Ep. 83 – The Purpose of the Jewish People
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Why would the Torah command “walk in Hashem’s ways” instead of simply saying, “be kind”? Rabbi Ari Klapper opens the core theme: a Jew isn’t meant to just do good deeds — he’s meant to make Hashem visible through the way he lives. The mitzvah of v’halachta bidrachav (as the Rambam frames it) teaches that our middos are not side-projects; they’re the place where Hashem’s presence can be revealed. Chazal read it plainly: just as He is merciful, we become merciful; just as He visits the sick and buries the dead, we learn to do the same. The “purpose of the Jewish people” starts sounding less like a slogan and more like a daily assignment: to reflect Hashem’s ways into the world.
Then the episode brings it down to the pressure points of real life: what happens when kindness is inconvenient, when patience costs you, when honesty might lose you money? Torah doesn’t ask for a “religious self” and a “weekday self.” It asks for one integrated person, where your home, your work, and your reactions become places of Kiddush Hashem. Practical takeaway: choose one middah you’ve been avoiding — patience, generosity, restraint in speech — and commit to one small action today that looks like “walking in His ways.”
Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Real Judaism series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don’t forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our daily lessons and timeless Torah insights!