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Heaven Dances with You: The Gift of Moshe, David and the Baal Shem Tov
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You Are the King | Women's Shavous Class This weekly women's class was presented on Tuesday, Parshas Bamidbar, 1 Sivan, 5782, May 31, 2022, at Bais Medrash Ohr Chaim in Monsey, NY. To sponsor or dedicate an upcoming class click here: https://www.theyeshiva.net/donate To watch more classes & to read Rabbi YY's articles visit: https://www.theyeshiva.net Follow Rabbi YY Jacobson: Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/RabbiYYJacobson Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheYeshiva Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yyjacobson Twitter: https://twitter.com/YYJacobson Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/yyjacobson/ Telegram: https://t.me/RabbiYY
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Okay, today's class is dedicated by Noam
Casper
in memory of Daniela Shayna bas Reb
Yehoshua Falk
who loved listening to your classes.
Thank you very much.
So Reb Chaim
and uh
may her memory serve as an eternal
source of light and blessing and
inspiration
to the whole family and to all of the
Jewish people.
I also want to dedicate the class to my
son whose birthday is today.
Gershon Dovid ben Esther Avigail
wishing you uh with a lot of love an
amazing year
in all aspects.
So, today we will
discuss Shavuos
the holiday that's coming upon us in a
few days.
And I'll also begin by just inviting
everybody. Shavuos is uh
Motzei Shabbos this coming Motzei
Shabbos, of course.
So, uh
Shabbos morning we have our regular
class here 9:00 but then honor of
Shavuos, so there will be two shiurim,
two lectures here in the tent
both for men and women and youth with a
mechitza.
That's going to be the first one 1:00 in
the morning till 2:30
and the second class will be 2:45 till
4:15 a.m. Don't get too jealous of me.
So, that's Shavuos night this year
Motzei Shabbos
1:00 to 2:30 and the second one 2:45
till 4:15. The topic of the first class
is
David and Bathsheba
in a way you never heard it. And the
topic of the second shiur, the second
lecture is which derech in Judaism will
prevail in 100 years.
The second day of Shavuos is uh Mon- uh
Shavuos is Sunday and Monday. The second
day of Shavuos in the afternoon 6:30
p.m. There will also be a lecture here
for men and women and the topic is if I
only would have known the rest of the
story.
That's Monday afternoon, the second day
of Shavuos 6:30
p.m. So, everybody is invited to either
or all of the lectures and classes. So,
again the night of Shavuos begins 1:00
a.m.
till 4:15 two classes and the second day
of Shavuos 6:30 p.m. Please share it
also with friends or family or husbands,
etc. Everybody is invited.
So, I'm going to begin today's class
with a story that I heard from a Jewish
tycoon.
Uh
very affluent and wealthy person
who shared this with me a number of
years ago.
And he said that uh
he once had a meeting
with uh the Prime Minister of Great
Britain
Margaret Thatcher.
Remember Mrs. Thatcher? She was a strong
personality.
She came to be known as the Iron Lady.
I think she served as the longest and
firmest Prime Minister
of the United Kingdom during the 20th
century.
And she shared this once with this
person who told me the story.
He asked her
"During your long and distinguished
career as the leader of England what was
uh your most amusing moment?"
And she immediately said without
skipping a heartbeat, she said, "Oh,
it's very obvious."
And she shared with him
that the Prime Minister of Britain
and the Queen of England meet once a
week.
That's I guess the tradition in the
United Kingdom Tuesday
6:30 in Buckingham Palace. And that's
when the leader, the Prime Minister
shares with the Queen
I guess the most important developments
within Great
within Great Britain over the last week.
So, Margaret Thatcher says every week
6:30 I would go to the palace
to meet Her Majesty
Queen Elizabeth.
Anyway, one week
I come in
and I give the traditional bow. You give
a traditional bow to the Queen.
And we're about to sit down
and uh
a very uncomfortable awkward uh scene
emerges.
It's good I'm not talking to men cuz
they wouldn't understand it but I think
everybody in this room will understand
it. To my dismay, what's the worst thing
that can happen?
We're wearing exactly
the same outfit.
But not not similar.
[laughter]
You know, different designers No, no,
no.
Mamesh mamesh identical.
The men would look at me, "What's the
problem? We all wear the same outfit."
But uh you know what I'm talking about.
Of course we're It's in Britain, so you
don't talk about these things. It's not
America.
So, I made believe I didn't see and uh
we just had a very awkward
conversation and meeting but when I left
I felt really horrible.
So, I wrote a note
apologizing and the next morning I sent
in a note to the Queen and I apologized
for any form of disrespect.
And I also So, I added that uh I told my
people
that henceforth every week before I come
you ascertain
and make sure that we know what the
Queen is planning to don so that
another awkward situation does not uh
occur again.
And she tells this Jew and she says, "I
sent in my note and a few hours later
the Queen sends back a note."
And the Queen writes as follows
"No need to apologize.
Her Her Majesty never notices what
commoners wear."
This Margaret Thatcher said was her most
amusing moment. Now, I like the story
first of all, maybe it tells you
something about uh
[laughter]
royalty in Britain today.
But uh
the Baal Shem Tov once said that
everything in life is also a lesson.
I think there's a profound lesson that
that can be gleaned from this story
albeit in a different context.
The holiday of Shavuos
is connected to three personalities.
The first of course is Moshe Rabbeinu
because Moshe Rabbeinu is the one who
gave
Moshe kibbel Torah miSinai, who's the
who's the one who gave the Jewish people
the Torah
on Shavuos.
Just uh
in parentheses, it's interesting to note
that Shavuos is also the day that Moshe
Rabbeinu got a second lease on life.
You know, one of the many reasons that's
given why we eat milchigs, why we eat
dairy products on Shavuos, dairy we have
a dairy meal on Shavuos there's many
reasons for it. But one of the very
interesting reasons that I saw
is because Moshe Rabbeinu, according to
our tradition, was born on the seventh
day of Adar, Zayin Adar.
It doesn't say it clearly in Chumash but
we deduce it from the psukim because
Moshe Rabbeinu passed away and after he
passed away it says they grieved for 30
days and then Yehoshua his successor
said in three days we're going to go
into Eretz Yisrael and that was the 10th
of Nissan which was 33 days after his
passing, which means he passed away on
the seventh day of Adar. Before his
passing, Moshe Rabbeinu says, "Today
today, the day that he's going to die,
is the day that I became 120 years old
exactly." Hayom malyu yamav shnasav.
Cuz the Gemara says that special people
that birthday on the day of passing is
the same day. Kodesh Boruch Hu maley
shnayim shanim shel tzaddikim miyom
l'yom. So, he was born on the same day
he passed away, which is the seventh of
Adar.
The Torah says in parshas Shmos that
after his mother gave birth to him,
after Yocheved gave birth to Moshe
she hid him. Va titzpeneyhu shlosha
yerachim. She hid him for three months
so that the Egyptians would not fetch
him and grab him and plunge him into the
Nile.
After three months, lo yachla od, that's
finished. She couldn't hide him anymore.
Rashi explains because it was a
premature birth before seven months. So,
after three months
she was he was born
not full seven months but very little,
six plus
so he survived but uh
she could hide him for three months but
not more than that. After three months,
of course, she creates a basket, she
puts him in the basket
and places him in the Nile hoping that
maybe maybe somebody will have
compassion and save this boy. If she
would have left him in the home
she would have
he would have just been taken and
murdered. Here she hoped, of course, the
basket could capsize, an Egyptian could
come and throw the baby into the river,
baby could die from starvation or
dehydration.
But she hoped maybe maybe there's a
chance, maybe who knows he'll be saved.
And of course Miriam stands there to see
what's going to happen. She was all of
six years old.
And then we all know the rest of the
story, the rest of the story. The
daughter of Pharaoh, Basya, comes down
to bathe in the Nile, she sees the
basket. Va tishlach es amasa va
tikachehu. She fetches the basket, she
opens it up.
She sees and hears a baby crying. She
assumes and knows miyaldei haIvrim hu,
so Jewish child.
And instead of killing the kid or just
ignoring the child, what does she do? Va
tachmol alav. She she feels compassion.
And that's when Miriam seizes the
moment. Miriam hiding in the bushes runs
over and says, "Should I find for you
a Jewish wet nurse to nurse the baby?"
And the daughter of Pharaoh says,
"Absolutely." And of course Miriam knows
who's the right wet nurse. She goes and
brings the mother of the baby and the
arrangement is a fabulous one because
Moshe is raised by Paro's daughter in
the palace, and yet he's nursed by his
own mother, Yocheved, who was hired, so
to speak, by Batya as the wet nurse of
this baby. So, Moshe gets his milk. Now,
which day did this happen?
