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Different Shades of Prayer By Rabbi Dr. Ahron Adler
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the Israeli Army left Lebanon after the
second Lebanese War so there was a UN
resolution in place guaranteeing as if
to say they say kav guaranteeing that
theala won't go south of a certain point
and that would allow certain amount of
um Peace on our northern border of
course theala violated it left and right
and the UN resolution ended up meaning
nothing in spite of that there's still
some efforts very whether was the United
States and others to try to help with
Israel work out some type of diplomatic
solution but everybody knows that a
diplomatic solution is just a stop Gap
and you don't know if it's going to last
for a day for a year or 10 years but
whatever it is um it pushes the the the
the moment of actual Warfare off a
little bit and um you know sometimes
countries have to make a consideration
after the difficulties in Aza
and the price that's been paid um you
know maybe we can we need a breather a
little bit and no doubt one day this
going to have to be another round in
Lebanon but maybe it doesn't have to be
tomorrow or the day after so that's Doon
that's the Diplomatic the other is MIL
country is ready country is ready for
another round in Lebanon as it
tries the next month or two to finish up
the job in Gaza hopefully not longer
than that but then there's
the is an absolute obligation for every
single person I'll even go beyond the
Jewish Nation The World At Large should
be praying for peace nobody needs War
but especially am Israel in these days
so those of us who are not engaged in
the the military have obligation to for
and we know that
from in par B we'll get to it in par B
in just a few weeks
so there the Torah says that
mosu ascends the mountain withon and
and's hand is being raised
and when his hands go up the tide swings
in the favor of when when the hands go
down so
the ask the
question is Hocus Pocus here up and down
so it says it has to do with because
is a gesture when your hands are up the
Tor
says
in when he's because this used to be the
big gesture of prayer right the hands
up there it's in the negative where the
Nai says and when you're daving I'm not
I'm going to ignore it in if we read it
right
before
so is is a gesture of I mentioned more
than once here uh the idea of
Professor that the the whole idea of
covering the eyes and candle lighting
Friday night actually emanated from an
original idea that women said AA at the
time ofat wrot and they said A for their
family for their children for the
surroundings and that's why box was
associated with because whenever is
there's always and the women would like
candles first you know with the hands up
as a Jesu and later it became a
secondary reason to it but the idea of
FR Kap so this was what the mishna says
m raenu is showing that is daving he's
symbolizing it so then the tide was in
our favor but when am Israel saw o we
must have great military strategy and
great armaments and so on there's no
need for another par of tum so then the
the tide Swang in the in the favor of
the yalim so you see that there is a
tremendous need for those who are not
active on the battlefield to engage in
and by the
way not only taking out a saer or say a
tiim or a sid or whatever and saying
specific but you can also meditate you
can meditate you're waiting for a bus so
you can think of a zillion things but
you can also think of some that you know
and you know you may not know the whole
per but sometimes you might know a whole
peric by heart whatever and I can prove
it because you know so those of us who
would go up to harab it and you know
there's this issue that they don't let
you DAV on harab so the point is why you
going up to harab I mean harab you're
now allow to go up unless you doing
something that's defined as AEM so you
can't bring a Corbin today that's not
going to work you also can't bow down
there because they're going to throw you
right off the mountain so what else can
you do of the answer is so how can you
say if can't say it if they see your
lips move they're going to throw you off
the answer is to meditate that nobody
can stop you can't stop you from
meditating and that's based on a mishna
in the third chapter of that there were
certain people who are who are for
variety of reasons who K said until they
go to the Mikvah they're now all to say
something of
a like a so question is how do they DAV
how do they say how do they say the
answer is they
meditate that's the mishna so you see
from there that huro has status what do
you say to a person who had got forbid
of stroke and lost the ability to speak
babba for the last two years of his life
couldn't speak so how did he D the
answer is meditation you meditate the so
meditating has status in and therefore
when we're in these days when when
there's a tremendous obligation for to
be engaged in upgraded we could even D
when we don't have a safer in the hand
we can meditate and by the way it
doesn't have to be a formal text it
could be anything in your
