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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

What Is Required of Us ?

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What Is Required of Us?
............

Thoughts to consider ............

By Brother Rabbi Dani'el Rendelman
ravemet@comcast.net

www.emetministries.com

More adults in North America will die this year of congestive heart disease. Each year millions are caught off guard as this silent killer lurks painlessly, unseen in the body, until it strikes as a major heart attack. Doctors describe this illness as "blockages in the blood vessels and arteries that prevent blood from flowing properly". Physicians tell us that the nation's death rate would drastically decrease, if we would just make our heart's health a priority. We would be "heart healthy", if we'd just eat healthy foods, exercise daily, and have regular visits with our family doctor. Spiritually, our condition is not much better, for we are "sin sick".

The Spirit cannot flow properly in our lives because of sinful "blockages" of hypocrisy, disobedience, and disrespect. Our prayers bounce off the ceiling because of the "insincerity" of our heart. We've not heeded the words of wisdom, "Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life." - Mishlei / Proverbs, chapter 4.

The word "heart" appears more than 900 times throughout the Scriptures and is nearly always the Hebrew term "lev." This phrase literally means, "feelings, emotions, will, intellect, the center of our thoughts." Our heart is the seat of emotions within us that prompts us to do what we do. It is from our heart that we get excited about Elohim, and it is from our heart that we rebel against him. "The backslider in heart shall be filled with his own ways: and a good man shall be satisfied from himself." - Mishlei / Proverbs, chapter 14 wrote Solomon, of blessed memory.

Our heart directs our actions before we speak or do something. Therefore, as we strive to live a life that is pleasing to the Almighty, it is necessary to have regular heart "check ups." We need to regularly search our motives and intentions, to ensure that our heart is healthy. Our examination doesn't need to be about our actions, but the reasons behind the actions. We don't necessarily need to worry about an occasional slipping into sin. But, we should be concerned about continued habits and attitudes. A person's arteries don't get clogged from one fatty meal; it takes years of neglecting exercise and many times of eating the wrong food. "Take heed, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief, in departing from the living Elohim, but exhort one another daily, while it is called today, lest any of you be hardened though the deceitfulness of sin. For we are made partakers of Messiah, if we hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end; while it is said, Today if you will hear his voice, harden not your hearts, as in the provocation" -- Ivrim / Hebrews 3: 12-13.

The story is told of a wise old rabbi named Moshe, who in the 1930s fled his native land of Germany. He sold all his assets and converted it to gold and then, had 5 sets of solid gold false teeth made. He kept his teeth hidden in his pants' pocket until he needed them.

When he arrived in New York the customs official was perplexed as to why anybody would have 5 sets of gold teeth. So Moshe pulled out his teeth and explained.

"We Orthodox Jews have two separate sets of dishes for meat products and dairy products, but I am so kosher and religious I also have separate sets of teeth."

The customs official shook his head and said, "Well that accounts for two sets of teeth. What about the other three?"

Moshe then said "Vell, us very religious Orthodox Jews use separate dishes for Passover, but I am so religious I have separate teeth, one for meat and one for dairy food.

The customs official slapped his head and then said, "You must be a very religious man with separate teeth for food and dairy products and likewise for Passover. That accounts for four sets of teeth. What about the fifth set?"

"Vell to tell you the truth, once in a while I like a ham sandwich."

It seems this rabbi has a little problem when it comes to Torah observance. Sure, he separates his milk and meat, but he also eats unclean foods. He is holy and reverent in front of others, but he lets his devotion slide when no one is watching. He doesn't know, but his pork eating is evidence of a 'heart' problem. Continued feasting on sinfulness leads to spiritual heart disease. Unfortunately, we are much like this Rabbi.

We all have some areas of obedience where we could be more devoted. Yet, most of the time, we ignore these sinful problems. We hide them in our pockets until the right time to sneak away and enjoy. Who likes to control their thoughts anyway? Who wants to show respect to those in spiritual authority? Who doesn't stretch the truth, just a little? We reason that a little sin, here and there, doesn't count against us, if we know the Hebrew Names or keep the Biblical Sabbath. Sadly, we have heart disease. Our arteries are clogged with some wicked actions and bad thoughts.

