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Daily Chizuk #0157
Holidays / Yamim Tovim
A Heroic Smile: The Hardest Mitzvah to Fulfill
A Heroic Smile
The Vilna Gaon once said that the hardest mitzvah in the entire Torah to fulfill is being happy on the holiday. The reason it’s so difficult is because it requires us to be in a constant state of joy for all seven days – no worry, no sadness, no aggravation. This is hard even for a person who’s blessed with a family, with a house, with parnasa.
Rabbi Dessler explains, to do any mitzvah with even the slightest amount of difficulty is worth a hundred times more than doing it without that difficulty. If there is more than a slight amount of difficulty, then the mitzvah becomes a hundred times greater than before, and so on. And if it’s an extremely difficult mitzvah, it could be worth thousands and thousands of times greater. We can’t fathom the reward even for an easy mitzvah, how much more so something very difficult.
May Hashem give all of us the strength to rejoice this Pesach, and may we see the ultimate salvation of Mashiach Tzidkenu. Amen.
The Vilna Gaon once said that the hardest mitzvah in the entire Torah to fulfill is being happy on the holiday. The reason it’s so difficult is because it requires us to be in a constant state of joy for all seven days – no worry, no sadness, no aggravation. This is hard even for a person who’s blessed with a family, with a house, with parnasa.
Rabbi Dessler explains, to do any mitzvah with even the slightest amount of difficulty is worth a hundred times more than doing it without that difficulty. If there is more than a slight amount of difficulty, then the mitzvah becomes a hundred times greater than before, and so on. And if it’s an extremely difficult mitzvah, it could be worth thousands and thousands of times greater. We can’t fathom the reward even for an easy mitzvah, how much more so something very difficult.
May Hashem give all of us the strength to rejoice this Pesach, and may we see the ultimate salvation of Mashiach Tzidkenu. Amen.

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