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ב"ה

Matot 5768 - July 25, 2008

Living
When Do We Stop Believing?

She's only seven years old, and the doctors say she has lost her battle with cystic fibrosis, that she will live only a few more weeks. But for some reason, nobody has stopped praying...
Help! I Don't Want to Turn Into My Father!

Sure, there are all those events that happened, the weather, geography, DNA. But we are the ones to string them together with meaning and direction. There is no story to life, until we tell it...
Back on Track

They'd married less than a year ago, following seven months of story-book courtship. It was a match made in Heaven. Hell, I heard him mutter...
The $499 Dilemma

His cousin has one, his friends have it, but we have no intention of buying him one. How will I explain it to him?
Seasons
Tammuz—Time for Transformation

Without a doubt, we have experienced tremendous hardship and pain throughout our history—more so, perhaps, than other nations. But Jewish history is anything but tragic . . .
The Unintentional Intentional Sin

A sin can only be rectified if the guilty person recognizes his guilt. We suffer most from our "unknown" mistakes.
Parshah
The Parshah in a Nutshell
The laws of vow annulment, war against Midian and the allocation of spoils. Two tribes request land east of the Jordan.
Twelve Sticks

The stick, it can be said, is a piece of tree that has paid the price of leaving home. The stick, it can also be said, is one who has reaped the rewards of leaving home . . .
The Moses Within

The battle against Midian described in the Torah is a crucial struggle which continues in our own time...
Priorities and Price Tags

A fellow who somehow got himself locked in a department store over a holiday weekend decided to vent his frustrations by swapping price tags on the merchandise....
Balancing the Spiritual and the Practical

Sometimes the question is raised whether the Torah scholar is “escaping” from the real world.
The Betrothed

The laws governing the annulment of vows distinguishes between an arus ('betrothed") and a baal ("husband"). On a deeper level, these laws describe two modes of spiritual life
A chassidic melody fortifies hope and trust, brings joy, and places the entire household and family in a state of light.
— Hayom Yom, Tamuz 22
Print Magazine

Due to the limitations of your reality, some of your best friends can enter only incognito.

In fact, the really big ones sometimes sneak in disguised as ugly monsters and vicious enemies. Otherwise, the guards at the gate would never permit them entry.

These are the events optimists call “blessings in disguise.”

Here’...

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