Nissan 4
May goodness and kindness pursue me all the days of my life (Psalms
23:1).
What a strange expression! Goodness and kindness should pursue me, as
though I was fleeing from them?!
Perhaps the Psalmist had in mind the verse: "You shall pursue
righteousness, only righteousness" (Deuteronomy 16:20). Many people
have things re versed. They pursue goodness and kindness for
themselves, but leave righteousness to somehow catch up with them. The
Torah dictates a different order. A person should pursue righteousness
and allow goodness and kindness to catch up.
If we asked people for their goal for life, many would say, "to achieve
happiness." While this answer is certainly understandable, happiness is
not the primary goal of creation of man. Indeed, the Scripture states
very clearly: "Man was created in order to toil" (Job 5:7). And the
Talmud explains that this means to work on the Divine mission, to
fulfill the Divine will. If our primary goal is happiness, we are
certain to be frustrated. The average person's life is abundant in
distressful happenings. If the primary goal is to do th Divine will,
then those times of happiness that do occur can be enjoyed, and the
times of ... more »
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Saturday, March 24
by
Publisher
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 10:55 PM CDT
by
Publisher
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 10:51 PM CDT
by Rabbi Shimon Apisdorf
Putting the Seder into perspective. The holiday of Passover marks the anniversary of the birth of the Jewish nation. The story of the Jewish nation is one of individuals who became a family who became a people. The great individuals who laid the spiritual foundation of Jewish peoplehood were Abraham and Sarah, their son and daughter-in-law Isaac and Rebecca, and their son and daughters-in-law Jacob, Rachel, and Leah. From Jacob, Rachel, and Leah came a family of 70 people who, due to a famine in Israel, were forced to migrate to Egypt. In Egypt this family grew and prospered to such an extent that they eventually came to be seen as a threat by their Egyptian hosts. Respect and admiration turned to contempt, and finally to an organized program of enslavement and oppression. After 210 years, and a series of unheeded warnings by Moses to Pharaoh which resulted in the Ten Plagues, God liberated a nation which had grown from the original family of 70 people. Seven weeks later this newly conceived nation received the Torah at Mount Sinai. The Haggadah is the story of the birth of the Jews as a people. It deals primarily ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 06:45 PM AKDT
BERLIN (Reuters) - The European Union should move toward forming a
common army, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said in a newspaper
interview published on Friday.
Asked how she saw the EU developing in the next 50 years, Merkel told daily newspaper Bild: "In the EU itself we must come closer to a common European army." Germany holds the EU's rotating presidency for the first half of this year. Last year, Polish President Lech Kaczynski said his country wanted a new 100,000-strong European Union army created to work with NATO in trouble spots in the world or to defend Europe.Reuters Pictures Merkel is hosting a summit this weekend in Berlin where the bloc will celebrate its 50th anniversary and unveil a declaration setting out its values and achievements. Merkel hopes the so-called "Berlin Declaration" will be a springboard for her revival of the European constitution, rejected by French and Dutch voters in 2005. Merkel told Bild the EU's 27 member states often spent too long grappling with issues under the bloc's existing structure. "To change that, we need the EU constitution, which suits the decision mechanism of the larger EU," she said. Germany has vowed to present a "road map" for ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 06:24 PM AKDT
By Meredith Buel
Washington A group of nuclear weapons specialists has issued ominous warnings before members of the U.S. Congress that terrorist groups like al-Qaida could launch a massive attack on the United States and currently there is little to deter or defend against such a strike. VOA correspondent Meredith Buel has details from Capitol Hill. Sidney Drell, an arms control specialist and physicist at Stanford University, told members of the Senate Armed Services Committee the United States has entered, what he calls, a "dangerous time." "I view us on the precipice of entering a new and more dangerous nuclear era with the spread of technology, which means, in particular, the enrichment of uranium, which makes it possible for more societies to enter the nuclear club," he said. "That raises the danger of nuclear weapons getting in the hands of terrorist groups and others unrestrained by the norms of civilized behavior as we know it and therefore these weapons become more likely to be used." The dean of Georgetown University's school of Foreign Service, Robert Gallucci, agrees. Gallucci, a former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs, says the most dangerous threat is that a terrorist group will smuggle ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 06:19 PM AKDT
Texas farmers are stepping up their opposition to the Trans-Texas
Corridor, a massive highway project that ultimately could take about
half a million acres of the state out of agricultural production – and
according to opponents possibly hasten the advent of a North American
Union.