We must guard our heart from becoming bored, complacent, or stubborn. It is so easy to go through the motions of obedience and forget why we do what we do. Many times we focus so much on the details of how to "properly" fulfill a commandment that we forget the simple reason for obedience, to draw near to YHWH.

This is why, in Mishlei / Proverbs, chapter 4, the scriptures say to "Keep thy heart with all diligence." We need to be watchmen, who are on the lookout for false concepts concerning the mitzvot (commandments). One such deception that easily slips into our heart is the idea that the Creator wants us to obey Him. We've allowed the mitzvot mindset to harden our hearts into believing that YHWH wants us to just obey the miztvot. However doing the right actions is not the pathway to pleasing the Almighty Elohim. We don't earn our place into heaven, no matter how Torah-observant we are. Our spiritual standing is not based on us memorizing the worship service, so the "amen" is said at just the right time.

Somehow, we have come to believe that when YHWH looks down from heaven upon us, that He measures our Torah obedience on a scale. We reason that, if we are doing Torah then, YHWH honors us, and we are ok. We've come to believe, write in our emails, and even tell others that YHWH wants us to be Torah-observant. We'll go to heaven, we'll be happy on earth, and life will be just fine. However, this is just not true.

When YHWH looks from heaven, He is not looking in judgment towards our Torah obedience ONLY. He does not desire us to be robots, who blindly obey to just obey; He did give to us free will! Plainly, YHWH doesn't want our obedience. He doesn't really want us to keep kosher or speak Hebrew. What YHWH wants is us, in totality. He wants our life. Totally. Fully. YHWH wants our heart, our soul, and our devotion. He doesn't need our service.

Likewise, He doesn't get a thrill from our obedience when He doesn't have our heart. Sure, we can learn the mitzvot. We can memorize the 613 commandments, we can keep the Noachide laws, and we can quote the Ten Commandments. But if we don't totally give our life to Him then, all the good works we do are just that. Good works and nothing else! It isn't the actions that earn us points in heaven; it is our heart condition that is most important. What pleases Him is the fact that our souls and very life have been yielded to the Almighty. YHWH wants us to submit our life totally to Him. That is the essential difference between obeying and submitting.

From our love of YHWH should come our submission to the mitzvot. The commandments are a means to an end, and not the end itself. Let's not get the cart before the horse by stressing obedience over submission. YHWH wants us to submit our life to Him; to love Him with all of our heart, soul, mind, and strength. Obedience to the Torah should flow freely from the heart. Saints should obey in order to please the Almighty because we love Him. We should submit to Him before we try to obey anything. "Come near to Elohim and He will come near to you," reads the book of Ya'acov/James from the Messianic writings.

Like a wife that prepares a special meal of her husband's favorite foods, we too should seek to please Him through our deeds. Our submission to the Torah, is how we show that we love Him. "If you love me, keep the mitzvot," said the Messiah in Yochannan / John 14: 15. Love of YHWH leads us to submit to the Torah and commit our life fully to Him. In turn, this love will cause us to go beyond what is stated in the Torah. Love will cause believers to go beyond the letter of the Law to grasp the Spirit of the Law. From a heart of love and devotion, we should look beyond what is required of us, to do what the Creator desires. He requires our lives to be devoted to Him. He desires us to submit to Him in love. As we fall more and more in love with our Elohim, we will go past wanting to only obey the stated commandments, grasping the soul and purpose of Torah. To understand this concept, let's consider the parable of a farmer and his two sons.

An elderly farmer had two grown sons that loved him very much. These brothers worked vigorously in their father's fields. Each year, the land would reap a tremendous harvest. The farm harvested incredible amounts of large and tasty produce, much more than the small family needed.

