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After the emotional heights of the Akeidah, Avraham faces what Rabbeinu Yonah considers his true final test - not on a mountaintop with an angel’s intervention, but in a mundane real estate negotiation while drowning in grief. When Efron the Hittite takes advantage of Avraham’s desperate need to bury Sarah, charging an astronomical price after pretending to offer the land for free, Avraham maintains perfect composure and courtesy. Rav Eliyahu Dessler reveals why this moment, not the dramatic sacrifice, might represent Avraham’s greatest spiritual achievement: true greatness isn’t demonstrated in dramatic moments of faith, but in maintaining our middos when we have every excuse to let them slip. This week’s episode explores why “your face is public property” and why having a bad day never gives us the right to spread that negativity to others.
By Aaron BenedictAfter the emotional heights of the Akeidah, Avraham faces what Rabbeinu Yonah considers his true final test - not on a mountaintop with an angel’s intervention, but in a mundane real estate negotiation while drowning in grief. When Efron the Hittite takes advantage of Avraham’s desperate need to bury Sarah, charging an astronomical price after pretending to offer the land for free, Avraham maintains perfect composure and courtesy. Rav Eliyahu Dessler reveals why this moment, not the dramatic sacrifice, might represent Avraham’s greatest spiritual achievement: true greatness isn’t demonstrated in dramatic moments of faith, but in maintaining our middos when we have every excuse to let them slip. This week’s episode explores why “your face is public property” and why having a bad day never gives us the right to spread that negativity to others.