Madlik Podcast – Disruptive Torah Thoughts on Judaism

Geoffrey Stern

The Malcolm Gladwell of the Torah -- That's how listeners describe Madlik™ – where sharp insight meets sacred text. With the curiosity of a cultural critic and the soul of a yeshiva bochur, Madlik ignites Jewish thought from a post-orthodox perspective. Each weekly episode explores the Torah with fresh eyes — drawing unexpected connections, challenging assumptions, and offering a heterodox yet deeply rooted take on halachic and philosophical questions. Born of a lifelong love for Jewish texts and a refusal to let tradition become static, Madlik keeps the flame of Judaism burning — not by preserving the embers, but by lighting new fires. In Hebrew, מדליק (Madlik) means to ignite. But in modern slang, it simply means cool. We aim to be both.

  1. 1 day ago

    A Midsummer Nightmare

    Why did ancient rabbis look at the longest, brightest day of the year and feel a sudden sense of impending doom? As archaeologists uncover evidence of ancient solstice celebrations near Stonehenge, Geoffrey Stern and Rabbi Adam Mintz explore a provocative question: Why does Judaism greet the longest days of the year not with celebration, but with mourning? Key Takeaways 1. Judaism Never Ignored the Sun—It Reinterpreted It Although the Jewish calendar follows the moon, it is anchored to the solar year. Passover must occur in the spring, the rabbis linked the 365 negative commandments to the days of the solar year, and the Talmud records Adam's fear as the days shortened. Judaism paid close attention to the heavens—but refused to worship them. 2. While Other Cultures Celebrated the Summer Solstice, Judaism Saw the Beginning of Decline Stonehenge and other ancient cultures celebrated the triumph of light at midsummer. The Jewish calendar places the month of Tammuz, the breach of Jerusalem's walls, and the road to Tisha B'Av immediately after the longest day of the year. At the very moment nature reaches its peak, Judaism reminds us that every pinnacle contains the seeds of decline. 3. Judaism Teaches That Every Light Casts a Shadow Most cultures celebrate the summer solstice as the triumph of light. Judaism looks at the longest day of the year and notices something else: tomorrow the days begin to shorten. The brightest moment already contains the seeds of decline. But Judaism doesn't stop there. The rabbis taught that the Messiah is born on Tisha B'Av itself. Even the darkness hidden within the light contains the possibility of redemption. Timestamps [00:00] Solstice and Jewish Paradox [01:55] Midsummer Mourning Season [03:50] Stonehenge to Sacred Calendars [05:23] After the Longest Day [09:35] Lunar Solar Calendar Sync [12:57] Adam and Shortening Days [15:46] Sponsor Break [16:57] Tammuz Origins and Fast Days [21:20] Ezekiel and Pagan Tammuz [25:01] Messiah Born in Ruins [28:01] Closing Shabbat Shalom Links & Learnings Sign up for free and get more from our weekly newsletter https://madlik.com/ Sefaria Source Sheet: https://voices.sefaria.org/sheets/736189 Transcript here: https://madlik.substack.com/

    29 min
  2. 17 June

    Creation and Re-Creation

    What happens when an ancient religion that forbids any new rules gets caught secretly reinventing itself in plain sight? Can God still create something new? At the climax of Korach's rebellion, Moses declares: "If God creates a new creation..." (Numbers 16:30) But that single phrase opens a theological fault line running through all of Jewish thought. Did creation end after the six days of Genesis? Or does God continually recreate the world every day? Key Takeaways 1. Judaism Contains Two Opposite Visions of Creation When Moses says, "If God creates a new creation" (Num. 16:30), the commentators divide sharply. Ibn Ezra, Pirkei Avot, and Maimonides insist that nothing genuinely new can be created after the six days of Genesis; even miracles were programmed into creation from the beginning. Yet our daily prayers proclaim that God "renews each day, continually, the work of creation." Judaism preserves a profound tension between a completed universe and a world that is constantly being recreated. 2. The Rabbis Distrusted Miracles but Celebrated Renewal The rabbis were uncomfortable with the idea of God repeatedly suspending the laws of nature. The Mishnah teaches that the earth's mouth that swallowed Korach was created before the first Sabbath, and Maimonides extends that principle to all miracles. Judaism's faith is not built on supernatural interventions but on discovering meaning within creation. At the same time, Jewish spirituality embraces continual renewal—every sunrise, every month, and every generation offers the possibility of a new beginning. 3. Judaism Often Creates New Ideas While Claiming Nothing Is New The Talmud transforms Korach's descent into Sheol into a descent into Gehenom, effectively introducing a richer doctrine of divine judgment into the biblical story. The irony is striking: while citing "There is nothing new under the sun" to reject new creations, the rabbis themselves were expanding and reimagining Judaism. From Gehenom to the synagogue, from the Passover Seder to fixed prayer, Judaism's history is one of creative renewal. Perhaps the greatest innovation in Jewish history is the insistence that Judaism does not innovate. Timestamps [00:00] Can God Create New [01:50] Korach Verse Setup [03:56] Ibn Ezra Avoids Miracle [05:10] Twilight Creations Mishnah [06:47] Rambam Nature Of Miracles [09:55] Talmud Adds Gehenna [13:02] Sponsor Break [14:04] Nothing New Under Sun [17:22] Daily Renewal In Liturgy [21:24] Perpetual Creation Polarity [25:10] Rabbis Create While Denying [27:06] Chasam Sofer New Forbidden [29:14] Wrap Up And Shabbat Shalom   Links & Learnings Sign up for free and get more from our weekly newsletter https://madlik.com/ Sefaria Source Sheet: https://voices.sefaria.org/sheets/735044 Transcript here: https://madlik.substack.com/

