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Parsha Perspectives - Ki Savo
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Good morning Booker Toll. Welcome back
to para perspectives for today. After a
very difficult day for KL Israel
yesterday, we'd certainly dive and we
continue to dive in for the families of
those who lost loved ones, for those who
were injured, they should have a speedy
recovery,
the families of the soldiers who were
lost in Gaza. As difficult as a day was
yesterday, just got news. Israel
eliminated some kamas leadership in
Qatar and Doha. Finally, about time.
must have gotten a green light to let
our enemies know wherever they are, they
are fair targets and it should just
continue, please God, to bring about a
return of the hostages and a lasting
peace. Our para series is generously
sponsored by Becky and Aviatz and family
in memory of David Gmanu
Nishmas, Becky's father, David Benes,
whose nama should have an aliyah. We're
on page 1068 in the art scroll stone
kish and this morning we have the
privilege of learning paras kavo. We are
well well on our way in our march
towards the completion of Kish of Toras
Moshe of the five books of Moshe as we
continue his soliloquis monologue his
message to the people on the cusp of
entering the land.
It will be when you will enter the land
which Moshe must have uttered those
words each and every time with a little
bit of a sense of bitter sweetness when
you enter the land you and not me. the
fulfillment of all of his dreams, of all
of his ambition, of all of his career,
of all of their purpose, of our mission
here is
Moshe says when you enter the land, not
me. But in any case,
that God gives you as your inheritance,
you'll possess it and you'll dwell in
it. You conquer it, you'll live in it,
and you'll possess it. is called Priyad.
And when you conquer land, you're going
to need to eat. How did you eat then?
You didn't go to the supermarket. You
didn't order Uber Eats. How did you eat
then? You farmed. It was an agriculture
agrarian society. You set up and opened
up fields. You plowed and you planted.
You harvested and you ate. So, since you
are new to the land, it'll be your first
time doing it. Moshe says there's a law
associated with the firsts. And what is
the law associated with firsts? You'll
take the first of your few fruit that
you bring from your land
that God gave you. Put it in a basket
and you'll take that basket with that
first fruit to the place that God will
designate. Interesting. Very ambiguous.
Doesn't give us coordinates. No. What
address should you put in ways? What
address do you put in Google Maps? How
do you know where to go?
Interestingly, the Torah leaves it as a
mystery. You're gonna take the first
fruit. You're gonna bring it to the
place that God has chosen for him to
dwell, to be accessible, to be most
intensely felt. Where is that?
We know the answer. It's mikdash. But
why is it missing from the text? We've
spoken about that in the past.
You'll come to the co in that time and
you'll say
I came to the land God promised my
forefathers. He'll take the basket from
your hands. He'll take it and wave it in
front of the altar.
You will answer and you will call out
before God.
A passage we're all familiar with from
say night from the Hagod from Pes from
Passover. There was an Aramian who tried
to destroy my father. Who is this
Aramean?
Lov
Jacob's father-in-law, cousin Yakov
tried, Lavan tried to destroy our
people. There's only one problem.
Flip back four books. Go to bracius.
Point to the that tells me love tried to
obliterate our people.
We say in the he wanted to uproot it
all. He wanted to reboot. He wanted to
set us all the way back. Where does it
say that? Did he trick Yakov?
Absolutely. He took advantage. He was
conniving. He tricked him. He was
manipulative. 100%. He tried to destroy
us. Where? When? Why do we accuse him of
that? Why do we say he was worse than
parro? Parro wanted to get rid of the
males. Love and wanted to get rid of
everyone. Therefore, he's the worst.
Where does it say that? We talked about
that in the past.
And the mitzv
aggravated us. They gave us tremendous
work. We cried out to God. He heard our
cries, our pleas, our work, the pressure
we were under. He took us out of Egypt
with an outstretched hand. All of this
we recite
many years later when we're delivering
the first fruit to the Cohen in the Ba
Mdash in the holy temple. He brought us
to this place, a land filled and flowing
with milk and honey. And now here I am.
Here I am telling you this whole story,
this whole background. All to tell you,
I'm delivering you my first fruit. A
little fig. I tied a ribbon around the
first fig that was growing. I made sure
to save it. I took at great expense and
great effort and great risk to bring it
to you. I placed it before God. I bow
down.
Now the farmer is told, "Rejoice in all
the good that God has given you. you in
your house, you the ley and the stranger
ash
who are in your midst. Let's start out
with
who is the
please tell me you haven't forgotten
since last week I introduced you to the
who was the sh of lisk one of the places
I visited this summer I told you I
bought all this forum the pre of the
founder of satar
the he says the following there's one
word superfluous in this p we should
read the text very carefully mindfully
and ask ourselves every vowel, every
letter, every word is anything extra?
Why is it there? What is it telling me?
Take from the first
of all of your fruit.
Take from the first
of all the fruit of the ground.
The first of every fruit art translates
it.
Word all coal is extra.
Says
we have an obligation. One has to
separate and give different parts tithe
different amounts of their produce
directed towards different people.
Myishon 10% goes to the ley truma
depending on your level of generosity.
