Episodi

  • Chief Rabbi to the Pope | Remembrance Day address
    Apr 24 2026

    In this Day of Remembrance address, Chief Rabbi Dr Warren Goldstein responds directly to Pope Leo, and says what the world needs to hear.

    Yom HaZikaron is a day of remembrance. A day to mourn those who lost their lives, and to stand with the families who carry that loss.

    It is also a day on which something must be said.

    In a world of moral confusion, where religious leaders like Pope Leo fail to distinguish between the aggressor and the defender, silence is not an option.

    When we call our fallen soldiers "Kedoshim Utehorim" - holy and pure - we are not only honouring them, but making a declaration: Israel's wars are just wars, and that those who gave their lives defending civilization itself are sacred.

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    8 min
  • Becoming Aware of Your Soul | Parsha with the Chief: Acharei-Kedoshim
    Apr 22 2026

    We all have a sense of who we are. It feels obvious. Familiar.

    But that picture is likely incomplete.

    Where does the self begin, and where does it end?

    In this week's parsha, we encounter the command: "Love your neighbour as yourself."

    What is the "self" we are being asked to understand?

    Drawing on the teachings of Pirkei Avot and the insights of our sages, including the profound perspective of Rabbi Shimon Shkop, the Torah opens a deeper question about identity, one that lies at the heart of how we relate to ourselves and to others.

    It is a question that challenges some of our most basic assumptions about selfhood.

    In this week's talk on Parshat Acharei-Kedoshim, Chief Rabbi Dr Warren Goldstein explores a question that reshapes how we think about identity, responsibility, and what it means to be human.

    Key Questions

    • Where does the self begin, and where does it end?

    • Is self-love the opposite of selflessness? Or is it a part of it?

    • What does it really mean to love your neighbour "as yourself"?

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    23 min
  • Words Shape Reality | Parsha with the Chief: Tazria-Metzora
    Apr 15 2026

    The way we speak feels simple. We describe what we see, respond to what happens, and share our thoughts with others. Words appear to express reality.

    But the Torah presents a very different perspective.

    In this week's talk on the Parsha of Tazria-Metzora, Chief Rabbi Dr Warren Goldstein explores a deeper understanding of how the way we speak shapes the world in which we live.

    We are taught what to do when we encounter tzara'at, an experience that reveals the profound impact of speech and the way it shapes how people are seen and understood.

    Words do not only express reality. They change how it is seen and influence the way we experience life.

    Key Questions

    • How do the stories we tell about others influence how we see them?

    • What does Torah offer as the framework through which we understand reality?

    • Do words simply describe reality, or do they shape it?

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    21 min
  • Gratitude 2.0 | Pesach with the Chief
    Mar 31 2026

    Gratitude is one of the most familiar ideas in human life.

    We teach it to children, express it to others, and speak about it often. Yet the deeper meaning of gratitude is not always obvious.

    As Pesach approaches, the Jewish people return to the story that lies at the heart of our national memory: the Exodus from Egypt. At the Seder table we recount the miracles, the redemption, and the journey from slavery to freedom. And of course, we give thanks.

    Pirkei Avot invites us to look more carefully at what gratitude really is.

    More than just a feeling or a gesture, it points to something deeper about how we understand what we receive in life, and what it asks of us in return.

    In this special talk for Pesach, Chief Rabbi Dr Warren Goldstein explores a remarkable insight that opens a new way of thinking about gratitude and responsibility.

    Key Questions

    • What does gratitude actually mean?

    • Why does Jewish wisdom treat gratitude as deeper than simply saying "thank you"?

    • What does the story of Pesach reveal about the nature of gratitude?

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    20 min
  • Work That Matters | Parsha with the Chief: Tzav
    Mar 25 2026

    Work is often measured in terms of employment and economic survival.

    To understand its deeper meaning is to begin seeing life itself in a different way.

    In this week's parsha, the Torah begins with a surprising image. A Kohen, dressed in sacred garments, performs what appears to be a simple cleaning task: removing the ashes from the altar.