mind you know let the soldiers come back
B Shalom that's a just think it you
don't even have to say it just think it
and and and that becomes another and
another and the the the the
conglomeration of all the that adds up
it m adds up and and and that's what
needs today so that's why they asked me
in the they asked told the speakers now
for the this particular uh session zman
to deal with topics that that have
something to do with our current events
on some level and I figured you know
what let's talk about the um because you
can talk about whenever but I think I
want to focus on specific aspects of
that will be relevant to the day there
is a fundamental m a dispute between
rambam and ramban is part of the 613
Commandments
now this could be a shock to those who
are not familiar with the fact that M
raenu never came down with a list of 613
Commandments at best a number at best
that is also a m that's also a dispute
did or did not mhu come down with a
number 6113 is the number T mitv from
sini so the rambam says absolutely yes
absolutely yes
and he
uses that takes the that we all familiar
with which the gamar says that should be
the first word that comes out of a
person's mouth when he's a little child
he should just teach him to so when he
finally starts babbling his first word
is tor doesn't always work out like that
one of my daughters who a big her first
word was
banana it wasn't Torah it's usually IMA
by the way but it can be you know
whatever it is right I have a nephew his
first word was more every time that he
gave gave him to eat more okay so each
baby has his or her first
word but the gar says if you're looking
for an example of a first word it should
be
the so T let's do a little
math adds up to
611 ah t
61 but two of the we heard directly from
the first two
of so now you need a computer for this
611 + 2 is 613 and the
says that's what the says you see from
here that they were all given to mhe and
the and the raham says this is
absolute now others said yes nobody's
challenging this line in thear but they
didn't really mean it that Moshe came
down with
613 but um It's Just an Illusion to the
the sum total of mitzvot that we have
today 613 now do the 613 include rinic
mitzvot ramam says impossible they can
only be biblical mitzvot now why does he
make that point because 500 years before
the r was the author of
the 7th Century now why I say author
what's his name we're not sure we're not
sure it's one of the we're just not sure
his name so he's called
the the author
of fine so we have the saer we have many
additions of the saer and uh and he has
it's a pioneering attempt pioneering
attempt to organize the material in the
mishna and in thear where there you have
no listing whatsoever of the 613 but all
you have is discussions about MIT and he
organizes it into a list so it's a he's
a Pioneer the only problem is part of
his list includes lighting kanah candles
and reading the Millan porm and this
rambam went ballistic because this can't
be part of tag and not only the author
of but one of the greats of the end of
the period of the
RAB from the n beginning of the 10th
Century he also has a poem of all of the
613 mitv that the until this very day
say or sing it on can't get better than
that a nice poem about the 63 mitzvot
and there he has lighting kanah candles
and and and reading the gilm so what
does that mean could mean that they
thought that mhu gave a Mitzvah to light
khah candles on the 25th but hold off
it's a slow release Mitzvah it's not for
today you know in 1500 years there's
going to be a St story with the mbes so
then you'll you know kick it'll kick in
same thing with purm in a thousand years
there'll be a story in shushan and then
the Mitzvah is going to kick in a slow
relase pill to the S is absolutely
ridiculous that's not what they thought
either either they thought that the
number 613 that's being wielded by kazal
as being this the sum total of mitzvot
is includes mitv as well it's as simple
as that and the rambam says no no such
deal the 613 are only biblical and then
he goes on in the 12th century to write
his sez now on theph less than 100 years
later the
r argues with the rambam on at least at
least 26 locations I can tell you that a
little over 50 years ago and I'm dating
myself now when I was still at
and was his second year at the Yesa tar
after his Al comes to New York to
interview the next year's crop of benat
and we were sitting there six of us at
the same time that was a miracle because
if would have been one-on-one we would
have been killed but um he he he gave us
in front of he again with six of us and
we he said what are you studying I said
what we're studying okay
what okay
so the leap year so he says is that one
Mitzvah or two mitv you know we knew a
lot of about the subject matter none of
us knew how to answer that question is
it listed as one Mitzvah or two Mitzvah
now I know I'm a little SM it's a
between the r and the ran the r counts
it as one and the ramban counts it as
two that's why when we started the Yesa
in 95 in the seventh creators I drilled
it to them that it's