If he was born on the 7th day of Adar,
3 months she hid him. After 3 months,
she can't hide him anymore. So, the next
day she puts him in the Nile.
Or that day she puts him in the Nile.
Which day is that?
Shavuot. That's the holiday of Shavuot.
Of course, there was no holiday of
Shavuot at the time,
but that would be the holiday of
Shavuot. And what happens on that day?
Many things happened. Number one, Moshe
Rabbeinu was saved from death.
Number two,
equally important is, he gets to be
nursed by his own mother.
So, to commemorate that, we eat milk. We
drink milk on Shavuot. Especially as
Rashi says,
she tried giving Moshe to many women,
but he would not nurse from the Egyptian
women.
And it was only his mother who he nursed
from.
So, this is a unique day. Not only is he
nursed by his mother, but he's nursed at
all cuz he wasn't nursing from other
women,
from the Egyptian women. And as a result
of that, the custom is that we eat milk
on Shavuot, whether you drink milk or a
coffee, or eat products that ultimately
come from milk.
Whether it's a cheesecake or a lasagna,
or a pasta with cheese, or all the other
healthy
dairy products that uh
you will eat on Shavuot, or some of us
will eat on Shavuot. Some more than
others, unfortunately.
There is this connection with the milk
of Moshe Rabbeinu on that day. So, Moshe
on Shavuot is not just the day he gives
the Torah, but it's also a day where he
got a second lease on life. It wasn't
his birthday, but it was his rebirth in
the sense that his life was saved, and
he would be raised in the palace, which
would allow him to ultimately redeem the
Jewish people from Egypt and give them
the Torah, and would also allow his
mother to
raise him, at least until he was ready
to completely move into the palace, and
the daughter of Paro treated him as a
son and also gave him the name Moshe.
So, Moshe Rabbeinu is the first
personality obviously associated with
the holiday of Shavuot. Moshe kibbel
Torah mi Sinai.
The second person is David Hamelech.
David Hamelech, it says in Talmud
Yerushalmi, David mace ba'atzaret. David
Hamelech passed away
on Shavuot.
And David's yahrzeit on Shavuot is
extremely significant because David
because that's one of the reasons that
we read Megillat Ruth on Shavuot.
There's different reasons why we read
Ruth on Shavuot. Some communities read
it during davening, others say it the
night before in the Tikkun Shavuot. But
Ruth is learned and or read on the
holiday of Shavuot. Why Ruth? What's the
connection? So, there's different
reasons given. One of the reasons is
because Ruth was the great-grandmother
of David Hamelech. Because Ruth married
Boaz. She was a Moabite princess, but
she married Boaz,
and she mothered a boy named Oved, who
became the father of Yishai, who was of
course the father of David. So, Ruth was
the great-grandmother of David. David's
father was Yishai. Yishai's father was
Oved, and Oved's mother was Ruth. And
the end of Ruth indeed traces the
genealogy from Ruth to David, and tells
the dramatic story of how Ruth came to
the Jewish people and came to Bethlehem,
and ultimately ended up marrying Boaz
under the influence of the influence of
her mother-in-law, Naomi. And as a
result of that,
ultimately, she creates the dynasty
which would produce David Hamelech and
then Hamelech all the way till
Mashiach.
And that's one of the reasons we read
Ruth on on Shavuot because it's the
yahrzeit of
her great-grandson, David Hamelech, and
this book traces the genealogy of David
Hamelech.
So, he's the second personality
associated with Shavuot, David.
The Gemara also says that it was
Shabbat.
David mace ba'atzaret, and there's a
whole Gemara that it was
how David Hamelech passed away, Maseches
Shabbat, the whole
explanation a whole story of exactly how
it happened, but Chazal tell us that it
was uh it was on the holiday of Shavuot,
which means there's a connection also to
David Hamelech.
The third personality connected to
Shavuot is many generations later known
as the Baal Shem Tov.
Rabbi Yisrael Baal Shem Tov
also passed away on Shavuot.
This is of course many, many years
later. The Baal Shem Tov was born in
1698.
They called it Shnas Nachas, Nachas, cuz
in Hebrew it's Hey Aleph Mem Tav Nun
Ches, which in the English calendar,
secular calendar, would be 1698. It's
hot, huh?
Uh you're comfortable. Okay.
I sweat even when it's cold, but when
it's hot, I'm going to sweat a little
more. You'll forgive me.
And the Baal Shem Tov passed away at the
age of 62
in the city of Mezhibozh in
a little city, a little town in Ukraine.
And that happened on Shavuot. The Hebrew
year was Tav Kuf Ches, which in English
would be 17 60. He was born 1698, and he
passed away in the year 1760.
Now,
Rabbi Yitzchak Hutner was the Rosh
Yeshiva of Yeshivas Rabbeinu Chaim
Berlin, and he once said something very
interesting, a very classic comment.
Rabbi Hutner said that you would think
providence would have it
that
the Vilna Gaon would pass away on
Shavuot, and the Baal Shem Tov would
pass away on Sukkot, cuz the Vilna Gaon
[clears throat]
was a great giant of learning, and the
Baal Shem Tov was the founder of the
Chassidic movement that emphasized joy.
So, he said the Vilna the Vilna Gaon
would pass away on Shavuot, the Baal
Shem Tov passed passed You would think
would pass away on Sukkot. But he said,
"But the Hashgacha had it differently.
The Vilna Gaon passed away on Sukkot,
and the Baal Shem Tov
passed away on Shavuot, which is Matan
Torah Shelanu."
The Baal Shem Tov revealed through his
movement, through Chassidus, he revealed
really the whole nistar, the whole inner
core, the inner dimension, the inner
soul of Torah, which is known as
pnimiyus haTorah, which till then was
revealed as was known as Kabbalah,
Jewish mysticism, Jewish spirituality.
And the Baal Shem Tov in his teachings,
through his students especially,
articulated this dimension in a more
accessible and revealed manner to this
very day. And his yahrzeit is also on
Shavuot.
What's the common denominator
of these three people?
Of course, all of them were leaders and
great leaders and great holy leaders and
great tzaddikim.
But there's something specific and
unique
about their contributions to Judaism and
to Jewish history and to Jewish life,
and the connection to Shavuot. Cuz
everything is with Hashgacha. Everything
is by divine providence. Even small
details in the world. Certainly,
personalities that play such a central
role in Jewish consciousness and Jewish
history. Certainly, the day that they
complete their mission in the world,
which is why we commemorate a yahrzeit
because it's the day that somebody
really completes the mission in the
world. So, it's connected to their
shlichus, to their mission in the world.
What is unique about their mission,
about their uh
their personality?
And the answer to that is one word,
malchus.
Malchus means kingship or aristocracy
or royalty.
Each one of these three people
embodied and introduced into the Jewish
world malchus, royalty.
The truth is
that when the Jewish people come to Har
Sinai,
so the Ribbono shel Olam gives Moshe a
message, and he says, "I'm summoning you
into a relationship." And the
relationship is defined as a
relationship of malchus. Va'atem tihiyu
li
mamleches kohanim ve kadosh. And
that's the krias That's what we read on
Shavuot.
When the Jewish people come to Har
Sinai, which was today, Rosh Chodesh
Sivan, the first day of Sivan,
the second day is called Yom Hamiyuchas,
the day of of of of yichus, of lineage,
the day of prominence, because it's the
day Hashem told Moshe
to give a message to the Jewish people,
"Va'atem tihiyu li mamleches kohanim ve
kadosh."
You will be for me a kingdom of princes
and a holy nation.
What does it mean to be mamleches
kohanim? A kingdom of kohanim.
Kohanim are translated as priests, but
not everybody is a kohen. Most Jews are
not kohanim.
This was a message to all of them. The
Baal HaTurim even writes mamleches
kohanim means kohanim gedolim.
Great kohen gadol, which was very few
Jews.
So, there's a message here. You're going
to be for me or you could be for me a
holy nation and a mamleches kohanim.
Each Jew is called
a melech or a malka, a king or a queen,
part of a family of kings, of royals.
Now, what does that mean?
And on a humorous level, they say that
Ben-Gurion once met President
Eisenhower.
And Eisenhower says, "You look very
depressed. What's the problem?"
He says, "Listen, I have a nation, 3
million Jews living in Israel,
and it's not easy.
It's not easy."
So, Eisenhower says, "You're
complaining?
