top of page

Daily Chizuk #1658

Parnasa / Money

The Poor and the Provider: How Giving Comes Back with Blessing

The Time You Give Comes Back With Blessing
The Midrash Rabbah on Megillat Ruth, quoting Rabbi Yehoshua, teaches: יֹתֵר מִמָּה שֶׁבַּעַל הַבַּיִת עוֹשֶׂה עִם הֶעָנִי, הֶעָנִי עוֹשֶׂה עִם בַּעַל הַבָּיִת — More than the homeowner does for the poor person, the poor person does for the homeowner.
One application of this Midrash is in how we view the time we invest in helping others. People often think — especially when life is busy and responsibilities pile up — I'd love to do more chesed… I'd love to learn more Torah… I'd love to do more mitzvot… but I just don't have the time. It sounds logical: every minute we spend doing Hashem's work is a minute we could have spent on ourselves.
But Hashem's accounting works very differently. When we give our time for His mitzvot, we don't lose time — we gain it. And it's not simply returned; it comes back with blessing. The more we give, the more we are given. Often, this isn't obvious, but sometimes we see it clearly in our own lives.
Hashem repays us with smoother days, calmer outcomes, and, yes, even babies who cooperate. But when we guard all our time for ourselves, we often find that it slips away anyway — tasks take longer, frustrations mount, and things don't flow.
So the next time the yetzer hara whispers, You don't have time for this mitzvah, for Torah learning, or for chesed, whisper back: I don't have time not to.
Blue Circular Gradient

Geula in Nissan: Anticipating the Glorious Month

Daily Chizuk #1101

Why Pesach? The Meaning of the "Pass Over" Miracle

Daily Chizuk #1102

Hardest Mitzvah: Choosing Joy when Logic Fails

Daily Chizuk #1103

Hope in the Galut: Beginning the Seder with Salvation

Daily Chizuk #1104

Master Plan: Seeing Roadblocks as Divine Intervention

Daily Chizuk #1105

bottom of page