One day, while the Father was talking with his sons about how to irrigate the land, he mentioned his desire to share the extra produce with the poor. The idea was a fleeting thought, a half-sentence, spoken in the middle of a technical discussion about water lines and germination. Nothing more was made of the father's suggestion and the conversation ended soon after. The younger son was ready to finish up the day's work so he could relax and rest. However, Dad's comment peaked the interest of the older son. He reasoned, "Why should all the produce go to waste, when there were hungry people in their town?"

As the moon hung brightly in the night sky and tired weary heads fell softly on gentle pillows, the firstborn of the father was busy making plans. No, he wasn't working on new fertilization techniques nor ways to increase plant production. He was sitting up in his bed brainstorming ideas on how to distribute the family's food surplus to the poor. He understood his father's desires, including the unstated. He was going to do all in his power to satisfy his father's wish. He knew what was on his father's mind. He was going to please him, even if it took extra work. To the younger brother, the suggestion was just that, a suggestion, and nothing more. However to the oldest son, the father's idea was an indication of something greater. It was an inspiration.

Which of these two sons loves their Dad the most? Is it the youngest son who faithfully does exactly what the father says? Or is the devotion of the elder son greater? Which son does what is required, to know and fulfill the heart's desires of his father?

The meaning of this parable can be discerned as we consider this story in comparison to relationship with our Heavenly Father YHWH. We can be like the youngest son who does only what is stated in the Torah. Or we can act like the elder son who deducted what was on the Father's mind and tried to please Him. We can do exactly what the Torah says in vain repetition. Or we can give our heart to Him; do what He commands, and even more. This "even more" is brought about as we discern the purpose behind our actions.

Our Heavenly Father wants us to be a people "set apart". This we accomplish through obeying the mitzvot and learning the principles behind the mitzvoth. We can't achieve full union with our Father through the mitzvot alone. We must totally give our life to Him and intensify our efforts toward His glorious end result of being like Him. King David understood this as he wrote, "I will delight in your mitzvot," -- Tehillim / Psalm 119: 24.

The truth is that YHWH is not satisfied in the deeds alone. He looks to the condition of the heart behind the deeds. He doesn't want us to worship our actions. He wants us to worship Him. He wants us to love him with all that we are. Before we obey, He wants us to question our actions. What is the reason behind our actions? How healthy is our heart? When we preach obedience to the Torah we fall short of the full and true message of the Torah. YHWH wants Torah-submission not Torah-observance.

Our Master Rabbi Yahshua often spoke about the dangers of this type of attitude. There were those who obeyed the mitzvot openly, yet had not given their whole heart to YHWH. They had obedience, but not submission. They could sing the Shema perfectly in Hebrew, but their lives were not submitted to the one about whom they were singing. Yahshua is quoted by both Matthew and Mark, describing these people:

"This people draweth nigh unto me with their mouth, and honoureth me with their lips; but their heart is far from me," Mattitiyahu/Matthew 15:8 "He answered and said unto them, Well hath Esaias prophesied of you hypocrites, as it is written, This people honoureth me with their lips, but their heart is far from me," Markus / Mark 7:6

Moschiach compared others to whitewashed tombs that were beautiful on the outside but held death and decay on the inside.

"Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye are like unto whited sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but are within full of dead men's bones, and of all uncleanness," Mattitiyahu / Matthew, chapter 23:27

"But those things which proceed out of the mouth come forth from the heart; and they defile the man. For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies," -- Mattitiyahu / Matthew 15: 18-19. Yes, the Torah is important. The Torah is mankind's blueprint for living. We do reap what we sow. We are blessed, if we obey and cursed, if we disobey. YHWH will reward our actions and we should be in pursuit of obedience. But, when we obey, to just obey, we become like trained animals that do what their master commands to earn a treat.

When we view our actions through the bifocals of blessing and cursing, the end result is minimizing the Torah into a book of do's and don'ts. Let's not do this. Don't follow the Torah only to get something. Don't do the mitzvoth merely to earn protection during tribulation, or a better spot in heaven. This type of living is very dangerous. We can never earn what our Father freely gives.

