Naso
Numbers · 9 articles
Parashat Naso - Seventh Aliyah
Numbers 7:72 to 7:89. The conclusion of the altar's dedication: the final two days of Asher and Naftali, a summary of all the offerings, and Moses entering the Tent of Meeting and hearing the voice.
Parashat Naso - Sixth Aliyah
Numbers 7:42 to 7:71. We continue with the dedication of the altar: the sixth through tenth days, with five additional leaders bringing the same template of offering, day after day, with different names in the signature.
Parashat Naso - Fifth Aliyah
Numbers 7:1 to 7:41. On the day the Mishkan was set up, the leaders of the tribes donate wagons and oxen to the Levites, and open the dedication of the altar with the offerings of the first five princes (Judah, Issachar, Zebulun, Reuben, Simeon).
Parashat Naso - Fourth Aliyah
Numbers 5:11 to 6:27. The parashah of the Sotah, the laws of the Nazir, and the Priestly Blessing. Three sections showing how God's presence operates in justice, in personal holiness, and in blessing.
Parashat Naso - Third Aliyah
Numbers 5:1 to 5:10. Sending the impure outside the camp, the mitzvah of confession and restitution for one who robs and swears falsely, and the holiness of the gifts given to the Kohen. Three levels of purity, repentance and giving.
Parashat Naso - Second Aliyah
Numbers 4:38 to 4:49. The census numbers of the sons of Gershon and Merari, and a total of 8,580 Levites aged thirty to fifty who served in the Mishkan. Each one counted by name, each man according to his service and his load.
Parashat Naso - First Aliyah
Numbers 4:21 to 4:37. The sons of Gershon, carriers of the curtains; the sons of Merari, in charge of the boards and sockets; and the census of the Levites from age thirty to fifty. A role for everyone, and honor for those behind the scenes.
Parshat Naso - Insights and Questions
Parshat Naso teaches that life is a portable Tabernacle: everyone carries something, everyone repairs something, everyone needs some kind of boundary, and everyone needs a blessing.
What Is the Connection Between the Priestly Blessing and Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs?
The parallel between the Priestly Blessing and Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs creates a profound bridge between sacred wisdom and modern psychology. Let's examine it step by step.
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