Faith and Therapy
Rebbe Responsa | February 13, 2026
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Faith and Therapy

Rebbe Responsa | February 13, 2026

Social work fused with warmth and care; the therapeutic benefits of encouraging religious patients in their faith; trust in G-d brings inner healing and helps overcome a split personality

By the Grace of G-d

17th of Shevat, 5740
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Mr. ... C.S.W.
New York, N. Y. 10016
Greeting and Blessing:

This is to acknowledge receipt of your letter with enclosure. May G-d grant you success in your professional services to bring relief and healing to those who turn to you for help.

Your qualifications as clinical social worker, holding certificates also in psychotherapy and in mental health consultation, etc. as outlined in your curriculum vitae, surely present a wide range of professional services which, I am sure, you render with warm personal interest and consideration for your patients. And there is no need to emphasize to you how important such an attitude is therapeutically in the medical profession in general and in your field in particular.

Nor is there any need to point out to you that those of your patients for whom belief in G-d is a meaningful factor in their lives and not merely in an abstract way but in terms of actual commitment to religious observances and practices in the everyday life, in accordance with the Shulchan Aruch, the Code of Jewish living and conduct – would derive much benefit from your encouraging and strengthening them in this belief. Clearly, strong trust in G-d goes a long way to relieve, and even dispel anxiety and helps one attain inner peace and confidence; moreover it helps to overcome a split-personality syndrome which is so often at the root of mental disorders. Above all the Torah teaches us that the performance of mitzvos, though a “must” for its own sake, is also

Social work fused with warmth and care; the therapeutic benefits of encouraging religious patients in their faith; trust in G-d brings inner healing and helps overcome a split personality

By the Grace of G-d

17th of Shevat, 5740
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Mr. ... C.S.W.
New York, N. Y. 10016
Greeting and Blessing:

This is to acknowledge receipt of your letter with enclosure. May G-d grant you success in your professional services to bring relief and healing to those who turn to you for help.

Your qualifications as clinical social worker, holding certificates also in psychotherapy and in mental health consultation, etc. as outlined in your curriculum vitae, surely present a wide range of professional services which, I am sure, you render with warm personal interest and consideration for your patients. And there is no need to emphasize to you how important such an attitude is therapeutically in the medical profession in general and in your field in particular.

Nor is there any need to point out to you that those of your patients for whom belief in G-d is a meaningful factor in their lives and not merely in an abstract way but in terms of actual commitment to religious observances and practices in the everyday life, in accordance with the Shulchan Aruch, the Code of Jewish living and conduct – would derive much benefit from your encouraging and strengthening them in this belief. Clearly, strong trust in G-d goes a long way to relieve, and even dispel anxiety and helps one attain inner peace and confidence; moreover it helps to overcome a split-personality syndrome which is so often at the root of mental disorders. Above all the Torah teaches us that the performance of mitzvos, though a “must” for its own sake, is also

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