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Shalom, friends. Uh, I have a a full day
of army training today. We're out at the
range. We're doing various exercises.
Uh, but I I wanted to pre-record this
message to you because we are in such
critical times right now. And really,
even every single fellowship matters so
much. And um you know so many people
have been turning to me in in this
fellowship even groups who come out to
the farm, people I meet on my journeys
and they're asking the same sincere
question like what can we do? How can we
truly stand with Israel and the Jewish
people during this pivotal moment in
world history in Israel's history? And
uh and I really believe that this Torah
portion gives us a powerful insight into
the answer because there are moments in
history when society begins to lose its
way. When truth becomes dangerous. When
morality becomes negotiable, right? When
people who once spoke openly now
whisper, right? Or they hesitate or they
stay silent or they moderate themselves.
Many of us are watching America right
now. Now, I know we're from all over the
world, but America tends to be a uh a
gauge of some sort of what's really
happening in the world at large. And
we're seeing what's happening in
America. And we're asking, how can this
be happening? How can the most free and
prosperous nation on earth suddenly
become a place where simply defending
Israel, defending the most basic moral
truths, can make you a target. The Torah
has seen this before. We've seen this
before in history and and and the Torah
really gives us language for
understanding what is unfolding now for
what's happening. So the there's a in
the Torah portion this past week I read
an idea shared by Rabbi Winreb. It was
called either utopia or dystopia. He was
saying the first dystopia in history was
not Nazi Germany or the Soviet Union or
Iran or North Korea. The first dystopia
was Sodom. It was the first nightmare
society. We uh we first encounter it
when Lot leaves the home of home of
Abraham and pitches his tents near Sodom
and the Torah uh interrupts to warn us.
The people of Sodom were exceedingly
wicked and sinful unto God. But what
exactly did they do that made them so
wicked? or Rashi tells us they sinned
with their bodies. They sinned with
their wealth and they consciously
rebelled against God. The Midrash and
the the Talmud, the sages, they describe
a society that outlawed kindness,
criminalized hospitality, and punished
generosity. Me and Dvash and Sheila were
telling stories at night. And all the
stories lately have been around this
crazy society of Sodom and how if you
were too tall for the bed, they would
cut off your feet and if you're too
short, they would stretch you out. I see
the children just imagining this because
it's the opposite of the Abrahamic
hospitality that we seek to uh to
engender them with and and to manifest
for them. Anyways, Ezekiel the prophet
uh reveals the root of their sin. He
said this was the sin of Sodom, pride,
fullness of bread, and tranquil ease.
And she did not support the poor and the
needy. They were wealthy, they were
secure, they were prosperous, but they
shut their gates to the suffering of
others. They created laws to protect
cruelty and to suppress compassion. Laws
to protect cruelty.
Sudom was not chaotic. I think when I
was a kid, I just pictured random chaos
and violence and murder, people running
the streets. It wasn't chaotic. It was
organized. It had judges. It had courts.
It had a functioning legal structure.
The problem was that its laws themselves
were evil. The sages say that that they
had a mishp
inverted justice, a society where good
became evil and evil became good. But
here's the the essential point here.
Sodom was not destroyed only because it
was evil. Sodom was destroyed because
nobody protested the evil. When God
tells Abraham that he's going to destroy
the city, Abraham stands before the
creator of heaven and earth and argues
that it should be saved if there are 50
righteous people or even 10 righteous
people among among these people of
Sodom. But the Torah uses a very unusual
phrase. Let's look inside.
He says, "Perhaps there are only 50
righteous in the midst of the city. Will
you also destroy and not spare the place
for 50 righteous who are in it?" Aram
asks whether the city can be spared if
there are 50 righteous people,
right? In the midst of the city. In the
midst of the city. Why does he emphasize
that? Why not righteous people anywhere
in the city? Why in the midst of the
city? And to the Iban Ezra Rav Aram
Ibanz Ezra, he explains that righteous
people only have a society if they are
righteous publicly. If their values are
lived in the public square, not hidden
under the table. Virtue that goes
underground has no power to transform. A
righteous person who's afraid to speak,
afraid to be seen is righteous only in
theory. Rabbi Shimshon Rafal Hersh, he
goes even further. He writes that a
person in the midst of the city is
someone in constant connection with the
community. Someone who teaches, who
warns, who corrects and fights for what
is good even if success seems unlikely.
