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We are pleased to present an insight on parshat Behar-Bechukotai excerpted from our Daily Wisdom by Rabbi Moshe Wisnefsky.
Humility and Pride G-d spoke to Moses on Mount Sinai, saying: (Lev. 25:1)
We are told that G-d chose to give the Torah on Mount Sinai because it was the lowest – i.e., humblest – mountain. But if G-d meant to teach us humility, He seemingly should have given the Torah in a valley. What is the paradox implied in the lowest of mountains?
Although humility is a necessary component of spiritual life, so is a certain measure of pride. A totally selfless person will feel powerless when he encounters the challenges, doubts, cynicism, and mockery of a world that obscures G-dliness. Hence, we must also be "mountains," mastering the art of asserting ourselves as the representatives of G-d on earth.
It is precisely true self-abnegation that enables us to exhibit true self-assertion: when we have lost all sense of ego, we are no longer aware of ourselves, including our self-abnegation; our consciousness of self has been supplanted by our consciousness of G-d. We are no longer "us"; we are G-d, acting through us. — Daily Wisdom 3
May G-d grant wisdom, strength and peace in the Holy Land.
Gut Shabbos, Rabbi Yosef B. Friedman Kehot Publication Society
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