Honor Your Mother and Father: A Spiritual View on the Challenges of the Fifth Commandment
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Handouts:
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Honor Your Mother and Father | |
| Audio: | Listen to Audio | Download this MP3 | |
| Topics: | Maturity, Ten Commandments, Family, Honoring Parents | |
|
Handouts:
|
Honor Your Mother and Father | |
| Audio: | Listen to Audio | Download this MP3 | |
| Topics: | Maturity, Ten Commandments, Family, Honoring Parents | |
Thank you Rabbi Taub As my dear father, Chaim David ben Yechezkel Nachum, has passed away less than 2 months ago, I am learning more in his memory. Your wonderful lesson helped me do this, and to appreciate how important my mother and father are to me. I never really thought how deeply the partnership between man, woman, and God was. And how we are created by our parents as they seek to connect and create!
Thank you, for this. I've gone from a Christian household to become Noahide and have been debating how I can still honor my parents. This has brought me a lot of peace and some good food for thought.
wow, this is the same teaching as islam, i feel like we have the same religion, when this rabbi is speaking is like a Imam is speaking. this message should be spead to minkind. no body love you more than your parents. thank you rabbi very great speach
Powerful Message we are always learning how to navigate in this life.Thank you. -
Great Message Thank you I really enjoyed it and learned so much! I have had trouble getting along with my parents but hearing this has made me see things in a whole different perspective. Thank you!
Thank you This is very powerful and true. Thank you for this most inspirring sermon
I ENJOY THE MESSAGE
Very nice and true message, it does happen.
and the suggestion is great, I have grown up twins, and when I comment to them anything that they know it could be better, they answer me, MOM it is what it is.
Honoring right on target! My Father did pass away on Wed Feb 09 2011. I learned because of his video that I should worship father in a way I never thought of! I took every energy to be by his side without thinking of my loss of wages from work, but I have only one dad and his life ment more to me then paying my bills! It will all work out if placed in the G _ds hands! I am so happy I spent those last days at my fathers bedside and have no regrets!! He came first! I will miss my daddy from way deep down inside of me! In memory of my father Robert F. Andre'! Love you Daddy! Thank you for this lesson!
Honor Your MOther and Father Stated so clearly. Tahnk you for a good class. This Thursday is my husband's mother's Yahrzeit. If you are ever here in Israel would love to have you come and speak here in Efrat.
Dear Rabbi Shais Taub, My wife and I heard this great sermon of yours, it was a spritual bliss. Hazak-U- Barukh.
Honor you father and mother Thank you. Very inspiring, giving one a lot to think about.
What does it say? The white letters in back of me say: "Etz chaim hi l'machazikim bah." It's a verse from Proverbs which means that the Torah "is a tree of life for those who hold fast to it." It's written on that curtain because it is covering the ark where the Torah scrolls are kept.
Honor your Mother and Father
An excellent speaker, you make a lot of sense, and for sure we can make use of more such talks. Thanks a lot Rabbi Shais Taub. Keep it up.
Shalom.
Can you please tell me what the white picture with Hebrew letters like a tree, says? Thanks
thanks once again incredibly helpful insights. as the saying goes, better late than never... may G-d bless you with continued ability to explain vital aspects of life so insightfully!!!! i express my gratitude.
I always Honor My Parents I have a lot to thank them for. They saved my life. In June I was very sick. I gave them a scare of their life.
Now I understand For long, I was angry about the way my parents raised me. But now I understand that they did their best just like you said. As I look myself, I realized that If they did not do things I wish they would have done for me, then they just could not do so.
Honouring your parents I really appreciate what you say. It has taken me many years to come to terms with my parent's upbringing of me (I am a second generation from Holocaust survivor/ or nearly parents). Slowly, and with G-d's help, I am coming to heal what they couldn't help but pass on. Seeing G-d in it all is always helpful for the process. Also seeing G-d as kind, and understanding that this lifetime is not the whole story, help.
Re: abusive parents
The Talmud does relate such a story where a sage fled the country in order not to be placed into a situation of dishonoring his mother who was mentally ill.
I cannot speak to your specific case but sometimes no contact or minimal contact really is the healthiest thing. The main thing is that it should bot be punitive on your part.
If you are genuinely praying for your parent and you feel love and forgiveness and acceptance toward them but still cannot maintain contact without subjecting yourself to emotional abuse, then I think it is fair to say that you are doing the very most that can be expected of you.
The main thing is to stop the cycle of dysfunction by feeling the peace in your heart of knowing that G-d is in control and that He will take care of you and your parents in the best possible way.
abusive parents how do you guide a person when their parent is emotionally abusive and causes great anger in the adult child as well as the parent to the point where it is a toxic relationship.. I have prayed about it and come to terms in that I pray for my parent every day but no other contact (except a Birthay and Mother's Day card) and I feel okay about it. Not the ideal situation, but something I can live with.
Beautiful message, thanks Rabbi. I have a simple question. What about in-laws? Obviously, we need to be loving and respectful as well. Since the commandment about how we behave in marriage is a social law, the ranking should be our own parents placed above in-laws? This is what I have understood from your speech.
I have an unusual situation, in that I live on the other side of the world from my own parents. As a result, I have spent more time with my in-laws, who are geographically closer. I communicate with my parents regularly, I have helped them out in any way possible. But I don't feel like I have spent enough time in the past 15 years or so as I should have. This really has begun to bother me in the past 5 years or so. I have invited my parents to come and move out with us, but healthcare, etc have all played a part in them only vacationing with us.
You are correct, that our obligations to our parents are greater than to our in-laws. That being said, we can only deal with the situation that we are in. It also goes without saying that one should do whatever possible to make the visits more frequent - whether you taking your vacations near them, or having them visit more often.
What I am trying to say is that instead of feeling bad about this, we should look for ways to spend more time, and the rest we need to leave up to G-d.