As our faith grows and we mature in this walk, we can move from doing the specified to searching for the implied. Yahshua expounded upon this idea with the issue of adultery. The Torah commands that we should not commit adultery. Yahshua though, raised this mitzvah to a more-complete guideline when He said, "Whoever looks at a woman to lust for her has already committed adultery with her in his heart," Mattitiyahu - Matthew 5:28.

When we are submitted, we do what is required, and recognize and do, what YHWH desires. One reason for the Moshiach's coming, was to bring Yisra'el back to the heart of the Torah. It is one thing not to physically commit a sin, while it is another to walk in purity. The difference is the condition of the heart.

If we don't guard our heart, we'll soon begin to doubt our actions and become trapped by doing only what is required of us. There are those in this movement that use the excuse that they will do "only what is required in the Torah" before they move on in their faith. These people won't follow traditions like lighting Shabbat candles because the "Torah doesn't command it." And they equate not working on the Sabbath to spending a day in the Dentist's waiting room. These attitudes are dangerous because of how they clog our heart.

Again, YHWH doesn't want just our actions. He wants our life. He wants us. The Scriptures have an answer for those who would question what is required of believers. "Yisrael what does YHWH your Elohim require of you, but to fear YHWH your Elohim, to walk in all his ways, and to love him, and to serve YHWH your Elohim with all your heart and with all your soul," - Devarim / Deuteronomy 10:12. Notice that walking in his way, observing the mitzvoth, and loving YHWH with all of the heart are equal. What does YHWH require? He requires all that we are.

"What does YHWH require of you, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your Elohim," -- Mica'yah / Micah 6:8. If our heart's condition is right before YHWH, it is as if we are obeying all of the miztvot, because we will be obeying the mitzvoth. Yahshua said, "'You shall love the YHWH your Elohim with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: 'You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets," - Mattitiyahu / Matthew 22:38-40. This verse corresponds with the previous pasuk (passage) in Micah.

When we love YHWH with all our heart, we will do justly. When we love Him with all of our soul, we will view others in compassion and so we will love mercy. And when we love Him with all of our mind, we will keep our mind upon Him and walk humbly in His Spirit. The Zohar says, "when a man's love to the Holy One is roused, the "right hand" is moved only by a threefold impulse, by "heart", "soul", and "might", for it does not say, "with all thy heart or with all thy soul", etc., but "and with all thy soul", etc.: all three are essential and necessary. Then does the Holy One respond and stir up His Right Hand towards that man." YHWH wants our heart. He wants all of us. His desire is for His people to submit to His will for their lives. This will is revealed throughout the Torah. To obey the Torah without giving our heart to YHWH is great loss. To submit to the Almighty and seek to walk in obedience to the Torah is great gain.

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Rabbi Wein - Parshas Beshalach

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Parshas Beshalach

The Great Song
The great song of Moshe and of Israel forms the centerpiece of this week’s parsha. The song was not a one-off historical event. It has remained a part of the morning services of the synagogue prayers of Jews for millennia.

The song concentrates on God’s power, on Israel’s always miraculous survival and on the perfidious behavior of the wicked enemies of the Jewish people. God’s power and greatness is seen in the salvation of Israel from its enemies, strong as they may be or have been. This song of Moshe forms one of the bookends of the story of the Jewish people.

The other bookend is the second song of Moshe – this time Moshe alone is the performer – in the parsha of Haazinu at the conclusion of the Book of Dvarim. That song also reiterates the theme of this earlier song relating to God’s power and omnipotence, the survival of the Jewish people against all odds, and the judgments to be rendered against the enemies of the Jewish people.

So the Torah at the beginning of the narrative of Israel’s sojourn in the Sinai desert and at the end of that forty year period sings the same song, albeit with different words and melody. But the content and message of the song has remained the same. This can also be said regarding all of Jewish history – it is the same song that has sustained us for these many generations though the words and melody may no longer be exactly the same throughout this long period of time and through our varied experiences.

