The story is told of a wealthy Jew who would quietly support Rabbi Zusha. He also received Rabbi Zusha’s blessings, and his business did very well.
One time, the man came to Anipoli and discovered that Rabbi Zusha was not in town.
“Where is the rabbi?” he asked.
“He went to visit his Rebbe,” people told him.
The wealthy man was surprised. “My rabbi has a rabbi?”
Being a sharp businessman, he made a quick calculation. “If Rabbi Zusha’s blessings have helped me so much, then surely his Rebbe’s blessings must be even more powerful. Why support the student when I can support the teacher?”
So that is what he did. He stopped supporting Rabbi Zusha and began sending his donations to Rabbi DovBer, the Maggid of Mezritch, Rabbi Zusha’s own Rebbe.
Not long afterward, his business began to decline.
When he realized what had happened, he hurried back to Anipoli and poured out his heart to Rabbi Zusha. “I understand that I lost my success because I stopped supporting you,” he said. “But was my logic really wrong?”
“Your logic was perfectly reasonable,” Rabbi Zusha answered. “But it came from the wrong place. Until now, you gave charity without calculations—without weighing what you would gain from it. So Heaven also treated you without calculation, and you were blessed generously. But once you began making calculations, Heaven began making calculations too. And according to those calculations, you may not be entitled to such extraordinary wealth.”
from Shluchim Sermons
The lesson is do the right thing because it is right.
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