Weekly Torah Reading (Read by an AI Voice) copertina

Weekly Torah Reading (Read by an AI Voice)

Weekly Torah Reading (Read by an AI Voice)

Di: Scott Lorsch
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A proposito di questo titolo

I have been wanting to read the entire Chumash each week but there are no audio recordings of it. This is an AI version of my voice reading the Kehot Chumash from Chabad. It weaves in Rashi commentary to make it easier to understand. All readings can be found at https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/4292310/jewish/Kehot-Chumash.htm Any errors in reading are due to the AI. I am not looking over recordings before posting so please listen with caution.Scott Lorsch Giudaismo Spiritualità
  • Shemot - Bo (Exodus 10:1–13:16)
    Jan 18 2026

    All recordings are created by copying Sefaria using the Kehot Chumash from Chabad english translation. The Text to Voice is using English AI... sorry for any weird speech.


    Please note that release schedule is based on the year 5786. Some weeks do not have a Parsha. You can always look up the current Parsha ⁠Here⁠.


    If you like the recording please consider donating to ⁠⁠⁠⁠Chabad⁠⁠⁠⁠ to help continue their effort to make resources like this more accessible to the Jewish population!


    Shemot
    Bo (Exodus 10:1–13:16)

    Three final plagues break Egypt’s will. Locusts devour what hail spared; a palpable darkness falls for three days; and at midnight the firstborn die—judgment against Egypt’s gods and Pharaoh’s stubbornness. In the midst of dread, God inaugurates hope: this month becomes the first of the year; each household sets aside a lamb, slaughters it at twilight, marks doorposts with blood, and eats the meat with matzah and bitter herbs—ready to move, belts fastened and staffs in hand. Staying indoors as the destroyer passes, Israel is spared. Cries rise in Egypt; Pharaoh drives them out; a “mixed multitude” joins, and Israel departs in haste with dough not yet leavened.

    Bo establishes Passover as a story to be told across generations and a practice to be lived: removing chametz, eating matzah for seven days, and excluding outsiders from the korban unless they join the covenant. The portion closes with sanctifying every firstborn to God and binding memory to the body—“as a sign on your hand and as a remembrance between your eyes”—so that liberation is never merely recalled but worn, spoken, and taught. Themes to listen for: stubbornness that blinds vs. ritual that opens eyes, time reshaped by redemption, the home as a sanctuary of faith, and how memory becomes freedom’s nightly bread.

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    48 min
  • Shemot - Va'era (Exodus 6:2–9:35)
    Jan 11 2026

    All recordings are created by copying Sefaria using the Kehot Chumash from Chabad english translation. The Text to Voice is using English AI... sorry for any weird speech.


    Please note that release schedule is based on the year 5786. Some weeks do not have a Parsha. You can always look up the current Parsha ⁠Here⁠.


    If you like the recording please consider donating to ⁠⁠⁠⁠Chabad⁠⁠⁠⁠ to help continue their effort to make resources like this more accessible to the Jewish population!


    Shemot
    Va'era (Exodus 6:2–9:35)

    God reveals Himself to Moses with a deeper Name and a fourfold promise of redemption—“I will bring out, save, redeem, and take you as My people”—and pledges the land sworn to the patriarchs. The people, crushed by labor and “shortness of spirit,” struggle to hope. A brief genealogy situates Moses and Aaron within the tribe of Levi, then the mission resumes: they confront Pharaoh, Aaron’s staff becomes a serpent that swallows the magicians’ staffs, and the first seven plagues begin.

    The Nile turns to blood; frogs swarm the land; dust becomes lice that the magicians cannot replicate. With the fourth plague, swarms strike Egypt while Goshen is spared—God now “sets a distinction.” A devastating pestilence kills Egyptian livestock; boils afflict people and animals; and hail—thunder, fire, and ice—shatters crops and trees. Each time, Pharaoh’s heart hardens (or is hardened), mercy flares and then recedes, and the demand remains unchanged: “Let My people go that they may serve Me.” Themes to listen for: the power of God’s Name as faithful presence, hope rekindled under oppression, the unraveling of a false god (the Nile) and an empire’s control, and how judgment and mercy together prepare the way for freedom.

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    37 min
  • Shemot - Shemot (Exodus 1:1–6:1)
    Jan 4 2026

    All recordings are created by copying Sefaria using the Kehot Chumash from Chabad english translation. The Text to Voice is using English AI... sorry for any weird speech.


    Please note that release schedule is based on the year 5786. Some weeks do not have a Parsha. You can always look up the current Parsha ⁠Here⁠.


    If you like the recording please consider donating to ⁠⁠⁠⁠Chabad⁠⁠⁠⁠ to help continue their effort to make resources like this more accessible to the Jewish population!


    Shemot
    Shemot (Exodus 1:1–6:1)

    A new Pharaoh rises “who did not know Joseph,” and Israel’s family becomes a nation in bondage. Pharaoh’s harsh decrees escalate from forced labor to infanticide, yet quiet courage pushes back: the midwives Shifra and Puah defy the king; a Levite mother hides her baby in a basket on the Nile; Pharaoh’s daughter draws him out and names him Moses. Grown, Moses intervenes against injustice, then flees to Midian after killing an Egyptian. There he marries Zipporah and tends flocks—until, at a burning bush that blazes without consuming, God calls his name and reveals a mission: return to Egypt and lead the Israelites to freedom.

    Moses hesitates—“Who am I?” “What is Your Name?” “I am not a man of words”—but God answers with signs, the promise “I Will Be with you,” and Aaron as spokesman. Back in Egypt, the first confrontation hardens Pharaoh’s heart and worsens the people’s burden as straw is withheld; despair spreads, and Moses cries out to God. The portion closes with a divine assurance: “Now you will see what I will do to Pharaoh.” Themes to listen for: civil disobedience born of moral courage, how personal calling emerges from exile and wonder, the power of God’s Name as presence, and the painful truth that liberation often begins with setbacks.

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    53 min
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