    30 min
  3. 10 June

    Hasbara - Inside and Out

    There's a terrifying line between having unwavering faith in your homeland and blinding yourself to a reality that is tearing it apart. Did the spies lie? For generations, Jews have read Parshat Sh'lach as the story of a faithless generation that listened to ten pessimistic scouts instead of Joshua and Caleb. The rabbis saw their tears as a "bechi shel chinam"—a gratuitous cry whose consequences echoed through Jewish history. But what happens when history forces us to reread the story? Key Takeaways The Spies Didn't Just Report the Facts—They Shaped the Narrative The Torah's first Hasbara crisis was not about military intelligence but about interpretation. The spies and Joshua saw the same land, the same giants, and the same challenges. The debate was over what those facts meant. Every generation faces the challenge of distinguishing between reality and the stories we tell about reality. 2. Sometimes Ancient Texts Force Us to Reconsider Our Assumptions For centuries, Jews have read the spies as the villains of the story. Yet in a moment of war, division, and uncertainty, we asked whether there are times when their warnings deserve to be heard. The enduring power of Torah is that it does not merely answer questions—it challenges each generation to confront its own historical moment. 3. Hasbara Begins at Home The spies were not speaking to the Canaanites; they were speaking to their fellow Israelites. Before a nation can explain itself to the world, it must understand itself. The conversation explored whether Israel's greatest challenge today is not external public diplomacy, but maintaining a shared sense of purpose, responsibility, and destiny among its own people. Timestamps [00:00] Meet Pamela Peled [03:07] Spies and Perception [07:29] Zionist Journey to Israel [11:11] When Fear Feels Real [18:10] Hasbara Begins at Home [21:34] Sponsor Break [22:32] Israel Not Apartheid [24:30] Needless vs Authentic Tears [28:52] Conflict and Corruption [32:05] Hope and Closing Blessing Links & Learnings Sign up for free and get more from our weekly newsletter https://madlik.com/ Sefaria Source Sheet: https://voices.sefaria.org/sheets/733929 Transcript here: https://madlik.substack.com/

    36 min
  4. 3 June

    Entitlement Reform Cont.