I have 200 million citizens in the
United States of America. You have 3
million Jews. What are you comparing?"
He says, "No, no, no. You have 200
million citizens. I have 3 million prime
ministers.
It's very different. To be a prime
minister of 3 million prime ministers is
different than to be a president over
200 million citizens." America has
changed a little since the days of
Eisenhower, but you get the point.
But the truth is,
on a much deeper level, or more genuine
level, what is this idea of mamleches
kohanim?
You'll be for me a kingdom of
princesses. What does it mean?
But here immediately we see that the
theme of Malkhus, royalty, is essential
to Shavuos. It's essential to Matan
Torah, because it's not a holiday when
something specific occurred. It's the
holiday that conferred
and confers upon the Jewish people their
identity.
Rab Saadia Gaon writes Umaseinu einenu
umah ki im b'Toraseha. What makes our
nation a nation and a unified nation is
the Torah
that binds the Jewish people together
and really constitutes
their raison d'être, their their very
purpose, our mission, our our calling in
this world. Umaseinu, if you want a
definition for the Jewish people, not a
geographical definition, because Jews
for most of their history have been
scattered all around the world. So, if
the definition of our being a people is
geography, then a Jew in Australia, and
a Jew in Russia, and a Jew in America
would not be connected.
Most of our history, unfortunately, we
weren't together in the same piece of
land.
You can't define Judaism only as a
culture, right? For some Jews, gefilte
fish is holy. Other Jews don't even know
what gefilte fish is.
Some Jews, skhug is very important, and
some people don't even know what skhug
is. Etc., etc. Culture changes from
culture to culture, from country to
country, different races. You can't even
call it a race,
because Jews come from many different
races, different complexions, different
backgrounds, different persuasions,
certainly different languages and
customs and rituals and so forth. So,
Rab Saadia Gaon says, if you want to
find the common denominator, what is it?
You look. What makes an American an
American is we live in the United States
of America. I was born in America. I'm
an American citizen. But I live in the
same land.
But for a people that most of their
history they lived, unfortunately,
outside of their homeland, most of our
history we didn't live in our homeland.
We lived outside of our homeland. Still
half the Jewish people live outside of
their homeland. So, the question is,
what makes the people tick?
So, Rab Saadia Gaon, who lived in the
9th, 10th century in Bavel, Rabbeinu
Saadia Gaon in Iraq, wrote to He has a
sefer Emunot v'Deot, his philosophical
work. He wrote Umaseinu einenu umah ki
im b'Toraseha.
What makes our nation a nation is ki im
b'Toraseha, it's Torah.
That identity
spans all the countries. It transcends a
specific
geographical location, or a specific
culture, a specific language, or a
specific race. Most Jews throughout
history didn't know Hebrew. They spoke
other languages. Till today many, many
Jews don't know Hebrew. There were times
they were spoke Aramaic. There were
times they spoke uh Ladino,
or Yiddish, which was a German dialect.
They Many Jews didn't even know Lashon
Kodesh. That's why large parts of
davening, like Kaddish, were composed
actually in Aramaic, not even in Hebrew,
so everybody should understand. There's
books in Tanakh that are written in
Aramaic, parts of Daniel, parts of Ezra
and Nehemiah. And there's also the whole
Talmud Bavli
and Talmud Yerushalmi, a big, huge part
of it. The Talmud was written in in
Aramaic. The Rambam wrote all of his
works in Arabic, besides one, Mishneh
Torah. He wrote every single work in
Arabic. Why?
Because where he lived, most of the Jews
spoke that language. They were fluent.
He wanted they should understand his
works. He wrote a whole commentary to
the Mishnah in Arabic. He wrote an
encyclopedia of the mitzvot, Sefer
Hamitzvot, in Arabic. He wrote his
philosophical work, Guide to the
Perplexed, Moreh Nevukhim, in Arabic.
Certainly [clears throat] all of his
books on medicine and and anatomy and
pharmacology and herbs, you know, the
Rambam wrote books on herbs and a
language and linguistics. All of them,
every work book besides one, Yad
Hachazakah, Mishneh Torah, was written
in Arabic.
So, Rab Saadia Gaon said, but the one
element that united all the Jewish
people and unites all the Jewish people
and became the definition of what it
means to be a Jew, Umaseinu einenu umah
ki im b'Toraseha.
So, it's a holiday of identity. And that
identity is identity of Torah. So,
Hashem says, what does it mean to have
that identity? v'atem tihiyu li
Mamlekhes Kohanim v'Goy Kadosh.
It transforms you into a king or into a
queen.
Now, there's a person who possesses
royalty, aristocracy, Malkhus.
What does that mean in a person's life?
There were kings. There are kings.
Today, uh
you know, the the mo- monarchy has
dissolved. We live in democracies and
we're probably very happy about it.
The question is, what does it mean
v'atem tihiyu li Mamlekhes Kohanim v'Goy
Kadosh?
And here we see how why these three
people
are very much connected to Shavuos,
because this holiday of Malkhus, these
three people embodied it and most
importantly bequeathed it. They taught
it to the people. What it means when the
Ribono shel Olam says to Moshe on the
second day of Sivan, v'atem tihiyu li
Mamlekhes Kohanim v'Goy Kadosh. Not only
a holy nation, but first a kingdom of
princesses, Mamlakhas Kohanim.
Moshe Rabbeinu was the first Jewish
king. Before that you have Jewish
fathers, Jewish patriarchs, but not
Jewish kings. Moshe is called a melekh.
At the end of his life, the famous pasuk
says, vayehi b'Yeshurun melekh, b'isasef
rashei am yachad shivtei Yisrael. Moshe
Rabbeinu was the first Jewish king, even
though he wasn't a monarch in the
traditional sense of what we call a
monarch, wearing a crown and living in a
palace. Moshe Rabbeinu was living in a
desert,
no man's land, and that's where he led
the people.
But he grew up among a He grew up in the
palace of a king.
And he overthrew
the monarchy of Egypt to liberate the
slaves.
In fact, the Even Ezra, Rabbeinu Avraham
ibn Ezra, asks a fascinating question.
Why did Hashem want that the first
Jewish leader in history should not grow
up among Jews?
Do you know that the first Jewish leader
in history did not know what herring or
kichel
look like?
May have not been at an upsherinish or a
vach nacht or a shalom zachar. Didn't
know what chickpeas look like.
How could you be Didn't know what sponge
cake is.
How could you be a Jewish leader if you
didn't grow up among Jews? Moshe grew up
among non-Jews. Not just among non-Jews,
he grew up in Pharaoh's palace.
From 3 months old, his mother nursed
him, but he was considered Basya's
child. So, the Even Ezra asks, why did
Hashem do it that way? You would think,
you know, in America we have a law that
the president has to be born in this
country. You have to be a homegrown
potato, or a homegrown tomato.
Trump and Obama had this out. This was a
very controversial story, you may
remember,
where Obama was born. With Trump and
Obama, they had this unique relationship
because of Trump's accusations about
Obama's birthplace. Why is it important
that you're born in the United States?
What's wrong if I'm born in Kenya?
Born in the Philippines. That's it. We
want a homegrown. We want somebody who's
uh
what's called mishalano, you know, you
you know the heartbeat of the people.
But Moshe was born in Egypt, but he
didn't grow up among the Jews. So, the
Even Ezra says, Sod Hashem l'Yireiav.
This is one of the secrets of God.
But then he says, I'll offer two
reasons. Reason number one is famous
expression, Ein Navi b'Iro. You can't be
a prophet in your own city.
Moshe would have been raised among Jews,
every Yachna and every Yenta
would have what to tell him
about himself. Oh, I used to babysit for
you. I remember your bris. You didn't
stop crying.
You were such a little cute baby. When
did you become a prophet?
When did you become a navi?
Oy, were you so difficult when you were
a kid. You're so cute You're still cute,
Moshe.
That's what he says, very fascinating
observation. The people you grow up
with, it's very hard for them to respect
you.
You know, they saw they see you
differently. Moshe would never be able
to command the respect that was
necessary for him to really lead the
people.
That's
explanation number one. The Even Ezra
gives another explanation. He says, if
Moshe would have grown up among Jews,
unfortunately, he would have had a slave
mentality,
because they were slaves.
And in order to be able
to overthrow Pharaoh, he had to think
like a king.
His vision had to be broad, expansive.
What we call today thinking out of the
box. He couldn't have been a product
of the education of the melturship, of
the pedagogy, of the Egyptian slaves,
because then his thought process would
have been very, very uh
What's the word? Uh
parochial, restricted, narrow. For good
reason, not their fault, for good
reason. But he grew up in a in in a
palace. He grew up in aristocracy. So,
that was his way of thinking.
The Gemara says in Sanhedrin,
v'lishadei b'narga, which means the tree
gets cut down
from an axe which uses wood as its
handle.
You understand? The the tree gets felled
from wood that's taken from the tree.
Pharaoh had to be defeated from somebody
who who who understood the zeitgeist,
who who who appreciated the energy of
aristocracy, of royalty.
So, Moshe then could think in a
different way.
He didn't think as a slave.
His He He introduced the vocabulary of
freedom, of emancipation, of liberty.
He could introduce a new language into
the psyche of the Jewish people. And he
could stand up
to Pharaoh
to be able to put an end them to demand
that he puts an end to tyranny.
This is how the Even Ezra explains the
way Moshe grew up.
So, Moshe is the first melekh of the
Jewish people, vayehi b'Yeshurun melekh,
b'isasef rashei am yachad shivtei
Yisrael.
And he, of course, leads the Jewish
people. He's the leader. He's the first
manhig, the first melekh of Am Yisrael.
When the Jewish people were slaves, they
could not be seen as a people. You can't
make a nation out of slaves because
they're completely subservient
and subjugated by their masters.
So, they can't even be a nation. That's
why the Novi Yechezkel describes Yetzias
Mitzrayim "Lakachti l'Goy mikerev Goy."
Hashem came and he extracted a nation
from among another nation. In fact,
Geulas Mitzrayim is compared to compared
to birth.
When the baby is in the womb, the baby
is not an independent person, obviously.
Ubar Yerech Imo, it's a part of the
mother.
Yetzias Mitzrayim is considered that so
the Novi Yechezkel says it that God came
and he extracted the child and it was a
painful extraction.
Sometimes the child himself or herself
doesn't want to leave.
There's a lot of comfort in the womb.
Mommy wants him to leave, but he doesn't
always want to leave. And that sometimes
repeats itself many years later.
Doesn't want to leave.
Mom's Mom's supper is good.
So, Yechezkel says Hashem came and he so
to speak extracted the child.
Because a slave sometimes, you know,
sometimes prisoners, when they're
liberated from prison, they don't know
what to do with themselves. There's many
situations where prisoners for many
years they go out and they take their
lives.
Because they don't know what to do in in
in freedom and you have to take care of
yourself. You have to make your own
money. You have to make for yourself
food. You have to have a place to live.
You have to Nobody tells you what to do
anymore.
Sometimes it's extremely difficult. So,
Moshe Rabbeinu takes a band of slaves
and he turns them into a people. And not
just into a people, Am Yisrael, Kayam,
Am Yisrael, a royal people. But that
journey is not an easy journey. It's a
very profound transformation, which
you'll see.
The Rebbe explains why at every crisis
they always say let's just go back to
Mitzrayim.
It's like almost the battered woman
syndrome or the Stockholm syndrome where
the the the evil that's familiar
is worse than the unfamiliar. At least I
know what awaits me.
It's terrible, but it's predictable. And
if it's predictable, there's a certain
comfort zone. It's a tragic comfort
zone, but it exists.
And Moshe is the one who's constantly
instilling the the confidence.
The Rambam says that that's the reason
that ultimately they couldn't go into
Eretz Yisrael. They wanted to go in and
he sent the spies and they came back and
they dissuaded the people from going in.
So, Hashem said stay 40 years in the
desert, you'll die here and your
children will go in. The Rambam writes
it's not a punishment.
It was simply reality. He says they had
a a a a mindset they did not feel
successful. They couldn't feel ready to
go in. They didn't have it. And you
know, certain things in life, if you
don't believe you can do it, you can't
do it. There's the famous expression,
right? Whether you believe you can
or you believe you can't, you're
probably right.
In fact, if you believe you can't,
you're right. You can't. And if you
believe you can, you're also right. You
can.
They They didn't believe they can. It
was a natural consequence. They can't.
They won't be able to.
So, he said 40 years in the desert rough
It gave them that identity. And the
children who grew up in the desert, you
know, they had to You have to rough it
out in the desert.
It's like living in the outdoors,
literally. You know, they have these
camps. They take kids for 2 months and
you live in the outdoors.
And you have to get your own food. You
have some sardines but
so nobody should starve. You make your
own fire without matches. You figure out
how to make a fire. You figure out how
to protect yourself. It's a very good
experience for a lot of young people who
grew up in America of the 21st century.
So, the Rambam says the desert really it
molded them. It crafted them. It allowed
them to become people who could be
independent and the next generation
could go into Eretz Yisrael. So, this
was Moshe's kingship, Moshe's Malchus,
to be able to take these people and turn
them into a nation.
Then of course you have David Hamelech.
David Hamelech is seen as the greatest
king in Jewish history. Not only as the
greatest king in Jewish history, but
it's only about David Hamelech who we
say The Gemara says in Rosh Hashanah we
say in Kedushas Levana "David Melech
Yisrael Chai Vekayam."
That the Malchus of of the presence of
David still lives on. David is
considered not only the greatest king
and one of the greatest warriors, but
also one of the greatest or the greatest
poet. He is the poet of the poet
laureate of the Jewish people. The Novi
calls him in Shmuel
"Zemiros Yisrael." The sweet voice of
the Jewish melody.
Every Jew found his or her heart and
poetry, deepest soul expression
expressed in the Tehillim of David
Hamelech, in the Psalms of David
Hamelech.
But not only was he a great king and a
great poet and a great leader, he's also
considered
the person and not considered, he was
chosen by Hashem to begin the dynasty of
Malchus.
Because the king before him, Shaul, was
a king for a short time and the dynasty
did not continue with Shaul. The dynasty
of Malchus, meaning the world of royalty
was given to David Hamelech.
And that's why the Novi promises Hashem
promises and he says in Tehillim that
"Kisacha Nachon L'Olam Vaed" that your
throne will endure.
And ultimately Malchus will never cease
from Bais David.
So, David passes away and takes
over and Rechavam takes over. And even
though there's a split, but Bais David
continues. And ultimately Mashiach, it
says, one of the qualifications,
one of the criteria of Mashiach is that
he comes, as the Rambam says, "Mizera
David U'Shlomo, Melech Mibais David." He
has to be a descendant of David. Why?
Why can't he be a descendant of somebody
else? Because David was given the gift
of Malchus. There could be other kings
among the Jewish people. Shaul was not
from Yehuda. Shaul was Binyamin.
And Moshe was from Shevet Levi and he
was also a king.
And Yeravam ben Navat was from Shevet
Efraim. You had many other kings. The
Chashmonaim were Leviim. They were
Kohanim. They came from Shevet Levi.
But that Malchus doesn't belong to them.
The ultimate The Rambam calls it Kesser
Malchus, the crown of Malchus. The
Kesser Malchus that was given to
Yehuda's family, to Shevet Yehuda. "Lo
Yasur Shevet MiYehuda" Yaakov told
Yehuda on his deathbed, "The scepter
will not depart from Yehuda
and the ruler from among his feet." So,
therefore David Hamelech who was a
descendant of Yehuda, Yehuda and Tamar,
David is the one who acquires the crown,
the Kesser Malchus, the identity of
Malchus, and bequeaths it to his family,
his children, all the way down to the
generations till Mashiach who also comes
from David and Hamelech. So,
there's something uniquely royal about
David Hamelech.
And what makes him uniquely royal is
that he could bequeath to the Jewish
people this gift of Malchus.
As we said before by Mattan Torah Hashem
tells the Jewish people "Mamleches
Kohanim Vegoy Kadosh."
Then you have the Baal Shem Tov.
The Baal Shem Tov in a very different
generation also embodied this type of
Malchus. This type of of royalty.
He was one of the greatest
revolutionaries
and leaders and thinkers in
[clears throat] Jewish history. The
architect
of
one of the most powerful movements in
Judaism, which was essentially a
revivalist spiritual creating a
spiritual rejuvenation among the Jewish
people.
And it transformed the landscape of
Jewish life. It also transformed in
Eastern Europe. And it also transformed
the landscape of Machshava, of
Machsheves Yisrael, of Jewish
scholarship.
All of them essentially taught the
Jewish people what it means "Veatem
Tiyuli Mamleches Kohanim Vegoy Kadosh."
But
if we take it one step deeper,
we realize that these three people lived
in completely different times and
milieux. And therefore the challenge of
Malchus in each of these generations
meant something completely different.
