Tuesday, Sivan 28, 5785 / June 24, 2025
One of the lessons our sages teach us in the fourth chapter of Pirkei Avot (Chapters of our Fathers) is the secret to wisdom, wealth, contentment and happiness. The great Talmudic sage Ben Zoma says, “Who is wise? Who learns from everyone. Who is strong? Who subdues his evil inclination. Who is rich? Who is happy with his lot. Who is honorable? Who honors others.”
“Who is rich? He, who is happy with his lot.”A poor man found a wallet with one thousand rubles. The following day when he came to synagogue, he heard that Yossel the banker lost his wallet with 1000 rubles and promised a hefty reward of fifty rubles to the one who returns it.
After service he quickly went to Yossel’s house, knocked on the door and when Yossel opened the door he handed him his wallet with the 1000 rubles.
Yossel took the wallet, counted the money and then said, “I see you already took your reward! There was one thousand and fifty rubles in the wallet and there is only 1000 there now.
“But that’s not true,” protested the poor man. There was only 1000 rubles there. You owe me the reward. The two men argued and in the end decided to go to the rabbi to settle the case.
They both presented their case to the rabbi. The poor man claimed that there was 1000 rubles in the wallet, and he was owed the 50 rubles reward for returning the wallet. But Yossel, the banker, said that there were 1050 rubles in the wallet and that he didn’t owe him anything. “Rabbi, I trust you believe me,” the rich man added.
“Sure, I believe you,” replied the rabbi. Now the rich man was full of smiles, and the poor man was devastated. Then the rabbi took the wallet and gave it to the poor man. “It’s yours. You keep it!”
“What are you doing,” protested the rich man angrily. “You don’t believe me, rabbi?”
“Sure, I believe you. You said that you were an honest man, and I believe you. I believe you that you had 1050 rubles in your wallet. However, I have to believe that the poor man here, who returned the wallet, is also an honest person. If he was a thief he would have taken all the money for himself. Now that you are both honest people, I have to believe that the wallet in question is not the one you lost, and it must belong to someone else. Thus, until the rightful owner is found, the wallet stays with him.”
“But what about my money,” the rich man asked. The Rabbi replied, “You will have to wait until someone who finds a wallet with 1050 rubles comes forward…”
The Talmud says that when one is not happy with what G-d gives them, G–d may take that away too. How true are the words of our sages, “Who is rich? He who is happy with his lot.” When we become too greedy we sometimes outsmart ourselves and lose even what rightfully belongs to us.
HAVE A VERY GOOD, HAPPY, HEALTHY AND SUCCESSFUL DAY
OUR HEARTS ARE WITH OUR BROTHERS AND SISTERS IN CAPTIVITY - MAY THEY ALL BE RELEASED NOW