B"H
 
Chabad of Sunny Isles Beach
17555 Atlantic Blvd. (ground floor King David)
January 24, 2008   Shvat 17, 5768
 
A BIT OF WIT

Morris went to his Rabbi for some needed advice. "Rabbi, tell me is it proper for one man to profit from another man's mistakes?"

"No Morris, a man should not profit from another's man mistakes" answered the rabbi.

"Are you sure Rabbi?"

"Of course, I'm sure, in fact I'm positive" exclaimed the Rabbi

"Ok, Rabbi, if you are so sure, how about returning the two hundred dollars I gave you for marrying me to my wife.?

ASK THE RABBI

Dear Rabbi

 I nearly died this week. I was stuck in an elevator for six hours, with absolutely no contact to the outside world. For the last two hours I was lying exhausted not eh floor gaping for air. Finally, I heard some noise and an arm reached in through the doors and helped pull me out. Thank G-d I am fine now, but I am trying to find some meaning in my experience. What was this supposed to teach me?

 Answer:

 What a horrendous experience. I am sure many thoughts flew through your head during those six hours. At least it was only six hours - I know people who have been stuck in an elevator for years.

 Our inner life is made up of two periods - we spend some of our life on level ground, and we spend some time in an elevator. There are times when we are on solid ground, comfortable in who we are and sure of our direction, clear in our goals and secure in our identity. We are at a comfortable spiritual level, and see no reason to move.

 But after a while coasting on one level we are ready to move up to a higher place. These are the times when, either by our own choice or by force of circumstance, we enter the elevator. We leave the solid ground of where we were and start moving from one level to another.

 The only way to move up is to enter a temporarily insecure place, a moving and unstable state, where there is an element of risk, and sometimes in order to go up you must first go down. To truly graduate from one level to another, your present state has to be shaken up, your current security has to be taken away and you must reinvent yourself. When life takes an unexpected turn and you find yourself in unfamiliar territory, when your complacency is shattered and you are faced with new challenges that your previous self is not equipped to face, you're forced to dig deeper within the wellsprings of your soul and find a new you.

 Not everyone knows how to do this. Sometimes we get stuck in the elevator. We can't bring ourselves to break with the past, don't feel confident enough to embrace the future, and so remain in a limbo state, neither here nor there, between one level and another, never taking the plunge and moving on. We may be stuck in a past relationship, refusing to accept that it's over, so we never really become open to a new relationship; or we may be too entangled with our parents to be able to mature into an independent adult; or trapped in past hurts that don't allow us to trust again; or wishing we were young and not accepting that we are now old; or full of regrets of what could have, should have and would have been if only we did this or that.

 Until you realise that there is no could have, should have or would have, you will never get to the next level. You are today exactly where you are supposed to be, and all you have experienced in the past is the prelude to your next move. If that next move is a step upwards to the next level, then everything that led to it is redeemed.

 You were trapped in an elevator. You got out. This means you are ready to break through the ghosts of your past and move to a new spiritual level. There is a hand reaching out to help you. Grab it and start the next chapter of your life.

JEWISH YOUTUBE

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Kabbalat Shabbat
5:45 pm
 
Morning Services
9:30 am
Followed by a gourmet kiddush
 
Evening Services
5:20 pm
 
Shabbat Ends
6:35 pm
 
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8:00 am
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Tuesday Senior's Class
10:30 - 11:30 am
Israel: The Land & the Spirit
 
Thursday Torah Studies
8:00 - 9:00 pm
With Rabbi Baron Delivered in English
 
Thursday Parsha Class 
9:00 pm
With Rabbi Yehuda Delivered in Hebrew
 
Friday Torah Studies
1:00 - 2:00 pm
With Rabbi Baron Delivered in English

Mazal Tov!

 
Mazal Tov
to Steve and Stacy Magadov on the birth of a baby boy
 

Mazal Tov

to Antonio and Linda from Blake Roses on the birth of a new Grandson.  The Bris will be on Thursday morning following Shachris (morning services)

LAST CHANCE to RESERVE Singles Shabbaton

singles dinner
 
at 5:45 PM Services
Followed by dinner at 6:30 PM
Cost:$9.00
at Chabad of Sunny Isles Beach

To reserve call Mike 786-223-6777 or www.chabadSIB.org

 

Next Week's Torah Studies Class

 

 
 
Mishpatim: The Four Custodians
 
This lesson will trace the classical law of the four shomrim-the four types of custodians outlined in the Mishnah-to their original sources in the verses of this week's Torah portion. We will demonstrate that it is impossible to derive the respective degrees of liability in Jewish law without access to both the Oral and the Written Torah. After defining each type of custodian and clarifying their varying degrees of liability in the case of a loss, we will examine the spiritual meaning behind these laws. In the process we will discover two fundamental attitudes to life and G-d, which translate into four archetypal relationships between Man, the Creator, and His creation.
 