    For thousands of years, who your father was determined your entire life—until the Torah decided to tear that system down to the ground. For most of us, the defining moments of Jewish history are obvious: the Exodus from Egypt and the Revelation at Sinai. But what if we've overlooked another revolution hiding in plain sight? Key Takeaways The Torah's hidden revolution was the attack on birthright. We tend to think of the Exodus as a liberation from slavery and Sinai as the birth of law. But running beneath the surface is another revolution: the dismantling of inherited privilege. 2. The Exodus story itself was reshaped to tell that story. The Torah repeatedly links the sanctification of the firstborn to the death of Egypt's firstborn. The result is that the Exodus becomes more than a story about freedom from Pharaoh. It becomes a polemic against the ideology that underpinned Egypt itself: hierarchy, inherited power, and entitlement. The plague of the firstborn is not only a punishment of Egypt. It becomes a theological statement that holiness and authority are not guaranteed by birth. 3. Judaism ultimately replaced pedigree with character and learning. The transfer from firstborn to Levites was only one stage in a much longer process. The Rabbis completed the revolution: A Torah scholar can outrank a High Priest. The crown of a good name surpasses priesthood and kingship. Maimonides teaches that the holiness of Levi is available to anyone who dedicates themselves to God. The trajectory of Judaism is clear: Birth → Service → Learning Or, put differently: The Torah begins by challenging inherited privilege and ends by teaching that true authority comes not from who your father was, but from who you become. Timestamps 00:00] Torah's Hidden Revolution [01:23] Madlik Intro and Setup [02:23] Menorah, Rashi, and Levite Tension [04:55] Levites Replace Firstborn [09:17] Golden Calf Theory Questioned [11:59] Sponsor Break [13:00] Exodus Firstborn Laws Reframed [19:36] Counting Swap and Five Shekels [23:28] Mashup Theory and Firstborn Focus [27:55] From Birthright to Merit [31:55] Closing Blessings Links & Learnings Sign up for free and get more from our weekly newsletter https://madlik.com/ Sefaria Source Sheet: https://voices.sefaria.org/sheets/732770 Transcript here: https://madlik.substack.com/

    32 min
  5. 28 May

    Splitting Hairs

    If you've ever wondered why your observant grandmother didn't cover her hair, you're about to discover a hidden truth that changes everything about how Jewish law actually works. What if the way your grandmother practiced Judaism no longer matches what contemporary Orthodoxy claims Judaism always required? This week on Madlik, Geoffrey Stern and Rabbi Adam Mintz sit down with Professor Michael Broyde to discuss his groundbreaking new book Splitting Hairs — a deep dive into women's hair covering that becomes a much larger conversation about how halakha actually works. Key Takeaways Jewish law has never evolved in isolation from lived Jewish experience, communal norms, and surrounding culture. The debate over women's hair covering reveals a deeper tension between objective halakha (Dat Moshe) and socially conditioned practice (Dat Yehudit). Great rabbinic authorities like the Ben Ish Chai, Rav Moshe Feinstein, and Rav Ovadia Yosef often defended inherited communal practice rather than simply imposing rigid uniformity. Timestamps [00:00] Hair and Halakha [02:25] Meet Michael Broyde [04:14] Why Hair Covering [06:18] What Counts as Covering [08:16] Defending Communal Practice [14:49] Sponsor Break [15:57] Sotah Text and Rashi [21:15] Dat Moshe and Yehudit [24:57] Ben Ish Chai and Culture [30:11] Ovadia Yosef and Wigs [35:13] Israel America Modesty [36:25] Closing and Shabbat Shalom Links & Learnings Sign up for free and get more from our weekly newsletter https://madlik.com/ Sefaria Source Sheet: https://voices.sefaria.org/sheets/731684 Transcript here: https://madlik.substack.com/

    37 min
  6. 13 May

    We The Tribes

    We usually think of the ancient world as being ruled by dangerous, power-hungry kings, but the Torah actually commanded a radical, unified democracy thousands of years before America. What if the Book of Numbers is not really about numbers? What if the census in the wilderness was actually the birth of the first constitutional government? Key Takeaways Bamidbar is not just a census — it is a constitutional moment. The Torah counts the Israelites not as isolated individuals but as tribes, clans, and representative units, revealing a revolutionary political vision: a nation built through covenant among distinct groups. The Torah's model of unity preserves difference rather than erasing it. From tribal banners surrounding the Tabernacle to the Bible's vision of the end of days, Judaism imagines a shared moral order where tribes, nations, and differing opinions retain their unique identities. Jewish political culture may explain Jewish intellectual culture. The same covenantal federalism that allowed tribes to remain distinct while united may also underlie Judaism's enduring embrace of argument, dissent, and multiple opinions within a shared tradition. Timestamps [00:00] Numbers Reimagined [01:24] Bamidbar Setup [02:33] Census Text Walkthrough [05:46] Journey and Authority [07:40] Elazar Tribal Federation [10:48] Camp Flags Communication [12:33] Counting Methods Leaders [14:47] Twelve Tribes Problem [18:42] Sponsor Break [19:48] Elazar Biography [21:15] Numbers as Constitution [24:24] Federalism Covenant Model [30:39] Federal Mindset Today [31:40] Closing Shabbat Shalom Links & Learnings Sign up for free and get more from our weekly newsletter https://madlik.com/ Sefaria Source Sheet: https://voices.sefaria.org/sheets/725075 Transcript here: https://madlik.substack.com/

