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It's All in Your Hands | Rabbi Zev Smith
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A person is constantly faced
with challenges.
But I do believe
there is a secret,
the master key,
that opens the door to success
to all of our challenges.
The Gemara tells us in Avoda Zora
about a R’ Elazar ben Dordaya,
a name not familiar to us.
He was a terrible, terrible Baal Aveira.
The Maharal describes him as אדוק בעבירה,
he was stuck to Aveira
בכל לבבו, נפשו ובכל מאודו.
And once he traveled seven seas
and paid an exorbitant amount of money
to do a sin with a woman.
And during the Aveira,
something unexpected happened
and this זונה, this woman,
saw it as a message from Shomayim
that Elazar, you are hopeless and helpless.
You'll never, ever do Teshuva.
But this, for some reason,
ignited that pintele Yid
in Elazar ben Dordaya,
and he decided he's going to change that
and he's going to do Teshuva.
But he was so helpless, he cried out
to the heavens and the earth,
all of the stars,
to the sun, the moon,
but no one helped him.
And then he realized the oldest truth,
It's up to me. It's all in my hands.
And he started crying.
And he cried and he cried
until he died,
during a pure moment of Teshuva.
And a heavenly voice rang out,
Rabbi Elazar ben Dordaya
you’re destined for life
in the World to Come.
Rabeinu Hakadosh
heard about this and added,
There is one who acquires
his Olam Haba in one moment.
How magnificent this moment was.
And not only that his Teshuva was accepted,
he was called a Rabbi, he was a Tana,
because he taught Klal Yisroel
a most important lesson,
No matter how challenging it is,
it's up to you, it's in our hands.
I guess he understood
what we’ve mentioned in the past,
that a person is never given a challenge
if he doesn't have
the ability to overcome.
So therefore, logically,
it's all up to me.
It's all in my hands.
Rabbi Yaakov Salomon
told the story of a drug addict
who gave new meaning to the word,
his life was drugs,
and suddenly he changed.
What was the secret?
It was a regular morning
and he was washing his face,
and he looked in the mirror
and he saw death.
He realized he's not
going to live much longer
and it bothered him.
And he said to himself
these six magical words,
And he said it over and over
until it mesmerized him,
and he changed.
A moment of truth,
a moment of believing in oneself,
was able to transform
this extreme drug addict
into someone that
taught the world the lesson,
And when I heard this story,
it struck me like a bolt of lightning.
This is a non-Jew,
who didn't have a Torah,
didn’t have a guarantee that we're
always bigger than our challenges,
didn't have a Gemara saying
הבא ליטהר מסייעין אותו
but in a moment
that he believed in himself,
he was able to change the impossible.
As we prepare now for the Day of Judgment,
if I could humbly suggest
that when we face a challenge,
when we find a situation
not just intimidating, but overwhelming,
let us look in ourselves,
let us look and see
not death, but see life.
Look in the mirror and see a person
that's bigger than the challenge.
I don't have to go to that party.
I don't have to go to that show.
Let us see a future,
because we're going
to teach Klal Yisroel ourselves
that the matter depends on
nothing other than myself.
And we’ll enjoy a moment
that we could say,
There is one who acquires
his Olam Haba in one moment.