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                                                                              Ki Teitzei          24107-EYAL - 24107-EYAL | 19 - A | 18-01-28 | 12:12:05 | SR:-- | Cyan                             19
               Another apparent paradox related to the laws of  the guardrail
 ki teitzei אֵצ ֵת י ִּ כ  concerns the fact that the numerical value of the Hebrew word for
            fence (gader) equals that of the numerical value for the Hebrew word
            meaning “infinite” (ein sof). Both are 207. How can the concepts of
            a fence and infinity be related? To understand Rabbi Ginsburgh’s
            answer, we must first explain that the Sages often use the word “geder”
 £Going Out to War Going Out to War   to describe the precautionary fences or enactments they “erected”
 ££Going Out to War
            to prevent people from even coming close to performing a biblically
 on a Personal Levelersonal Level  forbidden act. Rabbi Ginsburgh explains that not only do fences not
 on a Personal Level
 on a P
            serve to limit human endeavor, they actually open up new vistas. If
            there are no fences, people may be afraid of going “up to the roof” for
 Ki Teitzei begins with the words “When you will go forth in war   fear of falling. The presence of a guardrail/fence provides a safe space
 against  your enemy” (Deuteronomy 21:10),  while  the  following   that the soul can ascend to in order to experience a new horizon. This
 portion, Ki Tavo, begins “And it will be when you come into the   in fact is the spiritual understanding of all the mitzvot. By providing
 Land” (Deuteronomy 26:1).  The  juxtaposition of going  out and   the soul with clear and fixed boundaries, the Torah paradoxically
 coming in captures one of the most powerful dynamics present in   enables it to fly free like a bird toward infinite horizons.
 nature, the human  body, and the human condition: the dynamic
 Kabbalists refer to as “run and return.” This cycle is reflected in a
 multitude of ways from the contraction and expansion at the very
 origins of the universe to the pulse of blood running through our
                              £Amalek: Then and NowAmalek: Then and NowAmalek: Then and Now
                              Amalek: Then and Now
 veins; from the cycles of the seasons to the ebb and flow of the tide;   ££Amalek: Then and NowAmalek: Then and Now
                              ££
 from the exhalation and inhalation of breath to the rhythmic beating
 of the heart; from exile to redemption; and from life’s ups to life’s
 downs.     All the “stories” in the Torah are archetypal in nature, reflecting or
            representing various physical and spiritual energies ever present in
 God has granted us the potential inner wisdom to know how to “go
 out to war”: how and when to act forcefully, and how to go out into   all aspects of reality and within each and every person. The essential
 the world and step beyond our limitations and preconceived notions.   energy and fundamental lessons contained in these stories reappear
            in countless different guises and under many different circumstances,
 However, He has also granted us the wisdom to know when to return
 home, when to remain still and ascend to a new state of consciousness.   related to the individual, the people of Israel, and the entire world.
 Either we must learn to control this dynamic, learning to rule over   Using the PaRDeS system to decode the text is a particularly potent
            way to reveal the Torah’s eternally relevant nature.
 it or flow with it, or we must face the reality of constantly being
 passive victims, toyed with by faceless forces beyond our control.   The end of Ki Teitzei recounts Amalek’s unprovoked attack on the
            Jewish people just as they came out of Egypt. This incident is read
 On a personal level, going out to war against your enemy for a
 Jew means refusing  to  remain complacent, constantly  combating   on the Shabbat before Purim in synagogues all over the world. That
 those inner forces that reject change and try to prevent the soul from   Haman, the villain of the Purim story, is a descendant of Amalek
 telling the body how to act instead of the opposite. Traditionally,   provides a concrete  example of how the  same archetypal energy
            reared its ugly head a thousand years later.


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