The Magid from Zlotchov was impoverished beyond what we can imagine; yet every morning he would declare with recognizable simcha:
Speaking from experience, cancer is often not painful at all, but chemotherapy can be brutal. My doctor told me (more than once) that he was going to cure me, but to do that he was going to give me the full dose and course of chemo. Chemo was painful, but I was very sincere every time I thanked him for giving me everything I needed to be cured.
baruch atah HaShem, sh'asah li kol tzorkiHis talmidim asked one day, "With all due respect, the rebbie is extremely poor and lacking in even basic necessities; how can the rebbie say that that bracha at all?" The magid answered that it was precisely because of his situation that he was so excited to make that declaration. "Apparently," he said, "I need to be impoverished and HaShem is providing everything I need to experience that to its fullest!"
Speaking from experience, cancer is often not painful at all, but chemotherapy can be brutal. My doctor told me (more than once) that he was going to cure me, but to do that he was going to give me the full dose and course of chemo. Chemo was painful, but I was very sincere every time I thanked him for giving me everything I needed to be cured.
Comments