Moshe instructs the Jewish people to learn and always remember the song of Haazinu. It is the song of the future redemption of Israel, the song that will light the way for Jews in dark and dangerous times. So why is it that the song that Jews know best, the one that we recite seven times every week of our lives is the first song of Moshe and Israel at the salvation of God at Yam Suf?

The lesson here is obvious though often overlooked. The second song of Moshe has little credence if not for the first song at the Yam Suf. Once having experienced miraculous redemption, it is possible to believe firmly that it will happen once more. We are taught in the Torah that in the future redemption “you will be shown wondrous events just as it was in the days of the Exodus from Egypt.” That is why the commandments of the Torah, the Shabat itself and all the holidays are classified and named as being a memory aid to the Exodus from Egypt.

Those who cannot remember the past rarely have lasting hope for their future. The song of Moshe and Israel at the Yam Suf validates all later Jewish experiences, goals and hopes. It is a constant reminder of God’s omnipotence and of His guarantee to us of Jewish survival and ultimate triumph over evil and wickedness. This Shabat is one of “shira” – song – because, again, it validates and confirms all Jewish songs throughout the ages.

The Psalmist teaches us that at the time of the final redemption “then our tongues will be filled with song.” The melody and words may be new to us then but the message will certainly be grounded in the teachings of Moshe and Israel in the song of this week’s parsha.

Shabat shalom,
Rabbi Berel Wein
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Perceptions - Parshas Beshalach

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by Rabbi Pinchas Winston
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Parshas Beshalach

Patience
Patience is definitely a virtue, perhaps the most important one of all. It is amazing how far a little patience or impatience can go to change a moment, a life, lives, or even history. Usually people are impatient when the moment calls for patience, but sometimes people can be too patient when the moment calls for a little impatience in order to put an early end to what eventually may become a disastrous situation.

This is what the Talmud teaches as well, albeit in a somewhat poetic way:

Anyone who tries to push off the moment will be pushed off by the moment. Anyone who is pushed off because of the moment, the moment will be pushed off for him. (Brochos 64a)

On an everyday level, this means don’t try to bring about desired results prematurely. As the mishnah says:

Do not be contemptuous of any person, and don’t remove yourself from anything, for every person has his moment and every thing has its place. (Pirkei Avos 4:2)

which of course is rarely known to us in advance. Hence, it also says:

Many are the plans in a man’s heart, but it is God’s plan that prevails. (Mishlei 19:21)

For example, the Brisker Rav once officiated at a wedding during which the ring fell into the grass as it was about to be slipped onto the bride’s finger, completing the marriage ceremony. As a result, the long awaited marriage was delayed another 20 minutes, since it was not easy to find a tiny ring in tall grass at night using torches for light.

Eventually, to everyone’s relief, the ring was found. However, the Brisker Rav had sensed the embarrassment of the wedding party, and knowing his crowd, that the interruption probably had many in attendance second-guessing the worthiness of the match of the chasan and kallah. For, we like to believe that such matches are made in Heaven and assume that if they are, Heaven will make sure that everything runs smoothly and on time—even though life often teaches just the opposite.

“When deciding at which time to get married,” the Brisker Rav explained, “an hour is chosen for when the chuppah is to take place, and that is printed on the invitation for all the guests to know. The caterer is alerted, so that he can make sure that the food is ready on time. All the events of the evening revolve around that sacred time, and the plans proceed based upon it.”

“However,” the Brisker continued, “in Heaven, the new couple is not destined to be married until precisely 12 minutes later. Whose schedule prevails? Heaven’s, of course, and all of a sudden, though everyone involved is doing their best to make the wedding run on schedule, Heaven does its part to delay the completion of the ceremony until just the right moment. We have found the ring signifying Heaven’s agreement that this couple can now be married.”

Granted I embellished the Brisker Rav’s words somewhat, but that is the gist of what he said. And, they apply not only to delayed wedding ceremonies, but to all of life as well. We can try to bring about desired results by certain times, but the bottom-line is that all of history dances to God’s music, whether we like it or not, whether we believe it or not. Just like the art of a good joke is the timing, the same can be said of a good life as well.

