The Weekly Parsha - With Michoel Brooke

Welcome to "The Weekly Parsha with Michoel Brooke," your go-to podcast for engaging, accessible Torah study.Join us to explore the weekly Torah Parshios, offering insights and life lessons for beginners and seasoned learners. Each 15-to 25-minute episode offers a comprehensive yet digestible exploration of the weekly Parsha.Discover valuable Parsha wisdom to enrich your spiritual journey, deepen your understanding of our holy Torah, and inspire personal growth. Subscribe today and begin your journey into the timeless wisdom of the Torah.NEW! Join on WhatsApp for more motivational Torah content. Send "Greatness" to (757)-679-4497 to subscribe.

  1. Are You Wasting Your Shabbos? The Parshas Emor Wake-Up Call

    1D AGO

    Are You Wasting Your Shabbos? The Parshas Emor Wake-Up Call

    Shabbos can be the best day of the week and still feel strangely… normal. If we’re honest, routine can flatten holiness, and “been there, done that” can sneak into a mitzvah that is supposed to reshape our entire week. We want to bring Shabbos back, not as a vague self-care day, but as a Mikra Kodesh: a day that stands out so clearly you can’t confuse it with the other six. We start with a provocative contrast from Parshas Emor: the Jewish calendar and the festivals are sanctified through Beis Din and witnesses, a breathtaking partnership where humans help set sacred time. But Shabbos is different. Shabbos is fixed by Hashem from creation. That raises the real question: if we don’t “declare” Shabbos into existence, what does the Torah mean when it calls Shabbos a Mikra Kodesh? From there we dig into Onkelos and the Ramban. Onkelos frames Mikra Kodesh as ma’ora kadesh, a holy happening that befalls you. The Ramban explains mikra as a summons, a calling forward to assemble yourself for holiness. Then we bring it down to earth with halacha and practical Shabbos preparation: changing clothing, upgrading food and drink, setting the table, building a clean and calm home, marking the day with songs, meals, learning, and Havdalah. We also share a powerful story about a father whose joy at the Shabbos table becomes the definition of what a “remarkable” home can look like. If you’ve been craving a more meaningful Shabbos experience, press play and choose one change to try this week. Subscribe for more Torah-rich conversations, share this with a friend who loves Shabbos, and leave a review with your best Shabbos upgrade idea. Support the show Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content! ------------------ Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content! SUBSCRIBE to The Motivation Congregation Podcast for daily motivational Mussar!Listen on Spotify or 24six!Find all Torah talks and listen to featured episodes on our website, themotivationcongregation.org Questions or Comments? Please email me @ michaelbrooke97@gmail.com

    25 min
  2. Parshas Acharei Mos/Kedoshim: How to Build Real Discipline in a Culture Obsessed with Pride

    APR 24

    Parshas Acharei Mos/Kedoshim: How to Build Real Discipline in a Culture Obsessed with Pride

    Pride is sold as courage, but what happens when pride gets attached to the very things that ruin us? We take Acharei Mot Kedoshim and use it as a lens to talk about real discipline: the kind that stays loyal to Torah even when the wider culture changes the rules every decade. We start with the parsha itself, from the Yom Kippur Avodah and its otherworldly intensity to the holiness code that reaches into everyday life, relationships, business ethics, and how we treat other people. Then we move to a sharp yesod: mitzvos are not trend-based. Whether it’s kashrus, brit milah, or the Torah’s boundaries around intimacy, the goal isn’t to be “different” for its own sake. The goal is to live by the will of Hashem, with clarity and consistency. From there we confront a modern shift: not just sin, but celebrating sin. Using Ramban and Sforno, and a striking Gemara about the posture a person should have toward wrongdoing, we argue for a mindset of humility instead of self-congratulation. We also share a story about “kosher tech” that raises an uncomfortable question: do our workarounds sometimes turn struggle into approval? The closing takeaway is practical and hopeful: growth is incremental, built through more Torah, fewer triggers, honest self-knowledge, and refusing to dance around our own Golden Calf. Subscribe for more weekly Torah insights, share this with someone who thinks discipline is impossible, and leave a review to help more listeners find the show. Support the show Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content! ------------------ Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content! SUBSCRIBE to The Motivation Congregation Podcast for daily motivational Mussar!Listen on Spotify or 24six!Find all Torah talks and listen to featured episodes on our website, themotivationcongregation.org Questions or Comments? Please email me @ michaelbrooke97@gmail.com

