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How Do You Know When You've Touched A Soul? [Beha'aloscha]
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Aharon was told to ignight the Menorah in the Mishkan and Rashi points out he didn't deviate? Why would he thought to rebeled against such an important ritual? How does this shape the way we approach bringing light into our own lives?
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Paras.
This is the para that instructs us of or
instructs Aaron of the lighting of the
manora in the b mikdash. We had earlier
discussed back in the book of vayikra in
the book of Leviticus the construction
of the minora of how it was built and
now we discussed the actual lighting of
the minora that had taken place.
Rashi points out that the term used the
phrase used in Hebrew is
means
when you okay we translate it as like
okay you know translations are dangerous
right [sighs]
when you light the candles it literally
means when you bring up the candles
there's actual words in Hebrew to convey
ignite Right.
But it doesn't say
when you ignite the candles. It says
from the root word al or up to elevate
when you elevate the candles.
And Rashi tells us what that means is
that Aron or whoever is lighting the
minor
has to take that uh flame and hold it by
the wick until the flame becomes
independent till it goes up on its own.
It's not enough to create a flame and
that the minora should pre be a source
of light and divinity and and testify
God's presence in this world through
through fire and what it signifies. But
that flame that inspiration
has to be independent.
Aharun's role of illuminating candles
is seen
not just as a ritual,
but it's seen as a calling, really a
calling to all of us
because everything in the Torah is an
instruction, not just a ritual.
The the general rule is that the Torah
is eternal.
not historical.
If the Torah was historical, it would be
telling us what Aaron used to do. If the
Torah is eternal, it's telling us
through the lenses of history what we
should be doing. Does that make sense?
And the way we view Torah is that it's
not historical, but it's or it's not
just historical, it's eternal. And the
reason why it's eternal is because it's
the wisdom of God. And God is not a
piece of history. God is eternal.
And through the Torah, God is conveying
his values. And the value he's conveying
to us is that we have to illuminate a
manora. What does that even mean?
So
let's think back to how the minora is
structured for a moment.
The minora is a solid piece of gold.
a solid piece of gold that had somehow
been welded into the shape as we know
it, which that itself is a debate. But
was it straight edge? Was it curved
edge? The Rambam's view is that it was
uh straight edge. And that was Rashi's
view as well. Okay, but that's a side
thing.
The point is I remember teaching this at
the labs a couple years ago by the way
and I I'm not like a physics guy but I'm
trying to teach like a spiritual lesson
and it like erupted into this whole
discussion about if it was curved could
it actually hold itself or would it sag
down depending on the weight of gold and
if it was straight edge would it
guys I I don't know man everybody's
pulling out their pencils
impressive. Okay, but the point is that
you have this solid piece
with a base with distinct shapes and it
branches out into seven different
shapes.
And what that means is that each one of
us is a light and there's seven
different kinds of lights. There's seven
different personalities.
There's really more than seven
personalities, but there's a combination
of seven general personalities.
Some people are
kind. Some people are more gur. Some
people are more disciplined.
Some people are more balanced eras.
Right? There's the seven spherus
described in Cabala. The seven emotive
traits that God chose to express himself
with and those are seven traits that
every soul has. And everybody
accentuates at least one of those
traits.
Which means the manora is not just a way
to illuminate. It's a way to illuminate
in our individuality,
our individual soul.
As Jews, there is like this tension
between
our individuality
and our collective identity.
I mean, put simple, are
are
tongue twisted. Are all souls created
equal?
We look different on the outside. Are we
all the same on the inside?
The answer is yes and no.
The soul has a personality to it and
personalities are different.
If somehow
everybody watching this simultaneously
got to share a part of their soul,
you'd get to see everybody's uniqueness.
But that's how the soul expresses
itself. That those are the seven
branches.
What are the seven branches of
one solid identity, one solid piece
when you get to share a part of you
that's unique, but that's true, that's
real, that's deep.
And I share a part of myself that's deep
and true and real.
They're going to connect somehow at the
base.
Otherwise, you didn't get deep enough.
Those different lights are really part
of the same. And I, by the way, I see
this with couples all the time. They
say, "Oh, we're so different. Opposites
attract and now we realize we're
different. We're clashing." And and they
are clashing. But when they discover
real depth,
they're like on the same page.
I mean they they it's one solid gold
base. It's not the manura was not a
bunch of parts
that were assembled.
One of and this is all illuminated
through Aaron. Aaron is the co-enon
is the man of love. We'll get to that in
a second. We'll talk about how to
illuminate a soul through love. But
before we even get there, let's talk
about what that means.
It says that Aaron should light the
candles or
should elevate the candles should should
ignite the candles.
What is a candle?
You know what a candle is?
If you have
a thing of wax
and you have thread
and it's even on a nice tray,
is that actually a candle?
Not necessarily.