The number one trait that makes a person push the moment is panic. This doesn’t mean that the person necessarily becomes visibly hysterical, because there is such a thing as quiet panic as well, when a person panics on the inside while maintaining a semblance of calm on the outside. Like the Erev Rav in this week’s parshah, for example, when they came to Moshe Rabbeinu at the sea and calmly said, “Because there were no graves in Egypt you have taken us out to die in the wilderness?”

This is also part of the problem with the attempts to make peace in the Middle-East. “It’s about time there was peace between Israel and her enemies,” people say, but they are only partially right. If the time was right, peace would be within reach, but it as far from being reality as it has ever been. What people really mean is that they have had enough of the problems in the Middle-East, and all the international troubles that they create, so ready or not, they want peace now.

Indeed, one of the foremost Israeli peace activists groups uses this phrase as their name: Peace Now. And, though it sounds innocent enough, what it really means is: We want peace so badly we are prepared to make everything else secondary to it, including Israeli security. So, the Arabs say, “We have no problem with that,” while these activists protest against everything Israel does just to stay alive.

“Let’s give the Arabs Gaza and make peace,” they say.

“Wishful thinking,” reality answers.

“Let’s freeze the settlements and make peace talks possible,” the peace activists cry.

“Like that will result in anything more than more dumb concessions to the Arabs,” experience proves.

Funny how when it came to the Red Sea, they wouldn’t take another step forward into the abyss, but now that we confront a diplomatic Red Sea, they are prepared to jump in head first. The reason is simple: drowning by water they fear; drowning diplomatically they are too naïve to recognize until after they are too submerged to survive:

Rabbah bar Bar Chanah said: Once I was going on a boat and saw a fish upon whose back grass was growing. We thought it was an island. We alighted, baked, and cooked upon it. When the back of the fish became hot, it turned over, and had the ship not been so near (to enable us to jump into it), we would have drowned. (Bava Basra 73b) … Explains Rabbeinu Ya’akov: Rabbah bar Bar Channah saw with Ruach HaKodesh that in the End-of-Days the Jewish people would rule over a people. The Jewish people will assume that this people has no hope of ever overcoming Israel, and will therefore subjugate them. When the people have suffered much, they will “turn the plate over on its mouth” and resist Israel. If Moshiach is not close at hand, the Jewish people will drown from the many problems that will arise. (Tuvcha Yabiyu, Balak)

Another example of pushing the moment happened recently when certain rabbis passed an edict that it is forbidden to rent to Arabs in Eretz Yisroel. The desire to make this the rule is obvious, and the need, even more obvious. But, the halachic basis to do so is apparently non-existent at this time, and hence, poskim around the Jewish world spoke out against the action.

About a week later, a letter surfaced signed by certain prominent Jewish women advising against Jewish girls marrying Arab men (the opposite is far less problematic). Aside from the obvious halachic issues of intermarriage with gentiles, they were quoted as saying, “there are many hidden dangers that only appear after divorce is too late,” a proven fact.

Astonishingly, an outspoken Reform rabbi came out against the letter and the advice, and many women from that community were heavily critical of the action of the rebbetzins for having written such a letter, seemingly condoning intermarriage with Arab men. Where are they coming from?

Branches of Judaism that choose assimilation over separation do so because they want to be one with the rest of the world. Torah Judaism, for the most part, is not held in high regard by the gentile world, and therefore, it is not respected by those who hold the gentile world in high regard. After thousands of years of persecution for all kinds of reasons, they have had enough of living on the fringe, and have chosen integration instead.

Wishful thinking, once again.

Peace between Israel and her enemies will eventually result, God willing. The Jewish people will eventually be respected by the nations of the world, and not because we have abandoned Torah, but specifically because we adhere to it. Gentiles will want to join with the Jewish people, but we won’t have to intermarry to make it possible, but rather, they will seek to convert and become part of the Jewish nation (though, after Moshiach comes, that will no longer be possible).