a if they take an exam by and he asked
you that question you're not going to
fail on this question you know like uh
you're going to know the answer and and
so to two with regard to kma in the
morning andma at night is that
considered one Mitzvah in the scheme of
613 or two rambam says it's one and
ramban says it's two but the ramban
agrees that there has to be 613 so he
has to do some fancy gymnastics to work
it out he has to put things together or
leaves things out or put things in and
that's sort of becomes an exercise of
trying to work out the listing of the
613 so ramban has the Mitzvah of living
in ER he doesn't care what era it might
be
you just obligated to pack pack your
bags and move to her Israel the ran the
rambam it's not there it's not there it
doesn't mean he's against it but he it's
not there in the SE and and and many
many many other examples so with regard
to the r includes once a day once a day
as a Biblical Mitzvah you have to turn
to God and ask for something this is all
before Theon was written 2 200 years ago
the beginning of B cheni
an from the days ofu you got up in the
morning it could be 10: in the morning
it could be 400 in the afternoon within
a 24 hour span ask of aosh for something
in any language in any form but the ran
predicated and said before you get to
the point say a nice word of praise to
God and when you finish say thank you so
you have this formula not but it's
what's called in Hebrew a a formula
of
Bak praise request Thanksgiving fine
ultimately the
an built this formula into the because
the first three are the core whatever is
in the middle is bakas is request
petition and the last three BR are with
being the central one so so this is an
idea the ram says is biblical and he
deres it from if you look at
is reflecting that he was begging for
one thing to come into is that's what
he's begging to come into but how does
he get to the point his point
is i' love to go over the the boundary
and see Israel ultimately says all right
you'll see it from afar from a
Mountaintop but that's not what he was
asking for he wanted to go into Israel
so it begins
with
you know you have begun the process the
the the wars of and in the end
of leads those Wars and he says I I got
started the process has begun we've
already annexed the parts of trans
Jordan as part of er Israel for ruen and
G and half of manasha so so so you
know I've started it let me finish up
now let me finish the job
okay it didn't happen but we learn from
here that before you start asking for
something you have to praise theh and
and that's we have in the in the and so
on so you have once a day and then comes
on and they said we're going to D in
three times a day and and not today but
we'll deal with the question of how
exactly who is that applicable is it
appliable for all of Israel is it
appliable just for the men and not for
the women we'll see what the limitations
are with to the three of every single
day but that's the rambam it's there
it's one of the 613 Commandments the ran
argues and says no no there's no such
animal in the Torah that you have to D
once a day but one second is something
you find in the throughout from bra
until you see people are ding for
different
things AB was ding everybody's daving
for something and you see it in thees so
how can you say it's not biblical so
ramban says what you have in thees is
Crisis prayer only when somebody was in
a moment of Crisis then the person
turned to that's biblical crisis but
statutory which means regular routine
that's an innovation of the that's an
institution of the to regularly in a in
a routine fashion DAV every single day
even though everything Hy dor you woke
up everything was fine nothing hurts you
and the family was okay and and the
Shalom and and and you know nothing in
particular to to to DAV for so you still
have to Happ because that's what said
but according to ran there's no biblical
imperative to turn toh to ask for
something if there's not something on
the agenda that's burning so there
that's he that's he call now the rambam
says you're right there is such a thing
called crisis except it has a different
word it's called z z translated Loosely
means screaming or shouting but it means
a type of higher level and more
spontaneous type
of is a little bit more organized and Z
would be of a more spontaneous nature um
we might
include into the category of UHA maybe a
a malanu Edition might be part of zaka
or people just open up a tillum and just
they don't even maybe don't understand
every word they're saying but
there for something or in any language
for that matter so the ra says in the
Torah there are two spots of the 613 for
prayer one is statutory prayer every day
once a day person has to turn toh and
ask for something that's and then this
crisis and that is zaka whereas the ran
only has one space for it and that's
crisis okay so now we put it in
perspective comes my great re the and he
says let's make sholom bias between the
r and the ran he says you know in every
night there's
a and we
say we ask that should protect us from
the Satan who we'll see in a moment who
