Most importantly, the way we judge others becomes the standard by which Heaven judges us. When we extend grace to others, Hashem extends grace to us. The episode then shifts to the dangers of revenge, grudges, and public embarrassment. Rabbi Wolbe emphasizes a crucial distinction: we may condemn a person's actions, but we should never define the person by their mistakes. This principle is especially relevant in parenting, where criticizing a child's behavior rather than labeling the child preserves dignity and encourages growth. Our words have the power either to elevate people toward greatness or to push them toward failure. A central theme throughout the class is the power of positive expectations. Through stories ranging from Talmudic teachings to NFL MVP Josh Allen's upbringing, Rabbi Wolbe demonstrates how people often rise to the expectations placed upon them. Parents, teachers, spouses, and friends can profoundly influence others by speaking to their potential rather than their shortcomings. The episode concludes with the famous lesson that the true "elixir of life" is guarding one's tongue. Long life, healthy relationships, and spiritual greatness begin with careful, disciplined speech. _____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on February 2, 2026, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on June 2, 2026_____________This series on Orchos Tzadikim/Ways of the Righteous is produced in partnership with Hachzek.Join the revolution of daily Mussar study at hachzek.com.We are using the Treasure of Life edition of the Orchos Tzadikkim (Published by Feldheim)_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to d
In this powerful Mussar Masterclass from Orchot Tzaddikim's Gate of Slander, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe explores the destructive power of Lashon Hara (slander), gossip, and revealing secrets, teaching that words can cause emotional, financial, physical, and spiritual harm. The discussion emphasizes that speech is never neutral—our words either build or destroy. Whether through sharing private information, repeating rumors, or revealing confidential matters, a person who misuses speech can damage relationships, communities, and ultimately themselves. The episode then uncovers a deeper psychological truth taught by the Talmud: people often criticize in others the very flaws they carry within themselves. A person's conversations reveal their true priorities, passions, and character. Someone who constantly discusses Torah demonstrates a love of Torah; someone obsessed with material pleasures reveals what occupies their heart. What we talk about is often the clearest reflection of who we are. Rabbi Wolbe concludes with a profound lesson on finding the good in others. Drawing from the symbolism of the new moon and stories from the sages, he teaches that every person possesses a "sliver of goodness" that deserves recognition and praise. Strong marriages, healthy relationships, successful parenting, and thriving communities are built by focusing on virtues rather than faults. The challenge of life is not finding flaws—they are easy to find—but training ourselves to seek out and magnify the good. _____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on February 2, 2026, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on June 1, 2026_____________This series on Orchos Tzadikim/Ways of the Righteous is produced in partnership with Hachzek.Join the revolution of daily Mussar study at hachzek.com.We are using the Treasure of Life edition of the Orchos Tzadikkim (Published by Feldheim)_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________
In day 139 of the Jewish Inspiration Podcast, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe concludes the Gate of Slander in Orchos Tzaddikim by discussing the sixth and final dimension: speaking Lashon Hara about honest charity collectors and distributors. He explains how such slander is especially devastating because it discourages donations, harms the poor, drives away righteous fundraisers, and ultimately interferes with the holy work of tzedakah.Rabbi Wolbe shares inspiring personal examples of meticulous financial accountability from his grandfather during the Holocaust and his own work with TORCH. He emphasizes that Lashon Hara “kills three people” (speaker, listener, and subject), warns against associating with habitual speakers of slander, and teaches the dangers of even seemingly positive speech when said in the wrong context (such as praising someone to their competitor). The class closes with a powerful reminder about the tremendous value of every human being and the need for extreme caution with our words._____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on January 26, 2026, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 28, 2026_____________This series on Orchos Tzadikim/Ways of the Righteous is produced in partnership with Hachzek.Join the revolution of daily Mussar study at hachzek.com.We are using the Treasure of Life edition of the Orchos Tzadikkim (Published by Feldheim)_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrab
In day 138 of the Jewish Inspiration Podcast, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe continues exploring the Gate of Slander in Orchos Tzaddikim, focusing on the fifth dimension: speaking negatively about a Ba’al Teshuvah (penitent). He explains the profound spiritual transformation that occurs through genuine repentance — past sins are not merely forgiven but actually converted into merits. Therefore, reminding a penitent of their former wrongdoings is especially grave, as it mocks what have now become mitzvahs.Rabbi Wolbe stresses the importance of giving others the benefit of the doubt, not publicizing private sins, and judging favorably. He shares a powerful personal story of his own momentary lapse and immediate teshuvah, as well as a story about a rabbi who assumed a diabetic had eaten non-kosher food out of medical necessity. The class highlights how destructive it is to rob someone of their dignity and honor, and notes that true Lashon Hara (factually accurate negative speech) is often more damaging than false slander because it is more readily believed._____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on January 26, 2026, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 27, 2026_____________This series on Orchos Tzadikim/Ways of the Righteous is produced in partnership with Hachzek.Join the revolution of daily Mussar study at hachzek.com.We are using the Treasure of Life edition of the Orchos Tzadikkim (Published by Feldheim)_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: <a href="htt
Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe of TORCH in Houston explores Day 137 from the "Gate of Slander" in The Treasure for Life (Orchos Tzaddikim), detailing six dimensions of those who speak Lashon Hara. He begins with the severe spiritual danger of slander, noting that the Talmud lists speakers of falsehood, Lashon Hara, and flattery among groups from which Hashem distances Himself. The first dimension involves speaking negatively about others — sometimes fabricating stories or slandering innocent people — and the Torah’s prohibition against both speaking and accepting such reports. Rabbi Wolbe emphasizes that accepting Lashon Hara makes the listener complicit, as silence signals agreement and gives the speaker credibility to spread it further. He shares a powerful story about a man who received charity for his daughter’s wedding, only for the community to later discover the lavish event was funded by the caterer’s personal gratitude for a life-saving favor from the bride’s grandfather — a reminder not to rush to judgment without the full story.The episode continues with additional dimensions: speaking truthful but damaging information that causes pain (especially about someone’s family or ancestors), publicly shaming others (which can cost one their share in the World to Come), and mentioning a person’s family flaws behind their back to humiliate them in the eyes of others. Rabbi Wolbe stresses that every human being has immense value as God’s creation, and lowering someone’s “human value credits” through slander deeply displeases Hashem. The focus is on protecting others’ dignity, avoiding pain caused by words, and elevating people instead of tearing them down._____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on January 26, 2026, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 26, 2026_____________This series on Orchos Tzadikim/Ways of the Righteous is produced in partnership with Hachzek.Join the revolution of daily Mussar study at hachzek.com.We are using the Treasure of Life edition of the Orchos Tzadikkim (Published by Feldheim)_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questi
In day 136 of the Jewish Inspiration Podcast, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe continues his study of the Gate of Slander from Orchos Tzaddikim (Ways of the Righteous). He explains why the Sages consider Lashon Hara worse than the three cardinal sins: unlike those sins, which stem from momentary temptation and allow for Teshuvah, habitual slander becomes normalized, minimized in the speaker’s eyes (“It’s just words”), and extremely difficult to fully repent because of the hidden, far-reaching damage it causes.Rabbi Wolbe highlights the practical devastation caused by negative speech — lost jobs, ruined marriages, damaged family relationships, and even generational harm — and the challenge of seeking forgiveness when one cannot remember everyone affected. He strongly criticizes modern media and comedy that casually destroy reputations under the guise of “journalism” or “just joking.” The class ends on an inspiring note about the tremendous positive power of speech: the same tongue that can destroy can also build, encourage, teach Torah, and bring people closer to God, as “life and death are in the hands of the tongue.”_____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on January 26, 2026, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 25, 2026_____________This series on Orchos Tzadikim/Ways of the Righteous is produced in partnership with Hachzek.Join the revolution of daily Mussar study at hachzek.com.We are using the Treasure of Life edition of the Orchos Tzadikkim (Published by Feldheim)_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: <str
