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Human vulnerability is profound and inescapable.

And yet, one of our deepest psychological longings is for safety and security. We need to know everything will be okay. But the world offers no guarantees.

How do we make peace with being fundamentally vulnerable?

Sukkot provides the answer. We leave our secure homes for the sukkah, a temporary dwelling that must be fragile enough to let rain through. After Yom Kippur's vulnerability, we paradoxically make ourselves more vulnerable, and find joy in it.

Drawing on Pirkei Avot and the story of the Jewish people's birth in the desert, Chief Rabbi Dr Warren Goldstein reveals how the sukkah teaches us to transform vulnerability from threat into gift. When we understand that this world's purpose is growth rather than comfort, vulnerability becomes the key to humility, empathy, gratitude, and meaning.

Key insights:

  • Why the sukkah commemorates the Jewish people's most vulnerable moment

  • What the desert journey teaches about human vulnerability

  • Why this world's purpose differs from the world to come

  • Why justice belongs to the next world, not this one

  • How vulnerability cultivates humility, empathy, and gratitude

  • How purpose and meaning create true happiness

  • Why radical acceptance of vulnerability leads to joy

#Sukkot #Vulnerability #JewishWisdom #PirkeiAvot #TorahWisdom

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99 episodes