Latest Essays
Meat or Murder?
Meat or Murder?
The Torah first describes a world that is created to be vegetarian. It is only after the Flood that humans were allowed to eat meat. Leviticus restricts meat consumption to the sacrificial offerings only, whereas Deuteronomy permits even non-consecrated meat. How do we understand the tension between these approaches?
Dr.
Yitzhaq Feder
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TheGemara.comAuthorship of the Torah: The Position of Ibn Ezra and Yehuda HaChasid
Authorship of the Torah: The Position of Ibn Ezra and Yehuda HaChasid
A yeshiva student asks: Is it permissible to believe that parts of the Torah were written after the time of Moses?
Rabbi
Yuval Cherlow
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TheGemara.comThe Opening Of Devarim: A Recounting or Different Version of the Wilderness Experience?
The Opening Of Devarim: A Recounting or Different Version of the Wilderness Experience?
Deuteronomy presents Moses’ account as a retelling of the story narrated in Exodus and Numbers. And yet, so many details contradict the earlier narrative. Here are ten examples.
Dr. Rabbi
Zev Farber
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TheGemara.com