There's some flexibility here. either a
40th, a 50th or 60th goes to the
cohen. Then there's my sheni is brought
to you depending on the year. Otherwise
ani it goes to a poor person meaning not
everything that we harvest not all of
our income is ours. Hashem who is the
senior partner and everything we take in
says you keep most of it but I got to
take care of my other children. So I'll
tell you what instead of giving me my
part even though I'm the senior partner
and all the success is because of me I'm
going to tell you how to allocate really
what I should get and it's minimal
compared to what you get to keep Mr.
Farmer so you or Mrs. farmer. You farmer
who get to harvest your field and bring
in your income, sell it, live off of it,
know you have it, a little bit bit of
it, make sure the people around you are
taken care of, too. Your teachers, the
Kanam and the Levim didn't have their
own territory. They didn't have their
own farm. They had no source of income.
They were the designated community. Kal,
they were the teachers of the community.
So, what did they live off of? It wasn't
a financial stipen. They shopped in the
supermarket. As we said in those days,
there were no supermarkets. So what did
you do? You gave a tithe and they took a
little from each person. They were
sustained so they could be dedicated
exclusively entirely focused on
teaching. So you gave away a tithe. And
our rabbis tell us the say that when a
person properly tithes, then they
actually not only did a mitzvah, not
only the part they separated and gave
did they elevate, but they actually
elevate everything they keep. They give
purpose and meaning. They designate
sanctity to not only what they gave but
now everything they keep has a whole
other meaning.
Go back to the book of Exodus on the
parak
says
God says take from me a donation.
It should say give. Why did it say take?
We studied this then says because when
you give properly, you've taken
something for yourself. You know how
good it feels? You know how meaningful
and fulfilling? You know what purpose
you give to all of your possessions, all
of your material wealth, all of your
resources, all of your possessions, they
take on new meaning when you designate
and you give, when you allocate part of
them to make a difference. So when you
gave, you did indeed give, but you also
simultaneously
you took. And that's why it's
and for that you merit tremendous
blessing
says
that's what it means
when you take
when you take from your first fruit
because you're not taking the first
fruit. What are you doing with it?
You're giving. So why does it say
taking?
The farmer harvests a whole field a lot.
I'm not a farmer. I don't even know what
example to give you as a measure of what
he harvests. A dunam. In Israel, you'd
say a dunam. In America, you'd say
several acres. I don't know how you
translate to how many silos, how many
truckloads, how many I have no idea how
to measure what a farmer harvests.
That's how pathetic I am. But whatever
he brought in, he gives away part. And
in this case, we're talking about
bikurim. The first fruit is brought to
God. Why? Because we know we're most
connected. We're most attached to the
first. What we poured our heart into.
And the first harvest, the first thing
we take, we love it. And the willingness
to give it away is the recognition that
none of it belongs to me. Any and all of
its success in getting it is only the
graciousness and the goodness of God. So
God the first belongs to you. I
recognize I recognize the first belongs
to you. I don't tape the first dollar on
the wall. I take the first fruit and
give it to you. And what happens when
someone does that? Says the
when you take the first fruit and you
recognize Hashem, everything I harvest,
all of my income, all that I have is
only because of you. All the blessing in
my life is because of you. So I
designate the first. I dedicate it to
you. I've now transformed everything
that I keep and everything that I have.
So yes, I gave something small, but I
got so much more because I've elevated
everything I've held on to. They're not
physical possessions. They're not mere
material things,
but they all are gifts from you, God.
And they're all part of my mission to
serve you, God. And they're all ways I
transform and elevate myself in the way
I interact with them.
It says the says when you come
when bring the same letters as our
forefathers
in this merit we inherited the land.
The the first of the nations is Malik.
Amalik attacks and goes after our sense
of first. What are they attacking going
at? What are you designating anything to
God? What did he have to do with what
you have? What you have is because you
worked hard. Either what you have is you
deserve the credit or what you have is
just a coincidence. It's random. You
happen to pick the right stock so you
did well. You have a good portfolio. or
because you're smart and you joined
Congress where there are no rules, so
you had inside information and you
became very wealthy and you deserve the
credit. But what are you giving your
first to God? What does God have to do
with anything? Either you deserve the
credit or it was random. But who's God?
What's God? That's a Malik. A Malik
attacks our sense of first. And that's
why the end of last week's para was a
Malik. The beginning of this week's para
is bikurim. Our antidote, our answer to
a malik is we are a people of firsts.
Racious. We're nicer races. The Jewish
people are called races. We're called
his first. We're his bore. We're his
eldest children. He loves us. And we're
a people who designate the ra the first.
We give it to God and we recognize. He
continues, "I want to spend all day on
the I fell in love with because I went
to the middle of nowhere to his kever."
So you attach, you feel connected. When
you do that, you bring people back to
life or you recognize they never ever
died. They're still very much alive.
When you hold this safer and it's on the
same partial that you're learning 150
years later, you realize they never
died. It's amazing. It's amazing.
The says the world belongs to God.
