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Dvar for Bereishit (Genesis 1:1-6:8)

SP
Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar
Fri, Oct 25, 2019 4:57 AM

Welcome to another year of the Weekly Dvar. Please forward it forward...


As we begin Bereishit, after recounting creation and Adam/Chava’s sin of
eating from the forbidden tree, life seemingly settles down for Adam and
Chava. Adam goes off to work, they have 2 children, and after a mere 6
Pessukim (verses) their world is rocked by one child (Cain) killing the
other (Abel). How do Adam and Chava make sense of what happened, and how do
they (and we) move forward after tragedy?

The Midrash relates that Adam and Chava wept by Abel’s body, not knowing
what to do, until they saw a raven burying its dead in the ground, which
they decided to mimic. The irony was that the raven is typically cruel to
its young, yet it buried a dead bird, an act of absolute kindness that
cannot be repaid. Menachem Feldman (www.chabad.org) explains that this
loving kindness is the proper response to senseless evil. The proper
response to cruelty is love, something that comforted Adam and Chava, and
can bring us closer to G-d and each other today. We all have within us the
greatest power there is: the power to be kind.


Quotation of the week:
"The secret to having it all is knowing you already do."

Welcome to another year of the Weekly Dvar. Please forward it forward... _______________________________________________ As we begin Bereishit, after recounting creation and Adam/Chava’s sin of eating from the forbidden tree, life seemingly settles down for Adam and Chava. Adam goes off to work, they have 2 children, and after a mere 6 Pessukim (verses) their world is rocked by one child (Cain) killing the other (Abel). How do Adam and Chava make sense of what happened, and how do they (and we) move forward after tragedy? The Midrash relates that Adam and Chava wept by Abel’s body, not knowing what to do, until they saw a raven burying its dead in the ground, which they decided to mimic. The irony was that the raven is typically cruel to its young, yet it buried a dead bird, an act of absolute kindness that cannot be repaid. Menachem Feldman (www.chabad.org) explains that this loving kindness is the proper response to senseless evil. The proper response to cruelty is love, something that comforted Adam and Chava, and can bring us closer to G-d and each other today. We all have within us the greatest power there is: the power to be kind. _______________________________________________ Quotation of the week: "The secret to having it all is knowing you already do."