Torah.org Home Subscribe Services Support Us
 
Print Version

Email this article to a friend

The Path of the Just

Prologue

Few works touch upon the sacred human drive to perfect ourselves, to do what’s best and holiest, and to fulfill one’s life goal as well as “The Path of the Just”. Written by a holy man (Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto) in a way that nonetheless enables even us humble and flawed souls to resonate with its message and to connect with its goals, it is an utterly unique Torah work.

For what it does so incomparably well is to lay out divine goals, to stir us to aspire for them by evoking the reward, and then to lay out the method -- both what to aim for and what to be sure to avoid in the process.

The goal? Nothing less than drawing close to G-d Almighty, both in one’s lifetime and in the beyond. The reward? Achieving that in fact, in fully palpable ways. The method? Attaining the following traits: caution, enthusiasm, innocence, abstinence, purity, piety, modesty, fear of sin, holiness, divine inspiration, and the resurrection of the dead, while steering clear of their opposites.

And it’s all based on the fulsome and powerful Torah verse that reads, “And now, Israel -- what does G-d your L-rd require of you, if not to revere G-d your L-rd; to go in all of His ways, to love Him and to serve G-d your L-rd with full heart and soul, and to keep all of G-d's commandments and statutes.... “(Deuteronomy 10:12-13).

What we’ll do in this series is quote from the book itself at times, encapsulate and expand upon the ideas when that’s called for, explain Ramchal’s intentions, and cite from some of his other works that address the same themes from different perspectives.

“The Path of the Just” calls for great effort, to be sure. For it demands full loyalty, it challenges our comfortable sense of self, and prods us in directions we hadn’t known of beforehand. And yet we will find ourselves drawn to its call like few other works. Why?

Because somewhere deep in each Jewish heart there lays a muffled, curious melody that’s somehow unnerving … yet tantalizing, that wants to divulge secrets and to finally allow for true happiness. And it wants to be heard once and for all, before it’s too late. It’s the heart’s song to G-d, the lyrics of which are the words of “The Path of the Just”. May G-d grant us the ability to hear it out and heed its call.


Text Copyright © 2007 by Rabbi Yaakov Feldman and Torah.org

Please Support TORAH.ORG
Print Version       Email this article to a friend

 

ARTICLES ON VAYECHI:

View Complete List

The End of Days
Shlomo Katz - 5758

Shhhhhh… The Secret of Immortality
Rabbi Label Lam - 5768

Let Me Explain...
Rabbi Eliyahu Hoffmann - 5760

ArtScroll

Life After Death
Rabbi Pinchas Winston - 5761

It's A Jungle Out There
Rabbi Label Lam - 5765

God's Judgement of Our Intentions
Rabbi Berel Wein - 5765

Email Sponsorship

What a Stone!
Rabbi Osher Chaim Levene - 5767

"I Have More Than My Share"
Rabbi Yissocher Frand - 5757

A Small Glimpse of the Larger Picture
Dovid Hoffman - 5758

Oorah Auction - Early Bird Deadline Jan 26

Give It Up
Rabbi Eliyahu Hoffmann - 5769

Fleeting Shadows
Rabbi Eliyahu Hoffmann - 5759

Aging Gracefully
Rabbi Pinchas Avruch - 5764

The Everything Torah Book

The Weight of Eternity
Rabbi Pinchas Avruch - 5763

Casting Parts In The Play
Rabbi Pinchas Winston - 5767

Mixed Feelings
Rabbi Dovid Green - 5758

Trust in G-d
Rabbi Yaakov Menken - 5760




AT LONG LAST!
Rabbi Feldman's translation
of Maimonides' "Eight
Chapters" is available
here at a discount.

Learning Events and Programs

Project Genesis

Torah.org Home


Torah Portion

Jewish Law

Ethics

Texts

Learn the Basics

Seasons

Features

TORAHAUDIO

Ask The Rabbi

Knowledge Base

Discussion Forum




Help

About Us

Contact Us


Enable popup menus


Download to my HandHeld


Torah.org Home
Torah.org HomeCapalon.com Copyright Information