Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Religion vs.Judaism



Religion = Serve G-d so you can get a reward and be saved from Gehenom.

Judaism= Serve G-d because he desires an intimate relationship.


Religion= The main purpose of this world is the next world, by doing enough mitzvos it will enable you the next world so you can  "bask in his glory", and receive ultimate pleasure...

Judaism= The main purpose of this world is this world, it is here that we get to fulfill His desire, in the next world we merit to have pleasure by understanding what we accomplished.
His pleasure vs. our pleasure who's is more important....


Religon= Q. What can I get for myself?
                A. A front row seat in Olam Haba.

Judasim= Q.How can I give myself?
                 A. Do a Mitzvah and become one with your Creator.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Finding Your Inner Color

  
In the end of this weeks parsha the Torah describes to us of the offerings brought  by each of the twelve tribes in honor of the dedication of the Mishkan . Although we know that in the Torah there are no extra words or even letters , we find an obvious repition that seems to take place.  Each tribe dedicates the same exact gift, and yet the Torah repeats word for word the exact order of their donation. Rather then naming all of the tribes and afterwords telling once what the offering was, the Torah says each tribe individually and repeats the same offering for each one- "Reuben gave..., Shimon gave..., etc.",  Making this the largest parsha in the Chumash.

Why all the repition?

To Answer this question the Midrash Raba explains in length that although Each tribe brought the same gift they each had a brought it with a different intention, the Midrash describes in detail the different kavvanah they had behind each one’s specific offering.


Artist: Yitzchak Moully
All of Am Yisroel conform to the same divine guidelines, all follow the same Torah, yet we each carry out those very same deeds with our own personal approach.

There is often tension between following Jewish law and creativity, between orthodoxy and innovation. People ask why Judaism has to be so rigid and conforming. Where is creativity? We need an outlet for our own unique personality, to nurture our own individual talents?

The Torah teaches us here that there is no contradiction. The entire nation, including individuals of every conceivable character, can do the very same deed, down to every last detail, yet each person provides a unique flavor and color in his or her service. Physically, two people may do exactly the same act but yet in spirit and flavor be totally different.

It is no coincidence that Parshas Naso always falls out in close proximity to Shavuos. There is another Midrash which teaches that although every single Jew heard all the mitzvos at har Sinai they each heard them in a diffenent way- they each connected to them with there own personality.

For this message it was worth it for the Torah to repeat each tribes offering. Hashem is teaching us that receiving and following the Torah doesn’t mean loosing the self , on the contrary,  the greatest personal expression comes from a framework which although may on the outside look the same but on the inside allows us to freely express our unique personality and individuality.

Good Shabbos!

Monday, May 13, 2013

Special 20 min. video shiur!!

The Tolna Rebbe Shlita on Shavuos- Enjoy!





Restore My Soul

Toras Hashem Temimah Mishivat Nefesh- 
"G-ds Torah Is Pure, it Restores the Soul"

"Without Torah I feel like a leaf blowing in the wind, leaving no sense of groundednes and meaning, blowing from one place to another..."

-Rebeztin Devorah Hilsenrath (my Grandmother), Surviver of Aushwitz
Quote taken from a talk she gave at the Shapells Yeshiva last month

A Letter for Shavuos

By the Grace of G‑d
Rosh Chodesh Sivan, 5715
[May 22, 1955]
Brooklyn, N.Y.

. . . It is surely unnecessary to elaborate on the close relationship between the physical and the spiritual, which even modern science has become convinced of.

Physically, at this time of the year, we find nature again in full bloom. After a period of hibernation, it springs back to life with renewed vigor and vitality, faithfully reproducing the same elements which characterized the same period a year ago, and two years ago, and all the way back to the first seasons of the Nature cycle.

In our religious and spiritual life, also, we have the seasons and festivals which recur year after year, and reproduce the same spiritual elements which first gave rise to them. Thus, at this time of the year, with the days of Sefirah connecting the festival of Passover (physical freedom) with its culmination in Shavuoth (spiritual freedom), we can—if we are sufficiently prepared and attuned to it—relive the experiences of our ancestors who actually witnessed the Revelation and accepted the Torah at Sinai.
What a long way our ancestors covered in the course of but 50 days; from the abominations of Egyptian “culture,” in which moral depravity and polytheism reigned supreme (as recent archeological discoveries have amply brought to light)—to pure monotheism at Mount Sinai, where the Jew receives the Torah with the call of Na’aseh v’nishma. Na’aseh first, i.e., complete surrender of man to G‑d.

This great rise from the abyss of Egypt to the sublime heights of Sinai was attained by pure and simple faith in G‑d, from the day when parents and children, women and infants, several million souls in all, set out on the trek through the desert, not dismayed by the irrationality of it, but simply obeying the Divine call with absolute trust. This won special Divine favor, in the words of the Prophet: “I remember unto thee the kindness of thy youth, the love of thy betrothal, thy going after Me into the wilderness.” It is this faith that carried the Jews through the ages, an insignificant physical minority in the midst of a hostile world, a spot of light threatened by an overwhelming darkness. It is this absolute faith in G‑d that we need nowadays more than ever before.
It is said, the whole sun is reflected in a drop of water. And so the whole of our nation is reflected in each individual, and what is true of the nation as a whole is true of the individual.

