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DEUTERONOMY — 11:21 multiplied

DEUT540 For ultimately, long life is of itself no great blessing, if the added days are filled only with boredom and trivia and old age's increasing aches and pains. Torah brings a richer existence, infused with intimations of immortality in the radiance of the Divine Presence, to make the days a prelude to life in the world-to-come, for which the Torah is the ultimate passport. Finite time brings a mellifluous sense of infinity. In this sense does the second paragraph of Sh'ma bid us keep the Divine precepts faithfully "that your days… may be multiplied… as the days of the heavens above the earth" [this verse].

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DEUTERONOMY — 13:6 exterminate

DEUT614 R. Me'ir said: whoever occupies himself with the study of Torah for its own sake merits many things; and not only that, but the entire world is worthwhile because of him.… It [Torah] clothes him with humility and reverence, and prepares him to be righteous, pious, upright, and faithful; Pirkei Avot, Perek VI, mishnah 1. R. Me'ir lists four such levels – for which Torah readies a person--in ascending order of achievement: the tzaddik is righteous; as the word might suggest, he always does the right thing, living simply and wholly within the law, never doing evil--but no more. The hassid goes beyond the letter of the law, doing more than is required of him. He will often forget his own interests, in order to help others. If a poor woman owes you five dollars, you have a right to demand payment. If you are a hassid, you will forget it (so the commentaries of R. Isaac of Toledo and R. Shem-tov ibn Shem-tov ibn Palquera, c. 1390-1430, on the sixth perek (published with R. Bahya's commentary, Jerusalem 1962), and Rashi to T.B. Shabbath 120a, s.v. חסידי) Yet the hassid, always going "beyond the law," may not always act wisely. It is splendid to forgo your own absolute rights for the sake of compassion. But the Talmud knows of another kind who goes beyond the law in religiosity: he might see a child drowning in the river and murmur, "As soon as I take off my t'fillin I will save him"--and by then the child has expired. Should a woman be drowning in the river, he might mutter, "It is not proper for me to gaze at her and save her." He, says the Talmud, is a hassid shoteh, a pious fool! (T.J. Sotah iii 4 (19a); T.B. 21b). And the Sages warn: "If an ignoramus is a hassid, do not live in his vicinity (T.B. Shabbath 63a; Seder Eliyahu Zuta xvi (ed. Friedmann, 4). The piety of the hassid is surely generally good; but without the plumbline of law and truth to keep him on an even keel, he may go off the deep end. At times the Torah may demand seeming irreligiosity of us, to save a life. And have we not heard of a "religious" policy of forgiving and entreating Heaven's forgiveness for those who injure or kill you? Here is a piety that would encourage villains to flourish. When dire wrong is done, our Written Torah commands: "you shall exterminate the evil from your mist" [this verse]. Punishment can discipline the guilty and protect the community. Therefore yashar, one who is upright, straightforward, ranks above the hassid. The center of his life is neither the rigid letter of the law nor a tendency to an extreme that goes beyond the bounds of reason and truth. He learns the spirit of the Torah, the Divine thought and will behind its sacred law; and this becomes a gyroscope which keeps his life in balance. Where the Torah's law is not absolute, he will go beyond it, in religiosity and compassion, but always in the Torah's spirit. Informed by the values behind Torah, he will remain upright, in its straightforward path.

