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RABBI'S THOUGHTS: Vayeitzei
Don't Look Down
In this week's Torah portion, Jacob has his famous dream in which he sees
a vision of a ladder. The feet of
the ladder are planted firmly on the ground and the head reaches the heavens,
withangels ascending and
desceding. G-d is Infinite, yet He created a finite world with finite beings in
it. How do we reconcile the finite with
the Infinite? Just like the ladder in Jacob's dream, we are provided with our
own ladder - the mystical Zohar text
tells us Jacob's ladder is a metaphor for prayer. Through prayer (and the
performance of the Torah's
Commandments), stage by stage, rung by rung, we are connecting the finite,
material world with the Infinite. The
base may be rooted on the earth, the finite, but the highest step reaches the
Heavens, the Infinite.
Life is compared to a ladder. The deciding
factor is not how high you have reached, but which way you are
going - up or down. Better to be at the bottom yet ascending than at the top
but descending. A story is told of a
very smart child who, despite being very young, had managed to climb very high
up a talltree. When his father
asked him how he had managed it, he told him "simple - I didn't look down".
It is well-known that one way to avoid or at
least decrease the fear of heights is "not to look down". So too, in
our lives, by always aspiring to go one better, looking towards the future and
not looking down, backwards, into the
past, the task of moving on to the next rung of the ladder becomes far less
formidable.
The Jewish people, scattered throughout the
world, are charged with the sacred mission of being a light unto
all the Nations, of bringing light to every corner of the world - a sense of
higher purpose, a higher set of values. G-d
tells Jacob "... your seed shall be as the dust of the earth; and you shall
burst forth to the west, and to the east, and to the north, and to the south...
and through you... all shall be blessed."
May we all be blessed with peace and prosperity.
Shabbat Shalom
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