Not really till you light it. Till you
light it, you might It's just a bunch of
material. It's potentially a candle. I
mean, from a marketing perspective,
you're you're paying for a candle. Fine.
Is it actually living its purpose as a
candle
until you light it? No. It's just a
blob.
We might have a wick and we have wax and
we have the potential to shine as an
individual soul to illuminate the world
to express our relationship with God and
each other.
But if that potential remains potential,
are we actually godly candles or are we
just blobs?
The way you take a blob of wax and
thread and turn it into an actual candle
is by lighting it, which means by it
fulfilling its purpose for which it
exists.
The moment we have a deep connection to
the purpose for which we exist is the
moment we're not just taken up space.
It's the moment we begin to thrive.
And there is the purpose for which we
exist um in a general sense
to make this world more divine
to make this space a place where God
feels comfortable where our soul feels
comfortable in such a way that even
people feel comfortable
I mean that's how you know it's really
God and it's not just religion it's
really God because people feel
comfortable
because that's what God wants he wants
to be with people He created them.
And when we actualize that, I mean,
we're fulfilling our purpose. How we do
that, I mean, that that's a question we
all have to figure out. And that's our
own individual purposes. And when we
figure that out, we're on fire. We're
living our purpose. We're not just a
blob of wax. We're a real candle. Like
it says in the book of Proverbs by King
Solomon by
Adam, the candle of the of Hashem, of
God is the soul of man.
When we discover our soul, we're an
actual candle, not just a blob. I'll
share with you one of my favorite
stories.
There was a Israeli politician.
He was really like an adviser to the
prime minister and and
did something to something to do with
Israeli politics. His name was Yehuda
Aer.
Yuda Aer had a very close relationship
with the lab
and in many respects
considered himself aid of the
even though that's not how he
necessarily portrayed himself on the
outside.
That's not necessarily what you saw when
you looked at him. You didn't
necessarily see the that he was trying
to dress the part, but he was being the
part.
He had kind of an inside view, not an
observer's view. Oh, I like he he got
it.
He had one evening a very long a very
long private meeting with the
generally speaking the the Reb's
meetings would begin at 10 p.m. and
would when people would have private
audiences and would go somewhere to like
4:00 a.m. or even even later. There was
a lot of people. There was a line. There
was advanced booking and you'd get a
couple of minutes. Occasionally it'd go
longer.
And his meeting apparently went to like
two in the morning.
And
apparently he had some sort of desire to
engage more to engage himself more
as a as aid to live more in the spirit
of
the spirit of of the Torah. We're
talking about that that that connection
that living your purpose and everything
teaches.
But he felt the hesitation
and he the Reb asked him well what's
your hesitation.
He said my hesitation is what is this
whole
this whole idea of needing a reb
makes me a little uncomfortable.
Why don't I just connect to God? What do
you like what do I need you for? He
appreciated his connection with but like
from a spiritual perspective what what
is this?
[snorts]
And the Rebbit told him that you can
open up your cabinet.
You could see some wax with thread in
it.
And he says, "What would you call that?"
He says, "I'd call that a candle." He
says, "It's not yet a candle. It doesn't
have the flame.
Until you have the flame,
it's just a blob.
It's existing and taking up space.
But the moment it it's not about taking
up space, it's illuminating outside of
itself. It's providing warmth. It's
providing light. It's no longer a blob.
It's doing its thing. It's a candle.
My job is to take people that feel like
they're taking up space and help them
discover their fire, their flame. So,
they're not just a blob, but they're
they have a purpose.
and he he appreciated the answer.
Later, as he was about to exit the
meeting, exit the Reb's office,
he said facitiously or jokingly to the
Reb, "Has the Reb yet illuminated my
candle? Did you light my candle yet?"
And the Reb told him, "No, and I'm not
going to." I'm paraphrasing here, but I
don't know exactly what he said, but I
think it was in Yiddish. He said, "No,
and I'm not going to. So, I'm just going
to give you the match.
I'm going to give you not inspiration,
but I'm going to give you
the ability to generate inspiration on
your own. You choose to do it. Choose to
do as you wish.
But that's what it means to light a
monora, to discover our purpose, to
discover our soul, to figure out what
we're here for.
Think about a moment in life
where you felt more connected to your
soul.
You felt more connected
to
your purpose. You felt less like am I
just breathing air and taking up space
to
this is meaningful. This is eternal.
This is godly.
I mean, what's different about you at
that moment?
There's more sim. There's more joy. You
radiate. You shine outside yourself.
That's deep.
If we're truly illuminating,
we're going to notice
that we may all illuminate in our
distinct way, but it's seven branches of
one manura.
We're all part of the same base.
The manura was not
assembled from parts.
It was one solid piece.
Which by the way, the only way you could
possibly be one solid piece.
Anyone know how
our s the Tal I think Rashi brings us.
The Talman says that
it was too difficult for Mosha to create
the manura.
