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Bitachon 203 - Pesach and Bitachon
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We study together concepts of Bitachon from the Haggadah of Rabbi Yechiel Perr. We speak of the foundation of the Exodus which is the fact that Hashem is behind every miracle in the world, both great miracles and small miracles. We also talk about finding humility in the darkness and troubles, and finding humility in redemption, as well.
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You're listening to the 203rd edition of
the Baken podcast. I'd like to share
with you a thought that relates
to and it relates to Pes whose
foundation as we'll see in of Rabbi Pere
my rebi the foundation of Pes is the
concept of it's our belief that just as
Hashem did miracles for us inas in the
Exodus from Egypt so Hashem performed
sometimes discreet miracles and
sometimes express
miracles and all of it. He's behind it
all. And that's indeed something that we
learn, we're supposed to understand from
the he's speaking in the context of the
man. And I'd like to share with you a
thought from the manana. And then I'll
share with you something from which is
right before which has to do with how do
we perhaps have a little bit of a
different approach into getting not the
regular run-of-the-mill idea that we've
spoken about until now. And we've been
speaking a long time but we'll get to
that.
First and my parent says like
this man we have to understand why is it
that the child why do we want a child to
be the one to motivate us to answer the
question and to think about the to think
about the exodus from Egypt why is it
initiated by a question from a child so
lays down as follows and I'm going to
read the Hebrew I'm going to
translate the
foundation of what was
What became new? What new information
did we get when we look at the story or
when we experienced it as the Jewish
people left
Egypt? Is something which happens again
and again which is renewed. It's a
concept that happens again and again in
each and every
generation. Which is interesting because
this language of is used also later on
in the we speak about the the fact that
in every generation they rise up against
us to try to destroy us. We'll come back
to that thought. But here we're speaking
about the fact that Hashem redeems us in
every generation.
The understanding here the foundation of
of the Exodus which we mention every day
which we
say we remind ourselves about it in shah
we remind ourselves about it in kdesh on
shabas constantly it's in our it's in
the the on our door it's in the that we
wear constantly constantly we're
reminding ourselves about the exodus why
because there's something foundational
there and that is Hashem is
involved intimately he didn't just
create the world and then let it flow.
He's involved
intimately in human
lives. Everything that happens only
depends on Hashem's divine
providence. not an angel. It may have
looked might have looked like an angel.
Mosher Rabu might have been the one to
to with his staff and with his warnings
to power it might have looked like he
was doing but it wasn't him. Right? We
don't mention Rabenu at all in
the Hashem. It was God and there might
have been there might have
been messengers that he used but it was
really him manifesting through them.
Every single thing that happens to every
single individual, me and you and
everyone around us and nations, it's all
just a manif manifestation of Hashem's
will.
Every time we come to the night of Pes
which will be coming to
soon each and every one of us goes
through our own goes through our own
exodus which really
means the point of telling the story is
so that we should understand and
recognize that the miracles that
happened then who was behind those
miracles who intervened
in in human events in order to bring
about a salvation for Am Israel to take
us out to take us out of slavery out of
bondage and to give us the Tyra to
create a relationship with us. It was
Hashem and Hashem is behind the miracles
and he's behind every single thing that
happens to
this. But he says an interesting
thing. What's unusual is that we're
having a question asked by a child and
the the initiation of the entire is with
that child. He's asking why is this
night different from all of the nights
and the answer is as we're going to say
we were slaves in Egypt. Hashem took us
out with amazing miracles and he's
behind all the miracles and he is the
foundation of our lives. Every single
thing that happens to us, there's no
happen stance. There's only
miracle. Alter says it very clearly. He
says equals n equals tea. Nature itself
is
miraculous and miracles are also nature.
They're part they're not separable. You
can't can't really separate them. But
why do we have a child initiate this?
So pair says that the reason is that
often when a person experiences a
miracle. When we experience things in
our lives that are above nature, we
don't even notice it. We're just used to
it. We experience things that my heart
is
beating. I can
breathe. I'm
healthy. I have kids. There's so many
things in our lives that we take for
granted and we don't recognize because
it's it's it's just the way it is. When
a person has a miracle happen, you know,
you could be driving on the street, you
could have you don't might not even be
aware of the fact that an accident was
excuse me was
prevented. You need someone outside of
the picture sometimes to to say, "Hey, I
saw what happened. I saw you pass by.
There was almost an accident and you
just passed on through.
We want a child to ask the question. We
want, you know, I have a 2-year-old
son, and he's starting to ask the man.
He's learning to say it. might not know
what he's talking about, but for
example, I just brought him and my other
kids, some of my kids to the to a matzah
factory, and you could watch their
wonder as they saw the machine matzas
and how the and how the dough comes
through the machine, it gets flattened,
then it goes through the oven, gets cut
into squares first, etc. We watched the
whole process. We watched
them doing the creating the the the hand
mas, putting it into the oven.
and you watch it and you're in wonder. I
could watch it on my ch children's
faces. But we need that wonder because
we need a children's look. A child looks
at things with innocence and with with
realness.
