Archive for March, 2009

This week’s recommended reading: 4th – 10th Nissan, 5769

Books

Torah Reading for the Week of March 29 – April 4, 2009 – Nissan 4-10, 5769

Tzav (Leviticus 6-8) Holy Garbage – by Rabbi Max Weimman

Advanced Parsha – Tzav (Leviticus 6-8) Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust – by Rabbi Noson Weisz – Aish Jerusalem

From our Sages on the Parshah – Parshah In DepthParshah: Tzav Verses: Leviticus 6:1-8:36

Insights from the ZOHAR on the Weekly Torah Reading – Tzav (Leviticus 6-8) – Going Up In Smoke By Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai

Insights from the ZOHAR on the Weekly Torah Reading – Tzav (Leviticus 6-8) – Burned Again! By Rabbi Yitzchak Luria

Rebbe Nachman’s Wisdom – “The World of Shallow Opinions”, By Rabbi Erez Moshe Doron

Chassidic PearlsConfessing to G-d – Tzav – By: Rabbi Lazer Brody

Stories for the Shabbos TableBeing Invisible – Tzav – By The Baal Shem Tov

The editorial page of Breslev Israel’s English websiteEmuna = Freedom By Rabbi Lazer Brody

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The Legacy Of Reb Elimelech Of Lizhensk – The Tzetil Katan & Its 17 Clauses

The Legacy Of Reb Elimelech Of Lizhensk – The Tzetil Katan & Its 17 Clauses reprinted with the kind authorization of:
RevachL'Neshama

One of the legacies of the great tzaddik and one of the original leaders of all chasidim, the Rebbe R’ Elimelech of Lizhensk, is his “Tzetil Katan“, literally small note, the 17 point program of how to be a good Jew. While some things are beyond our level, reading the Tzetil Katan opens up new vistas in the holiness Reb Elimelech expected to people to reach. Moreover there are some very helpful things in it that can help us overcome some of the more irritating obstacles we face on a consistent basis.

The Tzetil Katan contains 17 clauses that are briefly highlighted below to give a sampling of what it contains. It is recommended that you read it in its entirety as Reb Elimelech himself placed great importance on reading it word for word. It can be found in many siddurim and is worth going through at east once.

1.        Any moment of your existence that you spend idle from learning, you should imagine that there is a great fire before you and you are jumping into it to be Mikayem the Mitzva of “V’Nikdashti B’soch Bnei Yisroel”, the mitzva of Kiddush Hashem.

2.        During the first pasuk of Shema and first bracha of Shmoneh Esrei you should do the same as above. Additionally you should have in mind that any torture that someone may do to you such as skinning you alive, you will never deny the oneness of Hashem. You should picture this scene.

3.        While enjoying any material pleasure such as eating or marital relations you should say to yourself that no pleasure is as great as giving your body and life for Kiddush Hashem and that you would be prepared to do so even during this moment of pleasure. You should really mean this and not just say it.

4.        When performing any mitzva you should say that you are doing it to give pleasure to Hashem. Say it with feeling and with the passage of time you will get a great lift from this.

5.        When you are overcome by a bad mida like stuborness, haughtiness, laziness, etc. you should say with all your might the pasuk, “HaKena’ani, HaChiti, HaEmori, HaPrizi, HaChivi, V’HaYevusi, V’HaGirgashi” and you will be saved. Do not look out of your 4 amos, especially in Shul, while learning, or when outside. When you pass a women, even you wife or small children, picture before the name of Hashem.

6.        When you have thoughts of adultery say a number of time the pasuk, “V’Nishmarta MiKol Davar Ra”. Think if the drasha of Chazal that say we learn from this pasuk not to have bad thoughts. Cast them out and do not let these thoughts contaminate your mind.

7.        When you see creatures mating or an imodestly dressed woman or your wife who is a Nidah immediately say the pasuk, “V’Lo Sasuru Acharei Livavchem”.

8.        Train yourself to only speak matter of great importance and even then speak in as few words as possible. Make sure it does not contain any forbidden speech such as lies, flattery, lashon hara, and embarrassment. Train yourself to respond, “I don’t know”. Avoid at all cost any or limit conversation with people who speak forbidden things.

9.        As soon as you wake up say Modeh Ani and then thank Hashem with a happy heart for the mitzva of tzitzis to surround you and netilas yadayim to cleanse you. Accept upon yourself not to speak only as in #8 above.

10.        Learn right when arise and say Tikun Chatzos and the tzetil katan. He also perscribes how to learn and some additional tefilos to say.

