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by Institute for the Next Jewish Future
An exploration of the Talmud through the “traditionally radical” lens pioneered by Benay Lappe. Whether you are a beginner to Talmud study or a long-time learner, by listening in on Benay Lappe’s study partnership with Dan Libenson as they explore foundational stories and material from the Talmud, you will discover the how-to manual that the ancient Rabbis left behind for future generations to help us re-imagine a new version of Judaism after the previous version “crashes.”
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“One of the criteria for a good life is did you understand a thing from within a thing? One way we could translate that is, did you read between the lines? Did you dig deeper? Did you reject the plain meaning? If you only read the surface level meaning, you get no merit for that. It doesn't mean you shouldn't do it. Sometimes it's worthy to do, but don't call that Torah.” - Dan Libenson Welcome to The Oral Talmud, our weekly deep dive chevruta study partnership, discovering how voices of the Talmud from 1500 years ago can help us rethink Judaism today. Something shifts in this episode. The rabbis start with a list of questions about what kind of life is a life well lived… a life of honesty, hope, wisdom, responsibility. But then they introduce one final twist: even if you answered every question correctly, it still might not count. Why? Because maybe the point was never just about being right. Maybe the deeper question is what anchors you when you have the power to reinterpret everything. From there, our conversation explodes outward. Benay and Dan wrestle with one of the most dangerous and liberating ideas in Jewish tradition: that Torah isn’t static, it grows through radical reinterpretation. Not by abandoning the tradition, but by digging so deeply into it that new possibilities emerge of what the tradition might actually be. Along the way, they touch everything from postmodernism to queer Torah, climate change to accountability, asking a question that feels larger than Judaism itself: How do you change a tradition without losing your connection to the people who carried it before you? This week’s text: Shabbat 31a Find an edited transcript and full show notes (references and further reading) on The Oral Talmud webpage for this episode! Access the Sefaria Source Sheet to explore key Talmud texts and find the original video of our discussion. The Oral Talmud is a co-production of Judaism Unbound and SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva. If you’re enjoying this podcast, please help us keep both fabulous Jewish organizations going with a one-time or monthly tax-deductible donation at oraltalmud.com. You can find a donate button on the top right corner of the website.
“You're not going to be judged on how much Torah you know. You're not going to be judged on other elements like how smart you were. You're going to be judged on did you make this a priority? What you're going to be judged on is, did you actually work to live the life that you wanted to live? Or did you just kind of hope for the best?” - Dan Libenson Welcome to The Oral Talmud, our weekly deep dive chevruta study partnership, discovering how voices of the Talmud from 1500 years ago can help us rethink Judaism today. Fifty episodes in, and Oral Talmud turns the mirror all the way around. Not “What does the text say?” but “How did you live?” This episode opens with a deceptively simple premise: the questions you’ll be asked when it’s all over. Not theology. Not belief. A test. And the rabbis don’t hedge, they hand you the exam in advance. Were you honest when it actually cost you something? Did you make space for what mattered, or just hope you’d get around to it? Did you live like redemption was possible or like nothing really changes? But the deeper provocation isn’t the questions — it’s the audacity behind them. The rabbis reverse-engineer a good life and then dare you to build it on purpose. This isn’t about getting the right answers someday; it’s about refusing to drift now. Every category cuts closer than it first appears: business becomes character, study becomes priority, hope becomes responsibility, and argument becomes a test of wisdom. By the end, you’re left with something unsettling and clarifying at the same time: you already know what matters — the only question is whether you’re actually living like it. This week’s text: Shabbat 31a Find an edited transcript and full show notes (references and further reading) on The Oral Talmud webpage for this episode! Access the Sefaria Source Sheet to explore key Talmud texts and find the original video of our discussion. The Oral Talmud is a co-production of Judaism Unbound and SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva. If you’re enjoying this podcast, please help us keep both fabulous Jewish organizations going with a one-time or monthly tax-deductible donation at oraltalmud.com. You can find a donate button on the top right corner of the website.
