Some Chizuk in the Koach of Tefillah

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  • #608448
    WIY
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    Rabbi Label Lam

    The Key To Something More

    In order to get a perspective on the Chanukah story (my addition: I know its Pesach now but the message is for all year round) it might be helpful to look through the prism of two Chanukah-like stories that are really the same. Allow me to explain.

    It was a Saturday afternoon, a Shabbos, and his friend like many others who live unaware of the laws of Shabbos, found himself at the beach for a long afternoon of frolic and fun. As the day was winding down he packed up his stuff and made his way to the car. He reached into his pocket for the keys but came up empty. So he searched the other pants pocket and became concerned as realized the keys were not there either. His wife just shrugged when asked if she had the keys.

    They walked back to the place where their blanket had been, turned over the trash can and retraced their steps a few more times before deep panic set in. All the cars had already left the parking lot. The sun was a fiery ball setting over the Mediterranean Sea and soon they would be standing there in darkness.

    In a fit of madness and desperation this man began to walk across the beach to the ocean. (Uri got up from his chair with a dramatic flair to act out the next episode.) He waded out into the sea up to his thighs and cried to the heaven with all his being, “Elochim! Elochim! Give me my keys!” Just at that moment, amazingly, the fellow became aware that there were his keys floating atop the water and touching his leg. He returned the car shaken and that night after Shabbos gave a call to his old friend Uri, asking, “Where should I begin…Kashrus….Tefillin…Shabbos!?”

    Now if that story sounds farfetched and on the other side of the ocean, I heard the same story here in the New York area. A young family who had recently started observing Torah and Mitzvos also registered their children in Yeshiva a few months before this story happened. The father had taken his children and a few others out to a large park in Riverdale, after school for some recreation before homework dinner and bed.

    We ought not to be too surprised that such an event can happen. We say thrice daily in prayer the words of King David in Psalm 145, “Hashem is close to all those who call Him, all who call to Him in truth.” The answer is different when the call is a call of truth. In the Chanukah story we find a few good men able to overcome distant odds due to the sincerity of their mission.

    When any part of hidden goodness is revealed even under pressure, and the heart becomes pure with purpose, the response can be dramatic. Nothing is lost in Hashem’s world. The A-lmighty can find anyone and anything; a jar of oil, a job, a kid, or a set of keys. So when what the person seeks most urgently is delivered magically to his hands-he may have actually found the key to something more.

    http://torah.org/learning/dvartorah/5762/chanukah.html

    #934400
    SaysMe
    Member

    wow. Very nice piece. Thanks for sharing

    #934401
    twisted
    Participant

    rabbi twisted’s favorite, loosely translated from Sforno Breshis18;12

    “and Sarah laughed” because she thought the statement of the angel was only a blessing from a prophet, and as in the case of Elisha, and not a true prophecy or directive of the Holy One blessed be He. For what is impossible for the aged is not achieved through the blessing of any prophet, indeed the return of youth after old age is alike to the revival of the dead, which can only happen through a directive of the Holy One, or through a prayer which merits grace (chen) from Him.

    #934402
    a mamin
    Participant

    WIY: Thank you!

    #934403
    WIY
    Member

    You are welcome!

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