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- Translator's Introduction
- Groping for Direction
- Choosing the Letters
- From Reverent Eloquence to Readability
- Recurring Themes in the Talks
- Hope, Faith, Trust
- Choosing the Talks from the Variety of Material...
- ...and the Variety of Versions
- Optimistic Trust in Days of Crisis
- Part A: Letters (1.
"A guide for all the troops under your influence...") - Part A: Letters (2.
"Endeavors to create a medium within the natural order do not contradict the concept of bitachon...") - Part A: Letters (3.
"One should not be too dejected or doubtful, for this, too, is exploited by the [Evil] Inclination.") - Part A: Letters (4.
"I do not know where you stand with regard to bitachon.") - Part A: Letters (5.
"If this blessing is sometimes delayed...") - Part A: Letters (6.
"In words that are appropriate to her present state of mind...") - Part A: Letters (7.
"One must have appropriate vessels to accommodate all these blessings.") - Part A: Letters (8.
"Consider: Is G-d really in need of your worry...? Or will He succeed in finding good solutions even without your worrying?") - Part A: Letters (9.
"I saw in a little book - it's called the Tanach...") - Part A: Letters (10.
"...a weakness in your trust, and the remedy for this is to study Shaar HaBitachon.") - Part A: Letters (11.
"And when a person is strong in his trust..., he then sees [the result] with his fleshly eyes.") - Part A: Letters (12.
"People study, and study - but when it comes to practical application, where's the trust?") - Part A: Letters (13.
"Just as He has a say in the big world, He certainly has a say likewise in our little personal world.") - Part A: Letters (14.
"This very thought - as to what will happen if, G-d forbid, a misfortune occurs - is itself a misfortune.") - Part A: Letters (15.
"Medical matters are not your Divinely-ordained mission in this world.") - Part A: Letters (16.
"The income that G-d fixed for you [on Rosh HaShanah], which I am sure is generous, no one can lessen and certainly no one can take away.") - Part A: Letters (17.
"If you occasionally feel that this certain trust is wavering..., you should avert your attention from this weakness, for it is no doubt only imagined.") - Part A: Letters (18.
"Since you place your trust in G-d in questions of materiality and your livelihood, surely that trust should be firm when it comes to one's children and their conduct!") - Part A: Letters (19.
"Several well-known incidents testify that with staunch bitachon one can accomplish whatever is needed.") - Part A: Letters (20.
"David HaMelech says, 'I will fear no evil, for You are with me.' And 'for You are with me' relates to every single Jew.") - Part A: Letters (21.
"Even when one does not see how this operates within the realm of nature, G-d will carry out His [Will].") - Part A: Letters (22.
"It is disappointing and painful to encounter certain dispensable expressions in your letter. Why do you do this?") - Part A: Letters (23.
"If a person thinks that his livelihood is meager, he should donate more tzedakah than previously. In that way he shows G-d that his charitable needs are greater than heretofore..., and He will then provide a greater income.") - Part A: Letters (24.
"At the same time, one must create a vessel on the natural plane and follow the doctor's orders.") - Part A: Letters (25.
"A man's trust is the measuring-stick...") - Part A: Letters (26.
"The tzitz was worn on the forehead, and thus represents a trust that transcends mortal reason.") - Part A: Letters (27.
"Not merely pushing through one day after another...") - Part A: Letters (28.
"You are already wealthy but do not know it.") - Part A: Letters (29.
"One should not initiate - and introduce into the world - depressing lines of thought.") - Part A: Letters (30.
"Especially in the present month of Elul, the month of Divine mercy, each of you - or you together with your wife - should talk for at least a few minutes on the subject of trusting in G-d.") - Part A: Letters (31.
"It seems to me that this is the only organization within the precincts of Lubavitch that is conducted in this way.") - Part A: Letters (32.
"In the course of the year one only does accounting that will certainly not weaken one's avodah, and - obviously - that will leave no room for the faintest trace of despair.") - Part A: Letters (33.
A descent ought to arouse... greater powers of faith and trust, whose external manifestation is a courageous spirit and a lack of emotional reaction to an unpleasant phenomenon.") - Part A: Letters (34.
"When you are firm in your trust and actually perceive the situation [as a trial], the trial will cease to exist, and you will return to your former standing.") - Part A: Letters (35.
"The Splitting of the Red Sea was actualized by [Nachshon's] strong trust and faith in G-d. From this we learn the approach to be followed in finding one's match.") - Part A: Letters (36.
"As I read there, you are worried about your children's health, and you conclude by asking what you can do apart from weeping and lamenting. First of all, one should stop weeping etc.") - Part A: Letters (37.
"There is a well-known teaching of the Sages that 'a son can bring merit upon his father' - and upon his mother, too.") - Part A: Letters (38.
