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Home > Parsha > Vayikra > Dvar for Bechukotai (Leviticus 26:3 - 27:34) Dvar for Bechukotai (Leviticus 26:3 - 27:34)This week's Parsha, Bechukotai, clearly states that good people will be rewarded, and bad people will be punished. But is that really true? Don't some people excel even though they're clearly evil? Don't good people sometimes suffer? Lastly, when the Torah describes these rewards and punishments it does so in the plural. Why? There is a Talmud (Kiddushin 39b) that states that there is no reward for doing a mitzvah in this world, and that it all comes in the next world. What, then, is our Parsha referring to? Rabbi Avi Weiss offers that in this world reward and punishment only operate on a collective level. That is, when one does something positive, the larger community benefits. And when doing something negative, the community suffers. That would explain why our Parsha uses the plural in describing rewards and punishments. As for good people suffering and bad people enjoying, that has a lot to do with free will. For example, if we saw immediate dividends when giving charity, who wouldn't give? It turns out that our faithful positive actions pay interest to our local communities, and pay handsome dividends to our personal accounts. _______________________________________________ WeeklyDvar.com |
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