In this episode of the Jewish Inspiration Podcast, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe begins a new chapter from Orchos Tzaddikim (Ways of the Righteous) on the Gate of Slander (Lashon Hara). He explains that Lashon Hara refers to true but negative speech about another person, distinguishing it from Motzi Shem Ra (spreading false rumors). The rabbi emphasizes how destructive such speech is — it harms the subject’s reputation, damages relationships and business opportunities, and offers the speaker no real benefit, only a fleeting sense of superiority.Rabbi Wolbe highlights the extreme severity of this sin according to our Sages: speaking Lashon Hara is compared to denying God and is equated with the three cardinal sins (idolatry, illicit relations, and murder). He stresses that one must never bring up a person’s past once they have done Teshuvah. A personal anecdote illustrates how easily Lashon Hara becomes the default topic in social gatherings, underscoring the need for conscious effort to avoid it. The class concludes with a powerful reminder from the Chafetz Chaim on guarding one’s tongue to truly desire life and see good in others._____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on January 26, 2026, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 24, 2026_____________This series on Orchos Tzadikim/Ways of the Righteous is produced in partnership with Hachzek.Join the revolution of daily Mussar study at hachzek.com.We are using the Treasure of Life edition of the Orchos Tzadikkim (Published by Feldheim)_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe:
Unlock the secrets of Shavuot and deepen your understanding of this often-overlooked holiday in the Jewish calendar. On this episode of the Jewish Inspiration Podcast, we uncover the fascinating journey from the exodus from Egypt to the monumental moment at Mount Sinai where the Jewish people received the Torah. Through the engaging analogy of engagement and a ring, we illustrate how Shavuot marks the beginning of the Jewish people's enduring covenant with God, and draw insightful connections to the events surrounding Yom Kippur. This episode promises a compelling historical narrative that will enrich your appreciation of Shavuot's significance.Explore the rich traditions and customs that make Shavuot a unique celebration. We reveal the reasons behind the beloved tradition of eating dairy and delve into the compelling story of the Book of Ruth. Discover the historical context of Elimelech's family's move to Moab during a famine and the poignant lessons about the dangers of assimilation. These narratives not only enhance our understanding of the festival but also highlight the timeless struggles and triumphs of the Jewish community. This episode is packed with thought-provoking insights that bring the customs of Shavuot to life.Finally, we reflect on the profound power of prayer and its essential role during Shavuot. Emphasizing heartfelt communication with God, we stress the importance of daily prayers and the auspicious timing of dawn prayers during this festival. Hear personal anecdotes from yeshiva experiences that capture the joy and commitment that define Shavuot celebrations. As we approach this spiritually uplifting holiday, we encourage you to embrace its deeper meaning, fostering a continuous connection with God through prayer and learning. Join us for a transformative journey as we prepare to celebrate the profound significance of Shavuot.Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Levin Family Studios (B) in Houston, Texas on June 11, 2024.Released as Podcast on June 11, 2024_____________DONATE to TORCH: Please consider supporting the podcasts by making a donation to help fund our Jewish outreach and educational efforts at https://www.torchweb.org/support.php. Thank you!_____________SUBSCRIBE and LISTEN to other podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Prayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJewish Inspiration Podcast: https://inspiration.transistor.fm/episodesParsha Review Podcast: https://parsha.transistor.fm/episodesLiving Jewishly Podcast: <a h
In this inspiring episode for Shavuot, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe presents a complete overview and deep dive into the Book of Ruth (Megillat Ruth). Written by the Prophet Samuel, it tells the story of Ruth the Moabite princess who converts to Judaism out of genuine love for Naomi and the Jewish people, ultimately becoming the great-grandmother of King David and an ancestor of Moshiach. The book emphasizes themes of kindness (Chesed), loyalty, modesty, second chances, and personal commitment to Torah.Rabbi Wolbe highlights why Ruth is read on Shavuot: it shows the Torah is acquired through difficulty and dedication (not luxury), Ruth’s conversion mirrors our acceptance of the Torah at Sinai (“Na’aseh v’nishma”), the story occurs during the harvest season (Chag HaKatzir), and it underscores the centrality of Chesed — the very foundation of the Torah. He also explains key halachic concepts from the book (Leket, Pe’ah, Shikcha, Yibum, Chalitzah) and powerful lessons about not running from challenges, embracing one’s unique journey, and understanding that apparent setbacks often pave the way for redemption and greatness.To Download the Book of Ruth Outline: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Z6J6Zcvl8EJ0R8s_nSGhzGxLV5uM81eb_____________This Podcast Series is Generously Underwritten by Peter & Becky BotvinRecorded at TORCH Centre in the Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on May 19, 2026, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 20, 2026_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: <a href="https://heyrabbi.trans
In the final episode (way #48) of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Valomer Davar B'Shem Omro — “say things in the name of its source” (proper attribution). Giving credit where it is due is a fundamental Torah principle that honors truth, prevents plagiarism, and elevates the value of the wisdom being shared. Rabbi Wolbe stresses that Torah and life wisdom belong to everyone, but we must acknowledge the source rather than claiming it as our own.He attributes the entire series to Rabbi Noah Weinberg, who popularized the 48 Ways and made them practical and accessible. Rabbi Wolbe encourages listeners to review, internalize, and continue growing with these tools, closing with “Chazak, chazak, v’nitchazek” and the traditional Talmudic farewell: we will return to the material, and it will return to us. The 48 Ways are practical tools for a magnificent, pleasure-filled life connected to Hashem._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on July 5, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 23, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJewis
Have you ever felt the anticipation of a monumental moment, only to find yourself unexpectedly calm? Picture the night before the Jewish people received the Torah, a gift so profound it's like waiting for a luxury car, yet they found peace in sleep. In our latest episode, we reflect on this paradoxical calm and draw parallels to the excitement of Shavuot, even as we hold in our hearts the ongoing challenges faced by those in Israel amidst recent rocket alarms. The beauty of this podcast lies in its exploration of the deep, complex relationship between the Jewish people and God, likened to an engagement ring's promise—the Torah as the eternal symbol of their sacred bond.Our discussion ventures into the symbolism of commitment, exploring how 613 mitzvot serve as daily reminders of this divine connection. Imagine a marriage, filled with ups and downs, demanding love and dedication—that's the journey of the Jewish people with God. As we unravel the significance of Shavuot, we touch upon the tradition of staying awake all night, reminiscent of the eagerness before a wedding. This holiday isn't merely about customs like enjoying dairy; it's a celebration of the profound covenant formed at Mount Sinai, commemorated through the story of na'aseh v'nishma and the journey captured by the letter Aleph.As the episode unfolds, we embrace the longing for closeness with Hashem, much like a parent's unconditional love for a child. This spiritual intimacy, especially during Shavuot, invites us to recognize and rejoice in God's presence in our everyday lives. Our conversation encourages listeners to nurture this relationship, finding strength and growth even amidst life's challenges. As we close, we share heartfelt wishes for a meaningful Shabbos and Shavuot, with hopes for ongoing Torah learning and spiritual enrichment, reminding us all of the enduring connection between the Jewish people and God._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Levin Family Studio (B) to a live audience on May 30, 2025, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on June 1, 2025_____________DONATE to TORCH: Please consider supporting the podcasts by making a donation to help fund our Jewish outreach and educational efforts at https://www.torchweb.org/support.php. Thank you!_____________SUBSCRIBE and LISTEN to other podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe:NEW!! Prayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJewish Inspiration Podcast: https://inspiration.transistor.fm/episodesParsha Review Podcast: https://parsha.transistor.fm/episodesLiving Jewishly Podcast: https://jewishly.transistor.