Which is why it's three different people
at three different stages in history
representing one truth, but manifested
in three different ways.
Moshe
emancipates the Jewish people from
slavery. That's true.
He lives with them for 40 years in the
desert. Moshe is a king. But their
existence is a supernatural existence.
They're surrounded by clouds of glory.
They witness the infinity and the grace
of Hashem.
Their daily breakfast, lunch, and dinner
is literally bread from heaven. Their
water comes from the rolling stone.
Be'er Shel Miriam, the well of Miriam.
No laundry.
No shopping. No mortgage payments. Not
even tuition.
Not trying to get your girls into a
certain school or your boys into a
certain school. Everybody was welcome in
Moshe Rabbeinu's Yeshiva. He spoke to
everybody. He taught everybody. And he
didn't ask what's your last name and how
much is the check for or how much
protection or connections you have.
But at that time the Jewish people were
on top of the world. And on top of the
world, pun intended.
Literally.
Fed with Manna, surrounded by glory, by
clouds of glory, Ananei Hakavod,
experiencing intimacy with the divine.
So, they could see with their own eyes
how the Torah was a source of life and
nourishment.
Of course they felt like kings.
[laughter]
You treat somebody like a king, they
feel like a king. They were treated like
kings. "Va'asa Eschem L'i B'Eretz
Mitzrayim." God says I lifted you up on
the wings of eagles. "Va'avi Eschem
Elai." I brought you to me.
And I defined you as my people and I'll
be your God. Atam ti'uli
ani l'elokim.
So, of course, you're mamlacht kohanim.
You're a kingdom of princes. You're
kodesh.
God says, I'm your king. Moshe is my
conduit and ultimately I'm the melech.
They really they felt like kings.
It was hard. It was a conflict because
they had this Egyptian the Egyptian
voices that still spoke, that still
existed in their hearts, which is why
there were struggles and conflicts.
But we can understand that they felt
like kings.
David melech, who passes away on
Shavuot,
lives in a very different milieu. He
lives in a different era in history.
Jews are living in a natural world.
They're living in Eretz Yisrael. They're
not eating mana from heaven. They're not
surrounded by clouds of glory. David was
surrounded by many many mortal enemies
who wanted to overthrow his empire. And
not only mortal enemies from without,
but also mortal enemies from within,
including from his father-in-law Shaul
and his family and from his own
children, his own family, like Avshalom
and others.
David melech was surrounded by many a
foe and he needed to engage in many
battles throughout his monarchy in order
to protect his people and his land.
David melech's reign was anything but
tranquil.
It was anything but serene.
It was rocked by anxiety from within and
from without. If you read David melech's
book of Tehillim and you see how he
speaks about his pain, his anguish, his
agony, his suffering.
Unfortunately, many people just read
Tehillim in Hebrew, so they don't
understand the poetry. It's worthwhile
to do Tehillim, unless you understand
the Hebrew, to at least read the
translation in English. Today they have
Tehillims where you have both languages.
So, you could read in Hebrew and see the
English or read in English. But
when you read those those those chapters
in Tehillim
slowly and you breathe in the words and
you meditate on the words, it's
incredible to see what David went
through and how vulnerable he is,
how open he is.
Somebody asked me the other day, is
there a tradition of vulnerability in
Judaism? Cuz they didn't believe there
was such a tradition.
I said, open up a safe at the Tehillim.
You will not find any vulnerable book I
don't know any vulnerable book in the
world as vulnerable as Tehillim.
Every chapter is more vulnerable than
the other.
He speaks there about his depression. He
speaks there about his sense of
denigration. He speaks there about him
being in the abyss, him being in
purgatory. At some point he says, I
don't even feel like a human being. I'm
a worm. Ani shalas v'lo ish. Cherpas
adam u'zui am. I'm the shanda of people.
My own brothers look at me as a mamzer.
Muzar ayisi l'echai. The children of my
mother think I'm some alien uh
alien creature.
I mean, he speaks about uh his
challenges and his struggles.
But he never ever loses his relationship
with Hashem.
Gam ki eilech b'gei tzalmavet, lo ira
ra.
I walk in the valley of the shadow of
death and I still don't feel evil.
So, David melech's monarchy was anything
but just peaceful and restful.
Ultimately, his own son Avshalom would
rebel against him, try to kill him,
overthrow his monarchy, expel him from
Jerusalem.
And David melech has to leave
Yerushalayim. His own life is in danger
because of his son Avshalom who rebelled
against his father. One can only imagine
the torment.
It's not just a Philistine enemy or
Ammonite enemy or Moabite enemy attacks
him. He had plenty of that, too.
But his own child attacked him.
At the end, Avshalom was killed and
David melech came back to Yerushalayim.
But he never got over the death of his
son Avshalom.
And as I spoke last week, was it last
week or two weeks ago about Amnon and
Tamar, David melech lost another son,
Amnon,
who his half-brother killed. And his
daughter Tamar was violated. And he had
a child from Batsheva, the first child
of Batsheva who died. More about this in
our Shavuot night lecture, David and
Batsheva, the way you never heard it
before.
So, just a sneak preview. What do they
call it? A sneak preview. Shavuot 1:00
in the morning.
But after everything said and done, you
can't compare Moshe's reign to to David
melech's reign. That's true. They're not
It's not It's not a time of nissim,
miracles like in the time of Moshe
Rabbeinu.
And it's one of the reasons the spies
didn't want to go into Eretz Yisrael.
The Bal Tanya said the miraglim didn't
want to go into Eretz Yisrael not just
because they were rabble-rousers. It's
much deeper.
Because like the Chidushei Rim says, you
know what an aidem of kest is?
An aidem of kest was the expression in
Yiddish when your son-in-law son-in-law
lived by the in-laws and he would learn
and they supported him.
So, the Chidushei Rim says the spies in
the midbar were like an aidem of kest.
Why should I go work?
Such a good shver, such a good shviger.
I have mana every day. Why do I have to
go to Eretz Yisrael and start becoming a
farmer? We have to make a government. We
have to build an army. We have to build
cities. Red office. The miraglim
actually had a good taina.
They said, you have paradise here. We
have Moshe. You have Aaron. What what
else do you need? You got to be crazy to
want to leave this cocoon, to leave this
paradise.
The miraglim were not afraid of their
weakness. They were afraid of strength.
They were afraid they're going to be
successful and go into Eretz Yisrael and
that would be their nightmare. Suddenly
life will change. And yet it was
considered a sin because the objective
was not to remain in the desert. The
objective is ultimately to sanctify the
landscape of planet Earth, to elevate
the physical, not just to escape into a
heaven within Earth,
as tempting and as amazing and as
powerful as that is.
David melech already lived in that land,
a land that was governed by the laws of
teva, by the laws of nature, not by
nissim. But nonetheless,
the Jews were living in their own
homeland.
They were living in Eretz Yisrael. David
melech also prepared all the material to
be able to build the Beit Hamikdash. He
also for the first time united all the
tribes of Israel under one king.
For 7 years in Chevron and then another
33 years in Yerushalayim, he bought
Yerushalayim. He established
Yerushalayim as the He conquered
Yerushalayim and he built and
established Ir David as the epicenter of
the Jewish people spiritually and
politically and militarily. And he built
Ir David and he designated the mountain
that will ultimately become the place of
the Shchinah, the Beit Hamikdash, that
would be built by his son who
continued his father's work.
So, David melech already is called Dav-
David melech is that king who unifies
the Jewish people, whose entire ambition
is to settle them, to give them a place
where they could be secure physically
and therefore secure spiritually and
morally and politically and militarily.
And David became that visionary. 40
years he was a king over the Jewish
people till his death at the age of 70
on Shavuot.
[clears throat]
So, there was a certain sense of
stability
and consistency
and a sense of eternity and coming back
to El Hamenucha v'El Hanachala, reaching
the ultimate destination of the Jewish
people
in Yerushalayim under David's reign as
as the melech that Hashem appointed and
Hashem coronated through Shmuel Hanavi
after Shaul.
Finally, he raised
the single flag, a unified flag of the
Jewish people high, uniting Klal
Yisrael,
and bringing a certain a certain amount
of stability
and pride and peace for the first time
in history in a very very long time. Of
course, would bring it even to
the next level.
would really comes from
the word shalom. would create
alliances with the kings around them and
he would become excessively popular and
excessively affluent, etc.
So, under David melech, once again the
Jews could feel like kings.
They could look at themselves and say,
"V'atem ti'uli mamlacht kohanim v'goy
kodesh."
