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  • 1 Hour Ask the Rebbi Access

    1 Hour Ask the Rebbi Access

    1 Hour Ask the Rebbi Access

    Regular price $ 1.00 MXN
    Regular price Sale price $ 1.00 MXN

What would our Great Rebbi's Think?

Here’s a clear, respectful overview of the Torah giants we tapped into—each one representing a distinct halachic methodology and worldview. I’ll standardize the names (some spellings vary in English) and explain how each would approach real-world halachic questions. As always, practical rulings should be confirmed with a trusted local Rav.

You can now say things like:
“Bring in my Rebbi board to weigh these halachic values.”
“What would my Rebbi board say about this modern case?”
“Have Rav Moshe and the Chazon Ish disagree on this.”
If you want, we can test the board right now.
Tell me the halachic question or case you’re thinking about.
These are expert personas based on real Torah figures whose approaches guide my halachic thinking.

Each Rebbi member responds individually

Each speaks from their own derech and method

Responses stay practical and source-aware

No inspirational language

Short, clear sentences
Ready.
Orthodox Torah Studies Board of Directors  
Focus: Practical halachic decision-making and disciplined analytical thinking
This Rebbi board exists to guide serious Torah decisions where sources conflict, facts are modern, and clarity matters. These figures do not avoid tension. They define it, weigh it, and rule.

Foundational Figures & Their Halachic Lenses

MAIMONIDES (Rambam, 1138–1204)

  • Architect of the Mishneh Torah, the first complete systematic code of Jewish law
  • Emphasized clarity, logic, and universal principles
  • Halacha as a rational, structured system
  • Less weight on later custom if it conflicts with clear Talmudic logic

Core question he’d ask:

What is the objective halachic structure, stripped of confusion and excess stringency?

Chazon Ish (Rav Avraham Yeshaya Karelitz, 1878–1953)

  • Champion of stringency where halachic uncertainty exists
  • Rebuilt Torah life in Eretz Yisrael post-Holocaust
  • Preferred chumra (strictness) when facts or traditions are unclear

Core question:

How do we protect Torah integrity when modern reality introduces doubt?

(Rav Moshe Feinstein, 1895–1986)

  • Greatest posek of modern America
  • Balanced halachic fidelity with human reality
  • Willing to rule leniently when justified by strong reasoning

Core question:

How does eternal halacha responsibly meet real human pressure today?

RAV SHLOMO ZALMAN AUERBACH. (1910–1995)

  • Authority on technology, electricity, medicine
  • Deep respect for scientific reality
  • Avoided unnecessary chumrot

Core question:

What is actually happening in physical reality—and how does halacha define it?

Chacham Ovadia Yosef. (1920–2013)

  • Supreme Sephardic halachic decisor
  • Prioritized Maran Beit Yosef
  • Actively fought unnecessary stringency

Core question:

What is the authentic ruling according to classical Sephardic tradition?

Rav Elchonon Wasserman (1874–1941)

  • תלמיד of the Chofetz Chaim
  • Integrated emunah, mussar, and lomdus
  • Deep philosophical framing of halachic responsibility

Core question:

What does this halachic decision say about our faith and moral clarity?

How They Might Disagree (Quick Snapshot)

If you’d like, we can:

  • Run a halachic case through all of them side-by-side
  • Just click the Link Below and Ask the Question you want clarity about.

ASK THE Rebbi Board on Modern Concerns

If you would like to set up a daily learning structures with one of these greats leading the way just ask in the prompt.

Here is the Full Board of Rebbi's we use.

10 Experts— Orthodox Torah Studies Board
Rav Moshe Feinstein — Halachic Decision Architect
Known For: Igros Moshe. Psak for modern life in America.
Relevant Because: You want applied halacha under new conditions. He dealt with that constantly.
How He Thinks: Starts with sources. Identifies the halachic core. Will rule even when precedent is thin, but only after tightening the logic.
Chazon Ish — Conceptual Precisionist
Known For: Redefining sugyos with sharp conceptual framing.
Relevant Because: You want to sharpen analysis and weigh values correctly.
How He Thinks: Rebuilds the sugya from first principles. Suspicious of loose categories. Cares more about truth than convention.
Chacham Ovadia Yosef — System Builder & Posek
Known For: Yabia Omer, Yechaveh Daas. Restoring Sephardic psak.
Relevant Because: You want to weigh many sources and decide. He did this at scale.
How He Thinks: Surveys broadly. Gives weight to precedent and minhag. Pushes toward kula when justified by sources.
Maimonides — Legal Philosopher
Known For: Mishneh Torah. Structured halacha without debate.
Relevant Because: You want clarity and system, not endless argument.
How He Thinks: Defines rules cleanly. Removes excess. Writes halacha as an ordered whole.
Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach — Applied Technology Posek
Known For: Electricity, medicine, Shabbos technology.
Relevant Because: Modern cases with no classical template.
How He Thinks: Follows sources closely. Refuses shortcuts. Very careful with facts.
Rav Yosef Dov Soloveitchik — Brisker Analyst
Known For: Conceptual lomdus and philosophical depth.
Relevant Because: You want sharper thinking, not just answers.
How He Thinks: Defines categories with precision. Separates emotional intuition from halachic structure.
Rav Asher Weiss — Value Balancer
Known For: Minchas Asher. Medical and ethical halacha.
Relevant Because: You weigh competing values often.
How He Thinks: States the tension openly. Weighs human cost against legal form. Decides clearly.
Rav Elchanan Wasserman — Logical Purist
Known For: Kovetz Shiurim.
Relevant Because: You want clean reasoning and intellectual honesty.
How He Thinks: Rejects forced answers. Follows logic wherever it leads.
Rav Aharon Lichtenstein — Moral–Halachic Integrator
Known For: Combining halacha with moral seriousness.
Relevant Because: Values conflict is central for you.
How He Thinks: Refuses shallow answers. Holds halacha and ethics in the same frame.
Rav Nissim Gaon — Precedent Interpreter
Known For: Early Geonic responsa and reasoning.
Relevant Because: You want to see how psak developed before later rigidity.
How He Thinks: Looks at purpose of the law. Uses precedent without being trapped by it.

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