The world is going somewhere good.
Last idea. It’s the biggest one, so we’ll hold it gently.
Judaism makes a strange, confident claim about history: it’s going somewhere. Not cycling, not winding down — heading, with intention, toward a destination the prophets described: a world finally at peace with itself and its Creator, where the ordinary goodness we practice in private becomes the way everything works. Jewish tradition calls that arrival the days of Moshiach (moh-SHEE-akh) — the redemption.
You don’t need to know what you think about that yet. Here’s the part that matters for you today: Jewish teaching insists it isn’t a spectator event. Every deed, by any Jew, anywhere, tips the scale. The Rebbe taught this with complete seriousness — your one candle, your one coin, your one kind word might be the act that completes the picture.
Which means the smallest page on this site carries the largest stakes. Not pressure — promotion. You matter that much.
One more gift from the Rebbe’s teaching to carry with you: tracht gut vet zain gut — think good, and it will be good. Not wishful thinking; a claim that trust itself opens doors. The Jewish stance toward the future is built out of exactly what you’ve been doing for seven pages now: one hopeful, deliberate step at a time.
That’s the whole path. You’re not at the end of anything — you’re at the beginning, with better information.