The Persian Empire of the 4th century BCE extended over 127 lands, and all the Jews were its subjects.
When King Ahasuerus had his wife, Queen Vashti, executed for failing to follow his orders, he arranged a beauty pageant to find a new queen. A Jewish girl, Esther, found favor in his eyes and became the new queen, though she refused to divulge her nationality. Meanwhile, the Jew-hating Haman was appointed prime minister of the empire. Haman convinced the king to issue a decree ordering the extermination of all the Jews on the 13th of Adar, a date chosen by a lottery Haman made. Mordechai, the leader of the Jews and Esther’s cousin, urged Esther to plead with the king to save the Jewish people. He tells her that if not it will be her loss because G-d will find another way to save His people. Listen to that incredible Jewish clarity! He did not say that if you do not intercede with the king we will all be annihilated; it will be all be over! Nothing of the sort. He was confident that the Jewish people will persevere, the question was only who would be fortunate enough to be the vehicle for the change of events. When you see an ominous danger facing the Jewish people, do not be afraid. When the demise of the Jewish people is predicted you can ignore those predictions because G-d promises us that He will find a way to save our People. The question to me and you is will we be a part of the salvation of our People from physical and spiritual peril or will we stand on the sidelines. Am Yisrael Chai - the Jewish people will live; what our part in that will be is up to me and you.... Happy Purim! Mendel (Menachem) Bluming
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Imagine that you are chosen for a role in a brand-new movie that you are very excited to play. You'll be required to show great motion and involvement personifying that role as perfectly as you can.
But then when you read the script you find out that later on in the movie the character is going to die! You protest. “I can't play that role, I don't want to die!” The producer laughs, “You won't die. The character will and you will go on to win an Oscar!” In life we are assigned roles that we play really well. We cry with the sadness that our bodies experience and we rejoice in its successes but we don't die with it because we are only acting that role, our true self remains independent. It is not that you have a soul, it is that you ARE a soul and you have a body. Your body is your role in life and you must act it really well just don't get too caught up in the character you play... Mendel (Menachem) Bluming and Rabbi Aaron The Talmud in Ethics of the Fathers chapter 4 shares both of these seemingly contradictory comments:
A single moment of repentance and of good deeds in this world is greater than all of the World to Come. A single moment of bliss in the World to Come is greater than all of this world. Wait a second... If one moment of good deeds in this world is so much greater than the next world, why would the bliss of the next world be so much greater than this world?? Right now you are in the world of accomplishment and mission. After the soul departs the body it embraces a very blissful existence but one that is devoid of mission. Heaven can be compared to a lovely retirement home, where nothing is expected and everything is provided. You will never need to cook another meal, plan another day, or clean another mess. Sounds like an idyllic place, but no one rushes into a retirement home! Embrace life because today your every deed is so meaningful! Mendel (Menachem) Bluming Miraculous food was provided from heaven in the desert for the Jewish people each day. But there was a catch. You were only allowed to take enough for one day and if you took more than you needed for one day, that extra food would spoil (Exodus chapter 16).
How would you feel if you were eating a wonderful dinner but you had not a morsel of food left after this meal? Would you be able to eat comfortably knowing that you were consuming your last scrap of food? The desert was the training ground for the future of the Jewish people. If God provided for me yesterday can I trust that He will provide for me tomorrow... When my pantry and bank accounts are full, I feel that I need not trust in God, I can trust in them. What would it take for me to trust that everything will be okay? If God provided for me yesterday can I trust that he will be there for me tomorrow without worry? So yes, the manna was miraculous food. Each day it descended from heaven ready-to-eat but it beckoned of us to let go. We were invited to focus on our mission and our purpose rather than ensuring that will have food for tomorrow. We were reminded that we don’t live in order to eat. Was God asking too much of us then? Is He asking too much of us today? May God always bless you with plenty and may you and I respond by letting go of worry. Mendel (Menachem) Bluming |
AuthorRabbi Mendel Bluming also dedicated six years to serving on the board of directors of the Jewish Federation of Greater Washington, where he received the Matthew H. Simon Rabbinical Award for exceptional communal leadership. Archives
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