God does not want you to break your body (through fasting or crying). He wants you to break your ego through joy .
The Alter Rebbe was not ignoring the reality of pain. He was validating it. He calls the sadness a "great battle" ( Milchamah Gedolah ). He acknowledges that for the sufferer, this battle is harder than fasting or self-mortification. tanya 157
The Alter Rebbe ends the chapter with a stunning promise: When a person breaks their sadness with joy, they draw down a light that is infinitely higher than the light available to those who never experienced darkness. God does not want you to break your
The Alter Rebbe writes to a disciple who is suffering from "heaviness of the heart" ( Koved HaLev ), a state the Rebbe argues is worse than any physical ailment or even spiritual sin. The central verse anchoring Tanya 157 is from Psalms 100:2: "Ivdu et Hashem b’simcha" — "Serve God with joy." He was validating it
The Alter Rebbe states that physical joy generates spiritual joy. This is revolutionary: You do not need to feel happy to start. You need to act happy. By dancing, clapping, or jumping, you force your body to adopt the posture of joy, and eventually, the soul follows. The Alter Rebbe acknowledges that the "Thick Veil" may whisper thoughts of heresy: "There is no God," or "God hates you."
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