is Mr Satan here who's in front of us
and who's be behind us and the r said
the Satan are the dangers of Life the
dangers of life sometimes the dangers
are clearly in front of us we can see
them we can see the danger coming we can
identify it and we can even sometimes do
something about it you know that there's
a illness out there and there's
vaccination or you do take other steps
to prevent the spread of an infectious
disease it's there and it can become a
Calamity but we can thwart it off maybe
not entirely but at least somehow reduce
the damage we can get into damage
control with regard to the Satan the SE
is a military situation you get the Army
together and you make a defensive stand
you can hold them off you can do things
many many aspects of human tragedy can
be averted if the person would have only
seen it up front and done something
about it and the most tragic is when you
see it and you do nothing about it like
October
7th like October 7th where people saw
what was happening people in
intelligence students saw what was
happening and unfortunately we didn't
take the the necessary stands look at
the price that we paid look at the price
we paid so that's the
Satan but what happens if the Satan
ISU the danger lurks from behind you
don't see it you don't see it you're
driving your car and you're perfectly
okay with your car car is okay you're a
good driver you're not sleeping and not
drunk everything and you watch the
lights or you watch the stop sign
everything you're doing everything 100%
correctly except that the guy coming up
the street he's not doing everything
correctly and to him a stop sign or red
light doesn't mean anything and he goes
right into you now these things happen
these things happen unfortunately person
driver can be killed maimed for life
you did nothing wrong somebody else did
it that's all that's the Satan person is
perfectly healthy every single time
person goes to the
doctor complete 100% you know complete
bill of health everything's fine and
then out a clear blue sky from one blood
test you know he's diagnosed with
leukemia these things have happened
these things have happened out of
nowhere and then you don't even know
where to begin
the the said on a philosophical sense he
us the word
existentially a person is
always always there's always a sometimes
we know about the and sometimes we don't
know about the but the SAT is always
there he's always there and therefore
the ran would have to
agree that even though you may not see
the tar you ought to D in every day and
not wait until God forbid the explosion
happens right in front of your face you
should D in every day on a Biblical
level that's what the said the ran would
have to agree to the rambam that there
is a need it may not be part of the 613
but that doesn't mean you should sit
around and not DAV on a regular basis
because the ramban says it's only a
Mitzvah of of shouting in time of the r
said it's always a time of it's just you
don't always see it so this just putting
it a little bit in
perspective now the ramam tells us in
his beginning
of that in the beginning of B people
lost touch on how to talk to our Kosh so
even on a human level if you're going to
write a letter to somebody's senior it
could be a person of in government a
president a prime minister whatever a
minister it could be a mayor could be a
head of a corporation you're writing
something of a formal
nature it has to be WR written properly
so after you put down notes what you
want to say many times you give it to
somebody who can polish that language
I'm not embarrassed to say that uh the
book that I published two and a half
years ago on the R's conversation I also
had a language editor because somebody
asked me are you going to translate it
into Hebrew I said no it's already in
Translation really what language did you
write it in I wrote it in Brooklyn e but
but U Rabbi David Shapiro translated it
into Brookline English from Boston so
it's a higher level of English fine you
have this uh in in in every language you
know in my Hebrew book that I just
published on the rambam I of course I
had a Hebrew Editor to it you you polish
up the words you fix it up and it just
looks a little bit better and and and
that's important so the ramam says
people lost touch on how to talk to
properly and therefore the there is a f
number one by authoring a text so here
this is a good text to meet a in a type
of you know talk a with and second just
in case you weren't sure what you should
be asking for we're going to be
suggesting to you what human beings
should be asking for now that doesn't
mean they slam the door on personal
requests the
ofu towards the end of in the weekday is
the wild card before you
say
or
whatever you can throw in anything in
any
language picks it up in a different
language so you can it's it's there it's
a there's an available spot in to throw
in you want to say and and all the boys
should come home B Shalom say it that's
what's on your mind Inu you say it it
right then and there but there was an
agenda in the that an felt these are
