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The Palace


The two men were among the privileged few to be granted an audience with the king.

At the appointed hour, the first man arrived at the palace; but as soon as he entered the anteroom he froze, awestruck. A wealthy man himself, he was in a position to truly appreciate the grandeur which lay before him. For hours he stood, reveling in the finery and opulence which intoxicated his rich-man's soul. For hours he stood, and the king... he never did quite see the king.

The second man also arrived at the same entrance hall, but he was a man unaccustomed to such riches. His impoverished taste failed to appreciate what so enthralled his more sophisticated fellow. Much to the wealthy man's dismay, the pauper made straight for the king's door.


In telling this story, the Lubavitcher Rebbe commented:

A great man1once said: "I pray with the mind of a child." A child's perception of G-d, he felt, is, in a way, truer and purer than the accomplished kabbalist's deepest comprehension of the Divine attributes and manifestations.

The spiritual connoisseur who approaches G-d with an eye to the "experience" of this or that nuance of divinity, can lose sight of what the point of it all is. Only by acknowledging our basic spiritual illiteracy can we truly relate to the all-transcendent essence of G-d.

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FOOTNOTES
1. The "Rivash," Rabbi Yaakov bar Sheishet, 1326-1408?.

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Translated/adapted by Yanki Tauber in Once Upon A Chassid (Kehot, 1994).

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Jan 1, 2007
to Eva Benita A. Tuzon
To the above posted. I think the story is more of a metaphor than anything else. And a great one at that.
Posted By michael

Posted: Feb 23, 2006
The Palces of Our Times
When was the last time our "kings" of today call both the rich and the poor for an audience with him? Rarely and rarely the poor could reach the king's door.
Even for world conferences, the representatives for poor nations could get passports and visas so how could we have moments with the king. The kings of today should provide the same openness as implicitly implied in The Palace.

Anyway, the impoverished is rarely part of the priviledged few.
Posted By Eva Benita A. Tuzon, Dhaka, Bangladesh



 


Fables & Parables
Two Bagels
Dishwater
The Donkey in the Pit
The Feast
In the Land of Obmah
The Princess
The Princess & the Peasant
The Palace
The Wicked Lamb
The Elusive Horse
Stuffed Derma
Sly Arrogance
The Chicken Prince
Bragging Rights
Forged in the Crucible of Life
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