11.        Daven with all your might and in a voice that connects your thoughts with your words. You should look in your siddur from beginning to end and not look to the sides. Pay careful to Chazaras HaShatz from a Siddur. Listen to every word of Krias HaTorah. Act like a mute Shul even before and after davening.

12.        Always imagine, especially when reading the Tzetil katan that someone is standing beside you and is encouraging you in a mighty voice to follow all these details to perfection. In due time you will be greatly inspired by his Neshama which is alight with fire.

13.        Always tell your guidance counselor or friend any bad thought that you have which goes against the torah, during davening or learning, be it by day or night. By verbalizing it you will break the Yetzer Hara. Additionally you will benefit from the practical advice your friend may offer.

14.        Make sure to constantly review the tzetil katan within a 24 hour period and explain each word in your mother tongue. He also offers other things to say at other times from the Arizal.

15.        Say Rabbeinu Yonah’s tefila before Netilas Yadayim. After eating HaMotzi he gives a tefila to say which essentially says that the eating is not for personal pleasure but to strengthen the body for Avodas Hashem. The word Ma’achal or food is gematria for two names of Hashem together. He also says one must expel the remains of the food from his body without even a moment of delay.

16.        At age 18 one must break his bad character with 40 days of completely opposite and unnatural behavior. He gives examples.

17.        When a person is idle from Torah or Tefila he should use the time to train themselves to learn by heart numerous essential tefilos including Tikun Chatzos, Brich Shmei, Modim D’Rabanan and others. Also one should think of the Mitzva of Kiddush Hashem as in #1.

The Legacy Of Reb Elimelech Of Lizhensk – The Tzetil Katan & Its 17 Clauses reprinted with the kind authorization of:
RevachL'Neshama

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This week’s recommended reading: 26th Adar – 3rd Nissan, 5769

Books

Torah Reading for the Week of March 22-28, 2009 – Adar 26- Nissan 3, 5769

Vayikra (Leviticus 1-5)The Small Aleph – by Rabbi Max Weimman

Advanced Parsha – Vayikra (Leviticus 1-5)Soul Call – by Rabbi Noson Weisz – Aish Jerusalem

From our Sages on the Parshah – Parshah In DepthParshah: Vayikra Verses: Leviticus 1:1-5:26

Rebbe Nachman’s Wisdom – “Something Missing?”, By Rabbi Erez Moshe Doron

Chassidic PearlsSuccess and Humility – Vayikra – By: Rabbi Lazer Brody

Stories for the Shabbos TableStealing From a Widow -Vayikra – By The Baal Shem Tov

Stories for the Shabbos TableThe Humble Healer – Vayikra – By The Baal Shem Tov

The editorial page of Breslev Israel’s English websiteTrue Leadership By Rabbi Lazer Brody

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Pirkei Avos by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld

Chapter 3, Mishna 19(c)

       Free Will vs. G-d’s Foreknowledge
Everything is foreseen, yet free will is given. The world is judged with goodness, and all is according to the majority of deeds.”

Last week we discussed the concept of man’s free will — and the apparent contradiction with the belief that G-d controls all events in this world. This week I’d like to deal with yet another well-known philosophical quandary alluded to in our mishna: man’s free will versus G-d’s foreknowledge.

Our mishna begins by stating “Everything is foreseen” — meaning that G-d knows in advance every event which will occur in this world. It then continues, “free will is given” — that man is given free reign to act as he chooses. The question raised by Maimonides and many other thinkers (both Jewish and Gentile) is as follows: If G-d knows the future and every act we will do for the rest of our lives, do we truly have free will? Do we truly have a choice how we will behave? It is already known, so to speak, that I will sin at a particular time and place. And if so, is there any possible way I can avoid it? I’m *going* to do it! G-d knows it already! There is no humanly possible way for me to alter my predetermined future! And so, isn’t my life merely a meaningless exercise — a futile performance of an already-written and predetermined script?

Further, the question goes, if I do not have any real control over the actions I will do, how can I be held accountable for them? I have no choice — literally! And if my fate is out of my hands, how can G-d punish me for my deeds? And so, not only is free will compromised but so is yet another great pillar of Jewish theology: reward and punishment.