things that we should be asking for
because these are proper needs proper
needs now the problem in Western society
and you know if not all of us are
products a little bit of Western Society
we grew up with a a cult in a culture
where sometimes you purchase things not
because you need it but because your
neighbor already bought it and uh um and
you don't want to be the last one on the
Block you know with this old jalape car
so you're going to have to buy a new car
but the car works it's fine it's 100%
okay no no no it's
just I'm the last guy with this jalap
car right or or other things that people
you know invest when they go shopping or
to make shopping into a sport you know
what are we doing this afternoon going
shopping do you need anything no so so
what are you doing it's a it's a thing
to do keeps me it occupies me look at
the the floor the window the Shar the
shop windows and so on maybe I'll see
something maybe I won't see something
whatever it's it's just an occupation
that's all the rambam in in describing y
mashia the very last lines of his Mish
Tor he says in in those days says there
won't be ra there won't be famine there
won't be war and and there won't be
there won't be jealousy in competition
he says the only thing you're going to
go out to buy is things you need you ran
out of milk you go to call that you buy
milk that's all you don't buy 10 cases
of milk because your neighbor brought in
10 cases of milk you know it's
ridiculous you you buy per need and I
remember saying ad and I probably said
it here in the course of the last 40
years when uh we talk about the Kaneka
candles um and until how long should the
candle be lit on on the Kaneka night the
M thear
says until people have come home from
the marketplace and I've interpreted it
uh homiletically until we get the shook
out of our
minds until we get our feet out of the
market there's there is a a a a
spiritual side to Kaneka and and we're
supposed to put the material side on the
side just get the shook out of your life
right now we're dealing with something
much more important than you know
consumption and being a consumer so anak
DOA gave us what they thought would be a
proper agenda so it has to do
with yes we need wisdom that there was a
my father of sh told me that there was a
speaker in in Europe he toured Eastern
Europe his name was maansi and he spoke
in yish and he said once in a speech
that it was true what mhu said about
that we were you know very wise Nation
it's all very nice but if we would have
had a little SE it wouldn't
hurt good you say means like a little
common sense sometimes okay yeah we're
brilliant people but
sometimes you know you know what it
means so so it's true that we have to
ask we'll see in later it's the same
thing and um and then this cha yes you
have to ask you don't have to wait for
him Ki for that and ask atonement yes
and and to get us out of all kinds of
local problems headaches aggravations
that's and then Health yeah health is a
good thing to asking for and parasa S
sustenance you should have food on the
table these are things that we need and
said you want to know what to ask for
here here's a schedule A B CDE e say
these you have other things in in add
whatever you want but this is an agenda
that they gave us the problem was that
from the days of an until shortly after
the destruction of the second bet
mikdash certainly after the Barba
Revolution we're now in the third
Century with the emergence of the
mishna this batin haad the Sanhedrin of
the 71 ceased to function as an
authoritative body of Tasha balp of the
oral law what I mean to say is while the
71 had a Judicial function as well but
it was very rare that you required 71
diim for something judicial you needed
three judges for monetary cases and such
you needed 23 judges for capital
punishment what else is there between
capital punishment and monetary cases
and civil cases where you need three so
the mishna delineates a handful of cases
where most of those cases never ever
happened so what do you need them for 71
diim the raham tells us it was really an
oversized
of the greatest of the generation and if
there was an issue of the oral law
nature that had to be clarified and they
didn't know they took a vote and
whatever the vote was that became the
and you were bound to abide by
it by majority
rule say Do not deviate left and right
for what they're going to tell you fine
which means that the days of B cheni
when there was already an
organized almost 500 years B mikdash is
standing and functioning with
Corban in the north and in the South and
in the center of the country are daving
three times a day so the 18 fine so the
um the the uh the the of the was uniform
because if somebody challenged a word in
the n in the version the literary
version so the sanedrin said all right
let's take a vote on it and whatever it
was it was and that became the for
everybody so there was no ashas and no
and no AR and no Taman and noad and no
this and no that imagine everybody's
daving one
standard or to use RAF goran's phrase
which he thought he was going to be able
