|                                    CLICK HERE                                   TO ORDER RABBI ARTHUR SEGAL'S                                   BOOKS                                   http://www.jewishspiritualrenewal.org/books
  The                                   Handbook to Jewish Spiritual Renewal:                                    A                                   Path of Transformation for the Modern                                   Jew
  A                                   Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the                                    Torah                                   and Talmud
 
                                     AND                                   ''GREAT IS                                   PEACE''                                   A MODERN COMMENTARY ON TALMUD                                   BAVLI TRACTATE DEREK ERETZ                                   ZUTA
   |                                      "Rabbi                                   Shimon the son of Gamliel said, 'One who eats                                   and drinks on Tisha B'Av is akin to one who eats                                   and drinks on Yom Kippur.' Rabbi Akiva said,                                   'One who works on Tisha B'Av will never see any                                   blessing from that work.' The sages say, 'One                                   who works on Tisha B'Av and doesn't mourn over                                   the destruction of Jerusalem will not merit to                                   witness its joy… from here we derive that anyone                                   who mourns over Jerusalem will merit to                                   experience her joy, and one who fails to mourn                                   over Jerusalem will not merit to partake of her                                   joy.'"                                   Talmud Bavli                                   Tractate Ta'anit 30a                                   The wicked                                   Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar instructed his                                   general Nevuzradan, "The G!d of the Jews is                                   always ready to accept penitents. Therefore,                                   when you capture them, do not allow them to pray                                   to Him, so that they should not be able to                                   repent. Otherwise, He will take pity upon them…                                   Midrash Eichah   (Lamentations)                                   "The world                                   can be compared to a human eyeball – The white                                   of the eye is the ocean surrounding the world –                                   The iris is this continent – The pupil is                                   Jerusalem – And the image in the pupil is the                                   Holy Temple."                                   Derech                                   Eretz Zuta 9                                   "Each time                                   the Jewish people were exiled, the Divine                                   Presence accompanied them."                                   Talmud Bavli                                   Tractate Megillah 29a                                    '' A bit of                                   Kabbalah from Zohar Beresheit: Let us see what                                   the traditional author, Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai                                   (c. 135 CE) writes. On Tisha B'Av we read the                                   book of Lamentations (Eichah ). Eichah does not                                   mean Lamentations in Hebrew, just as B' Midbar                                   does not mean Numbers in Hebrew. Eichah means                                   'How,' from the first words of the Book ,"How                                   [in Hebrew, Eichah] lonely sits the city, that                                   was full of people! (Lamentations 1:1) .'' R'                                   Shimon teaches that in parasha Devarim, Moses                                   asks '' How (in Hebrew, 'Eichah') can I alone                                   bear your weight, and your burden, and your                                   strife? (Deut. 1:12).'' And R' Shimon reminds us                                   that the Jewish people's hatred of one another,                                   caused Jerusalem's downfall. He also teaches                                   that when God says to Adam " 'Where are you?'                                   [in Hebrew, 'Ayecha'?] it is a broad hint to all                                   of us, to ask this question to ourselves each                                   day, as we journey with Jewish Spiritual Renewal                                   and daily spiritual growth."                                   Rabbi Arthur                                   Segal                                   http://rabbiarthursegal.blogspot.com/                                                                                                                                                                            |                                    Lamentations 3:22.                                                                      Truly, the kindnesses of the Lord                                   never cease! Indeed, His mercies never                                   fail!  |                                                                      |                                                                      
  |                                                                                                        23.                                   They                                   are new every morning; great is Your                                   faithfulness.  |                                                                      |                                                                      
  |                                                                                                        24.                                   "The                                   Lord is my portion," says my soul; "therefore I                                   will hope in Him."  |                                                                      |                                                                      
  |                                                                                                        25.                                   The                                   Lord is good to those who wait for Him, to the                                   soul that seeks Him.  |                                                                      |                                                                      
  |                                                                                                        26.                                   It is                                   good that one should wait quietly for the                                   salvation of the Lord.                                                                                                                                                                           |                                    30.                                   Let him                                   offer his cheek to his smiter; let him be filled                                   with reproach.  |                                                                      |                                                                      
  |                                                                                                        31.                                   For the                                   Lord will not cast [him] off                                   forever.                                                                      Written by The Prophet                                   Jeremiah, circa 586                                   B.C.E.  |                                      (Pictured                                   below on the front cover of the famous stained                                   glass window by Mark Chagall )                                    |                                                                      |                                                                      
