Rabbi Akiva Said
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Rabbi Akiva said it is THE fundamental rule of The Torah: "Ve'ahavta le'reacha kamocha" ("Love thy adjoin as thyself").??Known to numerous as "The Golden Rule", Hillel later restated it as: "Whatever is hateful to you, do no do unto others."(Leviticus 19:18)
Whichever version you favor does not matter to this writer. What does care me, whatever, is the illusive simplicity of "The Golden Rule". Can you alternatively, for that matter,
womens timberland shoes, anyone of us honestly say: 'While true I do not know the guy person being next to me, I regard him and all that which is his as if it were my own?' Ponder that honestly for several moments.
Does it still seem as effortless as ahead? It shouldn't because "living the Golden Rule" requires having reached a spiritual class to which maximum folk tin only aspire.
Is it understandable if we throw up our hands in frustration? "Forget about it. I've obtained enough trouble catching care of myself." The Jewish response is a resounding 'No' because we believe the inherent trouble of reaching a current goal does not pardon us from making a good belief exertion.
I have understood Ariel ben Avraham-known by his friends as "Arie"-for ten annuals and have always base him to be one engaging personality about whom I have formerly written: (Http://triblocal.com/skokie/community/stories/2010/10/great-storytellers-are-not-everyday-listening-to-yehoshua-ariel-ben-avraham-yoel/)
I refer to Arie as a "religious Jew" but with the caveat namely he does not do the entities religious Jews routinely do; for example, Arie does not go to shul regularly. I thought it either a agreeable motif and an appropriate opportunity to invite him to commemorate my son's tenth yahrzeit by my synagogue. When he showed up the next a.m. for services,
nike dunk low, it marked the 1st time he?would be?in an orthodox shul in more than fifty years.?
The memory of my late son Ben,
cheap hollister shirts, whom Arie not knew, brought him back to his roots even if the experience lasted fewer than an hour.
The Creator formed man's life to be crisp, fleeting and as distant from decease as the sum of space one respiration occupies. Jewish tradition teaches us to strive toward G-dliness by agreeable better human beings,
bose headphones, better Jewish human beings. We can achieve this via the vehicle of "teshuva"-returning to one's roots, "straightening out that which is sinuous" in our lives although the first steps taken may seem negligible.
This is maybe how we can best define Arie as a "religious Jew", as an who uses "teshuva" as a conveyance to reach "ve'ahavta le'reacha kamocha" (love thy neighbor as thyself) that makes him the human being, the Jew he is and may already transform.?
May we all become the human each of us possesses the potential to be. Oh, and one more thing: the next time you're going to criticize your fellow for his shortcomings, continue to the nearest mirror and introduce yourself.
Alan D. Busch
revised 12/7/10?
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