hosted by tripod
Search: This Site Tripod Web by Lycos Search
Start Your Own Blog Today Build an online Photo Album

His Word For Today
Praying
Home
Meet Your Teacher
Sugar And Humility
Do The Right Thing
Pain Relief
Beauty
Joseph
Now What?
Treasures
Thirst
Understanding
Purim And Wealth
Purim: Vashti And Israel
Esau, Amalek, Haman
If - Then
Keep Fighting
Speech
Rebuke
More Cunning
Business Ethics
Flee
You Can Do It
Two Mountains
Discernment
Praying
Be Empowered
Understanding Suffering
Truth
Dear Children
Get Wisdom
Divine Justice
Dear Christian
Guarding The Matzah
The Plagues
Divine Intervention
The Blood
Pharaoh's Heart
Promises
Today
Be A New Lump
Vanity
The Right Thing
Addictions
Happiness
Free Will
Shortcuts
Perceptive Heart
What's Fair
Proper Time
War And Humility
White Garments
In A Topsy-Turvy World
Cycles Of Life
Imperfections
Made In His Image
When A Man Marries
True Value
Control
Dealing With Our Enemies
Acts Of Forgiveness
Seeing The Potential
Delusion
Haste
Shavuot, Torah And Milk
It's Only A Test
The Salmon
The Ways Of Sin
Esau And Ishmael
Never Alone
Why Me?
Say You Are Sorry
Joseph: A Caring Leader
Morally Correct
His Mysterious Ways
From Lemons To Lemonade
Learning To Prioritize
Knowing YHVH
The Power Of Self Control
A Sanctified Tongue
Compassion
And Jethro Heard
Reduce Your Stress
Make Me A Sanctuary
Giving Freely
Torah Study
Inside And Out
Showing Compassion
The Ten Commandments
Public Reading
Bribery, Bias And Blindness
Daily And Continually
Streching Out The Olive Branch
A New Creation
Uplifting Experience
Acceptance
Good And Evil
Seeking After Wisdom
Take Time To Reflect
Relationships And Reflection
Wrongly Accused
Salt
Never Stop Learning
The Pleasure Of Forgiving
Say Something Nice
Real Forgiveness
The Sabbath Day: Yahveh's Sign
Be Still
The Unusual Oath
There Is Hope

Praying: Before And After

"And you shall eat and be satisfied, and you shall bless YHVH your Elohim for the good land which He gave to you." Deuteronomy 8:10

This commandment instructs us to bless YHVH after a meal, and acknowledge all that He has done for us.

The specified time for this blessing is significant. Don't we feel most thankful before the meal? Shouldn't we say the blessing when we're hungry? Most blessings are said before rather than after we eat. Why is this commandment different?

The command to say the blessing at the end of the meal reflects the Torah's profound insight into human nature. Yes, it is easier to thank Him before the meal, and that is exactly the point.

The Torah implies that after we are satisfied, we can make a tragic mistake.

"Guard yourselves lest you forget YHVH your Elohim, lest you eat and be satisfied, and build good houses and dwell therein, and you instill pride in your hearts and forget YHVH your Elohim who took you out from Egypt, from the house of slavery, and you say in your hearts, my strength and the might of my hand made me all of this great wealth."
(Deut 8:11-17)

This way, when we bless YHVH we avoid the false claim that our own abilities brought us these blessings.

The story is told of a woman late for a business appointment. Caught in traffic, she began to pray. "YHVH, help me get there, and I'll light candles every Sabbath." At that moment the police opened a lane around the accident and she got through. She hit a long line at a toll. "YHVH, help me get there, and I'll be more honest in my business." A new lane opened, and she went through. With three minutes to go, there was no parking space to be found. "YHVH, help me get there, and I'll even stop gossiping." At that moment, someone exited a nearby store, and pulled out from the space directly opposite the building entrance.

With moments to spare, she got to the office. "It's ok, YHVH. I worked it out myself."

This is why the Torah calls upon us to remember YHVH specifically when His blessings have reached us, so that we do not look upon the areas where we have been successful and claim, "I did it myself."