Enter
the third personality connected to
Shavuot, Rabbi Yisrael Baal Shem Tov.
When the Baal Shem Tov was born in 1698,
everything was very different.
Baal Shem Tov was born in the Ukraine
near the Carpathian Mountains,
a place called Akop.
The people the Jewish people were
shattered
both physically and spiritually. And not
just shattered,
but shattered into small broken
fragmented pieces.
The Jewish community was just recovering
from the horrific massacres
known as Gzeiras Tach v'Tat.
Those were the massacres by the Cossacks
led by Bogdan Khmelnytsky, whose statue
unfortunately still reigns supreme in
Kiev,
capital of Ukraine.
Bogdan Khmelnytsky and his Cossacks
slaughtered approximately 300,000 Jews
in Poland
and Ukraine at the time it was called
Ukraine. Today it's called Ukraine.
Then it was
considered Poland,
which was the worst massacre in Jewish
history since the destruction of the
second Beit Hamikdash and the Bar Kochba
revolt until the Holocaust and until the
Holocaust,
which of course
was a was a a darkness all its own.
Gzeiras Tach v'Tat were the defining
massacres of Jewish history in galus
because of the sheer amount of num- the
numbers were astronomical. And also the
way it was done, when going from city to
city, village to village, as described,
we have diaries from the time. There was
a Jew, Reb Nosson Hanover, who wrote us
a book called the Yeven Metzula,
describing
events that happened during the Gzeiras
Tach V'Tat, 1648-1649.
Jews were were craving for some solace,
for some stability,
for some comfort,
for some dignity.
And then this solace showed up in the
man who promised
redemption.
He was born on Tisha B'Av.
And that's why he was named on Tisha
B'Av and also Shabbos. It was Shabbos,
so they named him Shabsi.
And he came to be known as Shabsi Tzvi.
And Shabsi Tzvi declared himself as the
Mashiach, and he had a spokesman, a man
named Nathan from Gaza, Nosson HaAzati,
who had the gift of gab, and he was his
PR man.
You know, a talented person, you need a
PR man
or a PR woman. And this man was very
good at PR.
And he really made Shabsi Tzvi a success
story, to the point that so many Jews in
Europe really believed that this is it.
And then in 1666,
when he was offered the choice of death
or conversion to Islam, Shabsi Tzvi
converted to Islam.
What that did to the Jewish world,
spiritually, morally,
after the Gzeiras Tach V'Tat, this is
1666, just two decades later, it was a
fateful blow. The morale descended so
deeply into the abyss, because the hopes
were elevated, they were so high, and
yet he proved not just to be a false
Messiah, but suddenly their Mashiach was
now
a Muslim.
Of course, there were a group of Jews,
some followers, who still believed and
they said Mashiach has to convert to
Islam to elevate sparks. That became a
whole group of Shabsi Tzvi followers and
Yakov Frank, which wreaked havoc in that
time.
So, you can understand the morale, the
fallen morale of the Jewish people,
physically, spiritually, and morally.
Never mind when you speak about the
poverty that they lived in.
The sheer poverty that most Jews lived
in during that time. This is the 17th
century.
It was
it was so bad, it was so difficult.
There was like a certain darkness that
descended
on the Jewish psyche, on the Jewish
world.
You could say that the demoralization of
the Jewish people at that time was so
profound, it was almost like they
reached their lowest nadir. It was so it
was so excruciatingly painful and
difficult for so many Jews.
And if that was not enough,
those years, the end of the 1600s, is
when the Enlightenment began,
what's known as the Haskalah.
And the Enlightenment, which began to in
Western Europe, in England and in
Germany and in France,
it began to take root in Western Europe,
and it would prove yet another major
challenge to the destiny of the Jewish
people,
because it would result in mass
assimilation and mass conversion of Jews
in the 17th and 18th and 19th century in
Western Europe and Eastern Europe. The
secularization of the Jewish people
began to happen at that time, to the
point that even before the Second World
War, probably more than half of the
Jewish people, or half of the Jewish
people, I don't know the exact number,
have left Judaism.
The splits in the Jewish world, what
type of Jew you are. There used to be a
Jew was a Jew was a Jew, with no
differences. Then you had to know, today
I reform Jew, you're a conservative Jew,
conservative Jew, modern Jew, this type
of Jew, that type of Jew.
All this happened afterwards, and this
was a major major challenge for the
Jewish people, and everybody responded
in different ways.
And millions of Jewish youth were became
confused with all of the various
movements that sprung up.
And it was precisely in that era,
literally the same years when the
Enlightenment began, and just a few
decades after Tach V'Tat and a few
decades after Shabsi Tzvi,
that the Baal Shem Tov was born.
And one of the great masters once gave a
beautiful metaphor. He said, "Sometimes
when somebody's in a faint,
what you do is you whisper their name
into their ear,
because the name of a person is a
channel for their energy. So, when you
whisper their name, it sometimes is a
powerful tool to wake them up from a
deep
a deep faint state."
So, when the Jewish people found
themselves in such a spiritual faint,
coma-like state, comatose, the Ribbono
shel Olam whispered the name of the
Jewish people into their ear.
And the name of the Jewish people is
Yisrael.
So, this little boy was born and his
name was Yisrael,
the Baal Shem Tov.
And his life was about whispering the
name of the Jewish people into their
ear.
In other words,
giving a person once again a link
to his or her name,
identity, vitality, chiyus.
To be able to make Jews feel like kings.
In that era,
that was a tremendous chiddush, that was
a tremendous novelty.
To be able to confer upon the Jewish
people
the Kesser Malchus, the crown of
royalty,
in a bitter and dark galus, when people
felt so much
poverty and so much demoralization,
and experienced such darkness on so many
levels, to be able to give the Jewish
people that inner sense of of dignity,
it was like techiyas hameisim, it was
like a resurrection.
To be able to feel v'atem tihiyu li
mamleches kohanim,
to restore and confer upon their heads
those two crowns that they received. The
Gemara says in Shabbos that they
received two crowns, echad k'neged
na'aseh v'echad k'neged nishma.
How did the Baal Shem Tov do this?
What did the Baal Shem Tov do?
The Baal Shem Tov started to teach the
Jewish people
that the definition of a king doesn't
begin with outer circumstances.
The definition of malchus always begins
internally.
How you see yourself in the world,
understanding who you are,
what your identity is,
that makes all the difference.
And I'm going to share two such
teachings. One is a teaching, one is a
story that embodies this quality, and
really brings home what's the idea of
mamleches kohanim.
There's a sefer called Likutei Moharan.
Likutei Moharan comes from the writings
of Reb Nachman of Breslov,
who actually passed away Sukkos.
Chol HaMoed Sukkos.
Reb Nachman of Breslov was a
great-grandson of the Baal Shem Tov.
His mother's name was Feigele, Feiga,
and Feiga's mother's name was Adel.
And Adel was a daughter of the Baal Shem
Tov. The Baal Shem Tov had a son, Reb
Tzvi,
and he had a daughter named Adel. Adel
is a very beautiful name. It's an adeler
name,
pun intended.
Adel means adeler, very fine, refined.
The Baal Shem Tov's daughter was Adel,
and he had a very special relationship
with his daughter. When he wanted to go
to Eretz Yisrael, he took his daughter
with him. They never made it. They got
stuck on an island, a gan some ice on
Pesach. He was saved,
but Adel was at her father's side.
It's not clear when she passed away,
maybe before him or after him, it's not
clear, but she had a few children.
Reb Boruchl of Mezhiboz, the Degel
Machaneh Ephraim. She had a daughter,
Feiga, who I believe was the mother of
Reb Nachman of Breslov of Breslov.
Reb Nachman was a grand a great-grandson
of the Baal Shem Tov,
and a nephew of Reb Boruchl of Mezhiboz.
So, he writes in Likutei Moharan an
incredible teaching of his
great-grandfather, of the Baal Shem Tov.
And it's also connected to Dovid
HaMelech.
Again, this is more of a more about this
on Shavuos
in our class on Dovid and Batsheva, but
I'm just going to say one point.
When Dovid engages in his connection
with Batsheva, Batsheva was married to
Uriah, and Uriah went to war, and Dovid
took Batsheva.
And then sent back Uriah to the battle,
and Uriah was killed, and then Dovid
married Batsheva, and came from
that marriage. It's one of the most
difficult stories in Tanach.
The Navi, Nosson HaNavi, came to speak
to Dovid
and give him what you would call mussar.
By the Jews, the prophet could speak to
the king.
In other cultures, the prophet didn't
speak to the king like this, cuz he went
out with a head shorter.