"Our members are overwhelmingly opposed to the Trans-Texas Corridor," said Farm Bureau President Kenneth Dierschke, a grain and cotton farmer from San Angelo. "There's never been any doubt that the impact on agriculture would be negative, but now we see a growing number of people who believe the TTC would be bad for all of Texas." The organization has called the proposal a "disaster" for farm and ranch businesses that lie in its path, whose owners also are discovering that they have allies in their battle. In fact, Republican Rep. Rick Hardcastle has filed legislation to delay construction of the controversial Trans-Texas Corridor because the "critical point for me is when the state disregards the personal property rights of hard-working Texans." Hardcastle, whose district has little support for the project, filed House Bill 3831 in the Texas House of Representatives, which seeks to halt the project until specific improvements on Highway 35 are made. He ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 06:16 PM AKDT
By Stephen Pollard
Next Wednesday, England play Andorra in a qualification match for the 2008 European Championships. I am rather surprised that nobody has yet asked me which team I want to win. Surprised, because all sorts of people have asked me the same question about England's match tomorrow. I was born, bred and brought up in London. I have only ever lived in England. I make clear to anyone who will listen that there is no logical reason for England to be in a union with Scotland and that we should wave the ungrateful, sclerotic, subsidy-junkie nation goodbye. I even have an obsession with the music of Sir Edward Elgar. So why should anyone be in doubt as to which team I want to win tomorrow? For one reason: I am Jewish, and tomorrow England play Israel. And although, for most Englishmen, their support for the national football team is a given, for Jews, apparently, it is not. It seems Norman Tebbit may have been on to something when he identified his "cricket test" in 1990. As he put it at the time: "A large proportion of Britain's Asian population fail to pass the cricket test. Which side do ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 12:48 AM CDT
by Sara Yoheved Rigler
A lost diamond, a gaping black hole, and an inspiring Passover realization. The diamond ring I inherited from my mother, of blessed memory, is -- or should I say was -- my most beautiful possession. My father, o.b.m., had given the ring, a band of 16 perfect diamonds, to my mother shortly after their wedding in 1944. As precious to me emotionally as materially, the ring adorned my hand every Shabbat. Every time I looked at its glistening perfection, my Shabbat joy soared. Then, sitting at the Shabbat table six weeks ago, I glanced down at my ring and was horrified to see a gaping, black hole. A prong of the white gold setting had broken, and one diamond had fallen out. My horror gave way to a frantic search, with all members of the family on hands and knees searching the floors in the kitchen and living room, then sweeping, and finally giving up. The diamond was gone. Every time I looked at my ring, all I saw was the gaping, black hole, like a beautiful woman smiling to reveal a missing front tooth. My gorgeous ring had become a toothless hag. Bitterly, I took ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 24 Mar 2007 12:45 AM CDT
Caroline Glick,
In Israel, as in the rest of the free world, we are witnessing the death by a thousand cuts of free thought. Last month, two students at Cambridge University's Clare College became victims of this state of affairs. The students dedicated an edition of their satire magazine to the one-year anniversary of the global Muslim riots which followed the publication of caricatures of Muhammad in the Danish Jyllands Posten newspaper. As the students recalled, those riots led to the deaths of more than a hundred people. Although the British media refused to republish the caricatures, British Muslims held terrifying protests throughout the country where they called for the destruction of Britain, the US, Denmark and Israel and for the murder of all who refuse to accept the global domination of Islam. In their magazine, the students published some of the caricatures and mocked the Muslims for their hypocrisy in accusing British society of racial prejudice while calling for its violent destruction. The Muslim reaction was apparently swift. Fearing for their lives, the students were forced into hiding. But the Muslims were not alone in their anger. Clare College set up a special disciplinary court to consider action against ... more » |
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