“ People often take rites and rituals and they miss the point. It would be like if your doctor wrote you a prescription if you were sick, and then instead of taking the medicine, you take the prescription and you put it on your altar, you bow down, you recite the prescription, ‘Oh, wonderful doctor, wonderful doctor,’ and you keep reciting the prescription. You're not gonna get better. You have to actually take it.” - Benay Lappe Welcome to The Oral Talmud, our weekly deep dive chevruta study partnership, discovering how voices of the Talmud from 1500 years ago can help us rethink Judaism today. Passover is supposed to be a ritual. Instead, it starts to look like a construction site. In this episode, Benay and Dan pull apart the Seder we think we know and reveal something far messier, more alive, and more unfinished. The Talmud doesn’t hand you a script. It barely even describes a meal. What it gives you instead is fragments: a story to tell, questions to provoke, and a tradition that’s still being built in real time. Then the deeper disruption lands. The “Haggadah” isn’t a book, it’s an act. The questions aren’t a checklist, they’re the curriculum. And the Seder itself? Not ancient, not fixed, not even fully formed. Benay and Dan expose how much of what we treat as sacred structure is actually later invention, from printed scripts to Maxwell House marketing, and ask what it would mean to stop reciting and start telling. This episode doesn’t just reinterpret Passover. It dares you to rebuild it. By the way, we are aware that this episode is coming out a couple of months after Passover. That’s because we are re-releasing the Oral Talmud as a podcast, and we’re releasing it in the same order that we recorded it. We recorded this one just before Passover. But if you find that it gets you thinking about doing Passover differently next year, you have many months to make your plans. This week’s text: Pesachim 116b and Mishnah Pesachim Chapter 10:4 Find an edited transcript and full show notes (references and further reading) on The Oral Talmud webpage for this episode! Access the Sefaria Source Sheet to explore key Talmud texts and find the original video of our discussion. The Oral Talmud is a co-production of Judaism Unbound and SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva. If you’re enjoying this podcast, please help us keep both fabulous Jewish organizations going with a one-time or monthly tax-deductible donation at oraltalmud.com. You can find a donate button on the top right corner of the website.
“ We have a Constitution that's almost impossible to amend but it must change to preserve the constant. And the mechanism for change is that we reinterpret it to keep it true, that it reflects our deepest values and highest aspirations. If we did not reinterpret it, there would arise a dissonance between what we think the Constitution says and who we think we are and who we are as Americans is a people who do not tolerate that dissonance.” - Richard Primus Welcome to The Oral Talmud, our weekly deep dive chevruta study partnership, discovering how voices of the Talmud from 1500 years ago can help us rethink Judaism today. What if the law isn’t what it says but what we need it to say to remain who we are? In this episode, Benay and Dan speak with constitutional law scholar Richard Primus to crack open a question that cuts across traditions: when we interpret sacred texts, whether the Torah or the Constitution, are we uncovering meaning or creating it? What follows is a collision between legal theory and lived reality. Originalism, precedent, moral intuition, narrative, none of them stay in their neat boxes. Instead, they reveal something more unsettling: the system only holds if we keep it alive. This episode doesn’t just compare Jewish law and American law, it exposes the deeper game that both are playing. The text doesn’t control us. We’re the ones deciding what it means and whether it still speaks for who we are. Richard Primus is the Theodore J. St. Antoine Collegiate Professor of Law at the University of Michigan Law School, where he teaches the law, theory, and history of the U.S. Constitution. His work on the relationship between history and constitutional interpretation won a Guggenheim Fellowship in Constitutional Studies in 2008. He’s also one of my college roommates and one of my closest friends, so this is an exciting one for me! And I know that it will be for you as well. Find an edited transcript and full show notes (references and further reading) on The Oral Talmud webpage for this episode! Access the Sefaria Source Sheet to explore key Talmud texts and find the original video of our discussion. The Oral Talmud is a co-production of Judaism Unbound and SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva. If you’re enjoying this podcast, please help us keep both fabulous Jewish organizations going with a one-time or monthly tax-deductible donation at oraltalmud.com. You can find a donate button on the top right corner of the website.
“This story raises the questions of who's in our community, who can be in our community, and who’s svara should we be listening to? The answer is much broader on all of those questions than we typically think. She changed the entire tradition. She changed how we think about prayer and life and suffering and our role vis-a-vis God and what should happen in the world because we listened to her, we listened to her svara.” - Benay Lappe Welcome to The Oral Talmud, our weekly deep dive chevruta study partnership, discovering how voices of the Talmud from 1500 years ago can help us rethink Judaism today. The most powerful rabbi in the world is dying and everyone around him is fighting to keep him alive. Prayers are flying, desperation is rising, and no one is willing to let go. No one, that is, except the one person who sees what’s actually happening. In this episode, Benay and Dan dive into a story that flips everything: authority, compassion, even what it means to do the “right” thing. A nameless maidservant dares to break ranks, not out of rebellion, but out of clarity. In doing so, she exposes a deeper truth that the sages can’t see. This isn’t just a story about death. It’s about who gets to decide what mercy looks like and whether moral courage sometimes means going against the very tradition you’re trying to honor. This week’s text: Ketubot 104a Find an edited transcript and full show notes (references and further reading) on The Oral Talmud webpage for this episode! Access the Sefaria Source Sheet to explore key Talmud texts and find the original video of our discussion. The Oral Talmud is a co-production of Judaism Unbound and SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva. If you’re enjoying this podcast, please help us keep both fabulous Jewish organizations going with a one-time or monthly tax-deductible donation at oraltalmud.com. You can find a donate button on the top right corner of the website.