"This is 'something concerning which none of us knows' - determining a specific time, and not later, by which G-d, Who makes matches, should do so.") - Part A: Letters (39.
"These days of Pesach are days of faith and trust, when the Jews of those times went out with their wives and children to a wilderness of venomous serpents and scorpions, relying only on a word from G-d.") - Part A: Letters (40.
"Divine Providence applies in particular... to a person whose position enables him to influence a certain circle. After all, 'even the superintendent of the local irrigation well is appointed in Heaven.' ") - Part A: Letters (41.
"We have seen it proved in practice that the greater a man's trust, and the more he looks toward his future with joy, the faster do these things materialize.") - Part A: Letters (42.
"Let him take G-d as a partner, by pledging to contribute for tzedakah a little more than a tenth of the profit, and preferably close to a fifth. His Partner will then undoubtedly bring him blessings and success.") - Part A: Letters (43.
"The end of your letter, about your lack of joy, contradicts the beginning of your letter.") - Part A: Letters (44.
"One states as a fact, and regards as certain (G-d forbid), that in a month's time his father's health will not be as it ought to be?!") - Part A: Letters (45.
"The instances in which doctors are mistaken in such matters are innumerable.") - Part A: Letters (46.
"And G-d, Who since the Six Days of Creation has been 'arranging matrimonial matches,' will no doubt make available to you, too, the match that will be suitable for you, materially and spiritually in unison.") - Part A: Letters (47.
"You ask whether the gates of Heaven have been closed (G-d forbid) and why the way of the worthless prospers.") - Part A: Letters (48.
"There can be nothing that is not good, for in that place no one has any dominion apart from G-d alone.") - Part A: Letters (49.
"This [mood] itself will increase the good tidings.") - Part A: Letters (50.
"And may G-d grant that my trust in the ultimate victory of good and truth will be vindicated - even with regard to political parties.") - Part A: Letters (51.
"Despairing, and seeking miracles especially for one's battles with the [Evil] Inclination - these are simply the wiles and the incitement initiated by the [Evil] Inclination.") - Part A: Letters (52.
"It is self-understood that one cannot point out to G-d on the calendar that this must happen at the time that appears right to oneself.") - Part A: Letters (53.
"Bitachon is the conduit through which one receives outstanding success from Above.") - Part A: Letters (54.
"They're cutting him up! He's groaning in pain, but he can't free himself from these kidnappers and murderers!") - Part A: Letters (55.
"You write that it appears to you that your lot does not bring you success, and so forth. Avert your attention from all of that, because it is not true.") - Part A: Letters (56.
"When there is a full measure of firm trust - without learned debates or explanations - that He is 'my light and my salvation,' then 'whom shall I fear?' ") - Part A: Letters (57.
"With regard to the temporary inadequacy in your income, it is a pity that you are taking it so hard.") - Part A: Letters (58.
"In the spirit of lechat'chilah ariber, it could be suggested that rejoicing over the improvement in one's health should be advanced ahead of time, even though the improvement is not yet manifest.") - Part A: Letters (59.
"When there arrives a moment that is not as one would have liked it to be...") - Part A: Letters (60.
"If so, what room is left for worry?") - Part A: Letters (61.
"It is my unequivocal opinion that [involvement in the Chabad institution in your locality] is also the conduit through which the local members of the chassidic brotherhood will receive their material livelihood.") - Part A: Letters (62.
"I hope, too, that you will participate in the farbrengens..., which heal and strengthen and raise the spirits of those who are downfallen and of those whose hearts are bruised.") - Part A: Letters (63.
"When a person is weighing in his mind what he should decide and how he should act, at that time, too, G-d is watching over him and helping him.") - Part A: Letters (64.
"When one realizes that this is only a test, it utterly ceases to exist, and what is revealed is the inner meaning of that phrase: 'For the L-rd your G-d is elevating you' - over all the obstacles that veil and obscure [His Countenance].") - Part A: Letters (65.
"If people had made a habit of sharing [their] good news and writing about it frequently, they would have had less - or no - need to set up bonds of communication by writing about things that are the opposite of good news.") - Part A: Letters (66.
"When a soldier sets out to the battlefield, he strides forth to the joyful rhythm of a triumphal march.") - Part A: Letters (67.
"And as it becomes increasingly engraved in one's understanding that one is standing before the King of kings, ...there will be a corresponding decrease in one's anxiety about what others will say about the manner of one's speech.") - Part A: Letters (68.
Through the Zohar, G-d opened up a new wellspring that provides a profounder G-dly understanding, and faith, and trust.) - Part A: Letters (69.
"Repentance, too, must be done out of a firm trust in G-d, and not (G-d forbid) out of despair.") - Part A: Letters (70.