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  |                                                                      |                                                                      ''R. Zvi                                   Elimelech of Dinov (1783-1841), the author of                                   the work "Bnei Yissachar, " explains that Tu                                   B'Av is a day of deep-rooted significance                                   because it falls forty days before the date of                                   the world's creation. The sixth day of creation                                   was Rosh Hashanah. On that day God created man.                                   Six days before this is the Twenty-fifth of                                   Elul, and forty days ahead of this is Tu B'Av                                   (the Fifteenth of Av). The rabbis teach: "Forty                                   days before the formation of the infant an                                   announcement is made in heaven: "The daughter of                                   so-and-so is matched up with so-and-so." Tu                                   B'Av, too, because it comes forty days before                                   the creation of the world, is a day of much                                   importance as it has a unique capacity to                                   initiate life not only for the bride and groom,                                   but for the orchards, the trees, and the vines,                                   indeed the whole eco-sphere, that these young                                   boys and girls are meeting.                                    To match                                   human fertility with the earth's via fruit trees                                   and fruits of the vine, which both have their                                   own special beracoth, helps remind us, us to                                   treat the earth with kindness and love and                                   generosity, as we would when we are courting,                                   and when we are in love with that special                                   person.''                                   Authored by                                   Rabbi Arthur Segal and published By Rabbi Arthur                                   Waskow of the Shalom Center in his ''Compilation                                   of Essays on the Jewish Holidays from an                                   Eco-Judaic View Point.''                                                                                                          |                                    |                                    |                                                                      |                                    
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  A Holiday                                   Message From Rabbi Arthur Segal's Jewish                                   Spiritual Renewal                                   July                                   2012  |                                      |                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Shalom                                   Arthur,
                                    This month we                                   celebrate two Jewish holidays. The 9th of Av, or                                   Tisha B'Av, falls on the eve of July 28, and day                                   of July 29, and Tu B'Av follows on the eve of                                   August 3 and day of August 4, 2012.                                    Tisha                                   B'Av and Tu B'Av are two of our lesser-known                                   holidays. In fact, many Jews have never                                   celebrated Tu B'Av despite the fact that the                                   Talmud calls it the most joyous day on the                                   Jewish calendar.                                   
 
  |    |                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    Sometimes                                   the Message is Between the                                   Lines
 
   Tisha B'Av is a fast day                                   that we celebrate in commemoration of the                                   Temples' destruction; the first at the hands of                                   the Babylonians in 586 B.C.E, and the second by                                   the Romans in 70 C.E. 
  However, these are                                   not the only notorious events to have fallen on                                   the same date throughout Jewish history.                                   Specifically, among many others,:
                                                                      - The Jews'                                   expulsion from Spain in 1492                                   C.E.
                                                                      - The day that 10 of Moses' 12 spies gave negative                                   reports about the land of Israel, condemning the                                   Israelites to 39 more years in the                                   wilderness.
                                                                      - The outbreak                                   of World War I, which set in motion the events                                   leading up to the Second World War and hence,                                   the Holocaust.
  The spiritual aspects of this Holy day                                   are enormous, yet some synagogues don't                                   acknowledge Tisha B'Av out of a belief that it                                   is only about restoring the Temple, the                                   Priesthood and animal sacrifices.
  This                                   misses the spiritual message of Tisha B'Av                                   entirely. 
  |                                                                                                                                           |                                    |   |                                                                      |                                                                                                                                           Don't Blame it On the                                   Rain                                                                                                       Talmud Tractate Bavli                                   Berachot 5a teaches us that when bad things                                   happen to us, we are to look inward at our own                                   character flaws for the reason rather than                                   assigning blame to some external cause. This                                   lesson is found in stories throughout the                                   text.
  The rabbis write that the first                                   Temple fell because Hebrews broke up Solomon's                                   kingdom politically, making its conquest                                   easier.
  Talmud Bavli Tractate Yoma 9b                                   explains that the second Temple fell because                                   Jews harbored unwarranted negative feelings                                   (sinat chinam) toward one another, forming                                   quarreling cliques and giving individuals the                                   cold shoulder. 
  A story in Talmud Bavli                                   Tractate Gittin 55a - 56b tells of a man who was                                   so humiliated when snubbed at a party that he                                   vengefully reported to the Romans of a Jewish                                   plot to rebel.
  Upon hearing of the                                   supposed rebellion, the Romans decided to try a                                   little test. They sent a sacrificial calf to the                                   Temple, and the fellow who got the brush off at                                   the party put a blemish on the calf.                                   
