Shabbat is a day of Spiritual Memory

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#shabbat is a day of #spiritual memory. It is a day we remember who we are, where we come from and what our #purpose is.

Episode 16 - Create Yourself: Rediscovering Our Essence: How Shabbat Helps Us Remember Who We Are

What role do our perspectives play in shaping our character, influencing our actions, thoughts, and feelings? How can we retrieve the fundamental truths of existence that are deeply embedded within us, yet often clouded by the physical world's distractions? In this enlightening video, we explore the profound concept of Shabbat as a pathway to spiritual memory and a reorientation of perspective.

Before our soul enters our body, it possesses absolute clarity. It understands truth, righteousness, and #purpose Yet, upon entering the physical world, this clarity gets obscured. This is where Shabbat comes into play - it's a day of spiritual memory that helps us recollect our true identity and purpose.

Our sages refer to our earthly existence as the "world of forgetting" - a place brimming with distractions that can easily lead us astray from life's purpose. Shabbat offers an escape from this world, providing us with a glimpse of the spiritual clarity our soul will regain upon leaving this realm. It allows us to transcend the "world of forgetting" and reclaim the divine perspectives we need for life.

Join Chief Rabbi Goldstein on a weekly journey of personal discovery. Find #meaning and #purpose #joy and #connection Learn how to create yourself through Shabbat. And uncover a Divine formula for happiness in an increasingly complex world.

Each bite-sized episode is around two minutes, with a new one released each week.

📚 Get your copy of Shabbat. A Day to Create Yourself:

Hardcover: South Africa

Hardcover: USA, UK and Rest of the World

Audiobook: Global - Amazon Audible

eBook: Global - Amazon Kindle

About the Author:

Rabbi Dr Warren Goldstein is the current Chief Rabbi of South Africa and a global Jewish leader.

Affectionately referred to as ‘Chief’ and a ‘spiritual entrepreneur’ he has launched and led a number of innovative social projects with global reach and impact.

Locally, his Bill of Responsibilities – adopted by the Department of Education and taught in schools nationwide – has shown a new generation of young South Africans the importance of compassion, and respect for the dignity and wellbeing of others. CAP, a unique community-driven crime-fighting initiative that protects 30,000 homes and upwards of 250,000 people, and has reduced contact crime in its area of operation by between 80 and 90 percent and Sinai Indaba, the largest annual Torah convention of its kind.

Two of his local projects have been embraced and championed by world-jewry: Generation Sinai, an annual family learning experience as well as The Shabbat Project which unites Jews annually in over 1000 cities on an unprecedented scale.

The youngest person to ever be elected to the position, Chief Rabbi Goldstein is a strong advocate for creative, proactive leadership and effective partnership to find unique solutions to the challenges of our time.

He has featured on The Algemeiner’s top 100 People Positively Influencing Jewish Life multiple times and has a regular study session with South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa. He is an executive member of South Africa’s National Religious Leaders Council, through which he is involved with strengthening inter-faith relations in the country between Jews, Christian, Muslims, Hindus and other faiths, as well as engaging with the government on national policy matters.

A qualified Jewish law judge, Rabbi Goldstein has published several books, including African Soul Talk: When Politics is not Enough (with Dumani Mandela); Defending the Human Spirit: Jewish Law’s Vision for a Moral Society; Sefer Mishpat Tzedek (a detailed analysis of Torah business law and ethics, with particular focus on competition law); and The Legacy: Teachings for Life from the Great Lithuanian Rabbis (with Rabbi Berel Wein).

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Shabbat Shalom from South-Africa. Remember to keep it Holy

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Six days of the week remember Shabbat by setting aside something nice for her honor.
That's how Jews lived in Europe in the shtetl.

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