    On the surface, this seems menial. Yet the Torah treats it as an act of holy service.

    Why?

    And why does Pirkei Avot teach us not merely to work, but to love work?

    Because the Torah's understanding of work is very different from the way we usually think about it. What looks ordinary actually carries a deeper purpose, and what feels like effort holds the key to something far greater.

    In this week's talk on the Parsha of Tzav, Chief Rabbi Dr Warren Goldstein explores this question through the deeper wisdom of the Torah and our sages.

    Key Questions

    • Why does Pirkei Avot teach us not only to work, but to love work?

    • What gives work its dignity - the task itself, or the purpose behind it?

    • What does the Torah reveal about effort and the human condition?

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    22 min
  • Understanding Miracles Can Change your Life Today | Pesach with the Chief
    Mar 19 2026

    Miracles captivate the imagination. But what are they? Do they still exist? What do they reveal?

    These may seem like distant, philosophical questions. But, to understand miracles is to discover something that changes how we see the world, and how we live within it.

    And Pesach is the time to do it.

    As the Jewish people enter the month of Nissan, preparing for Pesach, the Torah places the miracles of the Exodus at the centre of our story. The ten plagues. The splitting of the sea. Moments that reshaped history.

    But Pirkei Avot - the great Talmudic tractate on character, growth, and human greatness - does something unexpected.

    In the midst of its teachings, it turns to miracles.

    Why?

    Because miracles are not only about what happened then. They raise a deeper question about what is happening now.

    If the same power that split the sea is required, at every moment, to sustain the world… then what we call the "status quo" may not be what we think.

    Chief Rabbi Dr Warren Goldstein explores this idea in a special talk for Pesach and the month of Nissan.

    KEY QUESTIONS

    • Is reality fixed, or is change always possible?

    • How does belief in miracles shape the way we see ourselves?

    • If nothing is fixed, what does that mean about the way that we live?

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    22 min
  • The Art of Successful Collaboration | Parsha with the Chief - Vayakhel-Pekudei
    Mar 11 2026

    Almost everything important in life happens with other people.

    Marriage. Family. Business. Community. Society.

    These relationships shape us in powerful ways. They can bring out our greatest strengths, and sometimes our most difficult character traits as well.

    It is often in the presence of other people that we feel jealousy, competition, or the desire for recognition. These moments can feel uncomfortable, even frustrating.

    But perhaps those very interactions are exactly where human growth takes place.

    In the Parsha of Vayakhel–Pekudei, Moses gathers the entire nation together as the Jewish people begin building the Mishkan. Individuals come together to create something greater than themselves, and in the process something profound happens.

    In this talk, Chief Rabbi Dr Warren Goldstein explores what it means to grow through our relationships with others, and how the associations that fill our lives can become the place where we develop into the people we are meant to be.

    Key Questions

    • Why do some of our most difficult character traits emerge in the presence of other people?
    • Would it be easier to grow as a person if we separated ourselves from the community?
    • Or is it possible that the challenge of living with others is precisely where human greatness is formed?
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    22 min
  • Overcoming Setbacks | Parsha with the Chief: Ki Tisa
    Mar 4 2026

    Setbacks and mistakes are part of being human. But for many people, the real struggle isn't the failure itself. It's what comes after.

    Some respond with perfectionism. Others settle for mediocrity.

    Both of these responses miss something fundamental about life.

    In the Parsha of Ki Tisa, the Torah records one of the most devastating moments in Jewish history: the shattering of the first tablets.

    And then something extraordinary happens. A second set of tablets is given.

    Why?

    Chief Rabbi Dr Warren Goldstein explores this question in a powerful reflection on Parshat Ki Tisa, drawing on the timeless wisdom of Pirkei Avot.

    KEY QUESTIONS

    • Why can perfectionism become a trap?

    • Why might mediocrity be just as dangerous?

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    23 min