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Visiting the Sick |
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Healing with a Smile
No frowns, no tears, no gloomy faces. None of that is going to heal anybody. When visiting the sick, your job is to provide a little smile, some hope, and maybe even a few laughs.
Let’s take a step back and learn 13 facts about this building block of Jewish life known as bikur cholim.
Jewish Ethics: Lesson 5
We examine two mitzvas which illustrate how Torah expects us to be compassionate to others. The first is visiting the sick. The second is the prohibition (Deuteronomy 19:14) "Do not place a stumbling block before the blind," which can be interpreted to me...
Practical Parshah—Vayeira
G‑d’s visit to Abraham following his circumcision teaches us some important guidelines in how to properly perform the mitzvah of bikkur cholim—visiting the sick.
The basic laws of how to fulfill this important mitzvah.
The Mitzva of Visiting the Sick... Mi Sheberach Prayer... Psalms and other Prayers... Charity... Adding a Name... Psalms 20 and 119
Meditate on loving-kindness throughout your daily activities.
Meditate on loving-kindness throughout your daily activities
Beginning with 10 packages, program expands to include Bikur Cholim for hundreds
It all started with the simple idea of bringing the feeling of Shabbat into hospital rooms for patients and their families. A decade later, it has evolved into feeding hundreds of people at eight area hospitals and senior homes in northern New Jersey. Ten...
Sheba Medical Center’s chaplain brings hope to Israel's wounded soldiers
By all accounts, Kfar Aza resident Yaniv Ohana shouldn’t be alive to tell his story. On the morning of Oct. 7, it quickly dawned on him that terrorists were on the loose in his small kibbutz. As a member of his community’s civil defense unit, he drove to ...
It so happened that as I opened the stairwell door on one of the floors, I found myself in the ICU Unit . . .
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