CHABAD.ORG MAGAZINE: What Is Spirituality? What is G-dliness? (and more...)

Chabad.org
Elul 1, 5771 · August 31, 2011
Editor's Note:

"Rabbi, what's your favorite verse in the Bible?"

The question caught me by surprise. "Favorite verse? Hmm... I never really thought of the Torah in that way..."

"Come, on, rabbi... What verse do you fall back on when the going gets tough?"

Put that way, I had my answer. In fact, it came from this week's Torah portion. After warning us against practicing witchcraft, fortune-telling, and all sorts of sorcery, the Torah tells the following five words: Tamim tiheieh im Hashem Elokoecha. "Be wholehearted with the L‑rd, your G‑d."

The Torah is telling is that we don't have to complicate matters. There's no need to seek fortune tellers, perform the paranormal, or be overly concerned with the unknown. We have a direct connection to G‑d, which is accessed through sincere performance of mitzvahs and wholeheartedness.

The message is powerful:

I don't need to be concerned with that which is out of my hands. All that occurs is orchestrated from above.
I don't need to worry about my prayer requiring mediation from another. I have a direct connection to G‑d - all that is required is sincerity.
I am not troubled by the unknown. If there's information I need to know, G‑d will bless my efforts to find it out.
I am never in the dark. I have a manual, a Torah, which helps me navigate an otherwise confusing world.

Don't worry. Be sincere. Follow the Torah. Talk directly to G‑d.

Be wholehearted with the L‑rd, your G‑d.

Rabbi Yisroel Cotlar
Responder for Ask the Rabbi @ Chabad.org


This Week's Features Printable Magazine
By Tzvi Freeman
Building Blocks of Jewish Spirituality
The most puzzling thing about G‑dliness is that it can be hidden from us. The true reality of everything that exists can be hidden from those very creatures that emerge from it.

By Tzvi Freeman
Standard translations include audacity, insolence, impudence, gall, brazen nerve, effrontery, incredible guts, presumption and arrogance—but chutzpah is in a class of its own.

By Tzvi Freeman
Starting the Month of Elul
Rosh Chodesh, the head of the month, plays a big role in the Jewish calendar, where the lunar cycle is front and center. Learn how the Jewish calendar works.

Watch Watch (6:34)
Did you ever wonder why our calendar has both weeks and months? Why follow two different cycles that never match up?

By Yanki Tauber
Elul is "inventory season," a time to review the past and look at how far you've come in life.

The Baal Shem Tov placed his right hand on the shoulder of the disciple to his right, and his left on the disciple sitting there. The circle was closed . . .

From the writings & talks of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak of Lubavitch
Shoftim: Judges and Refugees
"Justice"—the very concept is said to be a Jewish contribution to the world. A glance at this week's Parshah shows why.

Don't be judgmental. Unless, of course you happen to be a judge . . .

By Yossy Goldman
He was standing at the entrance of the strip mall, his front and back covered by identical, cumbersome cardboard signs . . .

By Naftali Silberberg
The spiritual processes involved in judging and atoning, and the locale of the "cities of refuge" in the terrain of time and in the geography of the soul.

Based on the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe
A weekly podcast where we take a look at topics in the weekly Torah portion and see how it relates to the coming of Moshiach.

By Yerachmiel Galinsky
Download Download   Listen Listen (4:06)
The simple faith of a sophisticated man has more dimensions and a richer texture . . .

By Shimon Posner
Senior Reflections
Know that I am proud of your accomplishments and achievements, but more importantly, of who you have become . . .

By Susan Schwartz
Well, maybe I am too old for camp, but whenever I think of a certain special summer of my childhood, I'm suddenly a kid again . . .

By Linda Tucker
Living Life
Expert educator Rabbi Yakov Horowitz addresses parents' concerns about how to best protect their children.

By Yakov Horowitz
Watch Watch (34:28)
Full of conviction and confidence, he replied, "Once you are here in the land of Israel, you want nothing more than to defend it . . ."

By Esther Mishulovin
Somehow, very early on along the way, eating became mechanical, emotional, social, comforting, and generally filled with mindlessness . . .

By Chana Lew
Did You Ever Wonder?
Is there any evidence that Jewish thought and philosophy had an influence on the Greeks?

By Yehuda Shurpin
Join Dr. Glickman of Yeshiva University as he posits a "legal theory" of Torah law that compares and contrasts the ideas of morality, legality, rationality and obligation.

By Ozer Glickman
Watch Watch (20:59)
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Featured Judaica:

Days of Awe, Days of Joy
Chassidic Insights into the Festivals of the Month of Tishrei. By Rabbi Eli Friedman

Price: $24.95 SALE: $22.45


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