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huge difference for a deserving charity! **
This short, practical Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App
Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy this Dvar...
Parshat Yitro contains the first time we are introduced to the Ten
Commandments, often overshadowing other important messages conveyed in our
Parsha. One such message can be found when the Torah describes the Jews
leaving Rephidim and leading to Har Sinai (Mount Sinai), where they would
end up accepting the Torah. Why does the Torah tell us that they left
Rephidim, when it seems rather obvious that they left where they were to
get to Sinai?
Rephidim was not only where the Jews were attacked by Amalek, but was also
known to be the only oasis in the region, a fact Amalek used to their
advantage when planning the attack on the Jews. Once the battle was over,
the Jews were able to enjoy the comforts of that oasis. It is therefore
important for us to know that the people were not only willing but excited
to leave the comforts of their environment to accept a Torah with many
unfamiliar and sometimes difficult rules and attributes. Comfort sometimes
breeds complacency, a lesson easily overlooked but also a key to personal
change and growth, a lesson the people understood and we can appreciate.
Quotation of the week:
“Enjoy the little things in life, for one day you'll look back and realize
they were the big things."
** Please consider joining DailyGiving.org - donate $1 a day and make a
huge difference for a deserving charity! **
This short, practical Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App
Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy this Dvar...
_______________________________________________
Parshat Yitro contains the first time we are introduced to the Ten
Commandments, often overshadowing other important messages conveyed in our
Parsha. One such message can be found when the Torah describes the Jews
leaving Rephidim and leading to Har Sinai (Mount Sinai), where they would
end up accepting the Torah. Why does the Torah tell us that they left
Rephidim, when it seems rather obvious that they left where they were to
get to Sinai?
Rephidim was not only where the Jews were attacked by Amalek, but was also
known to be the only oasis in the region, a fact Amalek used to their
advantage when planning the attack on the Jews. Once the battle was over,
the Jews were able to enjoy the comforts of that oasis. It is therefore
important for us to know that the people were not only willing but excited
to leave the comforts of their environment to accept a Torah with many
unfamiliar and sometimes difficult rules and attributes. Comfort sometimes
breeds complacency, a lesson easily overlooked but also a key to personal
change and growth, a lesson the people understood and we can appreciate.
_______________________________________
Quotation of the week:
“Enjoy the little things in life, for one day you'll look back and realize
they were the big things."