    32 min
  7. 6 May

    Made on Sabbath

    What if the Jewish secret to creating your best work is actually learning how to do absolutely nothing? Is Shabbat really about rest… or is it about creation? Is it about ceasing from activity—or a unique form of production? The Torah says something strange: during the Sabbatical year, you don't eat crops—you eat "Shabbat." And when we are commanded to keep the Sabbath—we are told to make it. Key Takeaways Shabbat Isn't Passive — It's Creative. The Torah doesn't just say observe Shabbat—it says "make" Shabbat. Rest isn't the absence of creation—it's a different kind of creation. 2. Letting Go Produces More Than Holding On In Shemitah, you don't eat what you grow—you eat what grows when you release ownership. Real abundance comes not from control, but from hefker, withdrawal, and trust. 3. Shabbat Only Exists Because We Create It. Unlike every other mitzvah, Shabbat has no physical form. It becomes real only when we live it— by stopping, we actually bring it into existence. Timestamps [00:00] Creation Through Stopping [01:14] Lag BaOmer And Sevens [02:01] Shmita Text And Shabbat Haaretz [03:41] Rashi Ramban And The Oxymoron [08:23] Nullification And Ownerless Yield [11:20] Tzimtzum And Hidden Goodness [15:12] To Do The Sabbath [16:39] Making Shabbat Commentaries [19:29] Sponsor Break [23:10] Torah Temimah Makes Shabbat Real [26:00] Shabbat As Human Construct [28:42] Closing Lag BaOmer And Chazak Links & Learnings Sign up for free and get more from our weekly newsletter https://madlik.com/ Sefaria Source Sheet: https://voices.sefaria.org/sheets/723691 Transcript here: https://madlik.substack.com/

    29 min
  8. 29 Apr

    Holiness When Life Refuses to Cooperate

    What if the Torah's strictest, most uncomfortable laws about perfection weren't actually meant to keep us out, but to give us permission to be broken? What does holiness look like… when life refuses to cooperate? In this episode of Madlik, we dive into one of the Torah's most uncomfortable passages—Parshat Emor—where the priestly caste is commanded to live a life untouched by death, imperfect relationships, and even physical blemish. No funerals. No complicated marriages. No broken bodies. It's a vision of holiness that feels… impossible. But what if we've been reading it wrong? Key Takeaways Holiness as Separation, Not Just Morality The priestly laws aren't random restrictions—they form a unified system built on distance from life's messiness: death, complicated relationships, and physical imperfection. Holiness here isn't about being good—it's about being set apart. 2. A Vision of Perfection… or a Problematic Ideal The Kohen represents an almost utopian human—untouched by loss, imperfection, or disruption. But that raises a tension: is this an aspirational model meant to uplift, or the creation of a spiritual hierarchy that excludes real human experience? 3. From "Disqualified" to "Permitted" The word ḥalal, usually translated as profane or disqualified, may actually point in a different direction. What if it means not rejected—but released? Not unholy—but free to live fully human lives, where imperfection isn't a flaw… but the norm. Timestamps [00:00] Holiness Without Cracks [01:40] Show Intro and Big Question [02:53] Priestly Mourning Limits [04:35] Marriage Rules and Separation [06:53] Rashi and Modern Practice [10:23] Talmud and Funeral Optics [13:52] Why These Marriage Bans [21:20] Physical Blemishes and Theater [27:00] Halal as Permission [29:57] Wrap Up and Shabbat Shalom Links & Learnings Sign up for free and get more from our weekly newsletter https://madlik.com/ Sefaria Source Sheet: https://voices.sefaria.org/sheets/722306 Transcript here: https://madlik.substack.com/

    31 min

About

The Malcolm Gladwell of the Torah -- That's how listeners describe Madlik™ – where sharp insight meets sacred text. With the curiosity of a cultural critic and the soul of a yeshiva bochur, Madlik ignites Jewish thought from a post-orthodox perspective. Each weekly episode explores the Torah with fresh eyes — drawing unexpected connections, challenging assumptions, and offering a heterodox yet deeply rooted take on halachic and philosophical questions. Born of a lifelong love for Jewish texts and a refusal to let tradition become static, Madlik keeps the flame of Judaism burning — not by preserving the embers, but by lighting new fires. In Hebrew, מדליק (Madlik) means to ignite. But in modern slang, it simply means cool. We aim to be both.

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