“ We're meant to be profoundly, deeply, intimately, radically empathic with one another. My understanding should be influenced by what I know is in your mind. I need to get into your head and I need to get into your heart, and I need to understand how this is gonna land for you. And I need to intertwine my consciousness with yours before I know what the right thing to say is.” - Benay Lappe Welcome to The Oral Talmud, our weekly deep dive chevruta study partnership, discovering how voices of the Talmud from 1500 years ago can help us rethink Judaism today. A wedding. A fragile moment. A question no one wants to answer honestly: what do you say when the truth might wound? The rabbis don’t dodge it. They stage a collision between two instincts we all recognize: tell the truth no matter what… or protect someone’s dignity at all costs. In this episode, Benay and Dan crack open a deceptively simple dilemma that turns explosive fast. Can kindness justify a lie? Can empathy override Torah itself? What emerges isn’t just a ruling, it’s a radical claim: morality isn’t about rigid truth-telling, it’s about learning to feel your way into someone else’s reality. And once you see that, everything changes. This week’s text: Ketubot 16b-17a Find an edited transcript and full show notes (references and further reading) on The Oral Talmud webpage for this episode! Access the Sefaria Source Sheet to explore key Talmud texts and find the original video of our discussion. The Oral Talmud is a co-production of Judaism Unbound and SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva. If you’re enjoying this podcast, please help us keep both fabulous Jewish organizations going with a one-time or monthly tax-deductible donation at oraltalmud.com. You can find a donate button on the top right corner of the website.
“ I think the value that's being privileged here is relieving suffering. It's not fiscal responsibility, it's not caution, it's not never making a mistake in giving to an undeserving person. Those are values, but making sure someone who's suffering isn't suffering, even if it's gonna cost us more money, that's a more fundamental value. And that's the Svara that wins.” - Benay Lappe Welcome to The Oral Talmud, our weekly deep dive chevruta study partnership, discovering how voices of the Talmud from 1500 years ago can help us rethink Judaism today. In this episode, a community collects its money, lines form, and the demand is always greater than the supply. Some people are hungry. Some are exposed. Some are lying. And someone has to decide—right now—who gets helped and who gets turned away. Benay and Dan dive into a brutal rabbinic argument about triage: Do you check up on the claims of the hungry and risk their suffering, or trust them and risk being fooled? Beneath the surface, the question cuts deeper, what matters more: preventing abuse, or preventing pain? And who gets to decide when those values collide? This week’s text: Bava Batra 9a Find an edited transcript and full show notes (references and further reading) on The Oral Talmud webpage for this episode! Access the Sefaria Source Sheet to explore key Talmud texts and find the original video of our discussion. The Oral Talmud is a co-production of Judaism Unbound and SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva. If you’re enjoying this podcast, please help us keep both fabulous Jewish organizations going with a one-time or monthly tax-deductible donation at oraltalmud.com. You can find a donate button on the top right corner of the website.
“ I now read the Talmudic literature as a paradigm of rationality, where you realize that to be rational you have to be self-critical. But you can't be fully self-critical merely by talking to yourself.” - Menachem Fisch Welcome to The Oral Talmud, our weekly deep dive chevruta study partnership, discovering how voices of the Talmud from 1500 years ago can help us rethink Judaism today. A philosopher of science walks into a Talmud conversation and everything shifts. In this episode of Oral Talmud, Dan & Benay sit down with Menachem Fisch, who didn’t grow up inside the Talmudic world and that outsider lens changes the read. What he sees isn’t a tradition handing down answers, but rather a system designed to generate argument, doubt, and transformation, where truth emerges not from agreement, but from friction. But the story doesn’t stay clean. As Menachem Fisch traces this radical, dialogic vision, cracks begin to show. Some voices are welcomed in, even radically different ones. Others are shut out completely. The same tradition that thrives on disagreement also draws hard boundaries around who gets to speak. We follow that tension all the way through: between openness and exclusion, evolution and control, courage and comfort. This episode doesn’t tie it all up. It leaves you inside the argument, exactly where the Talmud wants you. Menachem Fisch is the Joseph and Ceil Mazer Professor of History and Philosophy of Science Emeritus, and Director of the Center for Religious and Interreligious Studies at Tel Aviv University. He has published many books including Rational Rabbis: Science and Talmudic Culture, which serves as a launching point for this conversation. Find an edited transcript and full show notes (references and further reading) on The Oral Talmud webpage for this episode! Access the Sefaria Source Sheet to explore key Talmud texts and find the original video of our discussion. The Oral Talmud is a co-production of Judaism Unbound and SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva. If you’re enjoying this podcast, please help us keep both fabulous Jewish organizations going with a one-time or monthly tax-deductible donation at oraltalmud.com. You can find a donate button on the top right corner of the website.
An exploration of the Talmud through the “traditionally radical” lens pioneered by Benay Lappe. Whether you are a beginner to Talmud study or a long-time learner, by listening in on Benay Lappe’s study partnership with Dan Libenson as they explore foundational stories and material from the Talmud, you will discover the how-to manual that the ancient Rabbis left behind for future generations to help us re-imagine a new version of Judaism after the previous version “crashes.”
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