Posted by evedyahu on March 26, 2008
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Posted by evedyahu on March 26, 2008
When R. Ammi and R. Assi were sitting before R. Isaac the Smith, one of them said to him: “Will the Master please tell us some legal points?” While the other said: “Will the Master please give us some homiletical instruction?” When he commenced a homiletical [haggadic] discourse he was prevented by the one, and when he commenced a legal discourse he was prevented by the other. He therefore said to them: I will tell you a parable: To what is this like? To a man who has had two wives, one young and the other old. The young one used to pluck out his white hair, whereas the old one used to pluck out his black hair. He thus finally remained bald on both sides.
The immediate predicament of R. Isaac is that he cannot teach Torah at all because one colleague plucks out his haggadic hairs while the other is plucking his halakic ones.
Morale: Learning halakah ["law"] without homiletical (haggadic) application will leave the scholar bald on both sides.
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Posted by evedyahu on March 19, 2008
Two thousand years ago, when a non-Jew asked Hillel, the leading Rabbi of his age, to define Judaism’s essence, the sage could have responded with a long oration on Jewish thought and law, and an insistence that it would be blasphemous to reduce so profound a system to a brief essence. Indeed, his contemporary, Shammai, furiously drove away a questioner with a builder’s rod. Hillel, however, responded to the man’s challenge: “What is hateful to you, do not do to your neighbor: this is the whole Torah. The rest is commentary; now go and study” – a model statement that has defined Judaism’s essence ever since.
Rabbi Joseph Telushkin – Jewish Wisdom: Ethical, Spiritual, and Historical Lessons from the Great Works and Thinkers (1994), xix-xx.
Note Jesus’ response to the scribe in Mark 12:28-31:
And one of the scribes came up and heard them disputing with one another, and seeing that he answered them well, asked him, “Which is the most important of all?”
Jesus answered, “The most important is, ‘Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’
The second is this: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no other commandment greater than these.”
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Posted by evedyahu on March 7, 2008
One day in the synagogue, Rabbi Levi Yitzchak of Berdichev seemed to be observing a group of his Hasidim as they prayed. When they were finished, he approached them with a hearty greeting, “Shalom aleichem!”
They looked startled to hear their rabbi pronounce the greeting traditionally given after returning from a long journey. “But Rabbi,” they said, “we have not been anywhere!”
The rabbi continued to shake hands with them, as though they were travellers arriving in Berditchev. He said, “From your faces it was obvious that your thoughts were in the grain market in Odessa or the woolen market in Lodz. None of you were actually here while you recited the prayers, so I was glad to welcome you back once you stopped.”
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Posted in PRAYER, STORIES | Tagged: focus, PRAYER, Worship | Leave a Comment »