WELCOMING SHABBAT

Shabbat is more than a day of refraining from worldly activity.

When experienced to its spiritual fullest, its holiness enlightens all other days of the week.

We invite you to enhance your Shabbat with these words of Torah.

 

One man riding a camel, with a man behind him walking with his camel in a desert with red background

Ten Challenges

Ten Challenges

Jacobson, Rabbi Simon
November 3, 2022

“‘Our father Abraham was tested with ten challenges, and he withstood them all – to indicate how great was our father Abraham’s love’

(Ethics of the Fathers 5:3)

 

The Hebrew word for ‘test’ (or ‘challenge’) – ‘nisayon‘ – shares the same root with the word ‘ness,’ which means miracle and also banner. A miracle reveals the extraordinary within the ordinary; the Divine within the natural. The same is with a ‘nisayon,’ a challenge: Every person has innate qualities.

 

By virtue of being created in the ‘Image of G-d’ every soul contains enormous reservoirs of extraordinary potential.

 

However, these powers remain dormant when unactualized. A ‘nisayon‘ – the true test of one’s character – is a challenge that actualizes our potential and brings the best out of us by revealing the powerful forces we carry within. When we pass a difficult test in life… A deeper part of our soul is revealed, to the point that it can actually bring on true transformation of the human being. And, as a result, a deeper, transformative dimension of Divine light manifests in existence.

 

Each of us in our own lives will be tested, or rather, challenged. Each challenge is actually an opportunity to grow – to draw out great strengths from within. Each triumph over a challenge lifts us to unprecedented heights.

 

Everything that happened to the patriarchs [Avraham, Yitzchak, and Yaakov] is an indication for their children…”

 

[The way in which our patriarchs overcame their challenges has been ‘sublimated’ and raised to a higher level, in a spiritual repository in the Olam Ha’Elion (the Higher World), always available for us to draw from and apply to our own challenges. Our patriarchs created, through their behaviour, a sort of imprinting in the ability to face and overcome challenges for the benefit of their descendants].