Three ideas about the emphasis the Torah places upon the manner in which Yaakov Avinu takes the gifts he sends to his brother.
The false expectations of others cause the beauty of Leah Imenu to be obscured by anxiety and grief.
In the midst of a famine in a place where the local population does not easily abide his presence, Yitzchak Avinu finds material success--and gives back a tithe.
Hadlakat neirot as a tradition of our forbears, and as a mitzva of Shabbat.
Rashi recognizes that the subtlety of the language employed by the Torah hints at an extra precautionary measure taken by Avraham Avinu.
Presenting the drasha delivered by R. Kalonymous Kalman Shapira, hy'd, in the Warsaw Ghetto, in 1940, as printed in the Sefer Aish Kodesh.
A basic idea about how the Torah distinguishes Judaism as life-affirming through the Kehuna.