"You write that you would like to have more children, but that there is a financial question.") - Part A: Letters (71.
"There were a few reasons for my not answering your previous letters. One of them was that I wanted to see how Divine Providence would guide you in the course of the summer.") - Part A: Letters (72.
"My intent [in writing of Divine Providence] is not to act as defense counsel (G-d forbid) for the above-mentioned [medical] situation.") - Part A: Letters (73.
"The stronger and more disproportionate is one's trust, the more disproportionately will one's trust be manifestly vindicated - by the bestowal of G-d's blessings, both material and spiritual.") - Part A: Letters (74.
All the above [regarding responses to the Gulf War] relates to action. As to how one should feel, I have made my position clear on several occasions.) - Part A: Letters (75.
"You will then have less time to think the opposite of the directive to think only good.") - Part A: Letters (76.
"You see miracles..., yet you insist on seeking out depressing subjects.") - Part A: Letters (77.
"You have been promised that G-d is your guardian.") - Part B: Talks (78.
Why was Yosef punished for placing his trust in the royal butler, for preparing a natural means through which he could be released from the dungeon?) - Part B: Talks (79.
Regardless of everything, Yaakov Avinu went on his way with a light heart and in high spirits, because he had trust in the One Above.) - Part B: Talks (80.
Even if until that moment such a person was tainted by idolatry, or perhaps a tinge of it, when Pesach eve arrives he can have complete trust that "now the Omnipresent has brought us near to His service.") - Part B: Talks (81.
So long as the Yeshivah is their home, students should immerse themselves in their Torah studies and not be concerned with questions as to how they will eventually earn a living.) - Part B: Talks (82.
The Rebbe Maharash answers his own question: "People are not lacking a livelihood; they are lacking trust. Every individual is indeed provided with a livelihood. It's only that by lacking trust, a person sometimes turns off the tap....") - Part B: Talks (83.
"Even a little guy like me gave tzedakah to a bedraggled stranger!") - Part B: Talks (84.
The first time Adam saw nightfall, he discovered that a man is able to diffuse light even when the world around him is dark.) - Part B: Talks (85.
Before the Sea Splits: Four Responses to the Crises of This World) - Part B: Talks (86.
Faith and Trust)- Faith relates not to practicalities but to one's Divine service.
Trust, by contrast, has a practical consequence. - Faith is constant.
Trust is a sensation that is aroused within one when it is needed. - The Certainty of One's Trust Elicits Salvation
- Food from the King's Hand, or through a Natural Conduit?
- Part B: Talks (87.
A Jewish farmer "believes in Him Who is the Life of all the worlds - and sows.") - Part B: Talks (88.
From the Mouths of Babes: Three Modes of Trust) - Part B: Talks (89.
When one has trust in the One on High, he also has trust in his fellow Jews.) - Part B: Talks (90.
Once the beleaguered King Chizkiyahu heard the words of Yeshayahu, he placed his trust so completely in the Hands of G-d that he lay down in bed... for a sweet and tranquil slumber.) - Part B: Talks (91.
Even Bread from the Earth comes from Heaven.) - Part B: Talks (92.
G-d will provide him with all his needs even if he has not yet tackled his task for the month of Elul - repentance. Indeed, it applies because he is in that state.) - Part B: Talks (93.
G-d's army - and in our context, the Israel Defense Forces, whose privilege it is to defend Jewish towns with actual self-sacrifice...) - Part B: Talks (94.
Yosef turned to the Chief Butler as if his whole salvation depended on him - and this constituted his sin.) - Part B: Talks (95.
This arousal included a heightened trust that Divine Providence supervises the particulars of every individual's life, and this in turn empowered the chassid to decide what to do and how to act.) - Part B: Talks (96.
"In G-d we trust" means that one regards G-d as his trustee: one hands everything over into His Hands and relies on Him in all one's affairs.) - Part B: Talks (97.
When a child is born, his sustenance is born together with him. Indeed, the birth of an additional child increases the sustenance of the entire household.) - Part B: Talks (98.
The commandment to "be fruitful and multiply" should be fulfilled in a spirit in which G-d's blessings of sons and daughters are received "with joy and a gladsome heart.") - Part B: Talks (99.
Trusting in G-d does Not Contradict the Belief that Everything is for the Good.) - Part B: Talks (100.
Exactly What is Meant by the Obligation to Trust in G-d?)- Certainty Only for the Sinless?!
- A Tentative Solution
- Those who are Deserving and Those who are Not
- Cast Your Burden upon G-d
- Having Trust Entails Avodah and Exertion in one's Soul
- I am the One who can Remove my Obstacles
- Appendix I: "A Weighty Task Indeed"
A Thought from the Rebbe Rashab - Appendix II: "When there is still a straw to hang on to"
A Thought from the Rebbe Rayatz
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