Maimonides discusses this issue briefly here, and in greater detail in some of his other works. He does state here how fitting it is that such a profound topic is discussed by none other than R. Akiva, one of the greatest scholars of the period of the mishna. (R. Akiva’s name appears at the start of Mishna 17; both Mishnas 18 and 20 begin with the words, “He used to say…” It is a curious aside why Pirkei Avos did not choose to attribute this mishna (#19) to him as well — even indirectly. But it is a safe assumption that he is the author here as well.) The Talmud states that all the major works of Jewish law of the period of the Mishna, including the Mishna itself, are based on R. Akiva’s teachings (Sanhedrin 86a). It further states that Moses himself, in a prophetic vision, recognized that R. Akiva’s scholarship would be greater than his own, and even asked G-d why He did not give Israel the Torah through R. Akiva rather than himself (Menachos 29b).

I believe there is another reason for the appropriateness of R. Akiva here. Our tradition teaches us that R. Akiva was an unlearned shepherd until the age of 40. At that age he passed a stream in which water was slowly dripping down onto a rock. When he noticed that the water had over time carved a hole in the rock, he reasoned that with slow but continuous effort he too could penetrate the Torah’s unfathomable teachings. That — together with his wife’s encouragement — was the inspiration R. Akiva needed to embark on his career of greatness.

Not only is R. Akiva’s life a personal story of the triumph of the human spirit, it provides us with another possible explanation why he authored this mishna. R. Akiva was a person who first experienced Torah study as an adult — and not a young one at that. Such a person will certainly have to overcome great disadvantage and do much catching up — and R. Akiva did so extraordinarily — but in a way, he will be at an advantage. He will take nothing for granted. He will ask and tackle the tough questions of life which others fail to notice — simply because that’s how things have been as long as they can remember. R. Akiva, the quintessential “ba’al teshuva” (“returner to the faith”), was to seek — and find — truth and meaning where others saw nothing but the ordinary.

Maimonides in his Mishne Torah (Hil’ Teshuva 5:5), when he discusses the quandary of free will versus G-d’s foreknowledge, begins by stating that this issue is “longer than the land and wider than the sea,” and that many fundamental truths depend upon it. He then explains as follows: G-d’s knowledge is not external to Him, as is man’s. And, just as man cannot comprehend G-d’s essence, he cannot comprehend G-d’s knowledge. Therefore, although it is beyond our understanding how G-d can be aware of an indeterminate future, His awareness is as removed from our universe as G-d Himself and thus in no way impacts on the reality of free will. Thus, our futures truly are our own to decide. G-d’s knowledge of our eventual decisions is so to speak not yet a part of this world — and has not assumed a form which impinges on the independence of this world. And so, as far as our world is concerned, the future is still wide open.

Contemporary thinkers have demonstrated the wisdom behind Maimonides’ approach with our knowledge of Einstein’s Theory of Relativity. Time as we know it is relative; it is not a constant. It is an invention of G-d just as are space and matter, and its apparent rate of passage is affected by external factors such as gravity and velocity. G-d Himself exists outside the times-space continuum, it being merely one of His many creations. He therefore does not know the future because He *foresees* its occurrence, but because it is no more removed from Him than the past or the present.

One of the names the Torah employs to refer to G-d consists of the Hebrew letters yud-hey-vuv-hey. These letters constitute a contracted form of the Hebrew words “was – is – will be” (“haya, hoveh, v’yihiyeh”). This conveys the sense of G-d’s eternality, not in the sense that He exists forever but in that He is above time altogether.

The same is true regarding space. Our Sages teach: “G-d is the ‘place’ of the world; the world is not His place” (Bereishis Rabbah 68:10). G-d is not contained within physical space, just as He does not exist within time. Time, space and matter are all different forms of G-d’s creations — as man understands fully (or at least vaguely) only today — and in fact are all different manifestations of the same phenomenon. We who are confined within the imaginary world of the time-space continuum are simply incapable of truly comprehending G-d, much as we are incapable of comprehending what is beyond the “end” of the universe, or what existed “before” the world was created — or as primitive man was capable of understanding what lay “after” the edge of the horizon, for that matter.

A good treatment of this issue is found in _The Science of G-d_, pp. 161-5, by renowned physicist and scholar Gerald Schroeder. He observes that light is the one creation which too is above time. Light waves (or theoretically anything traveling at the speed of light) are not bound by time. (Light, as all forms of energy, can enter the world of time by transforming into matter through E = mc2.) Prof. Schroeder thus sees significance in that fact that “Let there be light” (Genesis 1:3) was G-d’s first utterance of creation. As he writes, “Light is… the metaphysical link between the timeless eternity that preceded our universe and the world of time, space and matter within which we live.”

(As an aside, I strongly recommend his book, in its groundbreaking treatment of many apparent contradictions between Torah and science. Though aspects of his theories are not without controversy, the primary theme — undeniable to anyone with intellectual honesty (IMHO) — is that the more science understands of the universe and the natural world, the closer it comes to converging with the millennia-old teachings of the Torah and Jewish tradition.)

