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So paradak, this Torah portion is not
simply the continuation of the Exodus
story. It's one of the most powerful
portions in the entire Torah. I mean, I
know I say that just about every portion
possibly, but anyways, you know, it's
powerful. It's the moment when the Torah
shifts from liberation as an event to
freedom as a discipline. You know, Egypt
is behind us. The sea has split. Pharaoh
is drowned. And the Jewish people sing
the greatest song in history. And then
almost immediately, the Torah turns its
attention to something that feels
surprisingly ordinary, but is not
ordinary. Definitely not for us here in
in our group together right now. And
what is that? Hunger, thirst, food. You
know, it's not accidental because the
deepest work of redemption doesn't
happen in miracles. It happens in how a
free people eat. It happens in how free
people eat. Uh Egypt was not the was not
only a house of bondage. It was a system
that trained the human soul to live
without trust. Pharaoh fed the body
while enslaving the spirit. And that is
why when the people later complain in
the wilderness, they they don't say that
they miss dignity. They don't can you
hear me? Sorry. They don't say that they
miss dignity or freedom. They say that
they miss the fish, the cucumbers, the
melons, the onions, the garlic, which
are all, by the way, healthy foods, you
know. But the Ramban Nakmanades notes
that this memory is distorted because
nothing in Egypt was truly free.
Obviously, but that distortion itself is
the point. Slavery conditions the soul
to confuse provision with security,
right? Sustenance with freedom. So when
God takes Israel out, he does not simply
remove chains. He introduces a
completely new way of relating to
sustenance. The mana is not just a
miraculous bread. It is a spiritual
curriculum.
The Torah emphasizes again and again
that it fell daily, that it could not be
hoarded, that everyone gathered
according to their needs, and that on
the Shabbat it didn't fall at all. The
the Melta explains that the mana was
given specifically to train Israel and
amuna because a person who eats from
God's hand every day learns what it
means to live in relationship rather
than control. I think that even that
could be the greatest theme of the
entire Torah portion of this whole
Exodus story, possibly of the entire
Torah, relinquishing control and
understanding God's in control and
really letting go and letting God. And
this is why the Torah says that God gave
the mana in order, this is the verse,
the text from, in order to test them
whether they would walk in my Torah or
not. Rashi explained that this test was
not intellectual obedience but
behavioral trust. Would they live as
slaves or would they panic at hunger or
as free people who you know that that's
the are they going to be slaves or are
they going to be free? Not in actual you
know being whipped by Egyptians but in
the in their essence. The sages of
Israel add that the daily portion was
meant to refine desire itself. So that
eating would no longer be driven by fear
of tomorrow, but by awareness of today.
And I think that this is the main place
that our Judeian diet journey meets the
Torah portion. Right? Not as a modern
program imposed on the Torah, but as a
rediscovery of the Torah's original
vision for the human body. Hunger is not
portrayed here as an enemy. It's a
teacher. God does not eliminate hunger.
He sanctifies it. He turns waiting into
worship. This is what we've talked about
on the whole program. Intermittent
restraint becomes the space where trust
is rebuilt. Man learns again and again
that he does not live by bread alone,
but by the word that comes from God. As
Moses later explains in in the book of
Deuteronomy, immediately after the song
of the sea, the people encounter bitter
water at Marrah. We're going to be
talking about that on the fellowship
this week. Please God. They encountered
bitter water. They encountered hunger in
the wilderness of of Zen. Uh and and
thirst again at Rafidim. Hunger and
thirst and hunger. The Midash asks why
the Torah places these crises directly
after miracles. And the answer is really
sort of opens your eyes. Miracles do not
change habits. Only practice does.
Redemption without retraining.
It just collapses. God is not punishing
Israel. He is reforming them. Reforming
them. Right? A slave eats when food
appears. A free person eats with
intention. And I'll tell you, my
friends, as much as I fancy myself a
free man or a redemption Jew or
whatever, I must admit that I still have
much of the slave mentality when it
comes to eating food and how I think
about food. You know, put some roasted
cashews in front of me, I don't care if
I'm hungry or not, there's a good chance
I'm eating them. And it's like, am I
ever going to have them again? Is it
ever going to be there? This scarcity
thing, there's a very good chance I'm
going to eat it. Anyways, at this point
comes in Amalch. Amalch attacks
specifically when the people are tired,
when they're hungry, when they're
unsure. Khazal teach, the sages of
Israel teach that Amalcch represents
Safk, doubt, not denial of God, but
erosion of trust. And Amalikch sed
seductively and persuasively convinces
you that you cannot rely on tomorrow,
that you must secure yourself now.
Amalch convinces you that scarcity is
real and fear is justified. And this is
why the war with Amalcch follows the
mana narrative so closely because the
battlefield is not only external, it's
internal. Primarily, it's primarily
internal. I've seen that with just even
life today in my personal life. I see
that what happens with me internally
within me in my own struggle and
wrestling and journey with God very much
manifests outside. But the primary
battle is inside. Every time a person
eats out of anxiety rather than
awareness, Amalch scores a victory.
Every time a person pauses, restrains,
blesses, and trusts, Amalikch is
weakened. The Maharal explains that
Amalch seeks to cool spiritual passion
by dragging holiness into a world of
randomness. Our journey on the Judeian
diet is the opposite. It restores
meaning to the most physical act. Eating
becomes an expression of the covenant
and hunger becomes a doorway to amuna
and satisfaction becomes gratitude
rather than excess. And then there's
Shabbat. The mana does not fall in
Shabbat because Shabbat teaches the
final truth. You are not sustained by
effort alone. You are sustained by
relationship. The double portion before
Shabbat, as the Ramban explains, teaches
that blessing comes when restraint is
honored. Shabbat is not indulgence. It
is holy enjoyment.
Eat, rejoice, bless, and rest, not
because you earned it, but because you
belong.
Ultimately, it's a gift from God. And
when it's used, not like the Romans did
in the vomitarium as an end in and of
itself, but as an means to connect,
well, then it's sanctified. All of this
prepares the nation of Israel for the
land of Israel. In Judea, food will come
through soil, rain, seasons,
responsibility, working the land. It's
harder sometimes to see God when you
have your own hand in it. Right? That's
why we said hamotzi, the prayer for the
bread is saying thank you God for
bringing forth bread from the ground.
That's the one part that we do. We
actually take the wheat and make it into
bread and we're thanking God for that to
remember that even the work of our own
hands, especially the work of our own
hands is really God's blessing. So the
mana trains the inner world so so the
land can be received properly. Ravkuk
writes that holiness in eating is a
bridge between the physical revival of
Israel and the spiritual destiny. And a
nation that eats with awareness can
build a society with justice. And a
people that sanctifies hunger can
sanctify power.
Anyways, I'm bringing this together my
friends. So Bashal is teaching that
freedom is not proven at the sea. It's
proven at the table. I mean, it's also
proven at the sea, but for us on our
journey, the table is just as much.
Pharaoh fed bodies and he broke the
souls. God feeds souls and restores
bodies. The Judeian diet is is bashalak
lived every single day, leaving Egypt
every morning, choosing trust over fear,
turning hunger into holiness, and eating
like a redeemed people. That's why the
the this this Torah portion is not meant
to be remembered once a year. It's meant
to be practiced every single day.
And and that's what we're here to do.
The Judeian diet isn't just an effective
and inspiring way to lose weight. It's a
return to clarity, energy, and God
aligned living. And people from all
around the world have already
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