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11 Daily Dose of Gratitude

11 Daily Dose of Gratitude

Update: 2025-11-20
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Welcome to daily Bitachon . We are now in our Sha'ar HaBechinah series, trying to figure out why we're not all jumping for joy if Tov Hashem l'kol , God is good to everybody. Why is it that most people don't realize it? And we gave two reasons. Reason number one is we're always looking for more. Reason number two, we're just used to it. And reason number three, because things don't always go right. And we have financial losses, we have physical ailments and we don't understand how these can possibly be good for us. We don't get the benefit of nisayon , tests. We don't have the benefits of musar . That means anything that goes wrong in our life is for one of two reasons: it's a test, means we didn't do anything wrong, Hashem's testing us, or it's for musar purposes to give us rebuke, to change. And he quotes a pasuk in Tehillim , Ashrei ha'gever , fortunate is the man, asher t'yasrenu Kah , that God rebukes him, u'mTorascha tolamdenu , and he learns from the Torah, which means he gets the message. And we forget that we and everything that we have are nothing more than gifts of God. That's all we are. Our existence and everything we have are all gifts of God. Generous, kind gifts. And everything that he gives us is b'tzedek . Everything he gives us is done with a just approach based on what God's wisdom feels is right. And we are not accepting of that justice. And not only do we not praise him when God reveals his kindness on us, we actually deny the good to begin with. And he says that this denial is rooted in foolishness. And it comes to the point that people think that they could be smarter than God in how they run the world and how they make things happen. And this is a famous, great Chassidic Rebbe that they asked him the question, if you were God, how would you run the world? If you could change things, what would you do? If you ask people around the table now, someone would say, well, I would find the new mayor for New York, or I would stop the terrorist attacks in Israel, or whatever else I would do. I would heal all the sick. I would get matches for all those without shidduchim and cure all mental health illnesses in the world. And the Rabbi answered, I wouldn't do anything any different than's going on right now because God knows exactly what he's doing and I don't think I could do anything better than he can. And it's really, in a sense, it's a sense of arrogance where we think, well, we could do better. We have better ideas for how to run the world than God does. And he gives a mashal of a group of blind people that were brought into a hospital, a center that was made specifically for them and all their needs. And every possible machine was there, every possible comfort was there, perfectly made for them, rails that they could hold on to when they walk, blinking, you know, beeping noises that they know what if things are safe or unsafe, all types of medicines and pharmacies and doctors. And they didn't pay attention to any of the rules, any of the regulations, didn't follow any doctor's instructions. And they walked through the hospital without listening to the beeps. They tripped, they fell, they banged into the machine that was there to fix them. They broke their arms, they were in pain, they were crying. And they said, who built this place? It's a disaster. We're falling all over the place. He doesn't know what he's doing. He's not a good doctor. He doesn't know how to run anything. And they don't realize that everything here was set up for kindness and goodness, not to paint anybody. And if anything, the one that caused the pain was the person themselves. And they now go deny the benefit and the goodness of the one that helped them. And he quotes a pasuk in Kohelet to this effect. The path that the fool takes is without heart and he announces to the world that he's a fool. Which means that's the person that goes through this world in a foolish way, and by denying God, announces to the world that he's foolish. So that's the first important premise in appreciating our lives is to understand that there's a lot of things that we're not gonna understand. I once heard a beautiful line, I don't know who said it. that the difference between the atheist and the believer. The believer has one thing to deal with. They don't understand why righteous people suffer. That's the question that Moshe Rabbeinu asked. That's the one thing that believing people don't understand. Atheists? They don't understand where a flower came from, where an eye came from, where a heart came from, where the Swiss Alps came from, where air came from. They don't understand anything. We have one thing. We don't understand exactly how God deals with us. Okay. Well, if anything, as we'll see later on, the very fact that we see such wonders of creation tells us how smart and understanding God is. And therefore, we'll tell ourselves, if we don't understand how to create a embryo, we don't know how to make a fly, well, shows God pretty smart. And if he could make a fly, he could probably
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11 Daily Dose of Gratitude

11 Daily Dose of Gratitude

Rabbi David Sutton