A hetiszakaszban a nép meg van győződve arról, hogy Mózes leváltása jó lenne a népnek. Valóban jó lenne?
And they said to one another, “Let us head back for Egypt.”
נתנה ראש LET US MAKE A CAPTAIN — Understand this as the Targum does: Let us appoint a chief — i.e. let us set a king over us. But our Rabbis explain the word ראש to denote idol-worship (i.e. that they intended to turn to idolatry) (cf. Sanhedrin 107a).
Máhárál szerinti mélyebb jelentés: az ávodá zárá a lényegtelenből csinál lényegest. A politika apropóján is fontos ezt mindig szem előtt tartanunk!
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Kérdés: a választások estéjén rendezett zsoltármondás az egyik jelöltért. De már a szavazatok le vannak adva...
One who has built a new house or bought new vessels says, “Blessed be He who has kept us alive [and preserved us and brought us to this season.]” One who blesses over the evil as he blesses over the good or over the good as he blesses over evil; one who cries over the past, behold this is a vain prayer. How so? If his wife was pregnant and he says, “May it be his will that my wife bear a male child,” this is a vain prayer. If he is coming home from a journey and he hears a cry of distress in the town and says, “May it be his will that this is not be those of my house,” this is a vain prayer.
One who prays for something that has already happened. For example, he entered the city and heard a cry in the city and he prayed "may it be God's will that this cry is not from a member of my household" or if his his wife was expecting and more than forty days had passed and he said "may it be God's will that my wife will give birth to a boy - behold this is a meaningless prayer. Rather a person should always pay for the future and give thanks for the past...
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Mi a helyzet Dinával? Neki szabad volt.
We learned in the mishna: One whose wife was pregnant and he said: May it be God’s will that my wife will give birth to a male child, it is a vain prayer.
Is a prayer in that case ineffective? Rav Yosef raises an objection based on a baraita: It is stated: “And afterwards she bore a daughter, and called her name Dina” (Genesis 30:21). The Gemara asks: What is meant by the addition of the word: Afterwards? What does the verse seek to convey by emphasizing that after the birth of Zebulun she gave birth to Dina? Rav said: After Leah passed judgment on herself and said: Twelve tribes are destined to descend from Jacob, six came from me and four from the maidservants, that is ten, and if this fetus is male, my sister Rachel will not even be the equivalent of one the maidservants; immediately the fetus was transformed into a daughter, as it is stated: And she called her name Dina; meaning she named her after her judgment [din]. The Gemara rejects this: One does not mention miraculous acts to teach general halakha.
Egy híres kérdés-válasz: Chanukakor a feledékenyek mégiscsak imádkoznak csodákért! (A Sááré Tesuvá nem a Hilchot Chanukában, hanem a Hilchot Beráchotban van, OC 187, és nincs is sajnos jól hivatkozva, még a Dirsuban sem – a PT-ben talán igen.)
Olámotban a 8. oldalon bővebben minderről: https://olamot.net/shiurim/%D7%A2%D7%9C-%D7%94%D7%A0%D7%99%D7%A1%D7%99%D7%9D/
If one did not mention the kingship of the house of David in the blessing of The One Who Rebuilds Jerusalem, we return them. Rema: And we say On the Miracles during Chanukah and Purim, before And On All..., and if one did not say these, we do not return them. (Tur). And in any case it is possible to say them in the rest of the May The Merciful One section, and say May The Merciful One Perform For Us Miracles Like They Did In Those Days... and so we are accustomed. (Kol Bo)
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A nagy kérdés: itt ez miért nem merül fel? R Lebowitz azt mondta, risonimban semmit nem talált, megdöbbentő.
The Sages taught: One who goes to measure the grain on his threshing floor recites: May it be Your will, O Lord, our God, that You send blessing upon the product of our hands. If one began to measure the grain he says: Blessed is He Who sends blessing upon this pile of grain. If one measured and afterward recited this blessing, this is a prayer made in vain, because blessing is found neither in a matter that is weighed, nor in a matter that is measured, nor in a matter that is counted. Rather, it is found in a matter concealed from the eye, as it is stated: “The Lord will command blessing with you in your storehouses.”
Válaszlehetőségek: 1. Ld. Sááré Tesuvá. 2. Kámut-ichut. 3. Ima helyessége.
https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/f980e524-3b65-4214-9beb-43dd75017084