He never despares of humanity. He never
gives up on his society. He never
withdraws into silence. It's not enough
to be good. One must be good out loud.
This is where the fate of Sodom becomes
very relevant to our moment. Right? The
the sages ask, "Were there no righteous
people in Sodom? Was there not even one
good person?" And Rabbi Isaiah Yung, who
actually perished in the Holocaust,
interestingly enough, he suggested that
maybe there were people who knew the
society was evil, but they were afraid
to protest. people whose
consciences were troubled but whose
courage failed them. Perhaps Aram argued
that these silent, fearful, decent
people should still be considered
righteous. But the midash implies a
different divine answer, which is that
silence in the face of evil is not true
righteousness.
Had even one person in SOMO stood up,
broken the conspiracy of silence,
protested injustice, God would have
rushed to support him. But no one did.
Evil didn't destroy Stone. Silence
destroyed Stone. And now with with heavy
hearts, we look at America, a place
where Jews and Christians felt safe to
speak. A country that for generations
stood with Israel, celebrated moral
clarity and were
global champions for the freedom of of
speech, for freedom in general. And
today in universities, on social media,
in workplaces, speaking truth has become
dangerous. Professors lose their jobs
for supporting Israel. Students are
threatened. Journalists are silenced.
People, you know, people whisper their
convictions privately, but they're
terrified to say them publicly. And my
friends, I have my ear to the ground
here. I'm asking people in America. This
is true throughout the entire country.
America is not Yes, but it is in a
somike test. The midash says that one of
the defining features of Saddam was that
they made laws against justice and
persecuted anyone who practiced
kindness. And in America today, the
moral inversion is very clear, right?
Terror groups are celebrated and Israel
is vilified. Jewish identity itself is
turned into a crime and those who defend
moral clarity as are treated like
extremists. But the greater danger is
not the slander. The greater danger is
the silence. Only a minority of people
in SOM were truly wicked. But everyone
was silent. And therefore, everyone was
destroyed. I don't know if it was a
minority. Maybe it was half. Maybe it
was the m majority, but it doesn't
really matter because silence in moral
crisis is complicity. And the Torah does
not ask us to be prophets. It doesn't
ask us to be perfect. It asks us to be
courageous. Hashem didn't need thousands
of righteous people to save Saddam. He
asked for 10. Just 10 who would speak.
10 who would stand publicly for what is
right. 10 who would not bow to
intimidation or mockery or fear. And if
those 10 existed, the entire
civilization would have been saved. And
uh and my friends, I think that's our
role right now. If we believe in truth,
but we refuse to speak it, what good is
our belief? And I'm not speaking to you
as one from the outside. I have my own
fears about saying the things that I see
need to be said, knowing the people in
my family, people that are beloved to
me, dear friends who would be infuriated
and enraged by this. I've lost friends
already. So, you know, but what we need
to speak, if we love Israel, if we if we
only whisper it in safe rooms, what does
that love accomplish? We were born into
a generation that is being tested. Not
with fire or sword at this very moment.
Maybe for me here in Israel, there's a
lot of sword involved, too. But but
really with social pressure, with
humiliation, with public shame, with
relationships being held over our heads
if we dare to deviate from what is
accepted, that the Torah tells us that
silence is not humility. Silence is not
diplomacy and it's not compassion. It's
surrender. We must be in the midst of
the city, unafraid to speak moral truth
in a world that wants to bury it. We
speak not with hatred or anger but we
speak with conviction and clarity and
love and if we speak God will stand with
us. Uh pure ethics of our fathers it
teaches where there are no men strive to
be a man. When society collapses the
righteous are the ones who refuse to
collapse with it. So let us be those 10
my friends. Let us be those who break
that silence. Who Let us be voices of
truth. Truth for Israel and for America
and for whatever country we may be in.
Let us be voices of truth for a world
that desperately needs moral courage
again. And may Hashem give us the
strength to speak what is right, even
when it's hard, even when it's
dangerous, and even when others fall
silent. Because if we speak, the world
can still be redeemed. And if we're
silent, well, we know how that story
ends. Love you, my friends. Thank you so
much. Shalom. Shalom.