So you agonize: do these considerations justify abandoning the current commitments and breaking up the current relationship?
Deuteronomy 21:10-25:19 Week of September 3-9, 2000
"I didn’t ask to be born, nor was I consulted when the laws of life were formulated. All this was imposed on me. My master is all-powerful, so I had best carry out His instructions." "I have a job to do, and I’ll give it my best effort. And has G-d not promised to reward my toil?" "G-d invented my life and He sustains it, but it is fueled by my own ambition and initiative. So it's a 50/50 deal--that's our agreement." Which are you--slave, employee or partner?
The surgical team assembled around the Rebbe. Suddenly, to everyone's surprise, the Rebbe called out to one of the surgeons. "Moses? You're a Jew, aren't you?" The doctor quietly nodded his head.
You came to me unexpectedly. We never met. I have only seen your picture. And even that came long after I knew that we were bonded by an ancient bond, that there was a debt that I owed you, a debt that I must and will pay. How can one begin to fathom your life? Abandoned at birth by your parents. Placed in an institution mockingly called an orphanage. Caged. Strait jacketed. Forced for twelve years to crawl on hands and knees because a simple operation was denied you. You have never used a pencil or crayon. My G-d! You have never even seen a toy!
People are not cars. |
![]() Located at the center of Israel's capital, the Lubavitch-run academy offered them sessions of Jewish learning, tours of the country's historical and cultural sites and rare encounters with local educators and public figures.
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