בס׳ד

"Where does it say that you have a contract with G-d to have an easy life?"

the Lubavitcher Rebbe



"Failure is not the enemy of success; it is its prerequisite."

Rabbi Nosson Scherman



9 Aug 2009

Parshat Reeh - a blessing and a curse

by Elisha Greenbaum
See, I give you today a blessing and a curse... (Deuteronomy 11:26)
When the Torah proclaims that G-d is the source of both the blessing and the curse, this can be understood as G-d telling us not to complain, and just accept all curses and suffering as coming from Him. On a deeper level, the Torah is presenting us with a more complex understanding of the nature of suffering: that all things, the blessings and the curses, derive equally from Him, and are thus all positive; the blessing as a revealed kindness, and the curse as an opportunity for us to transform evil into an opportunity for blessing.
The era directly following the passing of Rebbe DovBer, the Maggid of Mezritch, was terrible for the Jews. After a long period of benign neglect, the government began to promulgate many new anti-Semitic decrees. Additionally, to add insult to injury, a number of plagues and natural disasters struck the local communities.
At about that time, one of the Maggid's principal disciples had a dream in which his departed mentor appeared to him. The disciple asked his master to explain an apparent anomaly: Departed tzaddikim (righteous people) are described as having more power to affect nature after their passing than they had while still mortal; why then did all those calamities, that the Rebbe's prayers had averted while he was still alive, resume upon his passing?
Rabbi DovBer explained. "While on this world I recognized evil as such and prayed to G-d to save us, and thank G-d my prayers were often answered. Now I reside in the world of truth, and from my new perspective I divine the rationale of the Divine. I now see how everything G-d visits on the world, even that which is apparently negative, is in reality part of G-d's celestial plans for our ultimate good.
"You, however, who are alive and still perceive the iniquity implicit in human suffering--you pray to G-d, and you ward off the evil."
http://www.chabad.org/parshah/article_cdo/aid/410673/jewish/The-View-from-Below.htm

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