Deeper Look At The Parsha
Religion & Spirituality
About
In the late 1990s Rabbi Dunner presented his own daily 2-hour radio show on London’s multiethnic station, Spectrum Radio. Tens of thousands of listeners – Jews and non-Jews alike – tuned in every day to hear Rabbi Dunner’s take on current events. In 2011 Rabbi Dunner relocated to the US and became the senior Rabbi at Beverly Hills Synagogue. Weekly the Rabbi holds a parsha shiur that delves deeper into the Parsha of the week.
Episodes
- DEFINING YOUR PURPOSE
In an age that worships freedom and personal autonomy, Rabbi Dunner argues that liberty without moral purpose eventually collapses into chaos. Drawing on psychology, history, and the deeper meaning of Shavuot, he explores why Sinai transfo…
- THE MYSTERY OF RUTH
In this richly layered shiur on Megillat Ruth, Rabbi Dunner explores Ruth’s journey from Moabite outsider to matriarch of the Davidic dynasty. Through Chazal, Midrash, Gemara, and modern scholarship, he reveals how the the themes of chesed…
- BEYOND THE CHAOS
In the chaotic aftermath of World War II, military planners discovered that displaced people needed more than food and shelter — they needed structure and belonging. Rabbi Dunner shows how this insight lies at the heart of Parshat Bamidbar…
- GONE, BUT NOT FORGOTTEN
At a sparsely attended funeral for a once-prominent philanthropist, an unexpected tenth man completed the minyan — and led the gathered mourners to another grave. There lay an unnamed Holocaust survivor, nearly erased from memory. Two fune…
- WHAT REALLY COUNTS?
In a world driven by metrics—steps counted, sleep tracked, productivity measured—have we mistaken numbers for meaning? Drawing on a powerful personal ICU experience and the mitzvah of Sefirat HaOmer in Parshat Emor, Rabbi Dunner explores a…
- BEYOND BEING NICE
“Love your neighbor as yourself” sounds simple—until you try to live it. In this thought-provoking shiur, Rabbi Dunner explores why real love isn’t a feeling but a discipline, built through honesty, restraint, and responsibility. Moving be…
- WHEN PROCESS ISN'T ENOUGH
Following the rules should be enough—or is it? In this sharp and timely reflection on Parshat Kedoshim, Rabbi Dunner explores how a modern political scandal exposes a timeless Torah truth: process alone cannot guarantee integrity. Drawing…
- DON'T MISS THE BIRTH
What is tumah—and why does the Torah connect it to the moment of new birth? In this thought-provoking shiur, Rabbi Dunner challenges the common understanding of impurity, revealing a deeper perspective rooted in absence, potential, and tra…
- DID YOU HEAR WHAT HAPPENED?
In an age of viral rumors, conspiracy chatter, and endless scrolling, gossip has become a powerful force shaping how we see the world—and each other. Drawing on Parshat Tazria–Metzora, Rabbi Dunner explores how harmful speech fractures tru…
- THE ROAD TO HELL
Good intentions can inspire greatness—but they can also lead to disaster. In a gripping look at Parshat Shemini and the story of Rabbi Joseph Shapotshnick, Rabbi Dunner explores how ego can quietly corrupt even the noblest causes. When con…
- WHY IS SEDER NIGHT... LIKE YOM KIPPUR?
Pesach feels nothing like Yom Kippur—one is festive, the other solemn. Yet beneath the surface, they share the same transformative power. Rabbi Dunner reveals how the Seder night can achieve what Yom Kippur does—if we are truly present. Th…
- ECHOES, RHYMES, AND REDEMPTION
As tensions rise in Israel and antisemitism surges across the globe, familiar patterns begin to emerge. As Rabbi Dunner notes, the Haggadah’s call to see ourselves as if we left Egypt is not abstract. Just as in the original Exodus, when t…
- LIVING, NOT DYING
As Iran escalates its attacks across the Middle East, a troubling pattern emerges—one that blurs the line between strategy and sacrifice. But while some ideologies romanticize destruction in God’s name, Sefer Vayikra offers a radically dif…
- GONE, BUT NOT FORGOTTEN
Rabbi Dunner draws on a beautiful essay from the Rav Daniel Alter Haggadah to find the deeper meaning of freedom on Pesach. Moving beyond the physical Exodus, he explores a powerful message about the lingering mindset of slavery, challengi…
- BUILDERS OF BUILDERS
From Socrates in ancient Athens to Moshe Rabbeinu in the wilderness, history’s greatest leaders share a common trait: they create other leaders. Vayakhel reveals how Moshe built more than a sanctuary; he built a generation of builders whos…
- NO MORE MOWING THE LAWN
