Conversation Sparks – Family Discussion Topics from Parshat Shemini
Join us for weekly discussion topics for your family table. Perfect for teens and older children who have deep questions about faith. This week’s Parsha that will be read in synagoues around the world is Shemini which is found in Leviticus 9:1–11:47.
By Leah Bean Bowman
·14:30

This week’s Torah portion is Shemini, which means “eighth” in Hebrew. It can be found in Leviticus 9:1–11:47 and is read in synagogues around the world this week. Join us for weekly learning and explore the Jewish perspective—perfect for all curious young adults who love to ask questions and discover meaningful stories the Bible.
“And fire came forth from before the Lord and consumed the burnt offering… and all the people saw, and shouted, and fell on their faces.”
—Leviticus 9:24
Nadav and Avihu… brought a strange fire before the Lord… and fire came out and consumed them.
—Leviticus 10:1–2
Parashat Shemini tells two fire stories. One is beautiful: a fire from heaven that lights the altar. The other is tragic: a fire that kills two people. Both come from spiritual energy. One is invited. The other is impulsive.
Rabbis explain that Nadav and Avihu weren’t evil. They were just out of sync—trying to bring their own excitement instead of slowing down and asking: Is this what God actually wants?
In today’s world, it’s easy to chase experiences, opinions, vibes. We love a moment that feels deep or powerful. But Shemini says: not all “fire” is holy. Some of it just burns.
This is about more than religion. It’s about reverence.
We’ve lost that word. Reverence means slowing down, listening first, and treating some things as bigger than you. It’s not about fear—it’s about humility.
In Shemini, the fire doesn’t just teach obedience—it teaches boundaries. And in a world of instant reaction and spiritual confusion, boundaries can save you.
- Where in your life do you move fast when you might need to pause?
- Have you ever done something that felt right in the moment—but left damage later?
- What would it mean to treat something as truly sacred—not just exciting?
Final Thought:
We all carry some kind of fire: desire, energy, outrage, passion.
The question is:Will that fire build an altar—or burn it down?
Shemini invites us to slow down and offer our fire in the right way, at the right time. That’s not weakness. That’s wisdom.
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