In this timely episode ahead of Shavuot, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe discusses the Shloshet Yemei Hagbalah — the three days of preparation (beginning the day after this podcast) that the Jewish people observed before receiving the Torah at Mount Sinai. The Torah commands separation from marital relations, guarding the mountain, and spiritual readiness so the nation could become worthy vessels for Matan Torah.Rabbi Wolbe highlights Yom HaMeiuchas (today, the day between Rosh Chodesh Sivan and the three days of limitation) as a powerful day of pedigree and potential, surrounded by holiness on both sides. He stresses that preparation is greater than the mitzvah itself, that we must set realistic personal kabbalot (commitments) for Torah growth, and that the flavor of Torah only grows sweeter the more we learn. The episode encourages reclaiming the intensity of these days — learning more, closing shops early in the old days, and treating Shavuot as the Rosh Hashanah of Torah study. He ends with a personal request for listeners to share how the podcasts have impacted them._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on May 22, 2023, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 22, 2023_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJewish Inspiration Podcast: <a href="https://inspiration.transistor.
In episode forty-seven of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches U’Mit’Yashev Libo B’Talmudo — “let your heart sink into your learning.” Torah study is not passive or one-time; it demands constant review, fresh perspectives, and deep absorption so that wisdom becomes part of who you are. Rabbi Wolbe stresses that the Torah path is like a ramp (not stairs): you are either ascending or descending; stagnation is impossible. Each person must take their own size step forward while never stopping.He encourages annual renewal — creating new notes, finding new angles, and applying familiar material to your current life stage. Torah is life itself (“Ki heim chayeinu”), not an accessory. Complacency dulls the spirit; relentless engagement brings excitement, clarity, and closeness to God. Even great sages reviewed the Talmud over 100 times per cycle. Rabbi Wolbe shares that he learns best when preparing to teach, and urges daily growth: learn something new, review, and make it practical. God gives us each day because He believes in our potential — don’t waste it._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on July 1, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 22, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodes
Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe of TORCH in Houston delivers an inspiring overview of Shavuot, the Festival of Weeks, celebrating the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai over 3,300 years ago. He explains its Torah names — Chag HaShavuot (Festival of Weeks), Chag HaKatzir (Harvest Festival), and Yom HaBikkurim (First Fruits) — and the Talmudic name Atzeret. Shavuot completes the Passover season and marks the public revelation where millions of Jews (including converts) directly witnessed Hashem giving the Torah, a unique event no other religion can claim. Rabbi Wolbe highlights the mutual oath between God and the Jewish people, likening it to a wedding where the Torah serves as the ketubah.Practical laws and customs include candle lighting, festive meals with fine foods and wine, the special Eruv Tavshilin when Shavuot falls before Shabbos, staying up all night learning Torah (to correct the ancestors’ oversleeping and show excitement), eating dairy foods (symbolizing the sweetness of Torah and the first kosher meal after Sinai), reading Megillat Ruth, reciting Akdamus, decorating with greenery and flowers, and saying Yizkor. The episode stresses Shavuot as an internal holiday focused on our personal connection to Hashem and His Torah.Rabbi Wolbe encourages listeners to renew their commitment to Torah study and observance, making the words of Torah sweet in our mouths and homes for generations._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on May 23, 2023, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 25, 2023_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: <a href="https://heyrabbi.transi
In episode forty-six of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches HaMachkim Et Rabotav — “educate the educators” or making your teachers wiser. When you teach others, you deepen your own understanding and retention of the material. Torah study is not passive — actively ask questions, define concepts clearly, deliberate on their relevance, and apply them practically. Persistence is key: pursue wisdom relentlessly, even when it feels difficult or when rabbis/teachers seem busy.Rabbi Wolbe shares that he learns best when preparing to teach because it forces mastery. Students should not be shy — ask, inquire, and push for clarity. Teachers must present ideas simply yet deeply, ensuring students understand. Torah belongs to every Jew; keep it accessible while striving for greater depth. Persistence with rabbis and in personal study opens doors, as Hashem assists those who truly seek._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on July 1, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 21, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJewish Inspiration</str
In preparation for the upcoming festival of Shavuos, the TORCH Rabbis and Podcasters gathered together in the magnificent TORCH Centre to discuss the upcoming days of holiness and connection with our creator! Each of us shared an idea about Shavuos and how to make the most of this powerful holiday. If you want to experience a convivial, collegial, conversation about Pesach with the Podcasters of TORCH, now is your chance.Featured in this episode: Rabbi Yaakov Nagel, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Rabbi Yaakov Wolbe, Rabbi Chaim Bucsko and TORCH President, Dan Kullman.*****To listen to other podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: https://linktr.ee/ariwolJewish Inspiration Podcast: https://inspiration.transistor.fm/episodesParsha Review Podcast: https://parsha.transistor.fm/episodesLiving Jewishly Podcast: https://jewishly.transistor.fm/episodesThinking Talmudist Podcast: https://talmud.transistor.fm/episodesUnboxing Judaism Podcast: https://unboxing.transistor.fm/episodesRabbi Aryeh Wolbe Podcast Collection: https://collection.transistor.fm/episodesPlease visit www.torchweb.org to see a full listing of our Jewish outreach and educational resources available in the Greater Houston area and please consider sponsoring a podcast by making a donation to help support our global outreach at https://www.torchweb.org/donate. Thank you!For a full listing of podcasts available by TORCH at https://www.TORCHpodcasts.comRecorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B on May 21, 2023, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 22, 2023 ★ Support this podcast ★
In episode forty-five of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches HaLomed Al Menat L’Lamed and HaLomed Al Menat La’asot — “learn in order to teach” and “learn in order to fulfill/practice.” Torah study must lead to action and transmission. Clearly define concepts, deliberate on their personal relevance, and immediately apply them to life. Don’t hoard wisdom — share it, as this deepens your own understanding and fulfills the Jewish mission to be a light unto the nations.Rabbi Wolbe shares that he learns best when preparing to teach (e.g., his EMT course and this series), because it forces mastery and organization. Even if you only retain one point from a class, it’s valuable. Torah is practical wisdom for living, not abstract knowledge. Commit to daily growth, review with fresh eyes, and turn every insight into concrete change. Learning without application or sharing is incomplete._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on July 1, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 20, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJew
In episode forty-four of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Shoel U’Mayshiv, Shomea U’Mosif — asking and answering, listening and adding. True learning requires active engagement: clearly define the topic, deliberate on its personal relevance, and apply it practically to life. Don’t be a passive listener or embarrassed to ask questions — a fool avoids asking, while the wise pursue understanding relentlessly.Rabbi Wolbe encourages researching answers yourself first (to gain broader wisdom along the way), then listening deeply to expand on them. Make every piece of wisdom your own rather than repeating others. Torah study must lead to action and transformation, not just intellectual accumulation. This way builds directly on previous teachings about absorption, growth without complacency, and using knowledge for real change._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 28, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on March 31, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJewish Inspiration Podcast: <a href="https://inspiration.transist
