Interesting articles/presentations


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Making Judaism Work

Published on June 12, 2006

by Rabbi Berel Wein

One of the questions that Jews who are observant of Torah law and ritual constantly face is: “If Torah is all that it is supposed to be, then why are there many Jews who are observant but are otherwise immoral, bad people?”

I always flippantly answer that one should never confuse Judaism with Jews. Torah is pure, pristine, divine and moral beyond description. Jews are human beings, frail of body and will, buffeted by a hostile world and an inimical society. Therefore, there are failures in living up to high ideals. It becomes difficult to control one’s passions and desires and the terrible temptations that life offers are omnipresent.

But in my heart I am aware that this is an insufficient, irrelevant answer. It is really only a non sequitur, an avoidance of the basic issue. For why does Torah observance not create a better person automatically? What is the missing ingredient that prevents Torah observance from taking hold of the entire person and elevating him or her? How is the believing, observant Jew to deal with the gap between the promised ideal and the harsh reality that we see around us?

In the midst of the anguish of my recent bereavement mourning the loss of my beloved wife, who was the type of person the Torah had in mind and lived up to the Torah’s ideal in her everyday life, I had an insight into this issue, which I am about to share with you.

The Talmud itself states that “Torah, for those who merit it, becomes an elixir of life. Torah, for those who lack such merit, becomes a potion of poison and death.”

The Talmud does not specify nor define the merit involved. It is obvious that the Talmud did not treat this merit as a random gift, a chance happening. Rabbi Moshe ben Nachman, the Ramban, following the lead of this idea of the Talmud, states that a person can be Torah observant, operating within the technical rules and rituals of the Torah, and nevertheless be an awful, obscene, despicable person. He therefore challenges Jews to go a step beyond the letter of the law and attempt to infuse true discipline, care for others and holiness into our lives.

His formula is that even those acts of life which are completely permissible to us must carry holiness and dedication with them. But exalted as these ideas are, they still leave us with the gnawing question of why Torah observance does not automatically raise a person to holy heights.

The Gaon of Vilna, Rabbi Eliyahu Kramer, provides us with a glimmer of light in understanding this vexing issue. Moshe, in his final words to the Jewish people, described Torah as the blessing of rain and dew. The Gaon stated that rain and dew fall indiscriminately on the earth. Rain makes flowers and bountiful food crops grow. It also makes weeds, thorns and thistles grow. Whatever seed is in the ground, good or otherwise, is nurtured by rain. He therefore says that for people who train themselves and are trained by their parents and home environment from their earliest youth to be good people — before they are even old enough to study and observe Torah — the Torah will then be an elixir of life. The rain will create good crops.

However, for those who do not have that meritorious training as a basis for their entire persona, the Torah will, like rain on fields of thorns and weeds, be a poisonous and negative force in their lives.

We treasure knowledge of Torah. Our schools teach subjects and ideas. But if the basic personality of goodness is not first created within the child, we will be witness continually to the dysfunction of many in the Torah world. The rabbis therefore wisely stated that “good traits and behavior patterns — derech eretz — must precede the study of Torah.” Morals, probity, honesty, modesty, care and tolerance for others, self-worth and self-discipline, all must precede Torah study. Only then will the beneficial rain of Torah study and ritual observance create the desired Torah person and society. This should be the aim and curriculum of our homes and schools. Knowledge, by itself, can be a dangerous commodity. Planting the right seeds will ensure the beneficial effects of the Torah’s rain upon us.

Author Biography:
Rabbi Berel Wein is a noted scholar, historian, speaker and educator who is admired the world over for his books and cassette tapes — particularly on Jewish history. Rabbi Wein

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The Bodhi Mind

Published on April 15, 2006

The Bohdi Mind
by Br. Michael Day 21.03.2006, changed 31.03.2006

The source of all life, the centre of all things, this wonder we all have in our Heart as a free gift. The act of attaining to this Bodhi Mind, is so refined, the movement is so slight, that very few ever attain this blessed state of purity, re-aligning our attention away from the inner talk, the thoughts, and resting on the space the stillness, we become the witness, the listener. We are no longer controlling, we are accepting that this blessed purity is wise, and allowing our attention to listen to its message of Love.

