Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Jun 20, 2012 · 8 Answers. Sorted by: 21. +50. I understood the term to mean designated, differentiated or set aside for a purpose. So Kiddush-קידוש would be the verbal declaration that designates the day of Shabbat and differentiates it from all the days that precede it (see the Rambam on the Mitzva of Kiddush).

  2. Aug 26, 2022 · Whereas the plurality of שָׁנָה שָׁנָה, shanah shanah, means “ every year,” the repetition of קשׂ-קשׂ in קַשְׂקֶשֶׂת, kaskeset, conveys the hundreds, if not thousands of individual scales on each fish. The repetitive form suggests abundance. Looking beyond the parashah, repetition can be found in some of the most well-known verses in the Tanakh.

  3. May 10, 2024 · Shabbat is called the “great gift” from a heavenly treasure house, and our tables are vessels to receive its blessings. IN YORAM RAANAN’S painting Shabbat Table Crowns, a table with candles...

  4. May 21, 2016 · The ish halakha understands kedusha differently. Every discipline, whether it be chemistry, language or medicine, are all potentially aspects of Torah. As Rav Avraham Yitzchak Hakohen Kook has pointed out, “There is nothing unholy, there is only the holy and the not yet holy.”

    • Why is Shabbat called Kadosh?1
    • Why is Shabbat called Kadosh?2
    • Why is Shabbat called Kadosh?3
    • Why is Shabbat called Kadosh?4
    • Why is Shabbat called Kadosh?5
  5. After the meal, many recite (Grace After Meals) and sing special Sabbath songs called. Read on for the text of these blessings and fuller explanation. as sunset approaches on Friday is the traditional sign of the arrival of Shabbat.

  6. The meaning of the Sabbath is to celebrate time rather than space. Six days a week we live under the tyranny of things of space; on the Sabbath we try to become attuned to holiness in time.

  7. People also ask

  8. As a rabbi, I have been asked many times what it means to be holy. Most literally, the Hebrew word for holy, kadosh, means to set apart or separate. Throughout the Jewish calendar we have days that are holy and days that are not. Shabbat and festivals are holy days that are separate from the other ordinary days of the year.