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This blog tracks positive developments around the world, especially stories that bighlight trends predicted long ago as signs of Moshiach.



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  • Decisions

    Know that along with every blade of grass and every speeding electron, so too your own thoughts and decisions are directed with the same wondrous meaning and purpose by the One who created and directs all things. You only need to decide to do the right thing and His holy hand guides you on that path.

    This is what confidence in the Director of the world is all about: A conviction that since He is the essence of good, therefore all things are for the good?-the obvious good.

    If so, what on earth are you worried or confused about? Even when your own mind determines what to do and how?-even then He is there.

Daily Thought

The present state of the world is called "gola". The state of the world as it will soon be is called "geula". The two words are exactly the same, except that “geula” has the letter "alef" inserted in the middle. “Alef” means “master”. It also means “one”.

To make gola into geula, we only need reveal the alef— the One Master of the Universe who is hidden within the artifacts of our present world.

—The Rebbe

Reprinted from 365 Meditations of the Rebbe by Tzvi Freeman

Home arrow Features arrow Good News Blog arrow Coin used to pay Temple tax unearthed

Coin used to pay Temple tax unearthed Print E-mail
Rabbi Mendy Elishevitz   

First the archeologists hit bronze, then they found silver.

Israeli archeologists have unearthed a coin in Jerusalem's City of David that, they now believe, was used to pay the head-tax in the Second Temple period, the Antiquities Authority announced.

The rare silver coin was discovered in an archeological excavation outside the walls of the Old City in what was Jerusalem's main drainage channel 2,000 years ago.

Archeologists earlier uncovered thousands of nondescript small bronze coins that were used in every day life, said Prof. Ronny Reich of the University of Haifa.

"A drainage pipe is, not surprisingly, a place where you find lots of history," he said.

In the book of Exodus, Jews over age 20 are commanded to contribute half a shekel each year to pay for public sacrifices and the furnishings of the Temple.

Israeli archeologist Eli Shukron said the coin found at the dig was probably dropped in the drainage ditch by accident.

"Just like today when coins sometimes fall from our pockets and roll into drainage openings at the side of the street, that's how it was some two thousand years ago - a man was on his way to the Temple and the shekel that he intended to use for paying the half shekel head-tax found its way into the drainage channel," Shukron said.

The shekel weighs 13 grams, and shows the head of the chief deity of the city of Tyre on one side, and an eagle upon a ship's prow on the reverse.

Despite the importance of the half-shekel head-tax to the economy of Jerusalem in the Second Temple period, only seven other shekel and half shekel coins have been found in archeological excavations in Jerusalem.

Source: JPOST

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