to put pull it over in the AR push it
over in the
Army the unified course he called it
we're taking the VAR the variance and
trying to make it into one unified but
then it was really because it was that's
all there was there was just the one of
of
the what brought about the
differentiation in N was the galut was
the galut the fact that we were
dispersed so I mentioned in my book and
conversations with the r that the r
didn't like the word diaspora said the
word diaspora is much too refined and G
lent legitimacy for being
in now he said that in Boston and New
York imagine sitting in Boston and New
York he said he preferred the word galut
galut or as he said it Gus galut Exile
because when you feel you're in galut
you know you're detached you have a
sense of being detached you're not at
home you're not at home and the r
explained it and you can use this as
this coming Shabbat
for where the
says these are the children of yakob who
are coming to Egypt but then in present
tense who are coming and the pasuk ends
in the past
tense they had already come I mean my
gosh we
finished you see that they came already
and there it gives the listing of the 70
names in the beginning of it just
reduces it to 12 names because it's just
the headlines and it
says there inash and there the present
tense makes sense these are the names of
the children of is of is coming who are
now coming into MIM and the ramban says
that the beginning of schm is nothing
but a quote from parash and that's why
the book begins with conjunction and how
do you begin a book not let let Al a
paragraph a book with v
the book should have
started is but in the context
of the word makes sense because it says
that they came down and here are the
names and if the Tor is simply quoting
itself so it quoted the whole as as
is but the end of the is in the past
tense so rough side of the
medish Allah Shimon
Allah
Le Allah mean Ru went down to M Ru went
up from M Shimon came down to M Shimon
went up from what does that mean that Ru
shim leuda the children of jakov they
went out at the time of Moshe ridiculous
that that's obviously not what happened
at all but the r said what happened was
the people of am Israel were still in
the mold of Ruin and Shimon Ley as if if
they just got there they just got there
even though they may have been there two
300 years later they were still Hab MIT
like as if we just arried we're still
Greener we're still fresh we're still
we've not acclimated we haven't become
cultured to being Egyptians and and
we're still B Israel and still speaking
our language giving Hebrew names and not
Egyptian names as kazal say which means
Ruan went down and there were ruines who
came up and Shimon went down and there
was shimun who came up and and so on and
and and this has to do with not
culturally assimilating and the r said
that's why they were able to leave
because they were still B yov and B
Israel even after so many years of being
enslaved in mitan so the
um so when we talk about the galut and
the lack of central halakic leadership
because I know when I speak to high
school kids today and tell them you know
years ago there was no CNN they don't
believe me there was no WhatsApp they
don't believe me they don't believe me
well why couldn't they just send the a
WhatsApp from y change the you know
because 200 2,000 years ago they didn't
have a WhatsApp that's it it's like when
my father I used to bring my parents to
the shear here regularly and once it was
it Tuesday then we were giving it on
Tuesday Mornings so I was driving and I
was on my on my uh mobile phone which I
have a speaker in the car sometimes you
pass a tall building you lose uh you
know Casher you lose uh you know the
signal so it also blank that my father
goes well what happened I said we lost
tar so he said you know in pilna in the
the in Poland we never lost tikar never
never lost a there right seem wonderful
place wonderful place so that's why
different of evolve because a slight
variation and then a copy is and already
you're dealing with a new to the extent
today we don't have 18 but we have 19
because was added in the days of which
we have in
our that's already a difference of is it
or is it neither were original neither
the original began with the
word what's
a what does the word mean it's used in
various context but it meant the early
Hebrew Christians that's what it meant
and that was the battle and that was the
inclusion of the which we call today
that underwent so much internal
censorship because we were subject
to those who went over to the Christian
side and were then employed by the
church to scan Jewish sources and to
show and antichristian remarks that
would spark up a grum and and therefore
we had to be very very careful and
things were sensed out out of out of for
example I grew up
on you come to you look at any s and it
says they bow down too to nothingness he
and and they they pray to a god who's
not going to help them
but
we what happened
to him who sends it out so there were
certain communities in Israel that
didn't have a problem with Christianity
like Yemen and Yemen has a wonderful