The core of Jewish vitality and indestructibility is in its pure faith in G‑d: not in some kind of an abstract Deity, hidden somewhere in the heavenly spheres, who regards this world from a distance; but absolute faith in a very personal G‑d, who is the very life and existence of everybody; who permeates where one is, or what one does. Where there is such faith, there is no room for fear or anxiety, as the Psalmist says, “I fear no evil, for Thou art with me,” with me, indeed, at all times, not only on Shabbos or Yom Tov, or during prayer or meditation on G‑d. And when one puts his trust in G‑d, unconditionally and unreservedly, one realizes what it means to be really free and full of vigor, for all one’s energy is released in the most constructive way, not only in one’s own behalf, but also in behalf of the environment at large.

The road is not free from obstacles and obstructions, for in the Divine order of things we are expected to attain our goal by effort; but if we make a determined effort, success is Divinely assured, and the obstacles and obstructions which at first loom large, dissolve and disappear.

I wish you to tread this road of pure faith in G‑d, without over [unclear in original] introspection and self-searching, as in the simple illustration of a man walking: he will walk most steadily and assuredly if he will not be conscious of his walk and not seek to consciously coordinate the hundreds of muscles operative in locomotion, or he would be unable to make his first step.

Wishing you success in all above, and hoping to hear good news from you and yours,
With the blessing of a happy Yom Tov of Receiving the Torah with inner joy,

Sincerely,
Menachem M. Schneerson

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

A Hisbonenus Moment:
 
Every Soul Sings a Song of Praise- Kol Heneshama Tehalel Kah-
(Tehillim- Morning Prayers)

There was once a violinist who was playing his violin, then suddenly a cellist  came and sat down next to him. How dare he, thought the violinist, here I was playing my sweet oak wood violin and he decides to sit next to me with his cello? Besides, who does he think he is playing a cello, so big, such a deep sound so different sounding than my beautiful violin!
Just then a pianist decided to sit down next to the violinist and cellist. The two of them thought, how rude? doesn't this pianist realize that we are string instruments and he is a mere piano? What on earth is he thinking what do we have to do with him? Let him play with the other pianists out there.

There was an intense feeling of negative energy in the room, so much anger resentment and division, then the conductor walked in the room and explained the beauty of music...

Every moment of our lives we are playing a certain instrument which develops into a certain song. Sometimes these songs can be depressing and other times they can be joyful and inspiring. The instrument is in our hand we choose what songs to play.

The Torah is Hashem's desire. His desire is that we live in a world filled with songs of connection and meaning. Songs which lead us to see the beauty of mankind and to notice how each individual resembles a different instrument, a different sound.  This Torah, the blueprint of creation, teaches us how to play our own unique instrument. To look at another with a good eye, an eye that sees the potential and appreciation for song as apposed to hatred and division.

Once we are ready (keish echad bleiv echad) the conducter will ask us to begin playing (Naaseh) in the orchestra of life and then we will hear (vNishmah) a different world- a world of music...

Thursday, May 2, 2013

From Curse to Blessing

The Alter Rebbe would read the weekly portion every Shabbos. On the Shabbos of parshas Bechukosai he fell ill and somebody else read the Torah in his place. After he read the tochecha, (the portion which talks about the different punishments and rebuke)) the chassidim noticed that Alter Rebbe's son, Dov-Ber, passed out. The chassidim revived him...

Chassidim- What happened?

Dov-Ber- When I heard the tochecha I became frightened and couldn't handle all the curses.

Chassidim: But every year you hear them and never had such a reaction, what is different about today?

Dov-Ber- My father (the Alter Rebbe) all the years read this same torah portion and I can swear never once did I hear curses all I heard were blessings...

It says in the Parshas Bechukosai (26/26) that because of the intense famine "ten women will break your bread in one oven"

Listen to how the Alter Rebbe hears this "curse"

The bread here refers to Torah, for it is Torah which satiates the soul. Ten women refer to the ten modes of expression that every human being has within oneself, corresponding to the sefirot that Hashem uses to expresses himself in the world. Each one of us was created with a different kind of temperament/makeup and experiences the world in their own unique way. As the gemara says just like our faces are different so is our internal processing. This is because each one of these ten ways of expression are balanced differently in every individual person. For example some are more inclined to anger then others, stemming from the expression (or sefirah) of severity, and strictness.

One refers to the one Above (and below) the Aibeshter.
Oven- refers to the fiery burning passion that we all naturally have hidden inside of us towards our Creator.

Let us now put the pieces together.
Torah just like bread needs to be cooked properly. One can study and pray the entire day but if ones service is not "baked" then it will not become one within but rather two separate identities, Torah and the one studying the Torah. The point of learning is that it becomes us, that it energizes our soul and leaves us feeling satiated, and connected. How do we indeed cook our Torah?
The Rebbe explains that this is achieved by the One oven, By contemplating on G-d's oneness in creation, by learning about Him, how awesome and great he is. By meditating on the intimate desire He has to be with us and become one with our seemingly fragmented world.
These type of thoughts awaken the natural love that we all have deep inside of us and kindles our ten different modes of expression. Each individual, everyone according to there psychological/spiritual makeup will have a unique fiery love towards his or her Creator.

When we approach Torah and prayer in a way that our consciousness is filled with thoughts of love and desire then  the Torah study and Prayer will digest within and be truly ours.
Now that's a blessing!

Exercise: The next time before learning or praying try studying Tanya Chapter 33 for a couple of minutes, the Rebbe speaks there about these idea in detail it can be a great resourse for the above meditation's. http://www.chabad.org/library/tanya/tanya_cdo/aid/7912/jewish/Chapter-33.htm

Good Shabbos!

Questions and Comments appreciated...