On video: Rabbi Pinto (public relations)
It is not always convenient for us to tell the truth.
People come up to us and try to lift us up and we sometimes blurt out: 'I don't have any money' - and even though your bank account is actually depleted and overflowing with God's blessing.
During his lesson to his students, the leader of 'Shuba Yisrael', the Rebbe, Rabbi Yosiah Pinto, explained that when a person utters lies from his mouth, they may turn into a sad reality that will harm his soul and behavior.
"A person's head is the brain that works like a sophisticated machine.
A person who lies and says 'I am sick' and is not sick.
'I am poor' and he is not poor, he is saying something that is not true.
The brain receives the command 'I am sick' - it transmits currents and signals that it is sick.
Rabbi Pinto added and elaborated: "The same is true when a person says, 'I have no money' - the brain transmits signals that he has no money. This includes sadness, anxiety, fears, lack of concentration, lack of sharpness of mind. The brain does not know how to map what is true and what is false. The brain gives orders to the person's mood - according to what he takes out of his mouth.
He concluded the message to life by saying that "that's why he 'guards his mouth and tongue - guards against the troubles of his soul'. The meaning is that when a person guards his mouth - he protects himself from bad situations, from anxieties and depression. You kept your mouth - you prevented quite a few potential problems."
Aryeh Zamir, in collaboration with Shuba Israel
Judaism
life itself
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