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A simple lesson from a real estate course—every deal starts with a purchase agreement—sparked a new way to hear the High Holiday plea “Zachreinu L’Chaim.” We explored how a contract sets price, terms, and intent long before money or keys change hands, and how that same structure clarifies what we really ask for when we ask for life. If God wants to give life and we want to receive it, what keeps the deal from closing? The missing clause might be the most important one: “for Your sake.”
We walk through the tension between wanting good things and wanting them for a purpose beyond ourselves. Titles and paychecks vary—broker, barber, dentist, rebbe—but the true appraisal of a life depends on whether work, family, and learning advance a higher will. By translating liturgy into the logic of a transaction, we show how “l’maancha” turns vague desire into aligned intent, shifting prayers from “give me because I want” to “give me so I can build, serve, and uplift.” That reframing transforms tuition into investment in souls, labor into service, and daily routines into a mission that outlasts trends and ego.
Along the way, we share concrete examples of aligning jobs and goals with purpose, and we draw out the post-closing truth: stewardship begins after the grant. A year of life isn’t just a gift; it’s an assignment. If you’ve felt your prayers stalled in escrow, this conversation offers language and mindset to move toward a meaningful close—one where your time, money, and effort flow into something that matters.
If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s wrestling with purpose, and leave a quick review with your “for Your sake” clause—we’d love to read it on a future episode.
Support the show
Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content!
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Questions or Comments? Please email me @ [email protected]
By Michoel Brooke5
2020 ratings
A simple lesson from a real estate course—every deal starts with a purchase agreement—sparked a new way to hear the High Holiday plea “Zachreinu L’Chaim.” We explored how a contract sets price, terms, and intent long before money or keys change hands, and how that same structure clarifies what we really ask for when we ask for life. If God wants to give life and we want to receive it, what keeps the deal from closing? The missing clause might be the most important one: “for Your sake.”
We walk through the tension between wanting good things and wanting them for a purpose beyond ourselves. Titles and paychecks vary—broker, barber, dentist, rebbe—but the true appraisal of a life depends on whether work, family, and learning advance a higher will. By translating liturgy into the logic of a transaction, we show how “l’maancha” turns vague desire into aligned intent, shifting prayers from “give me because I want” to “give me so I can build, serve, and uplift.” That reframing transforms tuition into investment in souls, labor into service, and daily routines into a mission that outlasts trends and ego.
Along the way, we share concrete examples of aligning jobs and goals with purpose, and we draw out the post-closing truth: stewardship begins after the grant. A year of life isn’t just a gift; it’s an assignment. If you’ve felt your prayers stalled in escrow, this conversation offers language and mindset to move toward a meaningful close—one where your time, money, and effort flow into something that matters.
If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s wrestling with purpose, and leave a quick review with your “for Your sake” clause—we’d love to read it on a future episode.
Support the show
Join The Motivation Congregation WhatsApp community for daily motivational Torah content!
----------------
----------------
Questions or Comments? Please email me @ [email protected]

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