In episode forty-three of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches U’Mityashev Libo B’Talmudo — “let your heart sink into your learning” or absorbing Torah deeply so it becomes part of you. Torah study is not merely intellectual; it must transform character and daily life. Don’t be complacent or arrogant about what you know — review relentlessly, approach familiar material with fresh eyes each year, and challenge yourself to grow.Rabbi Wolbe emphasizes that the Torah path is like a ramp (not stairs): you are either ascending or descending; stagnation is impossible. Each Jew can and must take their own size step forward. He encourages annual new goals (new notes, deeper angles, application to current life stage) and treating Torah as life itself — with the passion of true love. Complacency dulls the spirit; constant engagement brings excitement, clarity, and closeness to God. Even great sages like Rav Moshe Feinstein reviewed the Talmud over 100 times per cycle._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 21, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on March 28, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: htt
In episode forty-two of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ma’amido al HaShalom — “establish/stand on peace” (pursuing and maintaining peace). Peace (Shalom) comes from Shalem — wholeness and completeness. While truth is absolute, peace sometimes requires flexibility or forgoing full truth to restore harmony, as God Himself does when blessing His people with peace.Rabbi Wolbe emphasizes that loving peace is not enough — we must actively pursue it like Aaron HaKohen, who would approach quarreling parties and tell each that the other regretted their actions, restoring peace. See the good and virtues in every person (even if you must dig), focus on positives rather than flaws, and be willing to be uncomfortable for the sake of peace. In relationships, disagreements are inevitable but should never cancel love — use them to strengthen bonds. Peace is the highest blessing and brings God’s presence._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 17, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on March 25, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJe
In episode forty-one of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches U’Ma’amidu Al Ha’Emet — “stand firm on truth” or placing everything on truth. Truth is absolute, not subjective or multi-sided. In a world of compromise, political correctness, and “my truth,” the Torah demands unwavering commitment to reality and honesty, even when uncomfortable or unpopular.Rabbi Wolbe explains that every decision is a choice between life/good and death/evil (Deuteronomy 30). We must research questions thoroughly, avoid flippant answers, and admit “I don’t know” when appropriate. Compromise has its place (e.g., mezuzah on a slant for peace), but truth itself does not bend. He stresses personal responsibility: only you determine your life path; take ownership and make changes where needed. Torah is the ultimate source of truth — investigate it deeply rather than defaulting to convenience or societal pressure._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 17, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on March 21, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJewish
In episode forty of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Umachriyo L’Kaf Zechut — “judge others favorably” or tipping the scale toward merit. This means judging the entire person and the full context, not a single action or moment. We rarely see the complete backstory, struggles, or reasons behind someone’s behavior, so we must give the benefit of the doubt.Rabbi Wolbe shares a powerful story of a modest wedding that appeared extravagant, leading the community to judge the father harshly — until they learned the caterer was repaying a debt of gratitude for the man’s father saving his own father’s life during the Holocaust. The lesson: never judge on partial information. Everyone has a story, and assuming the best protects us from sin and builds better relationships.Key teachings include: be concerned for others as much as yourself; help carry burdens rather than add to them; and remember that judging favorably is an active choice and responsibility. The Mishnah guides us to see the good in every person and situation, fostering empathy, unity, and spiritual growth._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 17, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on March 15, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi
In episode thirty-nine of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Noseh Ba’ol Im Chaveiro — “carrying the burden with your friend” or empathy. True connection requires feeling another person’s struggles as if they were your own. This is not superficial sympathy but genuine empathy that bridges isolation and builds real relationships.Rabbi Wolbe explains that every human being is struggling with something — financial, emotional, health, or spiritual challenges. When we pay attention, learn names, observe moods, and truly listen, we can share those burdens. Empathy is the foundation for judging others favorably (the next way) and for elevating all relationships. Even small acts — a kind word, a smile, sitting silently with someone in pain — can make a profound difference. He notes that the best comfort often comes not from clever words but from shared presence and tears.Empathy transforms us from self-centered to part of a greater whole, reflecting the oneness of humanity and God’s creations. It is the practical expression of loving others as ourselves._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 17, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on March 10, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodes
In episode thirty-eight of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ve’eino Sameach BeHora’ah — “do not delight in decision-making” (or avoid being hasty/casual in rulings). Every conscious moment involves decisions, and we must approach them with responsibility, research, and clarity rather than flippancy or emotion. The Torah presents a clear choice: “See, I have placed before you today life and good, death and evil… choose life.”Rabbi Wolbe urges thorough investigation before deciding on major life questions: How should I honor my parents? How do I maintain honesty in business? How do I care for humanity? Does God exist? Is there an afterlife? Do we have free will? Don’t act as a lawyer defending preconceived notions — be a judge seeking truth. Admit “I don’t know” when appropriate; it is a sign of wisdom. Only you determine your life path — take ownership and make changes where needed.Decisions shape destiny. Be deliberate, rational, and aligned with Torah values rather than rushing or defaulting to convenience. This way builds on earlier themes of balance, a good heart, and knowing your place, emphasizing thoughtful action as the foundation for a maximized, meaningful life._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 17, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on February 20, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!!
In episode thirty-seven of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches V’Lo Meigis Libo B’Talmudo — “do not become complacent or arrogant in your Torah study.” Torah learning is not a one-time achievement or a static body of knowledge; it demands constant review, fresh perspectives, and ongoing growth. Even the greatest sages like Rav Moshe Feinstein reviewed the entire Talmud over 100 times per cycle. Complacency dulls the mind and spirit, while consistent engagement brings deeper clarity, excitement, and connection to God.Rabbi Wolbe explains that the Torah path is like a ramp (not stairs) — you are either ascending or descending; stagnation is impossible. Each year we must approach familiar material with renewed vigor, creating new notes, finding new angles, and applying it to our current stage of life. Torah is life itself — treat it with the passion of a true love, never saying “I already know this.” He encourages challenging yourself annually, recognizing that every Jew can grow regardless of starting point, and maintaining the mindset that “God is the biggest believer in you” by granting another day to learn and improve._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 17, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on February 14, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: <a href="https://heyrabbi.transistor.