For decades Israel “mowed the lawn,” responding to attacks without eradicating the source of the threat. October 7 changed everything. As Iran and its terror proxies face unprecedented blows, the story of the Golden Calf in Parshat Ki Tisa…
- IN YOUR MIND'S EYE
A church that took 144 years to complete. A yeshiva built for students who had not yet arrived. A prophet describing a Temple that did not yet exist. In the Haftarah for Parshat Tetzaveh, we discover that redemption does not begin with mir…
- NOT A SIMPLE STORY
At Sinai, the mountain hovered overhead and faith felt inevitable. In Shushan, God’s name disappeared and everything could be dismissed as coincidence. So when was Torah truly accepted — in the blaze of revelation or in the darkness of exi…
- HOLINESS WITHOUT BORDERS
Empires self-identify by anchoring themselves to monuments and locations. The Aztecs had Tenochtitlan. The Incas had Cusco. Rome had its “eternal city.” When those centers fell, their worlds unraveled. The Jewish people lost Jerusalem twic…
- SPREAD THE JOY
What does it mean to “increase joy” when life isn’t perfect? Rabbi Dunner’s uplifting Adar shiur explores the deeper meaning of Mishenichnas Adar Marbim b’Simcha, showing how the Megillah teaches us to find hidden goodness, laugh at life’s…
- GOD IS IN THE DETAILS
After the thunder of Sinai comes a surprising shift: damages, loans, workers’ rights, and legal liability. Why does the Torah move from revelation to regulation? Rabbi Dunner explores how lofty ideals collapse without structure, and how Ju…
- WHEN THE MUSIC STOPS
A Don McLean concert becomes a meditation on nostalgia, inspiration, and disappointment. Rabbi Dunner reflects on what it means to watch a cultural hero age — and offers a novel insight into why the Torah follows the drama of Sinai with th…
- MORE THAN JUST WORDS
The Ten Commandments are among the most famous words in history—and among the least detailed. As Rabbi Dunner explains, this is no accident. By exploring Martin Luther’s literalism, Jewish history’s rejection of text-only faith, and the ro…
- AN UNLIKELY HERO
Before thunder and lightning, before Anochi Hashem Elokecha, the Torah pauses for a quiet but crucial conversation. Why does a Midianite outsider notice what no one else does? And why does Sinai have to wait? Rabbi Dunner explores Yitro’s…
- THE LONG JEWISH ROAD
Why didn’t God take the Jewish people the shortest route out of Egypt? Rabbi Dunner focuses on the opening verse of Beshalach, exploring why detours matter, how the long road shapes resilience, and why growth often comes not from speed or…
- AVOIDING THE TRAP OF REGRESSION
Freedom doesn’t always make people braver. Sometimes it makes them afraid. From ancient Egypt to modern politics, moments of success often trigger a dangerous instinct to retreat into familiar but destructive ideas. Drawing on history and…
- LESSONS FROM HIROSHIMA
A visit to Hiroshima’s Peace Memorial Museum prompts a painful moral reckoning. Using Parshat Bo as his anchor, Rabbi Dunner examines whether decisive, devastating force is sometimes necessary to end evil. Drawing on Ramban, the Maharal, a…
- OUT OF THE DARKNESS
Why did the Exodus begin at midnight, not dawn? Drawing on Talmud, Maharal, Chassidut, Rav Kook, and the Izhbitzer, Rabbi Dunner explores how Judaism understands transformation: that the deepest changes occur in darkness, before clarity, c…
- WHEN POWER BECOMES BLIND
As Iran’s leaders double down on repression, the echoes from history are chilling. From Napoleon to Hitler, and Pharaoh at the beginning of Sefer Shemot, dictators consistently overestimate their power even as it erodes—until reality inevi…
- AN ACCIDENTAL HERO
In 1940, a Japanese diplomat in Lithuania quietly chose conscience over career, saving lives he would never know. From Chiune Sugihara to the midwives of Egypt, Rabbi Dunner explores how small acts of courage by ordinary people set redempt…
- IT'S ALL ABOUT THE GRANDCHILDREN
Why do grandparents relate so differently to their grandchildren? Modern neuroscience, Chassidic thought, and Rabbi Jonathan Sacks converge on an ancient insight. In Parshat Vayechi, Yaakov blesses his grandchildren before his sons, teachi…
- CONNECTING THE DOTS
As life nears its end, clarity replaces illusion. From Beethoven and Jefferson to Steve Jobs and Isaac Newton, history shows how perspective sharpens with mortality. Parshat Vayechi captures this truth in Jacob’s final words to his sons, r…
- A TALE FOR ALL TIME
Written over two thousand years apart, the first-ever novel - written by a Japanese courtier - and the Torah’s story of Joseph converge on the same unsettling question: how should power be used? Drawing on The Tale of Genji and Parshat Vay…
