Thursday, April 24, 2025

Fwd: Torat Imecha Haftorah - Shemini


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: The OU Women's Initiative <ouwomen@ounetwork.org>
Date: Thu, Apr 24, 2025, 7:00 AM
Subject: Torat Imecha Haftorah - Shemini
To: <agentemes4@gmail.com>



Torat Imecha Haftorah

Torat Imecha Haftorah for Sefer Vayikra is dedicated by the family of Rabbi Dr. Israel Rivkin z"l, ישרא–ל בן רפא–ל זאב ז׳׳ל, as an aliyah for his neshama


Mrs. Sara Malka Winter

 

Haftorah Shemini

Mrs. Sara Malka Winter

Listen Now

Mrs. Sara Malka Winter holds a Master of Science degree in education and is a sought-after speaker in her community of Silver Spring, Maryland. As a teenager, Mrs. Winter founded Ashreinu, a Canadian kiruv organization dedicated to Jewish outreach to the Russian immigrant community, which has influenced hundreds of girls. Mrs. Winter lived in Israel for eight years with her family, where she taught and lectured across Jerusalem in seminaries, outreach centers, and high schools. In 2008, Mrs. Winter moved to Maryland to help found the Greater Washington Community Kollel, together with her husband, Rabbi Menachem Winter. She continues to lecture throughout the Washington, DC area as a Senior Lecturer for the Kollel on diverse topics, including Tefillah, Chumash, Nach, Tehillim, Chagim, and Mitzvos. Mrs. Winter is also a beloved teacher at the Yeshiva of Greater Washington Girls Division. At the OU Women's Initiative, Sara Malka taught Sefer Tehillim 53-62 and 120-134 to over 5,000 women worldwide as part of the Torat Imecha Nach Yomi program.


Dvar Haftorah

OU Women's Initiative 

Founding Director

Rebbetzin Dr.

Adina Shmidman

Rebbetzin Dr. Shmidman

The Power of Now

Parshat Shemini

וַיְהִי בַּלַּיְלָה הַהוּא, וַיְהִי דְּבַר־ה' אֶל־נָתָן לֵאמֹר
But that same night, the word of Hashem came to Natan…

 

This week's Haftorah opens with Dovid HaMelech's deeply heartfelt desire to build the Beit HaMikdash. Seeing the grandeur of his own royal palace while the Aron rested in a temporary dwelling, Dovid yearns to construct a permanent home for the Divine Presence. Natan HaNavi, recognizing the sincerity and spiritual nobility of this aspiration, gives his immediate approval. But that very night, Hashem appears to Natan and delivers a striking message: Dovid will not be the one to build the Beit HaMikdash.

 

Though Dovid's motivations are pure, and though his military victories were commanded by Hashem Himself, the House that will embody peace, unity, and eternity must be built by one whose hands have not been bloodied by war. The privilege will be given to Dovid's son, Shlomo, a king whose reign will be characterized by peace and stability.

 

Hashem instructs Natan to reverse his approval—and to do so without delay. That same night, Natan must return to Dovid and convey the new Divine directive. Why the urgency? Why not wait until the morning for such a weighty and difficult conversation?

 

Rashi, quoting the Yalkut Shimoni, explains that Dovid HaMelech was a man of action, a tzaddik infused with zerizut—a powerful blend of enthusiasm, intentionality, and urgency. Had Natan waited even until morning, Dovid might already have involved builders and architects, laid foundations, or begun acquiring materials. The very holiness of his impulse demanded a rapid course correction, and Natan had to act immediately despite the late hour and the difficult conversation.

 

This brief but poignant moment in Tanach offers a striking message about how we approach opportunity and ambition. Dovid's energy, his refusal to delay in the face of a spiritual calling, models a mode of living that is aspirational and mission-driven. He does not hesitate. He acts—wholeheartedly, decisively, and with purpose.

 

So often, we delay action out of fear: fear of failure, fear of imperfection, fear of change. Other times, we wait for a "better" time, one that may never come. But Dovid teaches us to seize moments of inspiration and to channel them into meaningful movement. As we are reminded in this week's chapter of Pirkei Avot, "וְאִם לֹא עַכְשָׁיו, אֵימָתָי"—And if not now, when?

 

Let us learn from both Natan and Dovid—the urgency to correct and the urgency to begin—and infuse our spiritual lives with a sense of 

zerizut, a readiness to build, even if the results may lie in the hands of another.



As part of your weekly learning, join Torat Imecha Parsha 

with Mrs. Shira Smiles.

 

Register below to receive weekly recordings.



The Women's Initiative is on Instagram! 

 

Follow @ouwomen for programming, inspiration and exclusive content!


Share this message on: Facebook | Twitter

No comments: