R
Rabbi
Guest
There’s a beautiful midrashic story where Rabbi Joshua ben Levi (3rd century) is brought before the prophet Eliyahu (Elijah) in a vision. He asked him, “When will the Messiah come?” Eliyahu explains, “The Messiah is at the gates, sitting among the poor, the sick and wretched. Like them, he changes the bindings of his wounds, but does so one wound at the time, in order to be ready at a moment’s notice.”
Rabbi Levi soon went to Rome and found him there, where he asked him the same question. The Messiah answered him: “Peace be to you. I will come today if only the world will merit it.”
The point of this passage is not we, the Jewish people, as well as the rest of the world, must merit the Messiah, otherwise, we’ll keep waiting until that time. In Jewish tradition, each generation has a potential candidate. If we would just merit one time, that Messiah will be it. Hopefully, may he come speedily in our day.
Rabbi Levi soon went to Rome and found him there, where he asked him the same question. The Messiah answered him: “Peace be to you. I will come today if only the world will merit it.”
The point of this passage is not we, the Jewish people, as well as the rest of the world, must merit the Messiah, otherwise, we’ll keep waiting until that time. In Jewish tradition, each generation has a potential candidate. If we would just merit one time, that Messiah will be it. Hopefully, may he come speedily in our day.