- WHAT THE EXPERTS SAY
When experts fail, it is rarely for lack of information. From the Great Storm of 1987 in England, to the 2008 financial crash, and recently Israel’s intelligence failure before October 7th, warning signs were present but misread. What make…
- SOME THOUGHTS ON POWER
Power reveals character. From Joseph’s restraint at the height of global authority to the Chashmonaim’s uneasy legacy, Rabbi Dunner explores how Judaism measures leadership once power is achieved. Why did Chazal let the Hasmonean victories…
- THE DREAMERS WE DISMISS
History is filled with great people dismissed as useless dreamers, only for their brilliance to be recognized later. From Lincoln to Semmelweis, John Snow to Ada Lovelace, and even Joseph in Parshat Vayeishev, we repeatedly misjudge vision…
- MAKING PEACE VS. WAGING WAR
In Parshat Vayishlach, Yaakov embraces diplomacy eith Esav while Shimon and Levi choose confrontation with Shechem. What determines the difference? Rabbi Dunner explores the Torah’s two models for responding to danger, and how these ancien…
- WRESTLING WITH THE FUTURE
AI panic is everywhere—politicians, philosophers, and tech theorists warn that machines may soon outthink or even replace us. But a strange nighttime encounter in Parshat Vayishlach offers a radically different lens. From Jacob’s mysteriou…
- THE MOST IMPORTANT PARSHA IN THE TORAH (MY FATHER WAS RIGHT)
The latest Ukrainian corruption scandal shows how moral collapse hides in the smallest details — a theme Rabbi Dunner sees echoed in Parshat Vayeitzei. Jacob’s true greatness appears not on a ladder to heaven but in the messy arena of dail…
- BEFORE THEY WERE BORN
A mysterious prophecy, a violent struggle in the womb, and two utterly different sons set the stage for one of the Torah’s most profound lessons in Toldot. Rivkah must interpret God’s words, confront human complexity, and choose courage am…
- THE TICHBORNE CASE VS. THE JACOB CASE
Rabbi Dunner cites the bizarre Victorian saga known as the Tichborne Case — when a mother’s devotion blinded her to an obvious imposter posing as her son — to draw a striking parallel to Parshat Toldot. Why does Isaac fall for Jacob’s disg…
- THE FIRST EQUALITY REVOLUTION
Few revolutions shouted louder about equality, or practiced it more selectively, than the French Revolution. Rabbi Dunner explores the hypocrisy behind Robespierre’s so-called “equality” and contrasts it with the genuine partnership of Abr…
- WORDS MATTER
Rabbi Dunner marks the fifth yahrzeit of Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks by reflecting on one of Rabbi Sacks’ most moving teachings — that creation, covenant, and love all depend on words. Through the story of Isaac and Rebecca in Chayei Sarah a…
- CRASH AND BURN
In 1946, Howard Hughes’s experimental plane crashed with a fiery explosion into a Beverly Hills home — a modern parable of hubris. Rabbi Dunner compares Hughes’s refusal to yield to limits with the moral failure of Sodom in Parshat Vayera…
- THE ONLY JOURNEY THAT MATTERS
We live in an age obsessed with movement — new jobs, new cities, constant reinvention. But Lech Lecha teaches that the greatest journey isn’t across continents but into ourselves. Avraham traveled far, but his true destination was his own…
- TESTED BY THE UNEXPECTED
When Sir Ernest Shackleton’s Antarctic expedition turned to disaster, his courage and leadership became legend. But 4,000 years earlier, another man faced the same kind of test — not on the ice, but in a land struck by famine. Abraham’s re…
- THE GIFT OF MANY VOICES
Rabbi Dunner unpacks the Tower of Babel: Why did God scatter nations and diversify language? Not to punish—but to protect. Unity is holy, yet enforced unanimity is perilous. Discover how Babel warns against groupthink, how Torah sanctifies…
- REAL MESSAGE OF THE OLIVE LEAF
In this moving reflection, Rabbi Dunner explores the true meaning of the olive leaf brought to Noah by the dove after the Flood. Far from being a symbol of closure, it marked the beginning of humanity’s long journey toward renewal. Drawing…
- WHEN EVIL SPEAKS OF JUSTICE
Throughout history, evil has cloaked itself in virtue — from the serpent in Eden to today’s moral crusaders like Greta Thunberg. Drawing on Niebuhr, Midrash, and classic Torah commentaries, Rabbi Dunner reveals how the language of compassi…
- THE NEVER-ENDING BEGINNING
Exactly two years after October 7, Israel stands at a turning point: a sweeping hostage deal agreed, Hamas broken, and the horrors since that day nearing an end. From vulnerability and isolation to resolve and renewal, Rabbi Dunner connect…