.Z ONE GIANT LEAP FOR JEWISH EDUCATION! Beth Achim Touches Down in Southfield and West Bloomfield/Walled Lake We Must Not Live `By Bread Alone' DR. RICHARD C. HERTZ SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS The Beth Achim Religious School K Post Bar/Bat Mitzvah Free Kindergarten ■ 6144(4 4)44 Qtt 4447 Za4/ Contact Barry V Levine, Religious School Executive Director (810) 352-8223 or (810) 352-8670. 4vgaiAd#4 44 - (centrally located) 21100 West Twelve Mile Rd., Southfield CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEI)EK invites all members and prospective members to attend their SUMMER. GRANDE FINALE PICNIC! Wednesday, August 30, 1995 5:30 pm - 7:30 pm Adler Hall 27375 Bell Road, Southfield FREE to Prospective Members! $15.00/family $10/couple $5/individual featuring the Abraham Ben Ze'ev Orchestra The Clark Family Players Food, Fun and More! J EWISH NEWS Sponsored by Congregation Shaarey Zedek Men's Club, Education Department and Membership Committee ..... .. THE BEST OF KNITTING S Providing the Best Prices and Service in Oakland County! — please call — 32 . Anny Blatt • Tahki • Prism • Gassk Elite Trendsetter • Annabel Fox • Katia • Unique Kolours Dyed in The Wool • Rowan & More! im • in nit DAVID BIBER 541-4133 • (810) 656-9500 Crestview Cadillac 29791 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, MI 48034 (810) 355-1400 he sedrah this week con- tains some remarkable in- sights into human nature and people. The lines served as a warning to the peo- ple of Israel, especially after their long wandering in the wilderness toward the promised land. Now that they were about to enter that land, the Torah warns against the blandishments of wealth, station and pleasure, against the sins of pride and self- satisfaction. The idolatry of ma- terialism may be all right for other people, but not for the an- cient Hebrews; for Israel has a mission. If we Jews become like other nations, the Torah warns we will surely perish. This is a lesson eternally valid, equally true 4,000 years ago, no less than in 1995. In this sedrah is the famous line, "Man dost not live by bread alone." Physical food is not the whole thing that insures man's safe existence. Apart from what he needs to keep his body going, there are divine forces that sus- tain man's soul in his progress through life. Man has a soul as well as a body. There is spirit as well flesh and both must be nur- tured. Despite what some philosophies teach about taking care of the bodily needs of man alone, when he fails in spirit, he is done for. It is dangerous to think that man can live by bread alone. Ma- terialism insures that when we give our all to the physical needs, of the great god Mammon, we be- come idol worshippers. Wherever there is pride, there is the forgetting of God. Prosper- ity often tempts man to fretful- ness against every idea of restraint. Whenever man forgets God, his whole way of life drops to a lower level to serve baser is- sues. Scripture follows a diligent ad- monition against the sin of pride and self-righteousness. Affluence brings spiritual dangers. The temptation to say, "My power and the might of my hand have got- ten me this wealth," is universal. Logically the more a man has, the more deeply heartfelt ought to be his thankfulness. Yet a strange perversity of flocks or herds or gold or silver often turns the eyes not outward to God, but inward toward the self. Just the mere fact of possession may poison the whole system with pride; and pride, in turn, is the root of the problem. Addiction to worldly goods can create selfishness. To forget God T is to gorget also that one is but a steward of one's possessions. Feeling his possessions to be his own, a person will cling more des- perately to them. We must bear in mind that God gives and God can take away. When we make idols of wealth, station or plea- sure, we become estranged from God instead of drawing nearer to God and our fellow man. Worldly possessions may pro- duce what biblical writers called "hardness of heart." The self- made man, conscious of having created his own wealth, easily feels scant room for sympathy. He may even arrogantly despise his brother who has less. Far more serious in its impli- cations, however, is the tenden- cy of worldly possessions to inculcate a materialistic outlook. Insidiously, money comes to ap- pear as the most potent factor in buying the good things of life, but some things cannot be bought. One has to learn to depend on God for security, contentment, power — the power of peace. The sedrah bids us to turn within and seek God. When our stomachs are full and we are sur- rounded with beautiful posses- sions, scripture warns we must beware lest pride and forgetful- ness begin. Israel is bidden to re- member that wealth comes from God's power, not its own, and is given in accord with covenant- ed promises, not in payment for what the nation thinks it de- serves. Shabbat Ekev: Deuteronomy 7:12-11:25 Isaiah 49:14-51:3. Even civility can be lost. Once a preacher told the story of two goats who met on a bridge which was too narrow for either to pass or turn back. When one goat lay down to let the other walk over him; civility was born. When peo- ple, one the whole, abide by a pas- sive agreement to hold back from doing what they please if it is in opposition to what is best for the whole of society, they are prac- ticing civility. These days many people's problems are said to be due to a lack of self-esteem. Good man- ners and civility build self confi- dence because people who have them can be reasonably sure that '\ wherever they go they will be ac-