  Now, according to strict Hebraic laws of                                   the Torah, a blemished calf may not be                                   sacrificed. However, the rabbis, who adhered to                                   the more spiritual Jewish Talmudic laws, advised                                   that the sacrifice would bring peace between the                                   Jews and Romans. They said that promoting peace                                   and love is a greater good according to G!d's                                   will than is following Torah law to the                                   letter.
  Irrespective of the rabbinic                                   advice, the Hebrew priests refused the calf as a                                   proper sacrifice, and the Romans came crashing                                   through the walls of Jerusalem and destroyed the                                   city and its Temple.
  The moral of the                                   story is found in Talmud Bavli Tractate Bava                                   Metzia 30b, in which the rabbis address the                                   consequences of following the letter of the                                   Torah law but not the spirit of Jewish Talmudic                                   law.
  In plain English, ask yourself: if                                   you were in Jerusalem in 70 C.E. gazing at the                                   ruins of your city and the Temple, would you say                                   that a blemished calf caused this tragedy, or                                   was it the anger and hate permeating your                                   people? 
  Tisha B'Av mourns a number of                                   deficits. Among them; that some Jews lack                                   spirituality and we behave poorly towards one                                   another. 
  In                                   Talmud Bavli Tractate Shabbat 10a we learn that                                   loving your fellow and "Shalom ha gadol" (peace                                   is the greatest of virtues) are intrinsic to                                   Judaism. 
  Other wise teachings of the                                   sages show that the root cause of problems with                                   others and with ourselves stem from our own                                   defects of character. 
  As spiritual Jews,                                   Tisha B'Av is a time for mourning our past                                   character defects and working toward improving                                   our behavior in the future.                                       |                                                                                                                                           |                                    |   |                                                                      |                                                                                                                                           She's Everything You                                   Dream About...But Don't Fall In                                   Love                                   Tu B'Av                                   is the 15th of the month of Av. Talmud                                   Yerushalmi Tractate Ta'anit 4:7 teaches that it                                   is the happiest day on the Jewish calendar.                                   
  Girls and young men would meet at the                                   vineyards and dance together. Today we might                                   call it a mixer or "singles night," but there is                                   one notable difference.
  The girls would                                   all wear the same simple white dress so that                                   rich and poor would all look alike - none                                   adorned with jewelry or make up - and the men                                   would get to know their character without being                                   distracted by the superficial.
  Talmud                                   Bavli Tractate Ta'anit 30b-31a says: "When any                                   Jew is decorated with the jewels of Torah                                   learning, he or she is not ugly."
  Isn't                                   it interesting to juxtapose that Talmudic view                                   from 2,500 years ago against the objectification                                   of women that we see in today's popular                                   culture?
  For the Tu B'Av celebration the                                   young women would dress alike and eschew jewelry                                   and makeup so that the men would fall in love                                   for the right reasons.
  Contrast that to                                   the "relationships" between men and women as                                   portrayed in supermarket tabloids or the latest                                   episode of Two                                   1/2 Men.
                                    (Lessons                                   about Tu B'Av continue below...)                                   
    |                                                                                                                                           |                                    |   |                                                                      |                                                                                                                                           |                                    She's right here behind                                   the glass...
                                                                                                         ...and                                   you're gonna like her, 'cause she's got                                   class
  Popular                                   culture is a powerful thing, but not always in a                                   good way.
  We                                   are inundated with images - on television, in                                   music, in movies, on the Internet - that purport                                   to show us how life is supposed to                                   be.
  "Beautiful                                   People," fast cars, big houses, cool gadgets and                                   a never-ending party; these are the things that                                   we should value...or so we are told. 
  So                                   many of us pursue these superficial things for                                   years, only to wake up one day to find that the                                   one thing missing from it all is                                   happiness.
  Look around you. Look at the                                   state of our society. 
  Is it any wonder                                   that our nation's literacy rate has                                   the risk of becoming abysmal?
  Or that                                   half of marriages end up in divorce?
  Or                                   that we just can't seem to get                                   along?
  This is not how it ought to be,                                   and we all know it.
  We also know that we                                   need to make a change; for our own happiness,                                   and to save us from a modern-day Tisha                                   B'Av.
  But how do we make that change?                                   
  Too many of us have put our hope and                                   faith in the wrong place for too long. We've                                   expected others - the powerful elite - to fix                                   the problems for us.
  Now that we've                                   reached the 21st Century, how's that working                                   out?
  The change that we seek has to come                                   from within. We have to change as individuals,                                   one by one.
  We have to re-evaluate what                                   is important in life and what will truly bring                                   happiness.
  We have to live more                                   spiritually.
  We have to address our own                                   character flaws and change them.
  I know                                   it sounds difficult. The influences against it                                   are everywhere and can be hard to                                   resist.