    31 min
  3. Parshas Tazria/Metzorah: Why You Should Wear Charles Tyrwhitt Shirts, Cole Haan Shoes, and Banana Republic Sweaters

    APR 17

    Parshas Tazria/Metzorah: Why You Should Wear Charles Tyrwhitt Shirts, Cole Haan Shoes, and Banana Republic Sweaters

    The Torah’s most “uncomfortable” topics sometimes hold the cleanest guidance for real life, and Parsha Tazria Metzora is a prime example. We take the laws of zav and zava that many people write off as technical, squeamish, and ancient, and we show how they reveal a surprisingly modern spiritual psychology: when we repeatedly push past what we actually need, the damage doesn’t stay hidden. It shows up in our habits, our headspace, and our sense of purity and focus.  We walk through the Sefer HaChinuch’s shoresh of the mitzvah, where the key word is “mostros” extras. Hashem pushes us toward holiness that is straight and sane, especially around basic human drives like eating and drinking. From there we bring in Ramchal’s Mesilat Yesharim (chapter 13) and sharpen it into a daily decision filter: “Do I need this to be a healthy, happy Jew who can serve Hashem, or is it just indulgence?” That single question touches everything from food and comfort to lifestyle spending, shopping, and the endless pressure to upgrade.  Then we add Rabbeinu Bachya on Vayetze and Yaakov’s prayer for bread to eat and clothes to wear, framing davening itself as a practice in clarity. Ask for what you need, not for the extras that become worry, distraction, and spiritual clutter. If you’ve ever wondered how Torah, musar, and self-control connect to what you wear, what you buy, and how you live, this conversation makes it real. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the “extra” you’re trying to cut back on. Support the show Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content! ------------------ Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content! SUBSCRIBE to The Motivation Congregation Podcast for daily motivational Mussar!Listen on Spotify or 24six!Find all Torah talks and listen to featured episodes on our website, themotivationcongregation.org Questions or Comments? Please email me @ michaelbrooke97@gmail.com

    26 min
  4. Parshas Tzav: What’s More Dangerous Than Climbing Annapurna Solo?

    MAR 27

    Parshas Tzav: What’s More Dangerous Than Climbing Annapurna Solo?

    A $40,000 swing can ruin your mood, but it takes one phone call with real medical news to make money feel small. We record from that place, where disappointment and fear are both on the table, and we let Torah tell the truth about what deserves our “brain space” and what doesn’t. As Pesach nears and Parshat Tzav comes into view, we dedicate the learning for a full and speedy recovery for someone deeply respected in our lives, and we try to turn pain into something honest and useful. We build the core idea through a tight chain of sources: a Rashi on “Kach et Aharon,” the Maharal’s read on free will, and the surprising claim that you cannot actually “take” a person. You can only draw them with words, meaning, and persuasion. From there we hit the deeper question: why does the Torah repeat a command that was already said earlier? The answer becomes the episode’s engine, because motivation before action is not the same as motivation when it’s time to perform. That opens into one of the most practical Jewish ethics teachings you can carry into daily life: zerizus, alacrity, as mapped by the Ramchal in Mesillat Yesharim. We talk about zerizus before the mitzvah so you don’t delay, and zerizus after you start so you actually finish, with the right mindset. If you’ve been stuck in procrastination, half-finished commitments, or spiritual “almosts,” this gives language and tools to close the gap between intention and follow-through. If this hit home, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs a push, and leave a review so more people find the Torah podcast. What’s one mitzvah or responsibility you want to stop delaying this week? Support the show Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content! ------------------ Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content! SUBSCRIBE to The Motivation Congregation Podcast for daily motivational Mussar!Listen on Spotify or 24six!Find all Torah talks and listen to featured episodes on our website, themotivationcongregation.org Questions or Comments? Please email me @ michaelbrooke97@gmail.com

    35 min
  5. Parshas Vayakhel Pekudei: Forget Likes and Followers — Did You Get Hashem’s Sticker Today?

    MAR 13

    Parshas Vayakhel Pekudei: Forget Likes and Followers — Did You Get Hashem’s Sticker Today?

