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"Letters of Thought" - 5 new articles

  1. Weird Sign Wednesday V
  2. On Foreign Religions And Their Influence on Judaism
  3. Picture of the Week 94
  4. Weekly Riddle 21
  5. Weird Sign Wednesday IV
  6. More Recent Articles
  7. Search Letters of Thought

Weird Sign Wednesday V


I don't remember where I took a picture of this sign - I figure it was in 770, though I could be mistaken.





Now listen.

I'm all for Israel like the next guy, and bringing the Geulah is most definitely the goal . . . but come now, does any of that have to do with "Serious people" bringing it "speedily" by buying Real Estate?

And wasn't Goshen in Egypt?



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On Foreign Religions And Their Influence on Judaism


As a bochur at a farbrengen I once heard a story of a Satmar bochur who went off the derech (r"l). Encountering a Lubavitcher bochur, the Lubavitcher told him that his performance of a mitzvah such as tefillin was something more precious to G-d then the deed of a person Shomer Torah V'mitzvos etc.
To what could this idea be compared?
To a king with two sons. One son left and moved very far away - visiting only once a year. When this lost son would come home, the time he spent with his father was more precious to his father then anything else. True the father would prefer a normative relationship with his son - one where, like with the second son, they were always together - but that single visit meant more to the father then anything else in the world.

The story ends with the Satmar bochur first being a wayward son making an occasional visit . . . then ultimately returning to the fold (and learning chassidus in 770 etc etc)

Cut to the present - some seven or eight years later . . . And I fine a possible source for the parable I so often gave:


A man has two sons. The younger demands his share of his inheritance while his father is still living, and goes off to a distant country where he "waste[s] his substance with riotous living" and eventually has to take work as a swineherd. There he comes to his senses and decides to return home and throw himself on his father's mercy, thinking that even if his father does disown him, being one of his servants is still far better than feeding pigs. But when he returns home, his father greets him with open arms and hardly gives him a chance to express his repentance. He kills a fatted calf to celebrate his return. The older brother resents the favored treatment of his faithless brother and complains of the lack of reward for his own faithfulness. But the father responds:
" 'My son,' the father said, 'you are always with me, and everything I have is yours. But we had to celebrate and be glad, because this brother of yours was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found.'"

Great story (this was Wikipedia's rendition) . . . the source? The New Testament of course.
Yup - it turns out one of my favorite parables is the famed parable of the Prodigal Son.
Go figure.
(And yes the name of the post is over blown)
-----
In a completely random and other note:
This almost made me cry last night 






Picture of the Week 94


Father and Daughter - Taken a few weeks ago in the Art Institute of Chicago

Wishing everyone a good Shabbos!






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Weekly Riddle 21

This one is worth 5 points:


Sit, I do, by your bed
-cooing softly by your head.
At dawn's first light, or half past eight,
My voice sings forth early or late.












Weird Sign Wednesday IV


This week's Weird Sign Wednesday comes in conjunction with yesterday's way classy 2010 Kosher Restaurant & Wine Experience
post.

What makes this sign odd isn't so much what it's advertising, Baron Herzog Jeunesse, but rather the way it sells the product . . . and even more, the location.

You see, the picture was taken on Franklin Ave between Lincoln and S. Johns pl - id est the complete and total non-Jewish {frum} part of Crown/Prospect Heights. Do stores in that area even sell it?
Were this on Kingston I'd say it's an odd advertisement for Kosher wine, but out here . . . Weird Sign Wednesday.


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