Category Archives: Daily Dose Of Emuna

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True reward

September 4, 2014
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

Today’s daily dose is dedicated to the refuah shleimah of Dovid Leib ben Kayla. May Hashem shower him with a complete healing amongst all of those sick and suffering in Klal Yisrael, b’karov, b’rachamim, Amen.

Hashem ‘designed’ this world in such a way that the month of Elul is conducive with spiritual growth and strengthening our connection to Him. Certainly this month encourages us to pray at no end for our requests to be answered for the very best, yet the true reward gained from tefillot this month is hundredfold.

Genuine closeness to Hashem by far surpasses the reward of having our requests answered. The exalted feeling of knowing that we are personally being guided and cared for by the Supreme Authority of the World, Melech Malchei HaMelachim HaKadosh Baruch Hu, envelops us with a sense of tranquility and boundless inner joy.

The purpose of the Yomim Noraim is ‘Atah Horehta Lada’at ki Hashem Hu Elokim… (You have been shown, in order to know that Hashem is G-d….)” Tefillah is the means by which we implant this awareness. We inject the mindset that Hashem was, is and will always be with us particularly this month by intensifying our prayers. Communication is the means to mending any broken relationship.

It is a tremendous gift to be able to ‘talk’ to Hashem and express our inner feelings and thoughts to Him.  Speech is an expression of Malchut (Kingship); it enables us to ‘rule’ over our feelings.  We are better able to deal with our feelings by speaking and releasing them from within. The benefit of speaking to Hashem is double.  Firstly we empty out our burdens.  Secondly we implant the awareness that Hashem is with us, listening and caring about us in every way.

Call Out His Name

September 3, 2014
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

Today’s Daily Dose of Emuna is dedicated L’iluy nishmat R’Kehas ben R’Avraham Yitzchak z’l. May his neshama bask in the Divine radiance together with all of the tzaddikim who have departed from this world, Amen.

The culmination of the Yamin Noraim is Simchat Torah. It is customary to open the tefillot of Simchat Torah with the passuk (Devarim 4:35): “You have been shown, in order to know that Hashem is G-d; there is none else besides Him.” From here we learn that the entire purpose of the Chagim and all of our avodah is to implant into our consciousness ‘Ein Od Milvado.

The following parable describes the importance of remembering that Hashem is always with us:

A doctor was asked to work night shift in a hospital ward that cares for the terminally ill. He was fresh out of medical school. He was told that due to a shortage of doctors he would have to work his shift on his own. He was greatly concerned that he would not be able to properly tend to the patients on his own. When he aired his concerns to the head doctor the reply was, “Most probably it will be a quiet night. However if it becomes over whelming for you to handle, immediately call for assistance.”

From the onset of his shift he already experienced difficulty in tending to the needs of the sick. Patient after patient began to complain as the doctor lacked the medical knowledge to treat them and handle such dire illnesses on his own. As a result one of the patients died when he did not receive his vital medication in time.

The doctor was sued for medical negligence. His defense, “I performed my duty as a doctor with every bit of strength and care that I possessed. I gave my maximum to those patients. I ran from room to room, from floor to floor and didn’t rest the entire night. How can I be blamed for not having enough time to attend to the patient or for failing to make the right medical decisions? It was humanly impossible for me to do any more than I did.”

The judge then replied, “But weren’t you told to call for assistance in such a case where it became too much for you to handle alone? Who asked you to manage without help? The reason you are found guilty is because you didn’t ask for assistance as you were instructed to do in such a case.”

This is what Hashem will tell us on the Day of Judgment – “I understand that you faced many difficulties in life and it was challenging to cope with them. Who asked you to tackle them alone? Weren’t you taught that you could always reach out and ask Me for help – anytime, anywhere, no matter what? All you had to do was call out to Me, ‘I can’t handle it, I need Your help!’ I would have then come to your aide and directed you how to manage is such a situation.”

We cannot live our lives without Hashem in our lives. We do not have the strength or knowledge to choose which path is the correct. Therefore we are instructed to yell out, “Aba, please help!”

Ein Od Milvado – the reality that Hashem is always with us and there to help when we call His name is not just ‘Bubbly talk’. It is real. Hashem wants us to ask for help since He knows we cannot make it through life without Him!  That is one of the most important lessons of the High Holidays.  And of Jewish life…

Pure and Wholesome

September 2, 2014
Orit Esther Riter
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Elul is a time of special closeness – a desire to unite with Hashem. This month has the power to ignite within us a strong fiery passion to return to Hashem – a life of clarity and keen awareness that Ani L’dodi V’dodi Li (I am for my beloved and my beloved is for me).