  But it is not that                                   difficult.
  You can live your life                                   spiritually, and have deep, meaningful                                   relationships without caring about fitting in or                                   looking cool.                                    
 
  My                                   book, The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual                                   Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern                                   Jew, teaches you how to transform your life                                   into one that is happier, more peaceful, and                                   more spiritual, regardless of what is going on                                   in the world around you.
  And it is all                                   written in the context of modern-day                                   life.
  In                                   this book, I distill the teachings of our sages                                   and rabbis that have been passed along for                                   thousands of years, along with lessons from the                                   Torah and the Talmud. 
  But                                   unlike other Jewish spiritual texts that you may                                   have read, or sermons you may have heard, this                                   book presents these lessons in a concise,                                   easy-to-read, easy-to-follow life transformation                                   process that you can follow step-by-step at your                                   own pace. 
  You                                   will learn:
                                                                      - That                                   "normative" Judaism as you have known it                                   throughout your life is not really Judaism at                                   all, why it may leave you uninspired, and how                                   spiritual renewal will help you recapture that                                   inspiration (Chapter 1).
                                     - That your ego                                   can be your own worst enemy, and how to win the                                   battle against it (Chapter 2).
                                     - How to stop                                   struggling for control over things you cannot                                   control, and be happier because of it (Chapter                                   3).
                                                                       - How spiritual                                   renewal conquers the fears and character flaws                                   that are holding you back in life (Chapters 4                                   and 5).
                                                                      - To actually                                   get rid of your character flaws forever (Chapter                                   6).
                                                                      - How to turn                                   negative relationships in your life positive                                   (Chapter 7).
                                                                      - How simple it                                   is to make prayer a regular part of your                                   days...without going back to Hebrew school                                   (Chapter 8).
                                                                      - How to find                                   peace of mind through meditation (Chapter                                   9).
                                                                      - How to                                   simplify life's toughest decisions 
 (Chapter                                   10).                                                                      - How spiritual                                   renewal transforms you into the best individual                                   you can be, and how to stay on track (Chapter                                   11).
                                                                      - How to                                   celebrate the Sabbath and the Jewish Holidays                                   with meaning (Chapters 12 and                                   13).
                                                                      - How to live                                   with happiness, joy, and freedom every day of                                   your life (Chapter 14).
  The Handbook to Jewish Spiritual                                   Renewal: A Path of Transformation for the Modern                                   Jew is available at www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org/books                                   . 
                                                                      Click                                   the link above to                                   order.
                                         |                                                                                                                                           |                                    |   |                                                                      |                                                                                                                                           Good Times, Bad                                   Times, You Know I've Had My                                   Share
  As the Hebrews wandered                                   the desert for 40 years, orphaned girls without                                   brothers were forbidden to marry outside of                                   their tribe.  This was intended to prevent                                   their fathers' inherited land from passing on to                                   other tribes upon reaching the Land of Israel.                                   
  This ban was lifted on the 15th of Av                                   (Tu B'Av) in the fortieth year.
  That same                                   year, the last of the generation of the ''sin of the spies,'' who were forbidden from                                   entering the Promised Land, died out.
  The                                   Tribe of Benjamin was allowed to intermarry with                                   the other tribes after the Concubine of Gibeah                                   incident (Judges chapters 19-21).
  Cutting                                   of the wood for the main altar in the Temple was                                   completed for the year. The event was celebrated                                   with feasting and rejoicing (as is the custom                                   upon the conclusion of a holy endeavor), and                                   included a ceremonial breaking of the axes which                                   gave the day its name, the Breaking of the                                   Axe.
  What is the significance of breaking                                   an axe? We will learn about this                                   below.
  The Roman occupiers permitted                                   burial of massacre victims at Bethar on Tu B'Av.                                   Miraculously, the bodies had not decomposed,                                   despite exposure to the elements for over a                                   year.
  Hosea ben Eilah opened the roads to                                   Jerusalem upon the division of the Holy Land                                   into two kingdoms following the death of King                                   Solomon. 
  Jeroboam ben Nebat, ruler of                                   the breakaway Northern Kingdom of Israel, set up                                   roadblocks to prevent his citizens from making                                   the thrice-yearly pilgrimage to the Holy Temple                                   in Jerusalem, capital of the Southern Kingdom of                                   Judea. 
  These were finally removed more                                   than 200 years later by Hosea ben Eilah, the                                   last king of the Northern Kingdom, on the 15th                                   of Av.
  Note that these joyous events                                   occurred merely six days (on the calendar) after                                   the horrors of Tisha B'Av, and there is a great                                   lesson in that fact alone.
