This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar...
Parshat Chaye Sarah records two major transactions, which begs us to wonder
about their connection. The Parsha starts with Avraham insisting on paying
for his plot of land in which to bury his wife. After much negotiating,
Efron agrees to accept payment for the plot. The Parsha then goes into even
greater detail describing the efforts of Avraham's servant in finding a
suitable wife for Yitzchak, his son. What's the connection, other than then
technically both being "transactions"?
One possibility is that the dialog of the first transaction could be the
requisite to the completion of the second. In other words, Avraham had to
understand and negotiate a FAIR transaction where both sides benefit before
he could find a wife for his son. This requirement says a lot about what it
takes to find a suitable mate: Give. If you find yourself taking more than
you're giving in a given relationship, you need to insist on adjusting it.
If any marriage is to work, the first ingredient is mutual respect, which
breeds mutual giving. It is this fact that Avraham mastered before
venturing to find his son a wife, and it's this lesson that we should
master before venturing to find our own mates or business partners.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the week:
"We look forward to the time when the power to love will replace the love
of power." --William Ewart Gladstone
This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar...
_______________________________________________
Parshat Chaye Sarah records two major transactions, which begs us to wonder
about their connection. The Parsha starts with Avraham insisting on paying
for his plot of land in which to bury his wife. After much negotiating,
Efron agrees to accept payment for the plot. The Parsha then goes into even
greater detail describing the efforts of Avraham's servant in finding a
suitable wife for Yitzchak, his son. What's the connection, other than then
technically both being "transactions"?
One possibility is that the dialog of the first transaction could be the
requisite to the completion of the second. In other words, Avraham had to
understand and negotiate a FAIR transaction where both sides benefit before
he could find a wife for his son. This requirement says a lot about what it
takes to find a suitable mate: Give. If you find yourself taking more than
you're giving in a given relationship, you need to insist on adjusting it.
If any marriage is to work, the first ingredient is mutual respect, which
breeds mutual giving. It is this fact that Avraham mastered before
venturing to find his son a wife, and it's this lesson that we should
master before venturing to find our own mates or business partners.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the week:
"We look forward to the time when the power to love will replace the love
of power." --William Ewart Gladstone