Sometimes it takes an outsers's view, a
childlike view, for us to realize
something that we might know already,
but we're not thinking about, right? The
sham says at the beginning of the
savory, he says, "I'm not coming to
teach you anything that you don't know.
I'm coming to teach you something that
you already know, but we don't pay
attention to. We need a child to
be Why is this night different from all
other nights?
by him arousing the
question. So it awakens us to the things
that we became indifferent to. We got
used to
it and it awakens my own hispilus.
Hispilus
means my feelings, my my in a feeling of
inspiration. I can get inspired. My kid
asks a question. He's inspired. He's
noticing something
different. So it wakes me up to
it. And so here we have an understanding
which we mentioned before of how it's it
seems to be a contradiction. It says
that Hashem
himself I did it. Hashem says there was
no messenger. It was God himself who
came and took the Jewish people out of
Egypt. Looks like Moshe. It's not Moshe.
But there's another puk that Hashem
commanded us when when weed we
slaughtered the pascal lamb pes. So we
took the blood put on the doorposts.
Hashem instructed us to do so so that
the angel wouldn't come to cause
destruction.
So, it sounds like there's an angel
which causes destruction and it can't
really distinguish between Jewish homes
and non-Jewish
homes. So, it sounds like it's not
Hashem doing it.
So he
explains there certainly
was there was a destroyer, an angel of
destruction like we we quote the verse
later on in the which speaks about the
destructive angels who are going to come
and cause destruction to the Egyptians.
Maybe it's talking about in the future
time when we're going to see our gula,
our redemption, there's going to be
destructive forces that come and destroy
our enemies, destroy their nuclear
aspirations. But what we're after here,
and this
is a recognition that it's Hashem and
not not an angel. It's not the Iron Dome
dome system. It's not the THAAD rockets.
It's not the Patriot rockets. It's not
the Air Force. It is them. But who is
working through them because there's
really nothing else besides Rashem. The
Malik comes and and and causes destroys
the firstborn of our enemies.
The Malik comes in the guise of
beepers and destroys the firstborn of
our enemies
etc etc on through history the
destruction among Israel's enemies it
looks like it happens perhaps in a
natural way or in a supernatural way but
it's not clear that it's
Hashem the point here is and this is the
foundation of The this is the foundation
of what we're supposed to learn
from is that Hashem his hand is hidden
behind everything everything that we see
every single thing that occurs in the
world it's him everything that happens
in my life if I'm successful it's
him right the danger
of I was discussing over this past
Shabas with a
very person I hated at his shabas table
with his
family. His name is Arit Tabak. He has a
safer about put out a number of years
ago,
bestseller. We're talking about and he
and he described his he had a vision, an
idea, a
concept, you know, a child is sitting on
a
tricycle and the child is on that
tricycle and moving this way and that
way
and veering in this direction and that
direction. He's okay. Okay, everything's
fine. Now, he doesn't realize it, but on
the back of his tricycle, there's a a
huge pole. That pole has a handle. And
with that handle, the the parent, the
father is walking along behind the child
and holding on to the the handle. Now,
the when the child is veering this way
and that, he's not touching or he's not
changing the course, the trajectory of
the child. He's letting the child do as
he wishes. But when the child is about
to veer off into the street into a place
of danger, so the parent gently or
perhaps firmly pushes the kid right back
to where he
belongs. And until that moment, the
child doesn't even realize that the the
parent is watching. He thinks he's doing
his own thing. Feels like if he got
somewhere on this tricycle, he got there
because of his own efforts cuz he moved
that steering wheel and he was turning
his feet. But really the parent was
watching all along waiting for the child
to make a mistake so that the parent
could keep that child
safe. Does the same thing with us. It
seems like our efforts are actually
doing it but it's not. He's actually
really in in the in the in the end of it
all. He's the one who made the tricycle.
He's the one who lets us go veer this
way and that way. He's the one who sends
us back on track when we make mistakes.
But he's behind it all. And that's the
lesson of of Mr of the Exodus. That's
what we're supposed to think about as we
come into the
sedar. I'd like to share with you one
more thought from from the what Rab P
says
in we say
in right before the so we we we uncover
the matzah and it's
called which means the poor man's bread.
But it also means the the bread that
we're going to speak a lot
about, right? The matzah, it's made out
of the same ingredients as bread, but
there's no or isa. There's no
leavenning. The bread represents the
hubris of the human being. His puffing
himself up, making himself to be great.
Look at what I've accomplished. Look how
great I
am. Is the bread of affliction. It's
flat. There's no there's no hubris.
There's no ego. There's no
ga. How do we get that? We got it in
mit. We got it in Egypt. We got it when
we were in servitude. And that's one way
of squashing one's ego is being beholden
to subject to our
enemies. In Egypt, we're subject to our
enemies. We're in
exile. Sometimes they could be nicer to
us. Sometimes they're more mean to us.
being subject to people who wish to
destroy us. Whether it's Iran, whether
it's Germany, whether it's the Christian
world for the last 2,000 years, whether
it's the Arab world,
pugs, crusades, the list is
endless. But what is the purpose of all
of that? The purpose of all of that is
to bring us back to ourselves because we
get lost. We steer we get we get off.