A ‘Ba’al teshuva’ is defined as someone who ‘owns teshuva’. Teshuva is shaped by a desire to ascend spiritually, despite the inevitable downfalls of our past. Sefer Yirmiyahu (31:20) brings down: “Shuvy Bitulat Yisrael  (Return O virgin of Israel…”) After the teshuva process is completed, Ahm Yisrael returns to purity, a virgin incapable of being defiled. The Ramban ztk’l teaches that this indicates Hashem’s great love towards Knesset Yisrael. Hashem loves us and is ‘willing’ to give us a second chance and ‘waits’ until we make teshuva.

This teaching highlights the foundation of teshuva – the ability to start anew and rely on a second chance. When we embrace the Divine gift of teshuva, we reveal our innate pureness and all transgressions are completely eradicated, as though they never occurred. We return to our untarnished G-dly core like being reborn.

Klal Yisrael is Hashem’s bride. Elul reawakens the G-dly spark hidden within each of us by flooding us with feelings of yearning and the desire to reconnect with Hashem’s love. In the process of returning to our innocence, our mindset also shifts gear. We are motivated to look at life from a fresher perspective, with renewed enthusiasm. Our prayers, mitzvot and Torah study are injected with the freshness and excitement associated with anything new and novel. Like a newly married couple’s infatuation during their first year together, a complete teshuva process enables us to reignite our intense enchantment and love for Hashem.

Returning Home

September 1, 2014
Orit Esther Riter
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The basis of Torah is emuna in Hashem. Hashem awaits our return no matter what happens and despite our mistakes and deficiencies. Though it may be difficult to grasp intellectually and even emotionally, this concept of complete acceptance when we return represents emet Torah.

This month our relationship with Hashem takes a different turn – one of love weaved with reverence. Chodesh Elul holds tremendous power because it affects the entire following year. Generally, we are under the false impression that we deserve and have a right to everything we have and own. We become accustomed to our lives. For instance, our ability to see today leads me to assume we will see – and have a right to see – tomorrow. We presume that because Hashem has gifted us with life today, we deserve our life and our standard of living. Yet, this is falsehood in its truest form. We are constantly subject to Hashem’s endless compassion and care. For instance, Hashem owns our bodies to us and lends them to us every day because he trusts us and has mercy on us.

Though Hashem is close to us, we still ‘fear’ our impending judgment. This month is a time of great trepidation which should be used to motivate us to ‘return.’ Even if we don’t consciously grasp the idea of judgment or feel heartfelt fear, we are taught to create within ourselves a feeling of awe over the impending collective and individual decrees to be decided on Rosh Hashanah.

The days leading to Yom Kippur are known as Yemei Ratzon (the days of desire/true will). Implanting the desire to return from our erred roads and come back to Hashem is the main avodah of this important month. This month we open our hearts and plead, “Ha’Shiveinu Hashem Elecha v’Nashuva… (Help us return to You, and we shall return…).”

Yet, how can we practically achieve this level of awe and thus be motivated to return if we do not feel it? First, we can know there are two paths in front of us – a pathway to Gan Eden and a pathway to Gehinom. Second, we can actively and constantly remind ourselves of Hashem’s kindness, mercy and compassion by pointing out how much worse our lives could be. By acknowledging that we are ‘hanging’ by a rope, unsure of what the future has in store and reminding ourselves how every blessing can be taken away by Him in an instant, we build our desire to please our Aba and return to Him.

Names of wounded soldiers

August 8, 2014
Kayla Krauss
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Want to really help our soldiers on the front lines, those who have been wounded and Am Yisrael who are currently under fire?
The most important way to help is to open up your Tehillim and daven to Hashem with your whole heart.
Here are links to a printable list of around 200 of our wounded soldiers’ Hebrew names that you can say after you daven.

Updated 8.8.14

For English list click here.

For Hebrew list click here.

From Mourning to Morning

August 7, 2014
Orit Esther Riter

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BS’D

From Orit Esther Riter of the Daily Dose of Emuna

Tisha B’av is a day closely linked to negative events. We fast and observe laws of mourning by disconnecting from all physical and even mental pleasure in order to feel the pain of the absence of light in our lives.

The Holy Temple was a special place. The Divine Presence rested there and in spite of human limitations, we were able to connect to God. In fact, the entire world was able to have a close relationship with the Creator of the universe and bond with Him in a tangible way.

When the Holy Temple was destroyed, life in this world was shattered and filled with darkness. This obstruction of light serves as a barrier until today and disables us from directly feeling God’s love. However, even during the lowest point in Jewish history, God wishes to uplift the Jewish People by naming this month Av (Father). Although we may not directly see God, He is ‘implanted’ in the essence of this month.

Yet another fatherly embrace is bestowed onto us this month. We merit ascending from the saddest day of the Jewish calendar to the happiest day – the 15th of Av. This day is described in the Mishnah (Ta’anit) as “There are no happier days for Israel that the 15th of Av and Yom HaKippurim” – the day of finding one’s predestined soul mate.

