Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please consider
passing along to others, or adding their email(s) by responding to this
one. Enjoy...
Towards the end of Parshat Vayeira, Avraham is instructed to offer his son
Yitzchak (Isaac) as a sacrifice to G-d. Avraham had been promised a large
number of offspring through Yitzchak, but he still planned to do as he was
instructed, despite the apparent contradiction. On his way up the
mountaintop, the Torah relates the only recorded conversation between
Avraham and Yitzchak (22:7-8). At the center of this conversation where
Avraham tells Yitzchak that he is the offering, Yitzchak calls to his
father, and his father responds, “hineni” – “I am here for you, my son.”
Rabbi David Fohrman points out that Avraham’s response to his son is the
same word he used when G-d initiated this task by calling out for Avraham,
and Avraham responded, “here I am” (22:1). It also happens to be the same
word Avraham uses when the angel calls out to prevent him from going
through with his action, with Avraham again responding, “here I am”
(22:11). Avraham wasn’t just there, and he wasn’t just going through the
motions requested of him. He was all in; he was present and fully engaged
with G-d, his son, and anyone around him.
Being there for others means being mindful of what makes them happy, their
challenges and fears, and, most importantly – knowing what they need to
hear and when they need to hear it.
Quotation of the week:
"Your mind is a garden, your thoughts are the seeds. You can grow
flowers...or weeds."
Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. Please consider
passing along to others, or adding their email(s) by responding to this
one. Enjoy...
_______________________________________________
Towards the end of Parshat Vayeira, Avraham is instructed to offer his son
Yitzchak (Isaac) as a sacrifice to G-d. Avraham had been promised a large
number of offspring through Yitzchak, but he still planned to do as he was
instructed, despite the apparent contradiction. On his way up the
mountaintop, the Torah relates the only recorded conversation between
Avraham and Yitzchak (22:7-8). At the center of this conversation where
Avraham tells Yitzchak that he is the offering, Yitzchak calls to his
father, and his father responds, “hineni” – “I am here for you, my son.”
Rabbi David Fohrman points out that Avraham’s response to his son is the
same word he used when G-d initiated this task by calling out for Avraham,
and Avraham responded, “here I am” (22:1). It also happens to be the same
word Avraham uses when the angel calls out to prevent him from going
through with his action, with Avraham again responding, “here I am”
(22:11). Avraham wasn’t just there, and he wasn’t just going through the
motions requested of him. He was all in; he was present and fully engaged
with G-d, his son, and anyone around him.
Being there for others means being mindful of what makes them happy, their
challenges and fears, and, most importantly – knowing what they need to
hear and when they need to hear it.
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the week:
"Your mind is a garden, your thoughts are the seeds. You can grow
flowers...or weeds."