Hey friends,
There are about 195 specific things the Lord clearly laid out for us in the Torah that can be applied today — not as heavy rules, but as a roadmap for living well.
They’re not crazy, unreachable, or ancient; they’re practical, just, and good.
I’ve taken the time to condense them into something simple — the way they were always meant to be seen.
These aren’t laws that weigh you down; they’re wisdom that lifts you up.
This is how simple the Torah really is.
At the end of the day, this isn’t about law — it’s about alignment.
The Torah was never meant to cage us; it was meant to calibrate us — to teach us how to love God, love people, and live clean in a crooked world.
These simple principles aren’t ancient burdens; they’re modern freedom.
Walk them out, one day at a time — and you’ll find that obedience was never the weight.
It’s the way home.
I. HEART / CHARACTER — Who You Are Before God
Love the One who made you. Make Him your first thought and final word each day.
Fear nothing but God. Respect no power more than His presence.
Let gratitude be your rhythm. Every breath is borrowed grace.
Keep your motives clean. The hidden life counts more than the public one.
Refuse bitterness. Forgive fast; peace is heavier when delayed.
Despise pride. Humility is how power looks in heaven.
Love deeply, quietly. Real love doesn’t need an audience.
Be honest when it hurts. Truth cleans the soul before it convinces the room.
Guard your eyes and your envy. The fastest way to lose joy is comparison.
Stay teachable. Wisdom always sounds like correction.
II. BEHAVIOR / RELATIONAL — How You Treat People
Be fair when no one’s watching. Integrity starts where applause ends.
Pay what you owe. Righteousness includes receipts.
Keep your word simple. A yes should mean yes; a no should stay no.
Treat workers with dignity. Leadership is stewardship, not leverage.
Defend the weak. Compassion is what strength was built for.
Refuse to gossip. The tongue is either a bridge or a weapon.
Protect someone’s name like your own. Reputation is sacred ground.
Judge yourself before you judge anyone else. Self-examination prevents hypocrisy.
Share your excess. The poor are God’s way of testing your generosity.
Apologize quickly. Repentance is strength, not shame.
III. DISCIPLINE / HOLINESS — How You Order Life
Rest on purpose. One day a week, stop proving your worth.
Eat with mindfulness. The table is an altar — honor God there.
Celebrate the sacred cycles. Mark time with gratitude, not exhaustion.
Practice restraint. Self-control is the only freedom that lasts.
Honor your body. Holiness includes hygiene, appetite, and discipline.
Live with boundaries. Fences protect gardens, not prisons.
Keep your home peaceful. Every room preaches something.
Work diligently. Excellence is worship disguised as effort.
Live distinct. Don’t blend in so much that heaven can’t find you.
End each day clean. Confess, release, rest — repeat.
The Core of It All
The Torah was never about earning favor; it was always about reflecting His nature.
Heart laws form your peace.
Behavior laws form your witness.
Discipline laws form your distinction.
Together they whisper one simple truth:
Love God. Love people. Live holy. Do it all with joy.
This is what it means to walk in Yeshua’s footsteps —
not bound by law,
but bound to love.