The Sages teach that there are many connections that bridge Tisha b’Av to Tu b’Av – the 15th of Av:
1. On Tisha b’Av, the Mashiach is born. His soul is taught to comprise of all the souls of Israel. Just as a groom unites with his bride and carries her off to build a new life, so does the Mashiach uplift the Jewish people to unite with the Almighty.

2. Tisha b’Av reminds us of the gloom and destruction of a displaced people. There are three faces to the current exile: the Jewish people scattered among the nations, the Jewish people exiled among their fellow brethren, and the Jew feeling he is exiled with himself.
Tu b’Av is a time of joy and new beginnings. Respectively, it comes as a perfect counterpoint to confront the three fronts of exile: spirited love is the roadway to collective redemption, building a Jewish home is the epitome of forming peace amongst fellow Jews, and finding one’s soul mate brings light into one’s life and lifts him up from exile.

3. Tu b’Av follows Tisha b’Av on the seventh day. Seven symbolizes wholeness as in the days of the week, the celebration of seven brachot (blessings) upon marriage, and by contrast the number of days one sits shiva (in mourning) to name a few. When the above messages are fused into the conscious minds of the Jewish people, namely togetherness and unity through the building of Jewish homes, we will merit a renewed and lasting relationship with God.

The unity that enveloped the single Jewish men and women as they gathered in the fields to find their mate removed all barriers from their midst and amplified brotherly love in the most astounding way. Rich and poor maidens of Jerusalem borrowed white clothing from one another in order not to embarrass each other and blur communal barriers. Such were the feelings of love that enveloped the Jewish people at the time.

Singing and dancing radiated the streets in the hopes of creating new generations that honor Jewish values. Tu b’Av ushers in celebration of the promise of new life and hope after grief and fear. God wants us to celebrate life by uniting with Him and enabling light to shine onto a world of confusion.

Jews have survived throughout history because they know they can always tap into the Jewish spark – the mark of our people. This unity sustains our nation. In our world, the way to uphold unity is by keeping our traditions alive. The mystical teachings write that God, the Torah, and Israel are one – Godliness transcends all limitations.

Tu b’Av is sandwiched in between Tisha b’Av, a time for deep reflection and self-accountability, and the beginning of the month of repentance, Elul. Its message is love that stems from harmonious relationships. Under the wedding canopy, the transgressions of the bride and groom are erased. Through love of one another, we wipe away Heavenly decrees.

Tu b’Av marks the transition from the days of mourning and judgment to the days of joy and compassion. Today, we may not be able to appreciate the full extent of this great holiday, yet it does carry us from tragedy to joyfulness.

May we soon merit seeing the revealed outcome of what baseless love and unity can bring the ultimate redemption soon, Amen.

Create an angel

July 31, 2014
Orit Esther Riter

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BS’D

Today’s daily dose of emuna is dedicated to all the wounded soldiers.  May they merit a complete healing amongst all of Klal Yisrael who are sick and suffering b’karov, b’rachamim, Amen.

“All of Your commandments are emuna” (Tehillim 119:86). The Zohar HaKadosh teaches that the 613 mitzvot are fundamentally 613 pieces of advice on how to strengthen the bond with HaKadosh Baruch Hu. Each time we do a mitzvah in effect we shrink the gap between Klal Yisrael and Hashem. In order to supercharge our mitzvot we must incorporate our hearts as well as our minds into every mitzvah.

Body and soul are enjoined in this world for the purpose of revealing Hashem’s presence. The body is inclined to physicality; it sees the outer casing. The soul penetrates the surface and digs to uncover purpose. The body needs the soul as much as the soul needs the body to fulfill its mission on earth. The mind needs the heart as much as the heart needs the mind to capture the power rooted in each mitzvah. We experience the powerful benefits of each mitzvah when we pair what we know to what we feel.

During this time many of us want to help our soldiers, the Jewish communities situated in the South of Israel or anyone in harm’s way. What can we do from the four corners of our home that will supercharge the merits of Ahm Yisrael? Pump emuna into our mitzvot. Here’s one way how:

Next time we begin doing a mitzvah let’s envision that we are creating a perfect angel. As we complete the mitzvah let’s picture shipping this angel immediately to a soldier in Gaza to shield and protect him.

Send the angel to move a rocket to hit an open field or into the sea. Maybe send that angel to a friend or family member who is experiencing hardship; pack him up with extra love and hugs. What about sending him to a person that we may be on bad terms with?

Imagine the power Hashem has given us when He appointed us to be co-partners with Him to bring G-dliness into this world. Let’s take advantage of it.