tradition of
preserving that goes before the the
Middle Ages so they had it all the
time whether it was in the standard the
end of each or whether it was in the
middle
of that we
say when we bow down in the middle so
the idea of uh censorship is something
that um that we know today I have
nickname for I call it because people
have one foot out the sh when they're
saying right thein has already come off
by as right and
thei hanging around to say for the last
kades at the end of ALU but um they say
that's why put him in the middle
of because came to God with a claim
that's everybody's running out of they
said don't
worry they gonna open thees and you're
gonna bow down
for was very happy very happy so you
have this business of difference of and
if I look at the 19 of
and I check this out from various sidim
of different communities there's only
one out of the 19 that there's a unified
that there's no
variant one out of 19 18 out of 19 come
in different brands and different
flavors which is it let's take a vote
take a guess okay take a guess which one
would you think that Amel never tampered
with and it remained in its pristine
form till this very day
yeah
Hal no that that came in different
variants we're gonna see that um matter
of fact that
variant is already a variant because in
the days
of they didn't
say when mdash was up and running they
said it was
after the they took that out and they
put
in next try what was
that
K the first one so the truth of the
matter is up until pretty recently I
would say there are two that never and
and one of the two was the first one
until became a little smarter because I
I always have to be careful to not to be
absolute because then you can be proven
wrong one day even if it's 20 years down
the road um the first BR did go through
variations so first I thought I was
going to fudge it because there was a
variant I didn't think was terribly
significant when we
say in the S of R it doesn't have a v it
says
K all right what does that mean k
I wasn't going to make a big deal about
it even though that's also a variant but
then I found out that the original we
say which is based on what we just read
in on
Shabbat I'm gonna explain this some time
and
then that's lifted straight out of M's
book
from that's from
Abu from
Abu but and and and there it
says now if you look at Friday night's
daving after and we
say and then the has an abbreviated type
of it's not really karat it's an
abbreviation um which was thrown into
the s so that the latecomers shouldn't
have to go home alone in Pitch Black
because it was dark and dangerous so
they figured you know what we'll stick
in something to to stretch it so that
the latecomers will be able to leave
shul at the same time as those who came
on time isn't that very kind and
considerate but it was apparently a
dangerous situation so we say
[Music]
says
where did that come from turns out that
was the original of aot and that was
changed by sensors I'm jumping now I'm
not going to give the whole speech now
that was changed to
kak and the and the and the
kak um triggered another change of
censorship from
ronam that we have in the morning in
shakas we have it in
konam and we also Al have it in the
Kish K the original word was K and it
had to do with a reference to AB ainu
partnering with aadh in creation of the
world which is an AIC idea but it played
into the hands of the Christianity that
a kadosh had partners and what are you
blaming us that yeshu is a partner you
also had Partners so we had to somehow
strike out any Poss ible reference that
Abraham ainu was a partner on any level
whatsoever and made the whole thing
became singular k k he was the K and and
it was r k and so on so this was a
sensorship is so the first Braha also
went through censorship what M also went
through changes also went through
changes yeah okay you give up fine it's
it's
the
every
single has that version without
exception at least and I checked
whatever I can get my hands on what I
know of
variant in daving everyone has the same
without exception which is amazing and I
think there might be even a thought to
it because who is person
being
to it all adds up to which means the
direction
of leads to one point it cannot be
divisive it can't be that he is
being here and she is being CH there
there is no here and there when it comes
to Chua there might be differences in
the pathways of chuva that yes but they
all add up they all come to a certain
cresendo in in an apex where it joins
and it becomes a that's the chuva so
there it makes a lot of sense that it
was all the same so I was hoping that
the first Braha would also be without
variance because this trasa of unity
plays into the idea of M Abraham of of
Abu being the and so on but all right
not going to work there variance there
as well so so this is just by way of a
little bit of introduction another point
that I want to mention is that many
times the an used biblical
phrases
to formulate their and the reason was
that if a phrase or full is mentioned in
tanak it's imbued with that level of
rues which they wanted the to have so if
