Get to Heaven Keep the Seven

Everybody wants spirituality. To be a good person means to walk in G-d's ways. How does that translate to reality? The only guidebook to spirituality that has stood the test of time is the Hebrew Bible. The Bible says that the Jews will be a light onto the nations. But if you are not a born Jew, you have to convert, which is not so easy!! If you do convert, it is a lot of work to be a Jew (three times a day prayer, keeping kosher, observing the Sabbath).

This blog will show you how to be Jewish without the work!!

Monday, July 22, 2019

Live Volcano, Sinabung on 9th June 04:28, INDONESIA and Israeli Hikers Discover Rare Treasure

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Yehuda Lave, Spiritual Advisor and Counselor

Yehuda Lave is an author, journalist, psychologist, rabbi, spiritual teacher and coach, with degrees in business, psychology and Jewish Law. He works  with people from all walks of life and helps them in their search for greater happiness, meaning, business advice on saving money,  and spiritual engagement

Doing Good When Difficult


The value of doing good deeds is primarily when they come through difficulties and suffering.

Love Yehuda Lave

Israeli Hikers Discover Rare Treasure

Three Israeli cavers touring a northern Israel stalactite cave discovered a treasure dating back to the days of Alexander the Great. "One of the greatest findings in northern Israel over the past several years."

Three Israelis visiting one of North Israel's largest and most hidden stalactite caves were astonished to find a 2,300 year-old treasure inside. They immediately informed the Israel Antiques Authority, whose representatives were very surprised by the "historic" finding.

The three cavers, Reuven Zachai, his son Chen Zachai and their friend Lior Hiloni, members of the Israeli Speleology Club, were taking an introductory tour inside the cave when they found the treasure. They were crawling through the cave, when suddenly one of them noticed a shimmering object, which later on turned out to be coins buried in the days of Alexander the Great, in the end of the fourth century BC.

The Israel Antiques Authority representatives who were called to the cave, found also silver jewelry next to the treasure. The jewelry was hidden inside a pouch made of cloth. The Authority estimates this is one of the greatest findings in northern Israel over the past several years. "The objects may have been hidden by local residents who fled the area following the instability which the death of Alexander the Great incited in the region," the archeologists estimate.

After rescanning the cave, the archeologists discovered additional findings, that date back to 6,000 years ago. They found ancient earthenware, which has been covered by stalactite, thus becoming an inseparable part of the cave. "It is a rare and fascinating combination between stalactite and archeology," the specialists say.

Live Volcano, Sinabung on 9th June 04:28, INDONESIA

Can you imagine sitting in your fancy house on the coast watching this happen before your eyes!!

And look at the houses when it is finished

Mount Sinabung Volcano Eruption, Sumatra Island Indonesia

Video captured from the side of a volcano in Indonesia shows when an eruption occurs sending ash high into the sky.

Update Mount Sinabung Volcano Eruption, Sumatra Island Indonesia

Mount Sinabung Volcano, on Indonesia's Sumatra Island, exploded in scenes reminiscent of a disaster movie on Monday, sending rapid moving and scorching hot pyroclastic flows and searing gases down its slopes and an ash plume more than five kilometers into the air, forcing terrified residents and tourists to flee the area

South Pacific | Mother Nature tries to create an island before your very eyes

Wanna see how a new island is made? Check out this fantastic show Mother Nature has put on in the middle of the Pacific Ocean in the Solomon Islands. Watch the Kavachi undersea volcano as it erupts underwater. Will it finally make island status?

Profiles in Courage

"Tzelaphchad's daughters speak justly!"

 

(Numbers 27:7)

Tammuz 16, 5779/July 19, 2019

This week's Torah reading, Pinchas, could easily bear the subtitle "Profiles in Courage." Every individual who appears in the parasha exhibits profound courage rooted in their uncompromising belief in the G-d of Israel, the Torah of Israel, the land of Israel, and the people of Israel. And this is most propitious as this is the generation and these are the people who are about to enter and inherit the land of Israel. The Korachs and Datans and Avirams, the complainers and malcontents are no more. Not fit to enter the land they long ago perished in the desert.