The more that we have hubris, the fatter
we are, the the more leavenvening there
is, the more we need to be squished
down. We need to be flattened a little
bit or a
lot the more we get involved in in using
our own kus. So that there's a great
danger. So there's the but it's
interesting because the same exact bread
as P points out we also heard this from
Rabbi Hab the same
bread is the bread
of it's the bread of affliction but it's
also he refers to it as it's the bread
that we eat as we're leaving Egypt.
We're leaving Egypt and as we leave
Egypt we're redeemed with that bread.
Right? There was not time for the bread
to rise and as they left they ate the
matzah. That's why we eat the matzah.
The puss
says so in the gula itself in the
redemption
itself there's there's that
flatbread. But you see there's a great
danger because as we get out we had
something to limit our yahar to limit
our egos and really we can't stay in a
place of redemption if we don't remain
with our
ego limited we need to stay in a a place
of servitude not to Egypt but now
servitude toades receive the
Tyra and by the way that place of
servitude is really a place of
connection and
love. It's a place of relationship and
it's the same place as that's why I'm
talking about this the the sense of the
sense of trust comes out of a sense of
relationship. The the Mishna says in in
it
says
sorry make Hashem's will your
will. Submit yourself surrender yourself
to God's will and Hashem will make other
people's wills subservient to yours.
First in really we've talked a lot about
different kinds of we've talked about
where I ask Hashem where I can have I'm
going to get something that I want
specific but there's another level of
which we've also spoken about which is
where I accept whatever Hashem brings to
me and really I need to start with that.
I need to accept that whatever happens
to me in the world is Hashem's
will and then I can go on to perhaps
once I have a relationship with him
asking for something that I
want. But it really starts and by the
way it ends up being that I really only
want what he
wants. I don't need anything in
excess. I don't need anything more than
that. But that's the but how do we get
to the and here's my last point that I'd
like to share with you. It starts
with this is the bread of affliction
that that our forefathers ate in
Egypt. So it talks about that the bread
reminding us of the the limitation of
our ego. But how what happens in the
middle here is called suddenly we start
saying whoever wants can come and visit
us. You want to eat with us please come.
Whoever wants to eat the carbon pes with
us, please join
us. And then we end off by
saying this year we're here. Next year
we're in the land of
Israel. Now we are servants. We're
servants of American dreams of wealth
and prosperity. We're servants of all
kinds of secular ideals. But we want to
be free. We want to serve you.
We want to serve you and learn your
Tyra. But how do we get from
the from the bread of affliction to
subservance to the nations? How do we
get to back to the land of Israel? How
do we get to be
free? How do we get to be free of all of
the ideals and ideas that we've been
inculcated in since our
youth from the cultures that surround
us? And the answer is in the middle the
pathways
called whoever wants to come and join us
please join
us. There's something you know we're
used to being something has to do
with between myself and God.
But I want to offer to you that it's
possible to get into that space in
another way that has to do
with offering someone
else. Please can I how can I help you?
How can I be of service to you? How can
I how can I invite you? Please can I
invite you to to join my meal to join in
my carbon pesa? Can we do this together?
It reminds me of something that my Rabb
quoted on Shamas on the mitz of we break
the middle
man. What's the reason for it? So it's
brought down in that the reason is I
believe it's the kbo he says that in mit
as they left Egypt some people their
matzah baked properly in the sun and
some people it just it it didn't it
flopped. It didn't work out. They didn't
have
The people who
had successful matzah, the matzah was
baked, they cut their matzah in half and
they gave half of it to their neighbors
who didn't
have. And that's the foundation of
mitim.
You want to know how you get
from the humility of being a slave of
being subservient to remaining in that
space and being a true free person
without the ego coming
in. It's by seeing how I can share with
somebody
else. Seeing what I can do for another
person. Putting aside my judgments of
someone else. Hey, how why doesn't you
get a job? Putting putting that aside
and saying how can I share? How can I
share? That space of sharing of love for
another Jew is the foundation. That's
how we got out of Egypt. It wasn't a
coincidence that that's what's what
happened. And we remind ourselves of
that when we do the yakat, we break that
middle matzah, reminding ourselves that
the gula
occurs with sharing with
others. And that itself requires I I
have
enough. If I'm going to share, maybe it
means I'm not gonna have enough. I'm
gonna have
enough. And the action of it is an act
of the action of sharing what I have
with someone else. When maybe I feel
mitsum, I feel
constricted. That's another avenue
into it's another way through to a sense
and a recognition and acting upon that
recognition that Hashem is giving me
everything that I need.
Those are the thoughts I wanted to share
and I hope that you'll be inspired by
them that we have a beautiful pes. Thank
you so much for listening. We'll see you
again next time.