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LEVITICUS — 25:23 srrangers

LEV1024 Trust in God when alone. Every person is necessarily in one of two situations: either he is a stranger or he lives among family and friends. If he is a stranger, he should, whenever he feels lonely, find companionship in God and, in his condition as a stranger, places trust in Him. He should bear in mind that the soul is also a stranger in this world, and the inhabitants of the earth are like strangers on it, as it says in Scripture: “For to Me you are strangers and temporary residents” (Vayikra 25:23). He should think of how anyone who has relatives will, in a short while, be left a solitary stranger; neither relative nor child will help him, not one of them will accompany him. He should also consider that he is freed from the heavy burden of supporting relatives and fulfilling obligations toward them, and regard this as one of the blessings the Creator has bestowed upon him. For if he is busy with secular interests and providing for his material needs, his labors are lighter without wife or child, and their absence means rest for him and is beneficial to him. And if he is concerned about his latter end, his mind is undoubtedly clearer and freer when he is in a state of solitude.

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LEVITICUS — 26:3 if

LEV1106 In how many ways should a person hold himself to an accounting before God? I say that there are a multitude of ways in which to make such an accounting. Of these, I will point out thirty. They can clarify to a person what he owes God, if he will bring them to mind and undertake to reflect on them and remember them always. Reflecting on compliance and noncompliance. … 6. A person should make an accounting when he senses in himself an inclination to rebel against the Creator and break His covenant. He should reflect and meditate on all that he has perceived, with his senses, of the world's roots and branches, of its simple elements and complex beings, of that which is above and that which is below--how they all exist by God's word and keep His covenant. Has he ever seen any of them deviate from the restraining bond of God’s service, rebel against His word, or break His covenant? Imagine [what would happen] if one of them were to violate God's covenant: man would cease to exist! For example, if one of the elements were to violate God's covenant and change its nature, or if the earth were to leave the center and the waters of the ocean were to flood out, bursting their bounds and engulfing the Earth's surface-- would a man be left on the face of the earth? Even more wonderful is the case of one's own physical organs. If they were to violate God's covenant [with them] vis-a-vis man-- for example, if organs that are naturally mobile were to become immobile, or those [naturally] immobile were to become mobile; or if the senses did not supply man with what they were appointed to bring to him--then his constitution would break down, his structure would come apart, and his control fail. How, then, can a man not be ashamed to violate his Creator’s covenant in a world that has not violated God's covenant in his regard; when he does so with the help of organs and limbs-- appointed by God to serve and support him--that have not violated God's covenant in his regard? Consider the following analogy. Let us say that there was a king who ordered a group of his servants to ferry one of his ministers, with the utmost care, over a mighty river to a certain place at a fixed time. The ling then ordered the minister to do certain things for them, in that situation and at that time. The servants followed the king's order in regard to the minister, but the minister neglected to execute the king’s order in regard to them. One of the servants then said to the minister: “You who neglect the king's command, do you not fear that one of us will act toward you as you have acted, and will disobey the king's order to take care of you, as you have disregarded his order concerning us? [Are you not afraid that] you will fall into this mighty river and die a cruel death? Correct your error by repenting and begging forgiveness; because the king ordered us to neglect your safety in the event that you neglected his order concerning us.” The minister awoke from his negligence and rectified his error. And you, my brother--reflect [for a moment]: Has any one of your organs or limbs ever failed to comply with the Creator’s instructions concerning you, when you wish to use it? Surely you know that the Creator has stipulated in His faithful Torah that if you serve Him, everything in the world will be at your disposal and command; but if you defy His word, everything will defy your will. This is clearly stated in parashas Im B’chukkosay Telechu [“If you follow My laws,” Vayikra 26:3ff.) and in other passages.

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LEVITICUS — 26:41 uncircumcised

LEV1142 You possess many different qualities ... two... are pride and humility. Pride and haughtiness are in place when meeting those who deny God and those who turn away from Him. Do not be humble or meek before them, lest you appear to justify them and incline toward their corrupt views; rather, unleashed pride and haughtiness, to indicate your opposition to their views and your displeasure with them, as you learn from the story of Mordechai and Haman. Humility is in place when you meet a person who is pious and pure, God-fearing, learned in His Torah, and devoted in His service; or [when meeting] a person who has shown you favor and kindness, to whom you are indebted and must make a repayment-- and how much more so if his favors [toward you] are so numerous and great that you cannot make him a return for them; or when accepting upon yourself God's judgment, as it is written “If then their uncircumcised heart is humbled and they accept their punishment” (Vayikra 26:41).

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LEVITICUS — 26:44 covenant

LEV1146 If a person in our own times would like to witness something similar to these [miraculous] events, let him look candidly at our position among the nations since the beginning of the Exile, and at our orderly condition in their midst, though we disagree with them in our beliefs and practices, as they well know. He will see that, in regard to standard of living and subsistence, our situation is close to theirs, and that in times of war and conflict, it may even be better than theirs. He will see that their middle class and villagers toil more than the middle and poor classes among us. This is as we were promised by our Creator, may He be exalted: “Yet for all that, when they are in their enemies’ land, I will not so abhor them and be disgusted with them as to destroy them and break My covenant with them” (Vayikra 26:44) ; As Ezra said: “Though we are servants, God has not abandoned us in our servitude” (Ezra 9:9); And as it says: “Had it not been for God, Who was for us, let Israel now say; had it not been for God, Who was for us, when men rose up against us” (Tehillim 124:1-2), and the rest of the psalm. In the gate on assuming the service of God, I will, with the help of the Almighty, elaborate sufficiently on the abundant favors God has bestowed on us in His Torah which He has given to us.

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NUMBERS — 12:1 against

NUM96 If, among your colleagues, there is one who is more advanced than you in the service of God, whose deeds are better than yours, and who endeavors to draw closer to God more than you do, the evil inclination will try to incite you against that person and will say to you: “Any manifestation of diligence in God's service on the part of someone beside you underscores your own deficiency. Were it not for that individual, you would appear, to both man and God, more righteous than any of your contemporaries. Incite against him, envy and hate him. Search for his defects and anything contemptible in him. Lie in wait to discover his failings, and keep track of his mistakes. Call attention to them as best you can, and discredit him on their account. If you can spread slander about him, to diminish his reputation among the people, do so.” Answer it by saying, “How shall I despise one whom God loves, disparage one whom the Creator praises? If I am too lazy to fulfill God's service as he does, should I also hate he who fulfills it? That is no way to repay the Creator, make He be exalted, for what I owe Him! Rather, it is my duty, for love of Him, to love those who love Him; And, out of honor for Him, to honor those who honor Him, as it is written: ‘He honors those who revere God’ (Tehillim 15:4). You know what happened to Miriam in the narrative beginning, ‘Miriam and Aharon spoke against Moshe...’ (Bemidbar 12:1), and what happened to Korach and his party when they were envious of Moshe and Aharon, and drew near to God.”

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