But Nosson challenged Dovid. What did he
tell Dovid?
He tells Dovid a story.
The story is
that there was a rich man who had a lot
a lot of sheep,
and there was a poor man who had only
one sheep.
It's all he had.
And a guest came to the rich man, and he
wanted a meal.
The rich man didn't want his own sheep,
so he stole the sheep from the poor man,
and he slaughtered it to give it to the
rich man. And he asked Dovid, "What's
the verdict for this man?" Dovid says,
"He should be killed. Ben mavess, he
should be killed."
So, the Nosson HaNavi says, "That's
you."
Dovid didn't realize where he's going
with this. "That's you."
"You're a king, you have whatever you
want. Uriah had one little sheep,
and you stole the sheep, his wife,
Batsheva,
for you, when you have everything,
you're the king of the Jewish people."
And when Dovid heard that, Dovid said
two words, "Chatasi LaShem." "I sinned."
Which is why Dovid became the paradigm
of the Baal Teshuvah.
The Gemara says, "Dovid heikeem oil shel
teshuvah."
He erected the yoke of teshuvah.
No my gever who come out he come
oileshal teshuvah.
The Gamara says David
David on his own would not be worthy
would not be capable of this story.
But the Hashgacha wanted this to happen
leetran pishkin palibali teshuvah. So
that David would become an example of
anybody who made terrible mistakes in
life that there's no such a thing
the situation is hopeless.
Asks Reb Nachman in the name of the Baal
Shem Tov he says, "I don't understand."
Why did Nasan have to go start telling
him stories about sheep and which people
and
just tell him David Hamelech, "You're a
criminal. It's so horrible what you
did."
Just tell him a story with a sheep, with
a poor person, with a wealthy person.
Just confront him and tell him the
truth.
So he says the answer is based on the
teaching of his grandfather the Baal
Shem Tov. And listen to the answer.
It says in Pirkei Avos
dalif nameia to osid litin din
v'cheshbon. You should always know
before whom you're going to give a din
and a cheshbon.
What does din mean? A verdict. What does
cheshbon mean? Calculation. What comes
first?
The verdict or the calculation? What do
you do first?
First you make a cheshbon.
And then there's the din, right?
Cheshbon means you survey all the facts
and checks and the balances and THEN
THERE'S A DIN. DIN IS A PSAK, A VERDICT,
HALACHA.
So lifnei mia TO OSID LITIN CHESHBON
V'DIN not din v'cheshbon.
Baal Shem Tov's question. Then he asks
another question. Says in Pirkei Avos
nifroin min ha adam midaito v'shelo
midaito.
You exact payment from a person
consciously and unconsciously. Midaito
means with his consent, with his daas.
V'SHELO MIDAITO WITHOUT HIS DAAS. WHICH
ONE IS IT?
So the commentators struggle. What does
it mean? So the Baal Shem Tov said as
follows.
The Reb Nachman writes it brings Likutei
Maharan from the Baal Shem Tov. The Baal
Shem Tov said
that the way people are judged is not
directly.
When a comes the time to judge a person
the person
is asked is shown the life of somebody
else.
And the person is asked to give a
verdict on the life of the other person.
It's coming together.
Not a trick. You'll soon see it's not a
trick.
And then
afterwards they say, "Ah, that's the
verdict. Now let's see your life."
And suddenly you realize that my
judgment wasn't about you. It was about
me.
Because the life I was showing or the
details I was showing
were reflective of aspects of my own
life. I thought I was judging you. I was
judging myself.
So the Baal Shem Tov said, "Be careful
before you judge people."
God brings different situations into
your life every day, every month, every
year.
There's certain people I meet. There's
certain people I don't meet. Certain
people I hear stories about them.
Certain people I don't hear stories
about them.
Why?
It's not by mistake.
Every situation I'm judging he said
realize you're not judging another
person's life. You're judging your own
life.
What do they say when you point a finger
at somebody you're pointing three
fingers at yourself?
Right? Have you noticed?
Only one finger at you. Three of my
fingers are pointing at me.
And the Baal Shem Tov says that's how it
also works in Olam Haba.
Google
Google and the Beis Din Shel Ma'alah
whatever their name is print out. You
know Google knows everything.
Somebody asked me that they were a
mitzvah boy. He said, "You think it's I
learned in Pirkei Avos that God sees
everything and hears everything. It's
mamesh true?
He really knows everything I do?" I
said, "Google knows. You think Hashem
has a problem knowing?"
[laughter]
I'll call pardon me.
So he says in Olam Haba also they show a
person a life. What do you think about
this? What do you think about this? What
do you think about this? Person judges.
This is what should happen.
So the Baal Shem Tov says din
v'cheshbon.
First is a verdict.
I give a verdict ON SOMEBODY ELSE. NOW
IS A CHESHBON.
NOW THEY MAKE a calculation and say,
"Ah,
you just defined your own story."
That's nifroin min ha adam midaito
v'shelo midaito.
Everybody is the one who decides their
own destiny.
CONSCIOUSLY OR UNCONSCIOUSLY? BOTH.
CONSCIOUSLY ABOUT somebody else.
Unconsciously about me. I didn't know I
was talking about me. I thought I was
talking about you.
So the Baal Shem Tov Reb NACHMAN SAYS
NASAN HANAVI COULDN'T GIVE David
Hamelech the verdict. David Hamelech had
to give the verdict for David Hamelech.
NASAN HANAVI COULD TELL HIM A STORY
ABOUT A SHEEP AND A POOR PERSON.
DAVID HAMELECH GAVE THE VERDICT. After
that Nasan Hanavi said, "Ata ish. You're
the person."
THE PERSON YOU SPOKE ABOUT IS YOU. AND
DAVID SAYS, "You're right. Chatasi."
He came oileshal teshuvah.
What's behind this insight? Just a
trick?
I'll I'll chap you.
[panting]
That's the verdict.
Cuz somebody else you don't care about.
So I'll give you the worst VERDICT IN
THE WORLD. AH, CHAPT.
IT'S THE EXACT OPPOSITE. WHAT THE BAAL
SHEM Tov is trying to say is
nobody not even Beis Din Shel Ma'alah
could tell a Jew where to go.
Because if you're a chelek elokah
mimaal, if you're a piece of Hashem
if your soul and your body are
essentially
and manifestations of Hashem in this
world
so you're completely one with the divine
creator so nobody can tell you where to
go.
You could never ever be a victim
even of a great angel's verdict. The
only one who can tell you where to go in
life is who?
Yourself.
Once you say where you COULD GO NOW WE
COULD GO YOU COULD GO THERE.
WHAT HE WAS TRYING TO BRING out is what
what it's pshat va'atem ti'u li
mamleches kohanim.
Malchut real kingship
is not just the kingship when I'm
circumstances
I'm in the clouds of glory. Obviously
that's amazing or even David Hamelech's
malchus.
But in the times of the Baal Shem Tov
when at the surface the Jews were
pitiful pitiful victims of pitiful and
horrible circumstances
to ignite the inner glory of the soul
to realize
your own inner light your own powerful
light
that ultimately I'm the only one
who can decide
my own story my own verdict. I'm the
author of my own biography. To be able
to give that to a person. Why? Because
mamleches kohanim.
Because malchus is not something you
acquire from outer validation. Malchus
is your inherent state.
Malchus doesn't mean your ability to
control people your ability to be a
dictator.
That's emotional. Malchus means the fact
that you're internally free. You're not
defined by any limits you might think
were imposed upon you by circumstances
or even by genetics or by upbringing by
nature and nurture
or by events in life. Of course I'm a
victim. Am I not a victim? Says the Baal
Shem Tov and says only you could give
the verdict. Only you could tell
yourself where to go.
Why? Because your soul essentially is
rooted in a place of infinity. And if
it's rooted in a place of infinity no
shackles can confine it. Circumstances
don't define you. You define your
circumstances.
Because if you're a piece of Hashem he's
not defined by the circumstances. He
sent you into these circumstances
in order to be able to bring light into
that space.
Once the Baal Shem Tov Friday night
made kiddush and he had his students
around him. They were called the
Chevraya Kadisha the holy group.
As he was making kiddush he finished
kiddush.
He drank. He gave the wine to the people
around the table and he started to
laugh.
This was very uncharacteristic. He was
like kvelling and laughing. Nobody made
a joke. They didn't understand why he's
laughing.
They finished the fish. They washed
hamotzi the fish. Finished the fish and
he started to laugh again.
Just laughing.
It was very strange. They served the
yoich the soup and then the chicken
whatever they had there.