  When bad                                   things happen, we should not only remember to                                   look inward for the cause, but that it is not                                   necessarily the end of the world. We can always                                   look forward to better times. Hope, Ha Tikva,                                   has sustained the Jewish people for millennia.                                   
  |                                                                                                                                            |                                     |                                                                      |                                                                                                                                           When the Moon Hits                                   Your Eye Like a Big Pizza                                   Pie...
  Tu B'Av is                                   called the 15th of Av because it falls on the                                   fifteenth day of the month (full moon) according                                   to the lunar calendar. 
  We celebrate Tu                                   B'Av on July 26 this year - and the exact date                                   varies from year to year - so that our                                   celebration coincides with the full                                   moon.
  The Kabbalah's Zohar explains that                                   we mark time with the moon                                   because:
                                    "We rise and fall                                   through the nights of history knowing times of                                   growth and diminution, our moments of luminous                                   fullness alternating with moments of obscurity                                   and darkness. And like the moon, our every                                   regression and defeat is but a prelude to yet                                   another rebirth, yet another                                   renewal."
   The full moon is a                                   sign of comfort, or nachamu, after the horrible                                   events of the 9th of Av. The full moon of Tu                                   B'Av gives Tikvah, hope, to the Jews, in the                                   Diaspora.
  As already mentioned, the 15th                                   of Av also celebrates the Breaking of the Axe.                                   An axe was used the to cut firewood for the                                   altar for the Temple. 
  It was                                   ceremoniously broken when the job was done -                                   rather than saved for the next year's cutting -                                   because the axe's destructive objective                                   represents the antithesis of that for which the                                   Altar, and the Temple as a whole, stood. The axe                                   is a tool of destruction and represents warlike                                   acts. Breaking the axe symbolizes an end to such                                   acts in favor of peace, kindness and                                   love.
 
                                    "When                                   you build a stone altar for Me, do not build it                                   of cut stone; for if your sword has been lifted                                   upon it, you have profaned it; Do not lift iron                                   upon it... The altar of G!d shall be built of                                   whole stones."                                     -- Ex. 20:22;                                   Deut.                                   27:5-6
 
   If any                                   metal implement as much as touched a stone, that                                   stone was rendered unfit for use in the making                                   of the altar.
  Our sages explain in Talmud                                   Bavli Tractate Middot 3:4: "Iron was created to                                   shorten the life of man, and the Altar was                                   created to lengthen the life of man; so it is                                   not fitting that an object which shortens should                                   be lifted upon that which                                   lengthens."
  Iron, the instrument of war                                   and destruction, has no place in the making of                                   the instrument whose function is to bring                                   eternal peace and harmony to the                                   world.
  While, it seems to be our destiny                                   to wax and wane like the moon, I do pray that we                                   have more days and years like a full bright                                   moon, with no instruments of war aimed at us, or                                   forced into our hands to defend ourselves, and                                   that our shovels and backs are used to plant                                   fruit trees and see a world full of Shalom and                                   love.                                   
 
  |                                                                                                                                            |                                     |                                                                      |                                                                                                                                           Many                                   Blessings,
  Rabbi Arthur                                   Segal
  |                                                                                                                                           |                                    |   |                                                                      |                                                                                                                                           |                                    The                                   Torah and Talmud
  A Modern                                   Interpretation
   In                                   my years of Rabbinic Counseling I've noticed                                   that many modern Jews are not as familiar with                                   the Torah and the Talmud as they might                                   be.
  They find it difficult to understand                                   and interpret in a way that makes sense and has                                   relevance to their lives in the modern world.                                   
  The spiritual disconnection that this                                   causes inspired me to write a second book, A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to                                   the Torah and Talmud.
 
  This                                   book instills Jewish values and an understanding                                   of the Torah and Talmud's teachings in plain                                   English and from a modern point of view.                                   
  The                                   Talmud teaches that the Torah is about loving                                   our fellow man and that we are to ''go and                                   study.'' The rest is commentary.                                   
  A                                   Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to the Torah                                   and Talmud clarifies the commentary                                   and allows one to study the Torah and the Talmud                                   to learn the Judaic ideals of love, forgiveness,                                   kindness, mercy and peace.
  A Spiritual and Ethical Compendium to                                   the Torah and Talmud is available at www.JewishSpiritualRenewal.org/books                                   
  It is not expensive as we have kept                                   costs down and certainly                                   a small amount to pay for the priceless wisdom                                   contained within the Torah and the                                   Talmud.
                                                                      Click                                   the link below to                                   order.                                                                      
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