This book is the story of one woman’s yearning for God, and at the same time it illuminates the universal relentless
longing of all human beings for connection with their Source. I am reminded of three poetic statements of that yearning,
one from the Muslim tradition, one from Judaic, and one from Christian. Eight hundred years ago, the Sufi mystic Rumi
wrote the poem "Love Dogs": One night a man was crying, Allah! Allah! His lips grew sweet with the praising, Until a
cynic said, “So! I have heard you calling out, but have you ever gotten a response?” The man had no answer to that. He
quit praying and fell into a confused . He dreamed he saw Khidr, the guide of souls, In a thick, green foliage.
“Why did you stop praising?” “Because I’ve never heard anything back.” “This longing you express is the return message.”
The grief you cry out from Draws you toward union. Your pure sadness That wants help Is the secret cup. Listen to the
moan of a dog for its master. That whining is the connection. There are love dogs No one knows the names of. Give your
life To be one of them. Ultimately, we all give our lives to be something, and we all cry out from grief. To what end?
Union, or exile? Another approach to exploring and understanding this human dilemma is presented by Rabbi DovBer, Maggid
of Mezritch (?-1772), in the following well-known analogy. The human experience of exile is comparable to a her who
conceals himself from his son. Not that the her does not want to be together with his son, but rather the purpose of
the concealment is to awaken within the son a desire and yearning to find his her. After all, when the son is
constantly in the presence of his her, his desire to be with his her is not revealed, for "continuous pleasure is
not pleasure." There arises a situation, however, when the son ceases searching for the her. He cls that "the
signs of our redemption we have not seen, and there is none among us who know how long” (Psalms 74:9). He, therefore,
concludes that G-d must have forsaken us and he loses hope and discontinues his search for G-d. When the her sees
that the son is no longer seeking him, then the exile truly begins. As long as the son is searching for the her, this
constitutes a preparation, a beginning, and a spark of the redemption -- for the search for Redemption is what is
occupying the son. Therefore we must increase in light, and not just any light, but specifically the light of simcha
(joyousness). Since simcha "breaks all boundaries and limitations," it breaks through the person's limitations, the
limitations of this world, and the limitations imposed by this dreadful darkness. Union, or exile? We live on the verge
of eternity, and every moment brings a new rtunity to choose. Jesus captured the universal law in this way: “Blessed
are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled” (Matthew 5:6). Those who yearn for
spiritual unfoldment and growth in their connection with God will attain it, as long as they continue to be focused on
satisfying this compelling hunger rather than squandering the rtunity by falling into distractions. Emmet Fox
(1886-1951) summarizes this beatitude: provided we are truly wholehearted in our efforts, provided, that is to say,
that we really are hungering and thirsting for righteousness, then, at last, we shall surely be filled. It could not
happen that a wholehearted search for truth and righteousness, if persevered in, should not be crowned with success. God
is not mocked, nor does He mock his children.