This week's Torah reading covers the giving of the Ten Commandments at Mount Sinai. Of all the Ten, only one is mentioned with a specific reward attached: honoring your mother and father.
A friend recently observed that this commandment needed a reward because it is sometimes the hardest to do on its own. Many of us have complicated and painful relationships with our parents.
Note that the commandment is to "honor" your mother and father, not to "love" them. Loving them is wonderful -- but if you cannot do that, you can at least do your best to treat them with dignity.
This week's show will be slightly different from the norm: we'll focus on clips and topics, rather than guests -- and that, hopefully, will mean more input from the callers (unless you are all watching football on opening weekend).
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This week's Torah portion includes several laws about conduct in civic and personal life, the common theme of which is boundaries -- setting bounds to what one may do at home, at work, and even in the battlefield.
One noteworthy passage concerns Amalek, the evil nation that attacked the Children of Israel as they made their Exodus from slavery to freedom. Deuteronomy 25:17-19 commands Jews to obliterate Amalek's memory.
The South African government accused Israel of genocide on the basis of a story about Amalek in the Book of Samuel, in which King Saul was commanded to wipe out the entire evil Amalekite nation.
Because Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu quoted this week's portion -- "Remember what Amalek did to you" (25:17), the South African government claimed he was commanding soldiers to commit genocide.
It was an absurd and malevolent misreading of the Bible and of Jewish tradition. The commandment, as observed by Jews today, is to remember the evil of Amalek and fight ...