    A five-word phrase repeats eighteen times at the climax of Sefer Shemos, and we think it is Torah’s way of grabbing us by the shoulders. “Kasher Tziva Hashem Es Moshe” is written so often in Parashas Pekudei that it stops sounding like narration and starts sounding like a demand: Do you actually mean what you are doing, and can you finish what you started? We walk through why the Mishkan narrative keeps circling back to that same line through the lens of the Shulchan Aruch. One path is about depth: every mitzvah has layers, including hidden dimensions of Torah that most of us never see, yet we can still honor them through careful, faithful execution. Another path is about kavanah, the intention that turns an action from a shell into avodas Hashem. We connect it to mitzvos tzrichos kavanah, the halachic question of whether intention is required, and the simple practice of saying, even in your head, “I’m doing this because Hashem commanded.” From there, we bring it into real life: a small moment that sparked this whole rant, a story about Rav Eliyahu Lopian noticing workers stacking up mitzvos while missing the mindset, and a Chovos HaLevavos-based reminder that parnasa can be a mitzvah when it is done with awareness. We end with a bigger arc, using the Ramban on Sefer Shemos to reframe the “finish line” as Hashra’as HaShechinah, and we challenge ourselves to crave one approval more than any other: the quiet joy of a job well done. If this hit a nerve, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review with one sentence about where you want more kavanah in your day. Support the show Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content! ------------------ Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content! SUBSCRIBE to The Motivation Congregation Podcast for daily motivational Mussar!Listen on Spotify or 24six!Find all Torah talks and listen to featured episodes on our website, themotivationcongregation.org Questions or Comments? Please email me @ michaelbrooke97@gmail.com

    38 min
  6. MAR 5

    Parshas Ki Sisa: Why Moshe Smashed The Luchos And What It Teaches About Healthy Guilt (Rebroadcast)

    A revelatory moment collapses into a dance floor, and that is where everything breaks. We revisit the Golden Calf not to retell a scandal but to ask a sharper question: why did Moses shatter the tablets? The answer many overlook—joy in the wrongdoing—turns a familiar story into a powerful framework for modern life, where guilt is suspect and numbness is often mistaken for peace. We walk through the Sforno’s startling insight about the music and dancing around the calf and show how celebration can seal a moral fracture. Then we flip a common script: guilt is not the villain. When conscience stings after a lapse—missing a prayer, gossiping, flipping a switch on a sacred day—that pain is a sign that the inner compass still points somewhere real. To make the point vivid, we bring in a rare medical condition—congenital insensitivity to pain—as a metaphor: the absence of pain doesn’t make you strong; it makes you unsafe. The same holds for the soul. Numbness invites harm; feeling prompts care. From there, we get practical. We break down a three-step move from remorse to repair: name the feeling without self-condemnation, translate it into a small, concrete action, and time-box the emotion so it catalyzes instead of paralyzing. We also offer a richer measure of spiritual growth: not only the joy you feel when you do right, but the honest ache when you fall short. That ache is not a verdict on your worth—it’s proof of attachment to what matters. By the end, you’ll have a clear, compassionate way to treat guilt as guidance, avoid the trap of toxic shame, and protect your integrity with simple guardrails and forward motion. No wallowing, no theatrics—just conscience doing its protective work, and you choosing the next right step. If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs a reframe on guilt, and leave a quick review with one insight you’re taking into the week. Support the show Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content! ------------------ Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content! SUBSCRIBE to The Motivation Congregation Podcast for daily motivational Mussar!Listen on Spotify or 24six!Find all Torah talks and listen to featured episodes on our website, themotivationcongregation.org Questions or Comments? Please email me @ michaelbrooke97@gmail.com

    18 min
  7. Parshas Tetzaveh/Zachor: Cold. Calculated. Amalek.

    FEB 27

    Parshas Tetzaveh/Zachor: Cold. Calculated. Amalek.