Thursday, January 31st
8:00-9:00 pm
or
Friday, February 1st
1:00-2:00 pm
 
at Chabad of Sunny Isles Beach

New JLI Course Starts In February

BEYOND BELIEF

Reflections on Jewish Faith, Reason and Experience
Our beliefs color the way we see the world and helps us to make sense of the inevitable challenges that confront us.
 
Beyond Belief is designed to help you take a closer look at how Jewish beliefs can help bring meaning to your life and guide your choices.
 
Class Starts Tuesday, February 5th at 7:00 PM and continues for six weeks.

Parsha In A Nutshell

Moses' father-in-law, Jethro, hears of the great miracles which G-d performed for the people of Israel, and comes from Midian to the Israelite camp, bringing with him Moses' wife and two sons. Jethro advises Moses to appoint a hierarchy of magistrates and judges to assist him in the task of governing and administrating justice to the people.

The Children of Israel camp opposite Mount Sinai, where they are told that G-d has chosen them to be His "kingdom of priests" and "holy nation." The people respond by proclaiming, "All that G-d has spoken, we shall do."

On the sixth day of the third month (Sivan), seven weeks after the Exodus, the entire nation of Israel assembles at the foot of Mount Sinai. G-d descends on the mountain amidst thunder, lightning, billows of smoke and the blast of the shofar, and summons Moses to ascend.

G-d proclaims the Ten Commandments, commanding the people of Israel to believe in G-d, not to worship idols or take G-d's name in vain, to keep the Shabbat, honor their parents, and not to murder, commit adultery, steal, bear false witness or covet another's property. The people cry out to Moses that the revelation is too intense for them to bear, begging him to receive the Torah from G-d and convey it to them.

E-TORAH

 So what is the definition of a well-balanced individual? One who has a chip on both shoulders!

In Exodus we read the Ten Commandments. The great Revelation at Sinai saw Moses come down the mountain bearing the Tablets of stone with the Ten Commandments engraved on them. As we know, the two tablets were divided into two columns--the mitzvahs between humankind and G-d, and the commandments governing our human relations. The one side was devoted to our responsibilities to G-d, such as faith and Shabbat, while the other side dealt with our inter-personal duties, e.g. no murder, adultery and thievery.

The message that so many seem to forget is that both these areas are sacred, both come directly from G-d and both form the core of Torah law and what being Jewish is all about. We must be well-balanced Jews. We may not take the liberty of emphasizing one tablet over the other. A healthy, all-around Jew lives a balanced, wholesome life and is, as the Yiddish expression goes, Gut tzu G-tt un gut tzu leit--good to G-d and good to people. If you focus on one side of the tablets to the detriment of the other, you walk around like a hinke'dike, a handicapped Jew with a bad limp.

A good Jew is a well-balanced Jew. This means that it's not good enough to be frum ("religious") on the ritual side of Judaism and free and easy on the mentschlichkeit side. You've got to be honest and decent and live with integrity so people will respect you, too. If you are "religious" towards to G-d but not fair with people, you can become a fanatical fundamentalist blowing up people in the name of G-d! The same G-d who motivates and inspires us to be G-dly and adhere to a religious code also expects us to be a mentsch. There is no doubt whatsoever that it is, in fact, a mitzvah to be a mentsch.

But neither can we neglect the right side of the tablets. A good Jew cannot simply be a democrat, a humanitarian. Otherwise, why did G-d need Jews altogether? It is not enough for a Jew to be a nice guy. Everyone must be nice. All of humankind is expected to behave honestly and honorably. To be good, moral, ethical and decent is the duty of every human being on the planet. A good Jew must be all of that and then some. He or she must be a good person and also fulfill our specific Jewish responsibilities, the mitzvahs that are directed to Jews which are uniquely Jewish.

I recently came across an interesting statistic on the Ten Commandments. The right-hand tablet bearing the duties to G-d consists of 146 words. The left-hand tablet listing our human responsibilities only has 26 words. Yet, tradition has it that both tablets were filled with writing. There were no big, blank spaces. So how did 26 words equal the space of 146 words?

Well, anybody who uses a computer or word processor knows the answer. You simply adjust the font size. You can type in 10 point size or 24 point size. Take your pick. So if we apply that same principle to the tablets we have a simple solution. The 26 words on the left, reflecting our moral and ethical human responsibilities were simply a bigger size than the 146 words on the right reflecting our G-dly, religious responsibilities. So we must never underestimate the importance of the human relations side of the Ten Commandments.

Then again, just so we don't start limping, the very same G-d who said we should be nice also said we should have faith, keep Shabbat (yes, it is one of the Big Ten), kosher, mikvah and the rest of it. In fact, when people say to me, "Rabbi, I'm not that religious but I do keep the Ten Commandments," I often wonder whether they are actually aware that keeping Shabbat is Commandment No. 4.

As we read the Ten Commandments this week, let us resolve to keep our Jewish balance, not to limp or become "one-armed bandits." Please G-d, we will live full, wholesome, rich and well-balanced Jewish lives. Amen.

 
Shabbat Shalom,

Rabbi Yisrael and Toby Baron
Chabad of Sunny Isles Beach