Fires of passion that roasts our kosher chicken and we then we douse and stomp out the red hot ashes with sweet pure red kosher wines! Lag B' Omer fires to heat up the night and to be our Burning Bush as we love G-d by building this bon fire in the passion of the dark night!
G-d like this raging fire takes vengeance for us.
G-d, as King David writes in The Psalms will protect us and guard us, He as Elohim will fight all our battles. Pick up The Shield of Abraham and this Shield will repel evil, repel hot fire, this Shield which is good will, will be the Shield that we need, promised to us in The Torah as a gift from G-d, when we keep His Covenant.
Vengeance against an act of crime is a crime itself, a crime that is used to fight crime but becomes a greater crime. A raging hot, wrathful, vengeful fire will not put out someone else's fire, the fires will join and grow huge and out of hand.
But wickedness does not turn bad into good, you must fight the wicked with goodness, with pure water that dissolves it, the flow of the water, the streams, the rivers, the oceans, the lakes, the rainwater, tap water, these waters causing purity will put out the flames that rise and destroy. Water dissolves dirt, purifies wickedness, and water puts out an angry fire.
To light our hot fires on Lag B' Omer and to see the bon fires rise and get hotter, to roast our marsh mellows and cook our kosher chicken, to harness wrathful fire to get what we want and what we need.
To see these bon fires as the Burning Bush of G-d, to not spread a fire to destroy, to feel its warmth and comfort and to use it to cook kosher meats. The Great Lakes rushes upon the shore in an effort to spread itself out, to be there when you need purity, to be the mikvah bath of 10% natural waters. To rely on this cleanliness to repel dirt, to clean hands, and to eat clean bloodless kosher meats.
Not to be happy when our enemies perish, to thank The G-d Almighty for coming to our aid and extending our lives in their place.
The peacemaker, to let water dissolve evil and to be the bringer of the water, to fetch clean water from a well. To use water to help your enemy quench his thirst, to throw a bucket of water on the Wicked Witch of the West and to watch her shrivel and turn into dust. To then bow to the east and watch a new sunrise.
To go to the Emperor of Oz and ask him for a heart, a brain, and courage. To be the one who delights in G-d's protection, He Who has a heart, a brain, and courage and therefore is equipped to win our battles.
To be "happy with our lot" thank G-d for everything, To thank The Greatest of all, Elohim, for fighting our battles without sticks and stones, to see Him withdraw our enemies and to drown them in deep waters, watching their green grass turn yellow withered in a brush fire; unable to grow.
To delight in a drink of pure cool refreshing water to put out the hot flame in your dry throat, and to put out your fires of angry retaliatory wrath, to float in cool waters, to see ashes that is all that remains.
G-d can be our Burning Bush and He can also be the sweet water that puts out our flames of vengeance.
Moses sweetened the River Nile with the righteousness, goodness and beauty of Torah, He received the stone tablets on Mount Sinai from the hands of G-d Who appeared to him as a Burning Bush, a bonfire on Lag B' Omer.
This Burning Bush bonfire ignited in our backyards again while we count another Omer, to turn the darkness of the night into the lightness of goodness.
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