you take a look in the source page
Source number three we're going to
collect this and we're going to give it
back next week Source number three it's
from y perak Zan it also happens to be
the
of and there it
says it's in singular but it's the
identical
formulation in plural of a of
so the tells us that when we DAV a
private daving not only if you're in
with a minion you're daving at home you
say he should heal us
why we had a president of Israel ASA
vitman right he was a nephew of
vitman he hadot
one of them wasn't that he was not a
religious Jew okay but he had I mean he
was the first air force of 1948 and so
on so it it was bolate it was it was
blatantly not religious but when he
became president of Israel at his first
press conference he made a comment that
he is not going to violate Shabbat
publicly now that's not a small matter
by the way in in I'm not talking about
the the policy of the president of
Israel in it's called
if somebody is blatantly deserting
Shabbat publicly then you can't drink
his wine I mean it puts him into a
category of of an idol worship it's a
very strong statement but a person's uh
you know at home watches TV does what he
does okay I'll have to deal with with
but at least publicly you know keeps a
posture of religious Behavior that's why
those people think that state of Israel
Benin who's not religious at all agreed
that there should be a a public posture
of Shabbat in the in this country and
that was very significant that was very
it impacts on on on there was been a
it's it's been caving in the last 20
years but there was once upon a time
that you know there was no TV on Shabbat
there was no movies on Shabbat no
restaurant Shabbat things have caved in
B but but at least the theory was that
there should be a public pasture of
Shabbat no public transportation and and
so which caused a lot of you know social
headaches down the road and so on so as
of vitman makes the statement that he
you know not going to be shabas but FIA
fine so one reporter asks him and and
they called him by his first name ASA so
he also going to
D you know as if they were kibitzing
with him so ASA Iceman had a his first
secr his personal secretary his name was
AR Schumer AR Schumer who wore a k you
know was a religious fellow so ASA ecan
says Ari dav's for me so everybody laugh
it was a big joke you know how that for
me I said that's far from being a joke
it's far from being a joke because
exactly what said why we D in the plural
because we have an obligation to pick it
up pick up with those who are not daving
we have to D on their behalf as well and
take rashash you know the rabam says
that rashash is the day of for the world
based on
the we say it
on the whole world I don't remember go
com to rash
to DAV Ander where are they the answer
is it's on our shoulders we have to
somehow spread the message to the world
that there's one God and they should
live they don't have to keep 63 let them
keep seven mitv of Noah that's all seven
mitv of no it's Our obligation to teach
them to convince them you know went on a
binge towards the end of his life on
Noah that President Ronald Reagan on a
shabas afternoon 2 2m. used to have a uh
radio broadcast to the people where he
was smoozy schmoozy I mean this was
President of the United States but he
did it you know and you can call him in
call in and so on so one shabas at 2m he
says in honor of the birthday of
the I take upon myself the seven no no
laws the seven it was big Kish and he
asked all Americans to do the same
that's what we have to do that's part of
the mission of so also have to D so Jews
who are not daving also have to DAV so
we have the obligation to DAV for them
so that's why we say it in plural so the
for health and go need health
non-religious Jews need health wounded
in the hospitals need health everybody
needs good
health was talking about something else
by the way he wasn't even talking about
physical health he was talking about
spiritual health he was talking about
the the the sickness of the Nish and he
uses the image of Rua for that that but
they like this phrase so I used to kibit
I used to say that was a galana because
how does a galana say the if you know
the
intonation even though it says I said he
must have been a Gana but the truth is
it's in singular and so on and so too
with Source number four
for smacks of
the
exact same process where lifted out of
context a phrase or a full out of tanak
it's imbued with thises and that gives
you know some body some spiritual body
to the itself and as I mentioned with
the
first comes out of's book there it
says comes out of book book from from
parv so these are phrases that are used
and they used in tanak and now you know
brought into the you know for this use
okay so we're going to take a pause here
till next week mem and um you can hand
back the pages I'll be happy to bring
them again next week because we still
have a lot to do on this page and uh God
willing uh we will all join in the T
efforts of all of am Israel
all the and to all the and he should
send Shalom to all our andot and
everybody should come home shalom