    What if the real battle isn’t choosing the right path—but staying on it once the ground shakes? We take a hard look at Zachor and the charge to remember Amalek, not as ancient trivia but as a living pattern: predators circle when conviction thins. The thread winds through Shekalim, Parah, and Hachodesh, yet lands here with urgency—miss even a word of this reading, say the sages, and you miss the heartbeat of the mitzvah. We connect the dots the Torah lays out: Amalek appears right after the people wonder, “Is God among us or not?” That same unease surfaces in Devarim, where the law about honest weights sits beside the command to remember. Why? Because cheating at the scale is theology in disguise; it says tomorrow’s bread requires my deceit. From Rafidim’s laxity to the Ramban’s portrait of anxious believers at the sea, the pattern holds—doubt is not ignorance, it’s the erosion that starts after you already know the truth. So we make it practical. Faith becomes a craft: choose with clarity, then refuse the daily re-vote on your values. Keep clean measures to declare trust in enough. When the work of building a holy home feels uphill, read “hard” as a sign of meaning, not a signal to quit. Quiet the panic, steady your breath, and act on what you know is right. That is how you drain the blood from the water and keep the sharks away. If this conversation helped you name where doubt sneaks in—and how to push back with conviction—subscribe, share the episode with a friend who needs resolve today, and leave a review with the one place you’re choosing to stay the course. Support the show Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content! ------------------ Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content! SUBSCRIBE to The Motivation Congregation Podcast for daily motivational Mussar!Listen on Spotify or 24six!Find all Torah talks and listen to featured episodes on our website, themotivationcongregation.org Questions or Comments? Please email me @ michaelbrooke97@gmail.com

    27 min
  8. Parshas Terumah: God Doesn’t Need Your Mishkan (But YOU Do!)

    FEB 20

    Parshas Terumah: God Doesn’t Need Your Mishkan (But YOU Do!)

    A single pasuk sparks a revolution: “Build Me a sanctuary so I may dwell among them.” We take that line seriously and ask sharper questions. What does it mean to build a house for the unhousable? Why did the Torah devote so much space to the Mishkan, the Beis HaMikdash, and the avodah? And most importantly, what does the mitzvah do to us? We explore the bigger picture with clear steps. First, the mandate and its scope: an unexpected portion of the 613 mitzvos revolves around the Temple, from offerings to purity laws to vessels. Then, the two main purposes highlighted by the Sefer HaChinuch: centralizing korbanos and uniting the nation through Aliyah L’Regel. We trace the story from Betzalel’s portable Mishkan to Solomon’s grandeur and the rebuilt Second Temple, anchoring it all in Jerusalem’s permanent location. We also examine the classic debate on the future: Rambam’s human-led construction under Mashiach versus Rashi and Tosafot’s vision of a heavenly structure descending in fire. But the core of our discussion is the why. Using the Sefer HaChinuch and Ramban, we consider the Temple as a training ground where action shapes the soul. Pilgrimage becomes a form of education: long journeys, guarded gates, rising smoke, and hands on the offering—all designed to transform regret into renewal. We challenge a countercultural idea: mitzvos are the workout of the spirit, a precise regimen you can’t outsource. Replace, don’t repair, in a house of dignity; do, don’t just study, when growth needs effort; and embrace the friction that shapes you—yes, even in the humble choice to hand-wrap mishloach manos rather than swipe a card. If you’ve ever wondered when we can rebuild, who must be present in the Land, what counts as “building,” or how the Ark fits into it all, this episode guides you through sources, history, and lived practice in one clear path. Listen, reflect, and then choose one mitzvah to “lift” with intention this week. If this resonated, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review—what part of the Temple’s purpose most surprised you? Support the show Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content! ------------------ Check out our other Torah Podcasts and content! SUBSCRIBE to The Motivation Congregation Podcast for daily motivational Mussar!Listen on Spotify or 24six!Find all Torah talks and listen to featured episodes on our website, themotivationcongregation.org Questions or Comments? Please email me @ michaelbrooke97@gmail.com

    30 min
5
out of 5
26 Ratings

About

Welcome to "The Weekly Parsha with Michoel Brooke," your go-to podcast for engaging, accessible Torah study.Join us to explore the weekly Torah Parshios, offering insights and life lessons for beginners and seasoned learners. Each 15-to 25-minute episode offers a comprehensive yet digestible exploration of the weekly Parsha.Discover valuable Parsha wisdom to enrich your spiritual journey, deepen your understanding of our holy Torah, and inspire personal growth. Subscribe today and begin your journey into the timeless wisdom of the Torah.NEW! Join on WhatsApp for more motivational Torah content. Send "Greatness" to (757)-679-4497 to subscribe.

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