"TODAY'S DAY": Wednesday, May 2, 2012

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Iyar 10, 5772 · May 2, 2012
Iyar 10, 25th day of the omer

Shabbat Iyar 10, 25th day of the omer 5703
Torah lessons: Chumash: Emor, Shevi'i with Rashi.
Tehillim: 55-59.
Tanya: Ch. 47. "In every (p. 247)...been explained earlier. (p.249).

It is our custom to dip the piece of bread (for hamotzi) into salt three times, not to sprinkle the salt on the bread.

At the festive meal on the second day of Shavuot 5621 (1861), the Tzemach Tzedek related as follows: At the festive meal on the second day of Shavuot 5555 (1795) my grandfather (the Alter Rebbe) said:

At the festive meal on the second day of Shavuot 5528 (1768) my saintly master and teacher (the Maggid of Mezritch) said:

"You shall count for yourselves," us'fartem lachem.1 The word us'fartem, - you shall count - has the root of sapirut, - brilliance and brightness. Us'fartem lachem, your lachem, selves, must be bright.

The Tzemach Tzedek continued his narrative: My grandfather (the Alter Rebbe) then leaned his head on his hands and sang the Niggun (melody) Of Four Stanzas with profound d'veikut.2 Afterward he raised his head and said in a questioning tone, "And with what does one brighten the lachem?" - and without a pause he continued in a tone of response, "with the seven complete weeks (more literally, "...seven...Sabbaths"), that is, through refining one's seven emotion-traits, each trait in turn to be sub-incorporated with all seven.3 The seven attributes themselves are to become 'seven Sabbaths,' Shabbat needing no refinement."4

FOOTNOTES
1. Vayikra 23:15. This is the Torah command to count the days of the omer. The verse concludes "seven complete weeks shall they be." Instead of the common word for weeks, shavuot, the verse uses the word Shabbatot, - Sabbaths. The seven weeks correspond to the seven human emotion powers. See note on Iyar 2.
2. Devotion, communion; see Sh'vat 23 and footnotes.
3. See note on Iyar 2.
4. The effort or avoda of self-refinement and refinement of Creation is primarily appropriate to the weekdays when man is occupied with worldly affairs, "your labors." Shabbat, the day of rest, not of labor, is not a time for "refinement." Shabbat is on a higher plane.



Compiled by the Lubavitcher Rebbe; Translated by Yitschak Meir Kagan    More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author

Compiled and arranged by the Lubavitcher Rebbe in 5703 (1943) from the talks and letters of the Previous Lubavitcher Rebbe.

Dedicated in honor of the Rebbe, and in memory of
Yitzchak Leib Federman

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