Parashat Pinchas opens in the aftermath of the illicit relations between the sons of the tribe of Shimon and the daughters of the idolatrous Moabites, a result of the evil brainstorm of the parting heathen prophet Bilaam, who, frustrated in his repeated attempts to curse Israel on behalf of Balak, hatched the plan that ensnared the children of Israel. While Moshe and "the entire congregation of the children of Israel, while they were weeping at the entrance of the Tent of Meeting," (Numbers 25:6) stood petrified and unable to act in their horror at what was transpiring before their very eyes, Pinchas took bold action, ending the dissolution in one single swift stroke, staying the plague that was consuming Israel and assuaging G-d's anger. The lack of decisiveness which gripped Moshe and the elders in the moment was in essence more dangerous than the brazen licentiousness being exhibited before them. Our sages teach us that they had all forgotten the commandment that they had learned at Sinai which deals with such an extreme circumstance as that taking place before them. But was their forgetfulness simply a 'senior moment' or was it a symptom of a momentary disconnect from G-d, a momentary lack of ironclad conviction and implacable faith in G-d and Torah? Had Pinchas similarly hesitated before he acted, he might have been guilty of acting out of an impure motive. Had he equivocated, even for an instant, and questioned his own motivations, he too might have frozen in the moment, like the others. His true act of courage was in his solid rock conviction that he was performing G-d's will, and not his own. There is no way that any other human being can peer into Pinchas' soul and determine unequivocally that his motives were pure, and indeed, the people began to murmur, alleging blood-lust to Pinchas' action. Therefore, in the opening of this week's parasha, G-d Himself testifies to the purity of Pinchas'motives and the righteousness of his deed: "Pinchas the son of Eleazar the son of Aharon the kohen has turned My anger away from the children of Israel by his zealously avenging Me among them, so that I did not destroy the children of Israel because of My zeal. Therefore, say, 'I hereby give him My covenant of peace. It shall be for him and for his descendants after him an eternal covenant of kehunah, because he was zealous for his G-d and atoned for the children of Israel.'" (ibid 25:11-13)

The second act of courage which occurs in our parasha was performed by the five daughters of Tzelaphchad - Machlah, Noa, Choglah, Milchah and Tirtzah. Their father had died without a son, and as things stood, that is, as Torah had stipulated, he had no one to inherit his portion in the land of Israel. The five sisters approached Moshe and challenged this law, saying to Moshe, "Our father died in the desert, but he was not in the assembly that banded together against HaShem in Korach's assembly, but he died for his own sin, and he had no sons. Why should our father's name be eliminated from his family because he had no son? Give us a portion along with our father's brothers." (ibid 27:3-4)The five sisters exhibited courage simply in standing before Moshe, as this was unprecedented. We have not heard of such a thing in the patriarchal society of the desert encampment. Had Miriam been alive they might have first enlisted her support, but Miriam was no more. They went directly to Moshe. But even more courageously, they appealed directly to G-d, via Moshe's good offices. Like Pinchas, the five sisters, Machlah, Noa, Choglah, Milchah and Tirtzah, were of the unassailable conviction that their desire was G-d's desire, that what they were asking for was what G-d wanted for them. And, as in the case of Pinchas, G-d testified directly to their righteousness: "Tzelaphchad's daughters speak justly!" (ibid 27:7) And so it was. In response to their query G-d dictated to Moshe an entire addendum to the Torah laws of inheritance, which, like Pinchas' entry into the kehunah, would, from that day forth, stand forever.

The third act of courage in our parasha, or, more precisely put, a reward for a lifetime of unimpeachable acts of courage, was G-d's designation, at Moshe'sbehest, of Yeshoshua bin Nun, as the successor to Moshe, the leader who would bring Israel into the land, lead their battle to conquer the land, and assign their tribal inheritances: "Take for yourself Yeshoshua bin Nun, a man of spirit, and you shall lay your hand upon him." (27:18) G-d's choice of the word "spirit,"(ruach, in Hebrew) was a direct reference to the courage which Yehoshuadisplayed, when he risked his own life by dissenting with the evil report of the spies, saying, (with Calev ben Yefuneh), "The land we passed through to scout is an exceedingly good land. If HaShem desires us, He will bring us to this land and give it to us, a land flowing with milk and honey." (ibid 14:7-8) Yehoshua, along with Calev, possessed "another spirit," the spirit of conviction, born of their unwavering faith in G-d's word and G-d's will.

The final act of undaunted courage displayed in parashat Pinchas, was that of Moshe, himself, who, upon being told by G-d to "Go up to this mount Avarim and look at the land that I have given to the children of Israel," but not to Moshe, who would not be allowed to enter, did not think for an instant of his own demise or of the pain of being denied entry into the land, but asked of G-d "Let HaShem, the G-d of spirits of all flesh, appoint a man over the congregation, who will go forth before them and come before them, who will lead them out and bring them in, so that the congregation of HaShem will not be like sheep without a shepherd." (ibid 27:16-17) To see beyond ones own self, beyond ones own mortality, and to dwell only on the destiny of G-d's eternal people, the children of Israel, whom Moshe himself had shepherded for forty years, is the ultimate distinction of courage, born of surrendering ones own will to G-d's and acting in the moment, and in the fullness of one's love for G-d.

See you tomorrow bli-neder

Love Yehuda Lave

Rabbi Yehuda Lave

PO Box 7335, Rehavia Jerusalem 9107202

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