This week's parsha — read in shul, studied at the table, lived through the week. With Rashi, Ramban, and modern voices alongside.
The longest parsha in the Torah. The duties of the Levites, the laws of the Nazirite, the dedication offerings of the princes — and at the heart, the Birkat Kohanim, the words by which the priests bless Israel to this day.
A Nazirite from the womb. The Nazirite laws in the parsha find their most famous example here — a man set apart, with all the strength and tragedy that calling brings.
The story of Abraham's hospitality to the three visitors — and the surprising halakhic principle the rabbis draw from his table.
"May the LORD bless you and keep you; may the LORD make His face shine upon you and be gracious to you; may the LORD lift up His face unto you, and grant you peace."
A real curriculum — multi-week, milestone-based, modeled on the way this tradition has always taught its own. Four stages: Aleph, Bet, Bar/Bat Mitzvah, Talmid. Quizzes. Milestones. Graduation.
Three modes. Teaching — confident, well-sourced answers in this tradition's own voice. Reflective — sits with you in the hard places, with text and a question back. Pastoral — explains the landscape, defers to a real teacher, helps you find one. Plus Doubt Mode for honest questions.
By denomination — Orthodox, Conservative, Reform, Reconstructionist, Renewal. By language, accessibility, family programs, daily minyan availability.
Today's page of Talmud, with classical and modern commentary.
Shacharit, Mincha, Maariv — full liturgy with translation and meaning.
Friday afternoon checklist, candle times, Kiddush, blessings.
49 days from Pesach to Shavuot, with sefirot reflections.
Rashi, Ramban, Sforno, Or HaChaim, and modern voices — toggle which.
From Aleph to fluent siddur reading, with audio.
Sayings of the Fathers — one per week, all year, with depth.
How major poskim differ — never a final answer, always next steps.
Honest questions get honest answers. Job asked. Jeremiah asked. So can you.
Marriage, grief, kashrut at work, raising kids in two cultures.
For students and parents — Torah portion study, d'var practice, milestones.
Jerusalem, Tzfat, Hebron, the graves of the tzaddikim.
Generate a family code. Your kids enter it on signup. You see their progress, journal summaries (with their privacy), formation level, and family streaks. Dinner conversation prompts based on what each person has been reading.
See parent dashboard →Generate a class code. Students join. Assign readings, track who's completed what, grade reflections, message the group. Built for the teacher who needs less paperwork, not more.
See teacher dashboard →An institution code your members or students link to. Engagement metrics, formation completion rates, sermon/teaching prep for leaders, community-wide reading plans, attendance integration.
See institution admin →GPJewish does not pasken halakhah, officiate ritual, or replace your rav. It teaches Torah, sits with you in the text, and points to a rabbi or beit din when the question requires one. The chain of Mesorah runs through people, not software.