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DEUTERONOMY — 14:22 tithes

DEUT688 In his Divine wisdom, Solomon counsels: "There is the one who thinks he becomes rich, yet has nothing; another thinks he impoverishes himself, yet has abundant wealth" (Proverbs 13:7). The fool who holds onto every penny he has ever made and thinks to so insure his wealth, deludes himself. He is lost in an unreal world of figures, calculations, bank-books. If he gives no charity, what will he accomplish in the world, with or apart from his wealth? What friends can he acquire? What mitzvoth will he take with him? On the other hand, the man who appears to impoverish himself by helping others to establish business, by supporting yeshivoth, by constantly giving for worthy causes--has incalculable riches that are irrevocably his. … Moreover, we know the teaching of the Talmud : Scripture bids us, [aser t'aser], literally, "Tithe shall you tithe." To our Sages this euphonious phrase echoed an invaluable directive from Heaven, implying a firm promise: "Give tithes in order that you may grow rich" [this verse, T.B. Shabbath 119a, Ta'anith 9a]. And the Talmud adds that though generally it is forbidden to put the Holy, Blessed One to the test, in this matter it is permitted: You may check to see if you will not indeed be blessed with much more than the "tithes" (i.e. the charity) you give. For we read in Scripture: "Bring every tithes into the storehouse… And thereby test Me, says the Lord of hosts, if I will not open for you the windows of heaven and pour down for you a blessing to overflowing" (Malachi 3;10. T.B. Ta'anith 9a).

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DEUTERONOMY — 14:25 convert

DEUT691 If you ponder the eternity at the end of life's road, and you realize that indeed "you can't take it with you," learn from Scripture's law to convert your wealth [this verse] into currency that you can take along. If a country will not allow your money out, you may solve the problem by exchanging it for diamonds or platinum bars. Here too, convert your assets into the kind of currency that lets you "bind up the money in your hand and go to the place which the Lord ... shall choose": Use your riches for Torah and good deeds. Support the Torah's scholars and their schools; spend for mitzvoth; give charity. Then you will not even have to take this currency along: it will be sent on ahead and deposited to your account to await your arrival.

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DEUTERONOMY — 15:10 give

DEUT786 We read in Scripture … "Give shall you give to him, and your heart shall not be grieved…" [this verse]. Rashi quotes the Midrash (Sifre) about the double verb: "Give shall you give--even a hundred times." People often use the expression, "Give till it hurts"; Scripture indicates that the more you give, the less it hurts! "Give … give" without stinting or counting, "and your heart will not be grieved." The more often you donate, the greater your sense of good accomplished, and the better you feel. Become a "veteran giver," and you will feel no pain, only a Divine gladness. Alas for the wicked man: he will not take even the first step.

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DEUTERONOMY — 15:11 within

DEUT812 In one verse of Scripture we read, "there will be no poor among you, for the Lord will surely bless you…" (Deuteronomy 15:4). Yet a bit later we find, "the poor will never cease out of the land" [this verse]. Perhaps the answer to the difficulty is that the first verse is not prophecy but a directive: "No matter what, let there be no poor man within you." [Hebrew בך -- AJL] As you view and appraise yourself, do not see a "poor man"; do not imagine yourself pitiable because the threat of poverty hovers over you and your "inadequate" earnings. The grudging evil eye that… with a miserly glance at your possessions fills you with misgivings, anxiety, or dread--let it be no part of you. If it is there, get rid of it.

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DEUTERONOMY — 20:19 trees

DEUT1020 Would you like assurance of the personal concern of Providence, that it will never consider you utterly worthless and insignificant? Become a holy part of a holy undertaking. Join your religious community. Become a vital part and partner of a project for the support and study of Torah. Make yourself an indispensable, irreplaceable "cog" in the system of the Almighty. In Scripture we read: "When you besiege a city a long time, in waging war against it to take it, you shall not destroy its trees… for you may eat of them; hence you shall not cut them down; for man is [as] the tree of the field" [this verse]. The prohibition applies only to fruit-bearing trees--"for you may eat of them"; they are not to be destroyed, says Scripture, even to help win a war--because they are like people. The metaphor bears us out, once we turn it around: Man is not to be destroyed, because he is a fruit-bearing tree. A human being is to be especially safeguarded from harm and destruction, Scripture indicates, when and if he "bears fruit" and contributes productively to a worthwhile community. The Torah signifies its protection for those who will nourish others, especially spiritually. Then see to it that the world of Torah and good deeds benefits from you.

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