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Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar

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Dvar for Vaera (Exodus 6:2-9:35)

SP
Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar
Fri, Jan 24, 2020 3:36 PM

Welcome to another short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please forward
this forward...


Reading the story of how the Jews became enslaved to Egypt in Parshat Vaera
and having the benefit of knowing how the story ends, one can wonder why
the Egyptians were punished for enslaving the Jews, when we know that the
Jews needed to be enslaved, either as part of the decree or as the process
of becoming a cohesive nation.

The Ramchal explains that the answer lies in the Egyptians' intent, which
became clear when it was time to let the Jews go. Had the Egyptians done it
with the intention of merely doing G-d's will, they would have immediately
let them go when the situation warranted it, and yet they did not. The same
is true of our lives: We can sometimes justify not giving as much, not
volunteering enough, or not learning enough Torah by claiming not to have
time or resources. The truth is revealed, though, when we do have time, on
weekends, vacations, or between jobs/school. If we do what we can when we
can, we will prove our appreciation for the Torah, and improve our
appreciation OF the Torah in the process.


Quotation of the week:
"Never be a prisoner of your past. It was just a lesson, not a life
sentence."

Welcome to another short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please forward this forward... _______________________________________________ Reading the story of how the Jews became enslaved to Egypt in Parshat Vaera and having the benefit of knowing how the story ends, one can wonder why the Egyptians were punished for enslaving the Jews, when we know that the Jews needed to be enslaved, either as part of the decree or as the process of becoming a cohesive nation. The Ramchal explains that the answer lies in the Egyptians' intent, which became clear when it was time to let the Jews go. Had the Egyptians done it with the intention of merely doing G-d's will, they would have immediately let them go when the situation warranted it, and yet they did not. The same is true of our lives: We can sometimes justify not giving as much, not volunteering enough, or not learning enough Torah by claiming not to have time or resources. The truth is revealed, though, when we do have time, on weekends, vacations, or between jobs/school. If we do what we can when we can, we will prove our appreciation for the Torah, and improve our appreciation OF the Torah in the process. _______________________________________________ Quotation of the week: "Never be a prisoner of your past. It was just a lesson, not a life sentence."