The Dragonfly

July 30, 2014
Orit Esther Riter

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BS’D

Today’s Daily Dose of Emuna is dedicated to the righteous neshamot who have departed from this world al Kiddush Hashem.  May Hashem’s love and warmth envelop them and may their families know of no more sorrow, Amen.

The Dragonfly (source unknown)

Once, in a little pond, in the muddy water under the lily pads, there lived a little water beetle in a community of water beetles. They lived a simple and comfortable life in the pond with few disturbances and interruptions. Once in a while, sadness would come to the community when one of their fellow beetles would climb the stem of a lily pad and would never be seen again. They knew when this happened; their friend was dead, gone forever.

Then, one day, one little water beetle felt an irresistible urge to climb up that stem. However, he was determined that he would not leave forever. He would come back and tell his friends what he had found at the top. When he reached the top and climbed out of the water onto the surface of the lily pad, he was so tired, and the sun felt so warm, that he decided he must take a nap. As he slept, his body changed and when he woke up, he had turned into a beautiful blue-tailed dragonfly with broad wings and a slender body designed for flying.

So, fly he did! And, as he soared he saw the beauty of a whole new world and a far superior way of life to what he had never known existed.

Then he remembered his beetle friends and how they were thinking by now he was dead. He wanted to go back to tell them, and explain to them that he was now more alive than he had ever been before. His life had been fulfilled rather than ended.
But, his new body would not go down into the water. He could not get back to tell his friends the good news. Then he understood that their time would come, when they, too, would know what he now knew.

So, he raised his wings and flew off into his joyous new life!

The lesson:  the beautiful neshamot are basking in the warm embrace of Hashem.  This is our only consolation.

Av: The month of the lion

July 28, 2014
Orit Esther Riter

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BS’D

The month of Av is represented by the astrological sign Leo, aryeh (lion). As written in Pirkei Avot (4:1), “Be strong as a lion in fulfilling the will of your Father in Heaven.” The lion is king of the beasts, the symbol of royalty; passionate yet in control.

This month B’H we have the power to conquer our inner impulse and think before we react. The entirety of any given situation should be looked at from all angles and sides before judging it. Hashem responds measure for measure- just as we discipline our animalistic tendencies and show restraint in our response, B’H, so too Hashem will be slow to judge the Jewish people and not ‘instantly respond in anger.’

This month the sense to rectify is hearing. Hashem longs to hear from us and for us to ‘invite’ Him into our lives. The way to build any meaningful relationship is through constant communication. Talking and listening to one another essentially means, “I love you. I care about you.” This message certainly needs to be reinforced in our relationship with Hashem as well.

It is essential to listen to our internal voice as well; the calling within of our soul. There is a continuous calling emanating from our neshama asking that we not forget her needs. Our emotional health is the best indicator on how well our soul is being taken care of. If we are mostly in control of the negative emotions that seemingly ‘pop up’, our soul is strongly bonded to Hashem and is radiating a sense of security.

A lion walks with his head up high expressing full control and confidence. This month in spite of the difficulties we can resonate trust and inner peace knowing that Hashem is our leader.  Ahm Yisrael is a kingdom of royalty eternally bonded to the King of Kings, constantly being enveloped by His passionate love and care.

A Faithful Friend

July 24, 2014
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

Would we do the same?

A Faithful Friend, by Meir Barenstein

“Love your fellow as yourself.”

Rabbi Israel of Rizhin illustrated this with the following story:

Once there were two friends whose souls were intertwined with a great love. They lived very far from one other. One of them was falsely accused of a crime, convicted and sentenced to death. A proclamation was made that everyone in the land must attend this criminal’s execution.

When his friend came to the execution, he recognized him. He cried out loudly, “Leave that man alone! It is I who committed the crime.”

The execution was stopped. The matter was brought before the king, who he summoned both men and asked them the truth of the matter. Only one of them could have committed the crime, so why is the other one willing to die in vain?

The friend of the condemned man answered the king, “I know that my friend did not commit any crime. I know his character. He couldn’t have done it. And so this is nothing but a miscarriage of justice. My life depends on my friend’s life. It is better that I die and not see his death. In fact, if I have received such a punishment as having to see my friend’s death, I must myself be deserving of death.”

And the other man replied in a similar fashion.

When the king saw the great love between these two men, he let them both free. And he requested of them, “You are such great friends that I would like you to take me into your circle of friendship, with that same amount of love. And I will be the same kind of friend to you.”

When we reach the level of “you shall love your fellow as yourself,” Hashem desires to rest His presence amongst us, so that we will also love Him, and that He will be our faithful Friend.
Imrei Tzaddikim, by Meir Barenstein, p. 38

 

Today’s daily dose of emuna is dedicated to Sarah bas Pesha who was recently diagnosed with breast cancer. May Hashem send her a complete healing amongst all of those sick and suffering in Klal Yisrael, b’karov, b’rachamim, Amen.

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