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ב"ה
 
Devarim 5761 - July 27, 2001
 
COMMENT
When (and How) to be Sad

When (and How) to be Sad A man is dancing at the wedding of his only child. He's a good dancer, but never before, and never again in his lifetime, will his dancing attain the grace and expressiveness it now displays. In fact, all his talents, capabilities and qualities are currently at their zenith: put a brush in his hand, and he'll paint you a picture which exacts the utmost of his artistic potential.

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PARSHAH
Devarim
Deuteronomy 1:1-3:22
Torah Reading for Week of July 22-28, 2001


Devarim Moses begins his "repetition of the Torah" to the assembled Children of Israel. For thirty-seven days, from the 1st of Shevat to the day of his passing on Adar 7, he reviews the events that occurred and laws that were given in the course of their 40-year journey from Egypt to Sinai to the Promised Land....

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    STORY
    The Expensive Blessing

    The Expensive Blessing The Chassid was by no means a wealthy man. Already, the extended traveling had cut deep into his resources. What to do? Eventually he decided that he just could not meet the Karliner Rebbe’s demand. He respectfully took leave of the Rebbe and departed for home, but in his heart he felt resentful: how could a tzaddik request so much money for a blessing?

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    INNER DIMENSIONS
    The Grammar of Love

    The Grammar of Love In the book of Proverbs King Solomon declares: "He who has found a woman has found good." Yet in the 7th chapter of Ecclesiastes he states, "And I find more bitter than death the woman."

    The grammatical differences between these two verses explain the conflicting images of woman they convey: Are you searching for love in the present, or in your past? Are you looking for your soulmate or are you looking for yourself?

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    QUESTION
    Are human beings the only conscious beings in the universe?

    Are human beings the only conscious beings in the universe? What does Jewish tradition say about life in outer space?

    Dr. Velvl Greene, a biologist enlisted by NASA in their project to determine if there was life on Mars, asked the Lubavitcher Rebbe privately if this was something he should be doing.

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    VOICES
    Ramblings about Stress and Love

    Ramblings about Stress and Love What is stress if not the feeling that life is too much? And what is love if not a merging with the other, creating a larger body, a more expansive being, an entity of sufficient resilience to contain and absorb the too much of life?

    The other thing - the inexplicable thing - is that the love begins to attract the resources necessary to actually deal with the physical problem or problems that cause the stress. Somehow this happens. At least in my life it does, and my gut tells me that it’s a universal experience. (Ooowah, now we’re entering into the world of magic, hey-what?)

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