Believing in Miracles: The First Step to Making Them Happen
"I take comfort in the fact that the Torah's attitude, which predates today's positivist trend by four thousand years and will survive it by much longer than that, is one of unabashed optimism. This is the doctrine of bitachon, or trust in G‑d, which the Chassidic master Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Lubavitch (1789–1866) distilled as the Yiddish adage, Tracht gut, vet zein gut—' Think good, and it will be good.' What this means, says the Lubavitcher Rebbe, is that bitachon, the absolute assurance and conviction that GD will make things good, actually becomes the conduit and vessel that draws down and receives GD's blessings. Positive thinking is not just a way to weather negative occurrences, but actually makes positive results happen." - Chabad.org Yanky Tauber
Building on the Rebbe's wisdom, we see that this principle goes beyond mere positive thinking. When we train our minds to have Bitachon, complete trust in GD goodness, we create the spiritual channels through which divine blessings can flow.
Think of it like preparing soil before planting a seed. Our unwavering faith and trust prepare our hearts and minds to receive G-d's miracles. Bitachon isn't passive hope – it's an active force that draws down divine intervention into our physical world.
So when facing challenges that seem impossible, remember: your absolute belief in positive outcomes isn't just a coping mechanism. As the Torah teaches us, it's the very vessel through which miracles can manifest.
Comments
Post a Comment