Rabbi Avraham ben Dovid of Posquieres (known as the Ra’avad) of 12th Century Provence authored a collection of glosses on Maimonides’ Mishne Torah. Here he suggests a different approach, perhaps less philosophical, which he too admits does not do justice to the question. He writes that G-d’s foreknowledge does not decree; it is only foreknowledge. He compares it to astrologers who predict the future. Although astrologers may often predict accurately, man, with his free will, can overcome the influence of the stars, as well the influence of friends, family and background. G-d knows these influencing factors and our abilities to overcome them. He even knows the final decisions we will make. But He does not decree; He only knows.

The Ra’avad also levels a criticism against Maimonides: He was not wise in posing a question which he himself admits is beyond man’s ability to answer. Better to not have raised the issue and stir doubts in many formerly innocent, upright hearts.

The response to the Ra’avad — and presumably Maimonides’ position — would seem to be that we Jews are just not that way. We ask. We question anything and everything we are commanded and all that G-d does to us. Do we always receive the answers? Are we even capable of comprehending them? This week’s class — as well as last week’s — are yet a few indications that all question will never be fully answered. But a questioning mind is one which is seeking truth. It may be troubled, it may be plagued with questions that do not give it rest, but it is searching. It is a mind which houses a soul — one which seeks its Creator. And that soul, in its search for truth and G-d, will ultimately be directed to the source it so desires.

Pirkei Avos, Copyright © 2009 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.

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This week’s recommended reading: 19th Adar – 25th Adar, 5769

Books

Torah Reading for Week of March 15-21, 2009 – Adar 19-25 5769

Pekudei (Exodus 38:21-40:38) It’s All in the Timing – by Rabbi Max Weimman

Advanced Parsha – Pekudei (Exodus 38:21-40:38) His Soul’s Fire – by Rabbi Noson Weisz – Aish Jerusalem

Insights from the ZOHAR on the Weekly Torah Reading – Pekudei (Exodus 38:21-40:38) – The Supernal Source of War By Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai

Rebbe Nachman’s Wisdom – “Childless”, By Rabbi Erez Moshe Doron

Chassidic PearlsSeeing and Hearing the Tzaddik, First-hand – Parshat Vayakhel – By: Rabbi Lazer Brody

Stories for the Shabbos TableThe Holiness of a Shabbat Gathering – Vayakhel – By The Baal Shem Tov

The editorial page of Breslev Israel’s English websiteThe Deer and the Wolves By Rabbi Lazer Brody

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This week’s recommended reading: 12th Adar – 18th Adar, 5769

Books

Ki Tisa (Exodus 30:11-34:35)When It Counts – by Rabbi Max Weimman

Advanced Parsha – Ki Tisa (Exodus 30:11-34:35)Golden Calf – by Rabbi Noson Weisz – Aish Jerusalem

The Kehot Chumash – Parshah Ki-Tisa An interpolated translation and commentary based on the works of the Lubavitcher RebbeDownload the Complete Parshah in PDF Format

Rebbe Nachman’s Wisdom – “The Rabbi and the Only Son”, By Rabbi Erez Moshe Doron

Chassidic PearlsThe Power of Patience – Ki Tisa – By: Rabbi Lazer Brody

Stories for the Shabbos TableThe Holy Shabbat Beans – Ki Tisa – By The Baal Shem Tov

The editorial page of Breslev Israel’s English websiteIf You Can’t Judge a Horse By Rabbi Lazer Brody

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This week’s recommended reading: 5th Adar – 11th Adar, 5769

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Tetzaveh (Exodus 27:20-30:10) Clothes Make the Man – by Rabbi Max Weimman

Advanced Parsha – Tetzaveh (Exodus 27:20-30:10) Splendor in the Quest – by Rabbi Noson Weisz – Aish Jerusalem

The Kehot Chumash – Parshah Tetzaveh An interpolated translation and commentary based on the works of the Lubavitcher RebbeDownload the Complete Parshah in PDF Format

Rebbe Nachman’s Wisdom – “KAPTZIN PASHA”, By Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum

Chassidic PearlsSpiritual Eyes – Tetzaveh – By: Rabbi Lazer Brody

Stories for the Shabbat Table100 Questions – BeShalach – By The Baal Shem Tov

Holidays and Fast DaysPurim – Rebbe Nachman on Purim – By Breslev Israel staff

CHABAD.ORGJewish HolidaysHoliday Guide – Purim How-to

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