Beit Midrash
- Jewish Laws and Thoughts
- Jewish Thought
- Foundations of Faith
The Torah study is dedicatedin the memory of
Yaakov Ben Behora
One who tries to follow God and serve Him without receiving comprehensive and detailed instruction from God Himself can be likened to an intruder who breaks into the large private pharmacy of a renown physician and proceeds to receive patients and give out medication. Whenever somebody enters and describes his problem, the impostor hands him some medicine without a clue as to whether or not it will be of any benefit. For all he knows it may even be poison.
It goes without saying that without the expert physician himself to prescribe the appropriate medicines, the correct quantities, frequency of intake, appropriate rest and diet, etc., even a warehouse full of medicine is of no value.
Foundations of Faith (51)
Rabbi Zalman Baruch Melamed
18 - 16. God's Hand in Nature
19 - 17. According to Divine Guidance
20 - 18. The Exodus and Jewish Faith
Load More
When a person chooses to serve God according to his own estimations and logic, and without any Divine guidance, all of the good intentions and selfless devotion in the world will not help, for such a person has no chance of arriving at a code of behavior which is truly desired by God.
That the actions of man can possess Divine significance should not be difficult to accept. After all, the entire creation is infused with Divine wisdom. Our physical world, despite all of its limitations, is full of Divine wonders. Though it is finite and ephemeral and God is exalted beyond all limitations, all of the wisdom embedded in creation is attributable to God alone. These truths form the very foundation of the Jewish faith.
When performed in accordance with the Divine command, human action itself takes on a Divine nature. Creation is full of Divine wisdom which gives it its character. Severance from the Divine source and worship without Divine guidance are the main ingredients of heresy.






