But, in the meantime, to act as if these realities are presently feasible is to push the moment, and will, in the end, cause us to be pushed off. Historically, activists groups like Peace Now have ended up being the victims of their own presumptuousness, as the Holocaust showed once again. Secularized Jews who sought to integrate with the gentile world, historically, have always been rejected by it in the end, sometimes in worse ways than those who remained true to Torah tradition.

I once spoke to a multi-multi-millionaire who had made a lot of his money from the Stock Market. I too had been in the business world at the time (towards the end of the Dot-Com era), and asked him for his advice regarding making investments. His answer was not what I expected.

The first thing he told me was not to expect to make a lot of money quickly. He said the best stocks remain to be the older ones that had been built up over the years, what they call the ‘Blue Chip’ companies. If you can afford to get into the market, stay with them, and over time they will make you money. You have to have patience, he told me.

I could not afford to take his advice, but I certainly heeded his message. Not only is patience a virtue and can save your life sometimes, it can also save you money and make you money as well. To date, I have not heard a disparaging word about the trait of savlanut—patience. And, over here in Israel, it is one thing you have to learn to have quickly, or suffer the consequences of some Israeli raising his three fingers (the traditional two fingers and thumb brought together) to say, “Hey! Savlanut!”
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Weekly Torah Commentary BeShallach from Mordecai Silver

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Tree of Life Messianic Ministries and Mordecai Silver?

That also through them The האור Light, רפואה The Healing and The ואהבה Love of ישועת יהוהYeshuath YHWH may come back to הארץ The Land of Israel?



Weekly Torah Commentary
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Message 1-15-11

BeShalach-When He Let Go

Exodus 13:17-17:16

Judges 4:4-5:31

Introduction

The center of this week’s Parashah is Shirat Ha’ Yam. The Lord has parted the Reed Sea and allowed the Hebrews to cross “as on dry ground,” then closed the sea on the crack cavalry troops of the Egyptian army, the elite of their officer corps and their ruler, the would-be god, Pharaoh. If you think back to the story of Joseph, you may recall that Pharaoh’s predecessor by some four hundred years dreamed that he walked upon the Nile. Now his successor is at the bottom of the Yam Suf.

So Moses and B’nei Yisrael sing a song in praise of the Lord, “who has overthrown horse and rider” and utterly destroyed the Egyptians. Then Miriam, whose name we learn for the first time and who is called a prophetess, leads the Israelite women in a spirited song and dance.

And they all lived happily after - for about a day.

The Haftarah for this week is an obvious parallel to Parashah BeShalach. It tells the story of the defeat by the Israelites of Sisera and his army and of Deborah’s song of triumph at their defeat.

Shalom Chaverim! You will find the weekly Torah, Haftarah, and Apostolic Scripture portions attached as a pdf file. This will be our normal means for sending out the weekly studies. For audio teachings on the weekly portions go to: www.etz-chayim.org/audio/audio.htm. These are free.

We now have our weekly TV show Our Jewish Heritage: Exploring our Hebrew Roots on the Internet at www.lascruceschannel.com. Click on the Video on Demand link and then the Etz Chayim link. We have over 40 shows archived there for free.

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May the Lord bless you and yours… Mordecai Silver

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BeShallach 1-15-11.pdfBeShallach 1-15-11.pdf
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If I am Legalistic So Was Yeshua (Weekly Torah Parashah)

Can we do תפילות prayers for:

http://www.Torahlife.tv and Thehealthwatchman?

That also through them The האור Light, רפואה The Healing and The ואהבה Love of ישועת יהוהYeshuath YHWH may come back to הארץ The Land of Israel?


http://www.Torahlife.tv This weeks Torah Parashah is (Exodus 13.17-17:16) This week we see the children of Israel leaving Egypt but did Egypt's ways leave there heart? Doesn't appear that way. We will talk about this and also getting out of the Church Mindset. (B'shallach)