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ב"ה

Start with the end in mind

Friday, 15 May, 2015 - 3:14 pm

“When you come into the land... the land will rest a Sabbath for G-d.”

This is re referring to the Mitzvah of Shemitah – the agricultural sabbatical year in the Land of Israel – where every seventh year the fields are not worked and are allowed to rest.

But doesn’t that only happen after six years? Why does the Torah seem to describe it happening as soon as you enter the land?

Torah is indicating to us what the focus, what the goal is. Is your goal the working of the fields, or is your goal the eventual ‘Sabbath for G-d'?

Says the Torah, don't lose sight of your priorities. You should know your goal from the outset,  and your goal should be arriving at the spiritual growth and elevation of the sabbatical year.

The same is true for our lives today, that even though we must engage in a lot of mundane activity to earn a living and get ahead, we should always be mindful of the higher divine purpose in it all.

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