Tuesday, October 31, 2017

sources mekorot - Which 20th century rabbi said "G-d normally doesn't stop the ill-intentioned"?


I recall hearing the following story:


There was a non-observant Israeli Jew who kept having visions of his deceased father telling him he should do more religiously. Finally he was about to turn on the radio on Yom Kippur when he had a vision of his father telling him to shape up or else. The fellow went to Rabbi X, who asked if he had done anything especially meritorious; the fellow thought, then mentioned that in his youth, he and his father had been in a Nazi Ghetto and risked a great deal to give someone a proper Jewish burial. Rabbi X explained that generally if someone has decided to do something wrong, G-d doesn't interfere; only if the person is particularly meritorious.


If you've heard this story, can you remind me please who Rabbi X was? It would have been someone living in the second half of the 20th Century.




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