Like can you think about this? Mosha is
like the head of the Sanhedrin. He's
like the rabbitical authority and
leader. He's busy answering everybody's
questions and like pause. Take this
block of gold and get carving, man. Not
carving, by the way. Banging. Supposed
to bang it. Mha.
[snorts] So, our sages tell us that it
was too difficult for Moshe. So, God,
just throw it in the fire and I'll deal
with it. And God had to do it.
That oneness we have is divine, is
godly.
And the only way to realize it is when
we are we illuminate the manura or when
we're our manura is truly illuminating.
That's when we can realize we're really
all part of one base.
Moshe is told to take that solid block
and yeare to separate them into
branches.
They should look distinct.
They should look individualistic.
They should look like it's its own
thing,
but yet not disconnected from tradition,
not disconnected from heritage, not
disconnected from truth,
but personality that expresses truth.
We're not saying to just do your
whatever you want because that's you
know your truth. There is a truth
and there is your personality that
expresses that truth and that drives
with it and that celebrates it in your
way.
Afterwards in the para
there's something which I found to be a
little puzzling here. So Aaron is told
to light the candles.
All seven candles are, by the way, are
point All seven candles are pointing
toward the middle or pointing toward the
base because when they illuminate, they
all realize they're all part of one
thing. And here's what the Torah then
says.
I'm going to read the Hebrew and I'll
translate
Arun did so
toward the face of the of the manora.
He brought up its candles. Arun did
exactly as instructed. He lit the
candles so they all face each other.
Mosha just like God commanded Moshe.
Aron did it just like God commanded
Moshe. But take a look at what Rashi
says.
Rashi highlights the phrase.
Aaron did so. Did as instructed. And
what does Rashi say?
This teaches us the praise of Aaron.
He did not
deviate.
Aron did exactly as instructed without
deviating.
Why would you expect that Auran would
have deviated?
That's almost offensive
like
why why would you say that? [laughter]
Why would you expect that he would have
deviated? God told me to light this
minora. This is significant. It's the
Cohen God
and there's a whole para dedicated to
illuminating the candles
that which represents illuminating the
souls
in a very specific way. Maybe I'll cut
corners while nobody's looking. Like
come on. What is Raji trying to tell us?
Aron didn't deviate. Well, thanks.
Didn't know that's what you thought
about me. [gasps]
Was Awin the type to deviate? Was Arwin
the type to rebel and do his own thing?
He's the Cohen Guzle. He's the high
priest.
What does the manora represent? Lighting
souls up.
And if you truly light a soul up, it
feels like an individual, but it points
toward the middle. It realizes that it's
part of something bigger.
Aharon
witnessed firsthand the sin of the
golden calf.
He saw what happens when people get
excited and when they get inspired.
He saw what could happen from gold. He
saw what you could do with gold. It
could be a monora.
It could be a golden calf.
Aron saw what rebellion looks like in
these Jewish people.
You want me to light up these people?
[snorts]
You want me to illuminate these souls?
I I I I get when you're when you talk
about a soul at Sinai that was, you
know, when you talk about the the
version of us that was like,
you know, you talk about the better
parts of our story. Okay, I could I
could illuminate that.
But to this was real. He saw people that
made big mistakes
that sinned.
He saw people that complained. He saw
people that rebelled.
Arun didn't deviate. Arun didn't say,
"Ah, these people have no hope. They're
going to abuse individuality,
not use it as a form as a form of
service to God.
They're not going to get inspired.
They're just going to do their own
thing.
No, Arwin didn't deviate. He was able to
see their soul. He was able to
illuminate their soul in a way where it
pointed toward the middle base where
they realized they were all one. Arun
didn't deviate because he knew that he
could inspire them. And how does Aaron
inspire them?
Well, if there's one trait that
epitomizes
what Aaron was, what his children, the
kohanim are,
it's incredible love. It's a
the deep love that he sees for every Jew
despite the mistakes that they have
made, despite the deviations they've
had, despite their past, but to be able
to look at them and believe in them and
say, "We're going to light up your soul,
man,
in a way that you feel good about it, in
a way that you feel comfortable, in a
way that it point. It's all pointing in
the same direction
because we're all one." Aron believed in
that. He didn't deviate.
There are times where
we may find it difficult to believe in
people.
Sometimes what it's actually difficult
to believe in is the expectations we've
created for those people. [snorts]
And it's like, okay, no wonder you can't
believe in them. You've created an
expectation that's not nothing to do
with them.
That's you.
But sometimes believing in them, not
just in your version of them or your
vision for them, but believing in them
could actually and the difference is
very subtle, but that could be very
difficult.
But then we also have within ourselves a
aaron.
The capacity to love
the capacity to look at a person and say
I know there's something deep in there
that could shine that could illuminate
and that could point toward the right
direction.
Aron didn't give up.
And the Torah is telling us
to put on those aaron lenses to look for
that depth and to allow that manura to
shine. Okay, that's my story and I'm
sticking to