Life is Not Linear | Parsha with the Chief: Matot-Masei
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ナレーター:
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著者:
We instinctively look for the quickest most efficient path from where we are to where we want to be.
But life rarely unfolds in straight lines. It twists, detours and doubles back, leaving us wondering whether we've lost time along the way.
This week's parsha opens with a list: forty-two stops, forty years, for a journey Rashi says should have taken eleven days. Rashi also brings a midrash: God recounting each stop is compared not to an accounting, but to a parent narrating every stage of a sick child's slow recovery. Not a report, but something closer to a love letter.
Drawing on Pirkei Avot, the Chief takes that same tenderness and turns it toward our own lives. "Efficiency is everything in commerce," he says. "But the human being is not a product." The years you thought were setting you back may have been the years that were shaping you most.
Every stop got written down, because every stop was precious enough to be remembered.
Key Questions
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What if the years you thought were setting you back were actually shaping you?
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Is someone who takes forty years to learn something behind, or exactly on time?
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Why do the things that matter most refuse to be rushed?
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Can you trust that none of it was wasted?