In this refined consciousness, we find that the thinking mind is slightly coarser, and slightly out of tune with nature, with reality, and we can see that because of this slight difference, all actions from the thinking mind are subjected to birth and death, in other words suffering.

As in the same way when we are at a symphony concert, we stop chattering to listen to the music in its full beauty and wonder, in this same way in deep meditation, deep attention, listening we can find our original nature in the stillness, by becoming aware of what are the thoughts and what are the spaces between them, the stillness, and moving our attention from the thinking mind to the Mind of Bodhi. Then we can see life’s beauty, in its wonder and fullness.

When we find this jewel of wisdom all our actions done from this place are karma free, there are no reactions to us, so that we can live a blessed life unhindered and free of suffering. It demands all of us, and gives us all of everything in return.

We can talk all day, but what have we said, we can listen to talk all day, yet what have we heard. We can listen to a symphony and lift our minds to Heaven, and then in the evening we simply return to silence the here and now, the greater Heaven on earth.

The Bodhi Mind is not a state of mind, it is simple awareness, clearly perceiving reality. It is not something that we attain, it is when we realise its utter un-attainablity, that we find it.

This article is part of a series of articles by Br. Michael Day which have been published on PrayerFolk.Net


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A Thankful Heart Is the Way to Happiness

Published on March 8, 2006

A Thankful Heart Is the Way to Happiness

By Masaru Emoto

Why do people go through life looking for happiness? Dogs and cats look for food and comfort, but they certainly don’t go to all the trouble that people do in their continual search for happiness. I suppose the reason is that we are the only ones who can align ourselves with the hado of happiness.

Many years ago, I had a discussion with Dr. Ravi Batra, a well-known international economist, and he said something that has stuck with me:

Why do you think people continually search for happiness? The reason is because we people have a link to unlimited existence. But many of us make a serious mistake. We set up conditions for happiness based on riches and fame, momentary pleasures, and things that are limited and always changing.

There are those who are rich beyond most of our imaginations, and yet they continue to want more as they strive in vain to find happiness. The reason it’s in vain is because they are looking to find unlimited happiness in limited money and riches.

Unless we can become one with the unlimited existence, we will never find true happiness. This requires that we raise our consciousness.

All that can be seen with the human eye is of this limited world. Sooner or later, the material trappings will end, and as long as that is how we define happiness, our hearts will always feel hollow.

Of course I understand that casting aside all desire is not possible or even advisable. In fact, desire is not what’s preventing us from finding happiness. An appropriate amount of desire is needed to make people strive for something better, and it’s what made it possible for human society to rise to its current level. The problem arises when we become slaves to our desires. Our modern society operates on the ability to stir up desire in the masses.

It’s no easy task to find happiness in a society established on insatiable desire. So what is it that we need to do to escape never-ending desire and find happiness? The answer is to have a thankful heart.

More than ever, we live in a time when love and appreciation is truly needed. And I think the right ratio for appreciation and love is 2:1 — the exact ratio of hydrogen to oxygen in the H2O molecule!

We have seen where words of appreciation and love result in crystals of indescribable beauty. There are no conditions needed for appreciation. We can be thankful for life and for our freedom to move about.

When you align your soul with the hado of appreciation and love, a small drop of happiness will seep into your heart and spread throughout your body. This will link you to the vibration of happiness, and happiness will become a part of your daily life. And this is the secret for finding happiness right now wherever you are.

Reprinted from The Secret Life of Water by Masaru Emoto. Published by Atria Books. December 2005;
For more information, please visit www.masaru-emoto.net


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