Shalom Bayit and Honoring Parents: Torah Guidelines for Married Women
How Jewish law prioritizes a wife's home obligations and harmony while preserving the mitzvah of kibbud av va'eim
How Jewish law prioritizes a wife's home obligations and harmony while preserving the mitzvah of kibbud av va'eim
Practical Torah Guidance on elder care, the obligations of adult children, and when nursing homes are an appropriate consideration
Striking a fellow Jew violates Torah law, even if you were wronged. Striking one's parent is a capital offense
What this unusual verse teaches about how we speak, even when we're alone and no one will ever know what we said
Sometimes, it's those who we feel closest to who are treated worst by us. Following the Torah's commandments enables us to balance love with respect
The Torah obligates children to honor and revere their parents, but as parents, what can we do to promote respectful relationships?
Navigating relationships with non-observant parents: obligations, boundaries, and respectful interactions in Jewish law
Children of any age may not refer to a parent using their first name, even if the parent says they don't mind. Why?
The mitzvah of honoring one's parents includes being available to take care of their needs. As parents grow older, what does this mean in practice?
Kibbud av va'eim is one of the Ten Commandments, but what happens if a parent asks a child for something that the Torah forbids?
The Torah's guidelines for the mitzvah of kibbud av va'eim ensure that children always show their parents respect even when they don't see eye-to-eye
The surprising moment a Rabbi’s breathing returned—thanks to a kind heart and a beautiful perspective.
Practical Torah guidance for everyday situations when interacting with parents
A young yeshiva student made a mistake in 1989. Thirty years later, he’s still trying to make it right.
Kibbud av va'eim means respect and reverence for our parents — and that means not treating them as our friends, and certainly not as our servants
How to balance respect and closeness between parents and children in the situations we encounter in everyday life
The five aspects of the mitzvah of kibbud av va'eim, plus the deeper meanings behind the mitzvah and why honoring our parents is like honoring God
The Torah promises us a reward of "long life" for two different mitzvot, one extremely easy, the other extremely hard. Why? To teach us that the bigger picture is only visible to God
When we feel entitled to the blessings in our lives, when we feel that 'my hard work got me where I am,' we end up ungrateful not only to other people but also to God
Three thousand years after the Torah was given on Mount Sinai, we are still observing its commandments the same way; meanwhile, other cultures and peoples have come and gone and left nary a trace behind
*In accurate expression search should be used in quotas. For example: "Family Pure", "Rabbi Zamir Cohen" and so on