The chicken and he starts laughing
again.
Nobody felt
uh
you know audacious enough I guess to ask
him. So nobody said anything.
But Tzoi Shabbos one of his closer
students went over after maariv after
havdalah and he said, "Rebbe can I ask a
question?"
He said, "You were laughing three times
after kiddush, after the fish, after the
chicken. What was the laughter all
about?"
So the Baal Shem Tov said
"Go to the end of the city
and ask Shapsi the bookbinder if he
could come over."
So he goes to Shapsi the bookbinder.
And he says the Reb Baal Shem Tov asked
if he could come over to the Beis
Medrash to the shul in Mezhibuzh. So he
comes over.
So the Baal Shem Tov himself tells him
"Shapsi
can you share with everybody what
happened Friday night in your house?"
He says, "Rebbe don't embarrass me.
I won't do it again." He says, "No no no
it's not embarrassing. I want everybody
to know what happened if you don't mind
sharing what happened Friday night in
your house."
So he says, "Okay I'll share."
"You know Rebbe he says for me and my
wife Shabbos
is an amazing day and I always saved up
money
for my bookbinding business to have a
little extra to be able to buy wonderful
delicious food and delicacies to
celebrate Shabbos as we should.
But you know, the last few weeks there's
been heavy snows
here in this part of the Ukraine and
Mezhbuzh and nobody came to bind their
books. He was a bookbinder.
Bookbinding was a parnossa, it was a
meager income, but it was an income.
Nobody came.
And I didn't have any savings.
So came before Shabbos and it was
Thursday night and I tell my wife
not one customer came. I don't even have
a cupke. Cupke would be like a penny or
a ruble would be like a dollar, Russian
currency Polish at the time called a
ruble.
Today a ruble is also like a penny.
Thanks to Putin. But in any case, I
didn't have even a ruble for Shabbos.
So my wife says, "So what do you want to
do Shabbos?" I said, "There's nothing.
I can't even afford a candle. You should
be able to buy candles. Never mind a
piece of fish, never mind wine."
That's what happened.
So Thursday night we spoke and we
realized this is a situation and
I shed a tear and my wife shed a tear
and we went to bed hungry.
Friday morning,
I realized for me to stay in the house
it's going to be very depressing.
So after Shachris, I decided I'll just
stay in shul and I'll learn.
And I learned the parsha of the week and
I was myvid the sedra and I said Shir
Hashirim and I went to the mikvah and I
prepared for Shabbos.
And I knew that I'm coming home and as I
say Shabbos I start
I'm coming home not to a regular
Shabbos.
But that's it. There's nothing to do.
So he says, "After Maariv, I came home
and as I come close to my house, I see
there's light coming from our windows,
beautiful light.
I see candles glowing.
I open the door and I smell
such
a smell
of
I walk into the house and I see a
tablecloth set up with foods and
delicacies we never even dreamt of. My
wife prepared a Shabbos meal.
So I look at her
and I say,
"Where did you get all of this?" So she
said, "I saw your pain Thursday night,
how pained you were.
So after you went to shul Friday
morning, I decided let me search.
Maybe I have some old clothes that maybe
have something expensive and I found
that old coat that I haven't used many
years. It had golden buttons.
So I went immediately, I took off the
buttons
and I went to the man who deals with
gold and I got a wonderful sum of money
and I bought candles and I bought the
best food for Shabbos so we'll have a
beautiful Shabbos."
So here we have
he says, "I can't thank you enough."
And we did shalom aleichem together and
together and when I said
I certainly knew who I was talking
about. Rabbis
I made kiddush. We were so happy. I
finished my kiddush and I turned to my
wife and I said, "You know, I could not
thank you enough for what you have done.
And I can't thank Hashem enough for
giving me a wife like you and for giving
us the gift of Shabbos."
So he says, "Let me again
let's dance."
So she says, "Sure."
And he said, "Me and my wife
like a choo-choo train then they didn't
have choo-choo trains yet.
But
we
we joined we joined arms and energies
and we danced around the table.
We ate the fish, we made
the fish and after the fish
I was so inspired. I looked at her and I
said, "How did I get so lucky
to have been married to a person like
you?
And how did we get so lucky to have a
gift like Shabbos? And how could we
express thanks that this Shabbos we
could still celebrate with so much
ecstasy and delight. Let me again let's
dance.
We have to dance a second time."
She said, "I'm game."
And we danced again around the table for
a long time with tremendous joy.
We sat down.
I ate the chicken after the chicken. I
told my wife, "My heart is swelling with
joy and ecstasy.
We have to dance again." She said,
"Let's go for it."
And we danced and danced and danced.
THAT'S WHAT HAPPENED IN MY HOUSE FRIDAY
NIGHT.
SO THE BAAL SHEM Tov is listening
and he says, "Shapsi, I want you to know
something.
When you and your wife danced after
kiddush
and after the fish and after the chicken
you should know you weren't the only
ones dancing.
Heaven was dancing with you.
The Hashem himself was dancing with you
and all the angels were dancing with
you.
And I too
was celebrating with you."
And then he turned to him and he said,
"Is there anything you need?"
So he said, "The one thing we would love
is a child. We were never blessed with a
child."
They didn't have They didn't have
children.
So the Baal Shem Tov gave him a blessing
that the next year his wife should give
birth
and they had a baby
and she named him Yisrael.
The same name like the Baal Shem Tov and
he became the Kozhnitzer Maggid. The
Kozhnitzer Maggid's name was Rabbi
Yisrael of Kozhnitz. He wrote a sefer
called Avodas Yisrael. Kozhnitz is a
city in Poland. He became one of the
luminaries of the Chassidic
the world in Poland. He's known as the
Kozhnitzer Maggid, Rabbi Yisrael. He was
a son of Reb Shapsi who was the
bookbinder of Mezhbuzh.
This is the malchus, the kingship
that he wanted every Jew to feel.
Person is sitting alone Friday night.
They don't even have children. Poor
people. They have some candles to get
filter fish
and they're dancing. He said, "Heaven is
dancing with you.
And I also danced with you."
The unique recognition of a person's
indispensable
non-negotiable value
and the fact that each person is an
indispensable note in the cosmic
symphony
and that heaven dances with you.
That's the malchus
that Torah can afford upon the Jew. And
in each generation, Moshe bequeathed it
in his unique way.
David bequeathed it in his unique way
and the Baal Shem Tov bequeathed it in
his unique way.
That ability for a person to realize
what real royalty means. Royalty doesn't
mean that all my circumstances are
perfect, that I'm living in an ivory
tower,
that I have no challenge in the world, I
have no struggle in the world. I'm
eating mana from heaven in the clouds of
glory.
There's those moments too and we're very
grateful for those moments.
The real royalty means that the person
realizes that wherever you are, wherever
I am, I'm never stuck.
There's meaning, there's purpose,
there's light, there's infinity, there's
a mission here. I'm a shliach, I'm an
ambassador of the Hashem in this world.
I'm an ambassador of the
in these very circumstances.
And therefore there's an internal sense
of confidence, of empowerment. Person
stands tall with an inner joy, not a
tallness of vanity or egotism or or
narcissism or or hollow pride.
But a
a
a pride that comes from a person's inner
relationship
and connection with the Hashem.
A
the servant of a king Rashi says in
is a king which was why the Baal Shem
Tov taught
that
and
are a state of consciousness. Exile is a
state of consciousness
and redemption is also a state of
consciousness. Everybody have a
wonderful week. I'll
remind you again
next Tuesday there's no class.
Next Tuesday there's no class. This
Tuesday after there is. The night of
Shavuos which is Motzei Shabbos
with
the help of Hashem
so
there'll be two
midnight Shavuos
classes, 1:00 to 2:30 a.m.
and 2:45 to 4:15 a.m.
1:00 to 2:30 a.m. 2:00 2:45 to 4:15 a.m.
Each one is an hour and a half right
here in Tent Gimel for men and for women
there'll be a mechitza and also for
youth
for children or teenagers or whoever
wants to come. The topic
of the first one is David and Bathsheba
the way you never heard it before
and the second class which is 2:45 will
be what of Judaism will prevail in 100
years.
And the second day of Shavuos, Monday
afternoon, 6:30 p.m. That's the second
day of Shavuos, not the first day, the
second day of Shavuos. 6:30 there will
also be a lecture here a sheer here for
men and women. The title will be
if I only would have known
the rest of the story.
Wishing you all a beautiful week, a good
a
with
simcha
and all the blessings to you and your
loved ones. Thank you.