07/08/2016
ELIE WIESEL A MAN NOT SILENT
There are people who instill in us such a sense of
humility, who bear themselves with such dignity
despite the suffering they have endured, whose
witness to history is so powerful, that we know their
influence will be felt down through the generations.
humility, who bear themselves with such dignity
despite the suffering they have endured, whose
witness to history is so powerful, that we know their
influence will be felt down through the generations.
Elie Wiesel – author, human rights activist, and
Nobel Peace Prize laureate – who died Saturday,
July 2 at the age of 87, was such a man. One of the
true prophets of our day, it was through his
unflinching courage in chronicling the atrocities he
experienced during the Holocaust, and his honesty
in confronting his own crisis of faith that resulted from
those experiences, that millions of people who came
after have come to better understand not just the
terrifying facts of this dark chapter in history, but its
effects on the collective memory of the Jewish people.
Nobel Peace Prize laureate – who died Saturday,
July 2 at the age of 87, was such a man. One of the
true prophets of our day, it was through his
unflinching courage in chronicling the atrocities he
experienced during the Holocaust, and his honesty
in confronting his own crisis of faith that resulted from
those experiences, that millions of people who came
after have come to better understand not just the
terrifying facts of this dark chapter in history, but its
effects on the collective memory of the Jewish people.
In his 1986 Nobel Prize acceptance speech,
Elie Wiesel said that after experiencing the
unimaginable suffering of the Nazi death camps,
“I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever
human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We
must take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never
the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never
the tormented.”
Elie Wiesel said that after experiencing the
unimaginable suffering of the Nazi death camps,
“I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever
human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We
must take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never
the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never
the tormented.”
Indeed, he was not silent. Elie Wiesel dedicated his
life to Holocaust education. He was an outspoken
advocate for the rights of oppressed people around the
world. He was tireless in his fight against intolerance
and injustice. His death is a blow not just to the Jewish
world, but to all who believe in the cause of liberty and
justice.
life to Holocaust education. He was an outspoken
advocate for the rights of oppressed people around the
world. He was tireless in his fight against intolerance
and injustice. His death is a blow not just to the Jewish
world, but to all who believe in the cause of liberty and
justice.
It was my privilege to know Elie Wiesel. In 2014 I was
honored to receive the American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee’s highest honor, the Raoul
Wallenberg Award, an honor that had been bestowed
upon Wiesel. While we mourn his death, we give thanks
to God for his life, and his example – an example that,
with God’s help, we pray we will be able to carry on.
May his memory be a blessing.
honored to receive the American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee’s highest honor, the Raoul
Wallenberg Award, an honor that had been bestowed
upon Wiesel. While we mourn his death, we give thanks
to God for his life, and his example – an example that,
with God’s help, we pray we will be able to carry on.
May his memory be a blessing.
With prayers for shalom, peace,
Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein
Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein
(These loving words by Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein I
present in the memory of Dr. Burton Nelson
of North Park Seminary, my teacher in life and my
friend for eternity. God Bless his memory)
present in the memory of Dr. Burton Nelson
of North Park Seminary, my teacher in life and my
friend for eternity. God Bless his memory)
03:02 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)
07/06/2016
THE GIFT OF CRITICISIM
Listen to advice and accept discipline,
and at the end you will be counted among
the wise. Proverbs 19:20
and at the end you will be counted among
the wise. Proverbs 19:20
“accept discipline” as referring to God-given
discipline. Oftentimes, God sends us unpleasant
circumstances in order to teach us something.
Sometimes, God gives us challenges simply so
that we might grow from them. When God sends
a lesson our way, we must accept it unconditionally.
God’s discipline will make us wiser and better.
discipline. Oftentimes, God sends us unpleasant
circumstances in order to teach us something.
Sometimes, God gives us challenges simply so
that we might grow from them. When God sends
a lesson our way, we must accept it unconditionally.
God’s discipline will make us wiser and better.
Next time someone offers us advice, instead of
running from it, let’s embrace it. When we feel the
hand of God teaching us difficult lessons, let’s be
grateful for them. As it is often said, we are here to
“live and learn,” and when we do, we will live more
powerfully, make better decisions, and enjoy the
fruits of our labor.
running from it, let’s embrace it. When we feel the
hand of God teaching us difficult lessons, let’s be
grateful for them. As it is often said, we are here to
“live and learn,” and when we do, we will live more
powerfully, make better decisions, and enjoy the
fruits of our labor.
With prayers for shalom, peace,
Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein
Founder and President
Founder and President
14:27 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)
07/04/2016
FREEDOM
It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm,
then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by
a yoke of slavery. Galatians 5:1
then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by
a yoke of slavery. Galatians 5:1
Did you know that the person who said, "Give me
liberty or give me death," didn't think that our individual
freedoms, as important as they are, were the most
important thing in life,
liberty or give me death," didn't think that our individual
freedoms, as important as they are, were the most
important thing in life,
In his Last Will & Testament, filed in the Brookneal
County Courthouse in Virginia, Patrick Henry noted
something especially interesting.
County Courthouse in Virginia, Patrick Henry noted
something especially interesting.
He wrote, "I have now given everything I own to my
children. There is one more thing I wish I could give
them and that is Christ. Because if they have everything
I gave them and don't have Christ, they have nothing.
" I would say that Patrick Henry understood what Paul
was talking about in Galatians 5. . He knew that there
is one thing in life that is the key to all of life: Jesus
Christ. Indeed, faith in Jesus Christ alone is that key.
children. There is one more thing I wish I could give
them and that is Christ. Because if they have everything
I gave them and don't have Christ, they have nothing.
" I would say that Patrick Henry understood what Paul
was talking about in Galatians 5. . He knew that there
is one thing in life that is the key to all of life: Jesus
Christ. Indeed, faith in Jesus Christ alone is that key.
Jesus says, "So if the Son sets you free, you will be
free indeed" (John 8:36).
free indeed" (John 8:36).
ARE YOU FREE?
Dear Jesus, give us clarity of thinking to see that the
things of this life -- no matter how valuable they might
seem -- they are nothing compared to knowing and
believing in You by grace through faith. Amen!
things of this life -- no matter how valuable they might
seem -- they are nothing compared to knowing and
believing in You by grace through faith. Amen!
(excerpts from Lutheran Hour Ministry)
17:30 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)