By the Grace of G-d
1 Shvat, 5718 [1958]
Brooklyn
Greetings and Blessings!
Just[322] now I received your letter of 23 Teves - eve of the anniversary of the passing of the Alter Rebbe, author of the Tanya and the Shulchan Aruch - in which you write of your present condition.
You have no doubt heard the teaching of the Rebbe Maharash,[323] the grandfather of my revered father-in-law, the Rebbe [Rayatz]: "People say that if you can't make your way from below, you should climb over the top - but I hold that right from the outset you should leap over the top."[324]
Now, this approach applies to the present subject. At first sight it would appear that manifest joy should wait until one's health improves in actual fact. However, in the spirit of the above teaching, it could be suggested that rejoicing over this improvement should be advanced ahead of time, even though the improvement is not yet manifest.
Indeed, this itself will hasten the process. As has been repeatedly cited in the name of the [earlier] Rebbeim of Chabad, "Think positively, and things will be positive." And how much more does this assurance apply when one translates positive thoughts into joyful words and joyful actions. This is especially relevant to yourself, whose literary skills equip you to influence many people in this direction - and the reward of those who gladden people's hearts is well known (Taanis 22a).[325]
[...] With blessings for good news,
[...]
Notes:
- (Back to text) Igros Kodesh, Vol. 16, p. 252, Letter 6026, addressed to R. Ze'ev Dov Alter Meir, Tel Aviv.
- (Back to text) Acronym for R. Shmuel Schneersohn (1834-1882), the fourth Lubavitcher Rebbe.
- (Back to text) The last ten words correspond to the classic Heb./Yid. phrase coined by the Rebbe Maharash, Lechat'chilah ariber!
- (Back to text) The Gemara there describes an encounter between Eliyahu HaNavi (Elijah the Prophet) and one of the Sages. Two strangers arrive on the scene, and Eliyahu declares that they are assured of a place in the World to Come.
The Sage then takes them aside and asks them, "What do you do with yourselves?"
They reply, "We are merrymakers who cheer up those who are sad. And when we see two people quarelling, we joke around until we make peace between them."