In episode thirty-six of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches U’mitrachek Min HaKavod — “run away from honor” or distancing oneself from seeking recognition and glory. While honor and respect are natural human needs, obsessively pursuing them harms spiritual growth, blocks genuine accomplishment, and leads to emptiness. True greatness comes from doing what is right regardless of applause or criticism.Rabbi Wolbe stresses respecting others deeply: a husband must honor his wife more than himself; a teacher must honor students as himself; and we must protect the dignity of family and community. He shares personal examples, including his father’s blunt honesty and his own rabbi’s fierce defense of students. Seeking external validation keeps us from authentic living — focus instead on fulfilling your mission for Hashem. Run after honor and it flees; flee honor and it pursues you. Know your priorities, maintain self-dignity without showmanship, and let actions speak louder than titles or recognition._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 14, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on February 13, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: <a href="https://
In episode thirty-five of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ohev Et HaTochachot — “love criticism” or loving rebuke. A wise person welcomes criticism because it provides a perspective they are blind to, helping them perfect themselves and avoid pitfalls. Criticism, when done with love and properly, is one of the greatest gifts one can receive — even if the delivery is imperfect, focus on the merit of the message.Rabbi Wolbe stresses the Torah obligation from Leviticus 19:17: do not hate your fellow in your heart, but rebuke them constructively so you do not bear sin on their account. Criticize the action, not the person (especially important with children). Be grateful to those who care enough to point out flaws, as it can save lives and elevate character. For the critic, the goal must be improvement, not shaming. Love of criticism is a hallmark of wisdom and a key tool for maximizing personal growth and spiritual success._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 10, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on February 7, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.
In episode thirty-four of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ohev Et HaMeisharim — “love the straight path.” This way calls us to embrace simplicity, honesty, moral clarity, and straightforward living rather than complicated, crooked, or politically correct detours. The Torah itself is straight and simple — follow it directly without overcomplicating or bending truth to suit desires.Rabbi Wolbe emphasizes that “straight” means doing the right thing even when unpopular, avoiding exaggeration or white lies (a lie is a lie), and maintaining clear moral boundaries in a confused world. He shares personal examples of his father’s blunt honesty and the importance of not disparaging others who choose differently, while still upholding our own standards. Environment matters: surround yourself with straight, positive influences.The Torah path is accessible to everyone — not just scholars. Keep learning simple when needed, focus on personal growth, and remember that loving the straight path brings clarity, integrity, and true alignment with God’s will._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 10, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on January 29, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodes</l
In episode thirty-three of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ehov Et HaTzedek — “love the righteous” and love righteousness. After discussing love of God and love of humanity, this way focuses on actively loving goodness, justice, moral straightness, and the pleasure of doing what is right.Rabbi Wolbe explains that the Torah presents a clear binary choice (Deuteronomy 30:15-16): life/good versus death/evil. God urges us to “choose life” by following His commandments, walking in His ways, and finding joy in righteousness. Obligations and mitzvot are not burdens — they are the path to true fulfillment and maximized pleasure. When we commit to goodness, even when it is not our natural inclination, we actualize our potential and experience deeper satisfaction.He encourages reaffirming moral clarity in a confused world: call evil what it is (theft, murder, etc.), model values for children, and obligate yourself to positive actions. Personal stories illustrate forcing oneself to give first (e.g., snacks in yeshiva) to break selfishness and the importance of celebrating small victories in goodness._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 10, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on January 24, 2023The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast:
In this special Lag B'Omer episode of the Jewish Inspiration Podcast, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe celebrates the 33rd day of the Omer (18 Iyar) as the yahrzeit of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai (Rashbi), one of the greatest Tanaim and author of the Zohar. The Talmud hints to him via “Hamin ha’etz” (same letters as Haman) from the Tree of Knowledge—both represent focusing on what we lack instead of appreciating what we have.Rashbi’s life story includes:Student of Rabbi Akiva; one of five who re-established Torah after the plague that killed 24,000 students.Hid in a cave for 12 years (with his son Elazar) surviving on carobs and water, studying Torah with Eliyahu HaNavi—emerging with unparalleled mystical wisdom.His teachings emphasize loving fellow Jews, the power of a good name, and the three crowns (Torah, priesthood, royalty), with the crown of a good name excelling above all.Customs for the day include bonfires (commemorating his fiery spirit and the heavenly fire at his funeral), bows and arrows (no rainbow appeared in his lifetime, symbolizing high spirituality), music, outings, haircuts for three-year-olds, and charity at his gravesite in Meron. The rabbi highlights Rashbi’s power to free the world from judgment and the immense merit of praying at his tomb._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on May 9, 2023, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 9, 2023_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer </
In episode thirty-two of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ahavat HaBriyot — “love of humanity” or loving all creations. This way builds directly on the previous teachings about being loved by others and loving God, showing that love must expand outward to every person.Rabbi Wolbe explains that the Torah command “Love your fellow as yourself” requires us first to love and truly know ourselves, then to extend that love generously to others. Love is fundamentally giving — the more selflessly we invest in relationships, the deeper and more fulfilling they become. See the unique virtue and potential in every human being (even if you have to dig for it), compliment sincerely, prioritize family, and actively pursue peace like Aaron HaKohen.Key teachings include: love moves us from the narrow “me” to the expansive “we”; disagreements are normal but should never cancel love — use them to strengthen bonds; every person is a unique world created by God; and loving humanity opens opportunities, brings joy, and helps us realize our own potential. When we focus on giving rather than receiving, love naturally reflects back._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on June 7, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on August 14, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: <a href="https://heyrabb
In episode thirty-one of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ahavat HaMakom — “love of God” and loving His presence in the world. Building on the previous way (being loved by others), this way focuses on reciprocating God’s endless love by actively seeking and appreciating His kindness, wisdom, and gifts in every aspect of creation.Rabbi Wolbe explains that the commandment to “love Hashem your God with all your heart” is fulfilled by investigating and recognizing what God does for us constantly — from the miracle of every breath and the beauty of a sunset to the intricate design of the human body and the galaxies. The more we immerse ourselves in God’s world and truth, the more natural and profound our love for Him becomes. He stresses that love is about giving and connection: just as we love those who do good for us, seeing God’s constant benevolence makes love for Him inevitable.Key points include: use unstructured personal prayer (hishtadlut) to thank God, ask, and share dreams; every pleasure can be traced back to its Divine source; God resides where there is peace and love, not strife; and loving God’s “place” means loving His creations, His Torah, and the path of peace. Rabbi Wolbe encourages daily utterances of “I love You, Hashem. Thank You,” turning ordinary moments into expressions of love and connection._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio A on June 7, 2022, in Houston, Texas. Released as Podcast on August 12, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen More
