Enjoy this Lelamed Dvar, also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). Please share this Dvar with someone...
This week's Parsha starts off with the word "Re'eh", which means "See".
What are we seeing, and why do we need to see it? Rabbi Yehoshua Wender
explains that in our lives we are all on a quest for truth. We are looking
to find the real meaning behind everything in this world. However, we need
to see everything in its proper light. In every thing in this world there
is truth, and there could be falseness, and it is our job to not be tricked
by the lies. So how do we know what's true and what's not?
G-d has given us a Torah that contains the ultimate truth, and that same
protection from falseness. Living in this world is like being in a room
of fun house mirrors. You walk in, and there are all these curvy mirrors
that distort your image. Some make you look fat, others make you tall, and
yet others make you skinny. The only way to get a true image of yourself
is to look in a flat, uncurved mirror. The Torah is such a mirror: You can
look in the Torah and find the truth, untainted, uncurved, undistorted. But
it's also possible to get a true image from looking at a curvy mirror, if
you stand in just the right spot, at just the right angle, you can see your
self the way you really are. The catch is that you won't know that that's
your real true image unless you've looked at yourself in a straight mirror
and have that image to compare with. The world is the same way: It is
possible to see the world truthfully using other sources, but unless we
have studied the Torah and know what truth looks like, we'll never know if
we've really found it.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week:
"The same boiling water that softens the potato hardens the egg. It's not
about the circumstance, but rather what you are made of. "
Enjoy this Lelamed Dvar, also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). Please share this Dvar with someone...
_______________________________________________
This week's Parsha starts off with the word "Re'eh", which means "See".
What are we seeing, and why do we need to see it? Rabbi Yehoshua Wender
explains that in our lives we are all on a quest for truth. We are looking
to find the real meaning behind everything in this world. However, we need
to see everything in its proper light. In every thing in this world there
is truth, and there could be falseness, and it is our job to not be tricked
by the lies. So how do we know what's true and what's not?
G-d has given us a Torah that contains the ultimate truth, and that same
protection from falseness. Living in this world is like being in a room
of fun house mirrors. You walk in, and there are all these curvy mirrors
that distort your image. Some make you look fat, others make you tall, and
yet others make you skinny. The only way to get a true image of yourself
is to look in a flat, uncurved mirror. The Torah is such a mirror: You can
look in the Torah and find the truth, untainted, uncurved, undistorted. But
it's also possible to get a true image from looking at a curvy mirror, if
you stand in just the right spot, at just the right angle, you can see your
self the way you really are. The catch is that you won't know that that's
your real true image unless you've looked at yourself in a straight mirror
and have that image to compare with. The world is the same way: It is
possible to see the world truthfully using other sources, but unless we
have studied the Torah and know what truth looks like, we'll never know if
we've really found it.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week:
"The same boiling water that softens the potato hardens the egg. It's not
about the circumstance, but rather what you are made of. "