His Miracles
At this time, too, he learned how to work miracles with the name of God. The following is an instance: In Constantinople, where Besht stopped on his intended journey to Palestine, he was received with unusual hospitality by a worthy couple who were childless. In return for their kindness Besht, when departing, promised them that they should be blessed with a son, and rendered this possible by the utterance of the Sacred Name. Now, to do this was a great sin; and scarcely had the words of the incantation passed Besht's lips when he heard a voice in heaven declaring that he had forfeited thereby his share in the future life. Instead of feeling unhappy over such a fate, Besht called out joyfully: "Blessed art Thou, O Lord, for Thy mercy! Now indeed can I serve Thee out of pure love, since I may not expect reward in the future world!" This proof of his true love for God won pardon for his sin, though at the expense of severe punishment.
Besht's miraculous power was so great that he did not fear even the brigands who lived in the mountains, but dwelt care-free in their vicinity. Once, when wandering about, deeply immersed in thought, he climbed a steep mountain and, without noticing where he was going, reached a very dangerous spot. Besht thought that his end had come, for he felt himself slipping toward a deep precipice; but suddenly the opposite cliff approached and closed up the gap. The robbers, who were looking on at a distance, doubted no longer that he was a man endowed with divine power.
Bibliography
The chief source for Besht's biography is Baer (Dob) b. Samuel's Shibchei ha-Besht, Kopys, 1814, and frequently republished.
For Besht's methods of teaching, the following works are especially valuable: Jacob Joseph ha-Kohen, Toledot Ya'akob Yosef;
Likutim (Likut)... a collection of Hasidic doctrines; the works of Baer of Meseritz.
Critical works on the subject are: Dubnow, Yevreiskaya Istoria, ii. 426-431;
idem, in Voskhod, viii. Nos. 5-10;
Grätz, Gesch. der Juden, 2d ed., xi. 94-98, 546-554;
Jost, Gesch. des Judenthums und Seiner Sekten, iii. 185 et seq.;
A. Kahana, Rabbi Yisrael Ba'al Shem, Jitomir, 1900;
D. Kohan, in Ha-Sh. ;ar, v. 500-504, 553-554;
Rodkinson, Toledot Ba'ale Shem-Tov;ob, Königsberg, 1876;
Schechter, Studies in Judaism, 1896, pp. 1-45;
Zweifel, Shalom 'al-Yisrael, i.-iii.;
Zederbaum, Keter Kehunah, pp. 80-103;
Frumkin, 'Adat ...;..hasidim, Lemberg, 1860, 1865 (?);
Zangwill, Dreamers of the Ghetto, pp. 221-288 (fiction).K. L. G.
External links
See also
Source | Copyright