In episode thirty of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ahuv — “to be loved by others.” The way to be loved is simple yet profound: love others first. Our sages teach k’mayim panim el panim — just as water reflects a face, so too does kindness and love reflect back. The more you give love, the more you receive it.Rabbi Wolbe explains that love is fundamentally about giving, not taking. In marriage, parenting, and friendships, the more selflessly you invest, the deeper the bond and the greater the returned love. Recognize the good others do for you (Hakarat HaTov), thank them, and compliment sincerely — this raises people to live up to the positive image you set. Children especially rise (or fall) to the expectations and words spoken over them.He emphasizes opening your heart: when you focus on giving rather than receiving, relationships flourish and true happiness follows. The generation’s self-centered “me-first” mindset blocks love, while shifting to “how can I give?” transforms life. Ultimately, being loved flows naturally from becoming a source of love, kindness, and positivity to those around you._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio A on June 7, 2022, in Houston, Texas. Released as Podcast on August 10, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: <a href="https://heyrabbi.transistor.f
In episode twenty-nine of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ve’eino Machzik Tova L’Atzmo — “do not take credit for yourself” or “do not praise yourself.” Arrogance is claiming credit for gifts and achievements that truly belong to Hashem. The Mishnah warns us that taking pride in things we did not earn blocks further growth, closes us off to new ideas, and damages relationships. No one enjoys being around a show-off.Rabbi Wolbe explains the critical difference: a humble person recognizes their talents as gifts from above, while an arrogant person sees them as self-made. True praise belongs to hard-earned character traits and fear of Heaven (yirat shamayim), not external gifts like beauty, voice, or success. King Solomon’s “Eishes Chayil” teaches that grace and beauty are false to praise (they are unearned), but a God-fearing person who works on their character is truly praiseworthy.Key lessons include: everything ultimately comes from Hashem (“Hashem malach ge’us lavesh” — God wears the garment of pride); running after honor makes it flee, while fleeing honor draws it near; maintain constant awareness that we are only travelers in this world; and avoid self-praise so we remain open to growth and connection with others and with God. The episode reinforces humility as essential for maximizing life and true spiritual success._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio A on May 31, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on August 8, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Lis
In this short, uplifting episode, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe explains Pesach Sheni (14 Iyar), the "second Passover" opportunity for those who were ritually impure (e.g., contact with a corpse) or too far away to bring the Korban Pesach on 14 Nisan. He highlights the Torah's message of second chances — no one is ever "too late" to correct course, reconnect with Hashem, or fulfill a mitzvah. The story of Mishael and Eltzaphan (who became impure handling Nadav and Avihu's bodies) shows how passion for mitzvot, channeled correctly, leads to asking Hashem for solutions.Rabbi Wolbe draws powerful lessons: (1) Always a new beginning — today is your chance to start over; (2) Bring passion and fire to mitzvot (learn from Nadav/Avihu's exuberance but do it right); (3) Personally declare "Hine Elokeinu Zeh" — make knowledge of Hashem your own, not just inherited. Customs include eating leftover matzah and omitting Tachanun. The episode ends with a call to live with clarity, passion, and personal connection to Hashem, especially as we count the Omer toward Shavuot._____________Recorded in the TORCH Centre - Studio B to a live audience on May 2, 2023, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on May 4, 2023_____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org.Your support makes a HUGE difference!_____________Listen MoreOther podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Hey Rabbi! Podcast: https://heyrabbi.transistor.fm/episodesPrayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJewish Inspiration Podcast: https://inspiration.
In episode twenty-eight of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ha’oseh Siyag L’Dvarav — “making a fence around your words” (and by extension, around your life). Just as we build protective fences around dangerous things (nuclear plants, guns, etc.), we must create intentional boundaries to safeguard our speech, eyes, time, family, and values from negative influences.Rabbi Wolbe explains that boundaries are essential for maximizing pleasure and success in every area. Without them, we lose appreciation (going to the beach every day stops being special), fall into bad habits (foul language from coworkers, endless scrolling), or expose ourselves and our children to harm. He stresses protecting innocence like we protect valuables — limit apps, use screen-time controls, avoid certain environments (e.g., Las Vegas as “Sin City”), and be cautious with media and influences.Additional teachings include: pre-marital counseling/therapy as a wise boundary for marriage (especially for those over 30); knowing good vs. evil clearly; learning from mistakes only to improve the future; and recognizing that “the second look costs.” The definition of insanity is repeating the same action while expecting different results. Children absorb what they hear and see at home — set the right example. Ultimately, boundaries are not restrictions but strategic tools that allow us to live with clarity, self-control, and true freedom._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio A on May 31, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on July 24, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torchweb.org<
In episode twenty-seven of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches HaSameach B’Chelko — “happy/content with one’s portion.” This is one of the most vital traits for our generation, where material abundance coexists with record levels of depression and anxiety. True happiness does not come from having more, but from appreciating and being grateful for what we already have.Rabbi Wolbe explains that people today — even those on government assistance — live with more comforts than kings had centuries ago, yet they remain miserable because they focus on what they lack rather than what they possess. Consumerism, window shopping, and constant comparison fuel endless chasing after the next “fix,” which provides only temporary dopamine before the craving returns. The key is daily gratitude: say “thank you” to Hashem constantly, aim for the 100 blessings a day we are commanded to recite, and maintain a personal list of things you are grateful for.He shares a powerful personal story of a wealthy student who transformed from misery to joy after being assigned to write and daily recite 50 things he was thankful for. Happiness is an attitude and a discipline, not a destination or external circumstance. Negative people and environments drag us down, while focusing on blessings creates confidence, optimism, and fulfillment. Ultimately, being content with our portion allows us to enjoy life’s gifts without being enslaved by endless desire._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio B on May 24, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on July 22, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at torc
In episode twenty-six of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Ha'Makir Et Mekomo — “to know your place.” This is a foundational principle for a successful, meaningful life: understanding where we stand in every situation, especially in our relationship with Hashem. When you are in charge, know you are in charge. When you are not, know you are not. Knowing your place brings clarity, humility, and proper action.Rabbi Wolbe stresses the importance of personal introspection — taking time alone to speak directly and unstructured with Hashem: thank Him, ask of Him, and share your hopes, dreams, and aspirations. In marriage, family, business, and community, everyone must know their responsibilities so harmony can exist. We must know ourselves before entering deep relationships, and we must know our unique purpose in this world — Hashem placed each of us here for a specific mission no one else can fulfill.Key teachings include: we are only travelers passing through this world (like the Chofetz Chaim who saw himself as always traveling and therefore did not accumulate); write a personal and family mission statement and review it regularly; recognize that politicians and the honored in this world are often the lowest in the next, while the humble and trampled-upon are elevated; and understand that the world is “upside down” compared to how we perceive it. Knowing your place with your Creator gives direction, prevents arrogance, and allows you to fulfill your unique role with confidence and joy._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio B on May 24, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on July 17, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponso
In episode twenty-five of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches B’Kabbalat HaYisurim — “accepting pain” or “receiving suffering.” No pain, no gain is a fundamental principle of growth. Every truly valuable thing in life — children, marriage, Torah, Eretz Yisrael, Olam HaBa — comes with a price tag of effort and discomfort. According to the pain is the reward (“lefum tzara agra”).Rabbi Wolbe explains that pain is an essential ingredient for real pleasure and achievement. We must learn to welcome it as a necessary byproduct of growth rather than running from it. Let children experience healthy failure so they develop resilience and the drive to fight harder next time. Pain is temporary, but the results and character it builds are permanent. Historical examples show that the Jewish people often rose to their greatest heights precisely during times of difficulty and exile — like an olive that yields its finest oil only when crushed.Key teachings include: confront reality, find pleasure within the pain, and use suffering as fuel for growth; Moshe Rabbeinu was chosen because he felt the pain of others — we must do the same and not ignore suffering around us; make a list of things you fear and overcome them; and remember that toiling without immediate success is still valuable because the reward is pending. We should not seek unnecessary pain, but when it comes, accept and channel it toward greater merit and closeness to Hashem._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio B on May 24, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on July 14, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]_____________Support Our Mission:Our Mission is Connecting Jews & Judaism. Help us spread Judaism globally by sponsoring an episode at tor
In episode twenty-four of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches B’Emunat Chachamim — “with belief/faith in the wise” or valuing wisdom. Building on way #10 (serving the wise), this way emphasizes actively seeking, valuing, and believing in wisdom in every area of life — not only Torah, but also parenting, marriage, business, medicine, technology, and more.Rabbi Wolbe explains that the world has always had distractions (even before smartphones and social media), yet King Solomon’s advice remains: seek wisdom like buried treasure. The first step is deciding you want truth and will not settle for less. Make for yourself teachers and experts in every field you need (“aseh lecha rav” applies broadly). Learn to think like a scholar by studying sources deeply, as his rebbe taught with source sheets before class.He highlights the unbroken chain of Torah transmission from Moses at Sinai to today and the unique power of the Jewish people to derive all wisdom from Torah (even concepts like pi appear in the Talmud). The Chazon Ish’s precise surgical diagram drawn on a napkin is a striking example: deep Torah knowledge can illuminate modern fields when properly applied.Practical guidance includes: listen to your parents and elders (white hair is an “information center”); be bothered by ignorance and time-wasting content so you are motivated to seek real wisdom; know what you are living (and willing to die) for; and recognize that Jews should look to Judaism as the ultimate source of wisdom. In our “Generation I” (self-centered, “me-first” culture), the greatest mistake is thinking we already know everything — instead, humbly seek those wiser than us and let their wisdom enter our souls._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio A on May 24, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on July 10, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: <a href="mailto:awolbe@torchw
In episode twenty-three of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Tov Lev — “with a good heart.” This quality is the engine that drives all other positive traits and actions. The Shema’s command to love God “with all your heart” (b’chol levavcha) refers to the two inclinations battling within us: the yetzer tov (good inclination) and the yetzer hara (evil inclination). We must consciously choose the good heart every day.Rabbi Wolbe explains that a good heart brings clarity and virtue to everything else we do. Before every decision, we should ask: What does my soul want versus what does my body want? The yetzer hara pushes for immediate comfort or pleasure (chocolate cake, procrastination, TV), while the soul yearns for growth, wisdom, and connection to God. In Pirkei Avot, when the students were asked for the best way a person should conduct himself, Rabbi Elazar ben Arach answered “a good heart,” and that was deemed the correct response because a good heart energizes and perfects all other traits.Key teachings include: do not get caught up in the facade of the world (beautiful cars or walls hide twisted metal and wires underneath); resist the “I” generation’s self-centered culture that cannot tolerate differing opinions; learn to appreciate small steps forward and differences in others; let children experience healthy failure so they learn to push themselves; be proactive about filling life with good deeds and emulating God; and constantly evaluate priorities — money versus happiness, comfort versus growth.Rabbi Wolbe reminds us that the heart inspires action while the body performs it. A good heart keeps us aligned with our true mission, helps us discern real from fake, and ensures that even when we fall (the righteous fall seven times and rise), we get back up with renewed direction. Ultimately, having a “tov lev” is the key to maximizing life and achieving true happiness._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio A on May 24, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on July 8, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houst
In episode twenty-two of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches Erech Apayim — “slow to anger” or “control your anger” (patience and acceptance of frustration). This is the final “limited” way before shifting to positive character traits. We must accept that things do not always go our way, embrace differences, and learn to appreciate opinions that differ from our own.Rabbi Wolbe identifies the core problem of our generation as the “I” culture — everything is about “me” (iPhone, iPad, etc.). This self-centeredness leads to intolerance: if I don’t like your opinion, I can hurt or damage you. As Jews, we are meant to be a light unto the nations by showing how to live with warmth and friendship despite deep differences in religious, political, or philosophical views.Anger is likened to idol worship in the Talmud because it allows another power to take control. It often stems from a lack of bitachon (trust in Hashem). Everything comes from God, and challenges are tailor-made for us — only we can handle our specific tests. A person should habitually say, “The world was created for me” (bishvili nivra ha’olam), realizing their challenges were designed perfectly for their growth.Practical teachings include making small adjustments like the trim on an airplane to stay on course amid changing winds; learning patience from Rav Preida, who explained a lesson 400 times (and then another 400 when the student was distracted); and recognizing that righteous people fall seven times and rise again — the ups and downs are the healthy rhythm of life (like a heartbeat). Anger causes us to lose wisdom (“if someone was smart, their wisdom leaves them when angry”). Even Rav Moshe Feinstein once appeared to yell sternly at a student, but it was deliberate acting — he himself remained calm.Anger never helps; it destroys relationships, marriages, and personal growth. Instead, accept frustration, make small corrections, and use every situation — good, bad, or ugly — as an opportunity to grow and connect more deeply with Hashem._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio B on May 20, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on July 2, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torch
In episode twenty-one of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches B’Miut Tzchok — “with limited laughter.” This is the final “limited” way in the series, emphasizing balance rather than avoidance. Laughter is powerful and can be wonderful, but like business, intimacy, pleasure, sleep, and speech, it requires proper limits.Rabbi Wolbe distinguishes between positive laughter and negative laughter. Positive laughter uplifts others — the two marketplace men who merited the World to Come simply made sad or struggling people laugh and lightened their spirits. Negative laughter mocks others, laughs at people’s misfortunes, or ridicules leaders and celebrities (as seen in many late-night shows). Excessive laughter risks sin, desensitizes us, wipes away inspiration (“one laughter can wipe away 60 inspirations”), and causes us to lose seriousness about what truly matters.He shares the beautiful story of the great Maggid Rav Shalom Shvadron, who always began his Torah lectures with a joke. When asked why, he compared himself to a mother giving medicine to a child: she makes the child laugh first, then slips in the (sometimes bitter) medicine. Laughter can open hearts so that deeper, spiritual “medicine” can enter.Key teachings include: life is a collection of opportunities, not problems; use laughter consciously to lighten difficult situations and keep troubles in proportion; it is better to visit a house of mourning than a wedding party because weddings can lead to excess and loss of boundaries, while mourning restores perspective. Laughter is “the best medicine,” but medicine is for healing, not daily consumption. Mockers are among those from whom God distances Himself.Rabbi Wolbe notes his own grandfather was serious yet had a fabulous sense of humor — balance is essential. Too much laughter can damage spiritual growth and prevent us from maximizing true, eternal pleasure. The Mishnah teaches us to use laughter in measured, constructive amounts that elevate rather than degrade._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio B on May 20, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on June 21, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchwe
In episode twenty of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches B’Miut Sichah — “with limited schmoozing” or limited idle talk. While the previous “limited” ways focused on balance rather than total avoidance, this one encourages meaningful, substantive conversation instead of empty chatter. Every person has unique wisdom and life experience; when we genuinely like people, we enjoy talking with them — but the talk should count.Rabbi Wolbe stresses making conversations purposeful. Complaining about things we cannot change (like Houston humidity) is pointless; once they stopped kvetching about it, it stopped bothering them. Learn to enjoy hearing different opinions and perspectives — even robust political discussions can be beautiful when done with respect. Negative speech turns a person negative. What we talk about defines who we are (“ish kefi mahalalo” — a person is known by what he praises).Speech is a uniquely human power. Hebrew (Lashon HaKodesh) is not a socially constructed language but a divine one where each word reflects the essence of the thing it names (e.g., “kelev” = kol lev — all heart). We have four levels of creation: domem (inanimate), tzomeach (plant), chai (animal), and medaber (speaking human). Jews are held to an even higher level as links in the chain from Abraham to the present.Practical advice includes: find the good in people and say it (a sincere compliment); limit futile talk (weather, endless sports statistics); promise less and deliver more; follow through on what you say; and remember that “all my days I have been among the wise and I never found anything better for a person than silence” (Pirkei Avot). Silence is a sign of wisdom — listen to all opinions and keep quiet. “Say little and do much,” like Abraham.Men and women communicate differently; understanding this (e.g., via books like Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus) helps build better marriages. Children absorb the speech they hear at home — positive or negative, clean or foul. Communication builds relationships, removes isolation, expands our world, and allows creativity and self-expression. Use this great gift constructively and effectively._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio B on May 20, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on June 12, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: h
In episode nineteen of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches B’Miut Sheina — “with limited sleep.” Sleep is essential, but too much of it causes us to miss life. The Rambam states that a healthy adult needs about eight hours, yet excess sleep dulls the mind and wastes precious time. Children naturally resist sleep because they are full of dreams and a desire to accomplish; as we age, many lose that drive and begin sleeping through life — both literally and figuratively.Rabbi Wolbe stresses the importance of balance (one of six ways in the 48 that focus on moderation). We must be proactive about staying awake — not just physically, but spiritually and mentally. Walking down the street with an empty mind is a form of “sleep.” Instead, take a verse from the weekly parsha, a Mishnah, or a line of Talmud and think about it deeply. Never let your mind wander aimlessly. Apps like YouTube or social media are designed to waste time; periodically delete unused ones or even switch to a “dumb phone” for weeks to cleanse the mind.He shares a moving story about his rabbi, who trained himself over time to sleep only 2½ hours a night and would sometimes doze off mid-lecture, yet wake up and continue exactly where he left off. When asked about sleep, the rabbi replied, “I’ll sleep when I die.” Rabbi Wolbe encourages us to stay alert every moment, because it is possible to live an entire lifetime without a single meaningful thought if we remain in spiritual “sleep mode.”The core message: Sleep enough to stay healthy, but limit it so you don’t miss life. Be awake, purposeful, and constantly engaged with Torah thoughts and growth._____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio B on May 17, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on June 10, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podcast-rabbi-aryeh-wolbe/id1476610783Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4r0KfjMzmCNQbiNaZBCSU7) to stay inspired! Share your questions at [email protected] or visit torchweb.org for more Torah content. _____________About the Host:Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe, Director of TORCH in Houston, brings decades of Torah scholarship to guide listeners in applying Jewish wisdom to daily life. To directly send your questions, comments, and feedback, please email: [email protected]<
In episode eighteen of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches B’Miut Ta’anug — “with limited pleasure.” Like the previous two ways (limited business and limited intimacy), this does not mean total avoidance or asceticism. It means achieving balance so that physical pleasures enhance life rather than dominate or diminish it.Rabbi Wolbe emphasizes that God wants us to enjoy life and created pleasures for our benefit — but only when pursued with proper limits and intention. The Torah’s mitzvot are not restrictions to make us suffer; they are the precise guidelines that allow us to maximize genuine, lasting pleasure. Deviating from them leads to imbalance and diminished fulfillment. All pleasures — food, exercise, material goods, intimacy — require balance. Seeking pleasure for its own sake is spiritually detrimental.He uses the powerful metaphor that the body is for the soul like a car is for the driver. The body is simply the vehicle that transports the soul; we must maintain it well so the soul can accomplish its mission, but we should never become enslaved to the vehicle. The soul is like a vacuum cleaner that constantly craves spiritual connection to God. When that connection is missing, people chase artificial, momentary pleasures (recreational drugs, excessive materialism, instant gratification) that never truly satisfy and only create greater craving.Practical examples include barbecue potato chips (one bag leads to feeling sick) and the danger of becoming dependent on luxury (his own story of buying a Lexus and the family reaction; his neighbor obsessing over a new truck). True pleasure has substance behind it — use nice things to do mitzvot, help others, and elevate the experience. Shabbos is the ultimate model of ta’anug (pleasure): it combines physical delicacies with spiritual elevation.Rabbi Wolbe warns against wasting pleasures or opportunities and stresses that Mashiach will come “riding on a donkey” (chomer = materialism) to teach us how to master materialism rather than be controlled by it. The bottom line: do not retreat from life or reject pleasures — elevate them. Make every experience holier so it serves the soul instead of the other way around. _____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio B on May 17, 2022, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on June 9, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/jewish-inspiration-podc
In episode seventeen of the 48 Ways series during the Omer, Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe teaches B’Miut Derech Eretz (limited intimacy / controlled desires). Just like the previous way on limited business, this does not mean total avoidance or minimization for its own sake, but rather achieving balance and proper control so that physical pleasures serve their higher purpose.Rabbi Wolbe explains that the single greatest desire of every human being is happiness, not raw sexual pleasure. God created us for pleasure and placed physical desires in the world for us to enjoy — but only in the right way, with balance, so they become real, lasting, and uplifting rather than fake, cheap, or degrading. The Ramchal (Mesilat Yesharim) teaches that man was created for pleasure, yet most people settle for cheap, effortless pleasures instead of working for genuine, godly, eternal ones.Intimacy is a powerful barometer of self-control and desire management. The wedding blessing under the chuppah beautifully expresses the Torah’s balanced approach: certain relationships are strictly forbidden, while within marriage, physical intimacy is not only permitted but elevated into something holy — a reflection of our relationship with God. A healthy marriage and proper observance of the laws of Niddah (family purity) create 12 “honeymoons” a year, keeping excitement and freshness alive even after decades together. This explains the dramatically lower divorce rates in Torah-observant communities.Rabbi Wolbe uses the powerful metaphor of a luxury car and a high-school graduate receiving a red convertible from his wealthy uncle with the condition that he must return it whenever called. The periodic separation heightens anticipation and appreciation — exactly what the Torah’s system of Niddah accomplishes in marriage. He contrasts this with hookup culture, pornography, and instant gratification, which provide cheap, temporary thrills but no lasting fulfillment.Additional points: too much of anything (even barbecue potato chips or chocolate) ruins the pleasure; the Torah elevates physical acts rather than rejecting them (unlike celibate traditions); all wisdom, including scientific concepts like pi, is embedded in Torah; and marriage is a holy unification that mirrors and deepens our connection with the Almighty. The goal is not to suppress desires but to channel and balance them so they bring us closer to God and true happiness. _____________Recorded in TORCH Centre - Studio B on May 13, 2022, in Houston, Texas. Released as Podcast on June 8, 2022The 49 days we count between Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot are an exciting time for powerful and impactful change. The Mishna (Avot 6:6) teaches us 48 masterful tools and ways to maximize life and get the most out of each day._____________Listen, Subscribe & Share: Apple Podcasts: <a href=
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