Everything in it. And yet another verse
says
the heavens belong to God. of Adam and
he gave the earth to man. So which is
it? Do the earth and everything in it
belong to God or are the heavens God and
the earth he gave to man? Says the not a
contradiction.
Before you make a blessing the earth and
everything in it belongs to God. But
once you make the blessing that is the
currency with which you pay God that now
you bought it now it's yours. When we
make a blessing on the food we eat, we
can't walk out of Publix without paying.
Can't walk out of the Grove of Ama
Casey. I don't want to get in trouble.
You can't walk out without paying at the
cash register. You're a thief. You've
stolen. You have to pay in order for it
to be yours in order to benefit, in
order to have the pleasure of it. And
this world is God's. And if you want to
enjoy the currency with which you pay,
God is a blessing. He doesn't need your
money. He doesn't need your things. What
he wants is a connection, is a
relationship. And how does we get it?
How does he get it? When we make a
blessing, when you hold up that cup of
coffee, when you hold up that cup of
water, when you hold up that diet and
you say,
"This world and everything in it, it all
belongs to you. Thank you for this
coffee. The coffee bean. The farmer who
plowed and planted it. The one who
harvested it. The one who collected it.
The one who shipped and trucked those
beans. Whoever ground it, the one who
packaged it, the one who put it in a
pod, the one who put it in this cup of
coffee, and the one who's giving me life
from it. All that's in the shahak varo.
That's why in our munish we have merch.
Our caffeinate with kavana cups. I make
a my first cup of coffee every day is in
a caffeinate with kavana cup. It has
caffeinate with kavana.
It reminds you be mindful shak
everything. You're alive. You're awake.
You can drink. You get the aroma, the
steam, the emotional connection. It
awakens. Everything about it. I could
speak romantically about a cup of
coffee. A cup of coffee. If you think
you don't need it, tishabove yum kipper
is coming up. See what a person who
needs a cup of coffee looks like if they
don't get it. The withdrawal from it.
That's a shahako. So the gar says it's
not a contradiction. The whole world and
everything in it is God's. And until you
pay with the currency of only with the
does it become yours can be
similar
if I make a blessing on the good then
the good is considered to be me to be
mine and that's the
says
When is it yours? When can you derive
benefit? When you make a when you make
the blessing on
says
the
so when a person realizes it's all yours
and I'm here to serve you and this is
just by allowance. It's what I need to
fulfill my mission. When a person
travels for business, there's an
allocation for their meals. Why? Because
there's an understanding if you're going
to fulfill the p purpose of your
business trip, you need to nourish, you
need to nurture, you need to eat, you
need to fuel up. So if I recognize that
food is the fuel so I serve Hashem, it
is a means and not an ends. Then I've
transformed everything that I have. So
that's
I may be giving my first fruit, but it's
really I've taken something. What I've
taken is I've transformed everything
that I have and everything that I am.
And then what do we say? This farmer
answers and proclaims before God. He
goes back in time and back in history.
Let's quickly go through three
of the and he says the following.
We don't only have the mitzvah to bring
the first fruit but parallel and along
with it we have a mitzvah of what's the
mitzvah of I don't just deliver my first
fruit to the cohen in Jerusalem in your
shim. I have a whole recitation, a whole
proclamation. I've got a whole text I
have to recite when I deliver it. And
what's the story I tell?
Let's go back to the beginning of time.
History of the world, part three. Let's
go back to the beginning. There was an
Aramine. He tried to kill my father, but
I survived. And here I am. And God took
me out of Egypt and he brought me to the
land and I planted this farm and I and I
was able to harvest this fig, this fruit
and here it just say here's the fruit.
Why do I have a home?
In order to give gratitude for the fact
that we survived Lavan, we survived
Egypt. We inherited the land. We
conquered it successfully. We divided
it. We inhabited it. All the goodness
until now. I got a farm. It rained. I
grew things. I have okay. I got it.
And is one of the things we say every
morning in our ding is that you have to
bring. There's no she there's no minimum
measure. Whatever it is, you bring it.
So what do I need? This whole
recitation, this whole pomp and
circumstance, this whole story, this
whole text, this whole history of the
world, what do I need it for? Just come
and deliver the first fruit and say,
"Thank you, God. Even though I'm
emotionally connected and attached to
the first, here it is. I'll give it to
you." It's amazing because I've told you
the story diff different context. It's
amazing how the the memories of our
youth stick with us and what things our
parents did for us or with us leave such
indelible impressions. But I remember as
a kid, my father worked hard, wasn't
around that much, but I still remember
Sundays, he took upon himself, we
planted a tomato vine in our backyard.
For some reason, he became determined to
grow tomatoes. And in the Sundays when
he was around, you know, as it grew, we
we tied it to a a rod in the ground so
it would grow up. And we checked on it
and we made sure there were no bugs that
were And I still remember the first
tomato that he plucked that he plucked.
And I remember he brought it to the
Shabbas table. Became part of our Shabas
meal. That first tomato, it was tiny. It
grew. It was green. It changed to red.
Brought it to the table with love,
affection, care, concerned. Now, if we
were in Israel at a time of mikdash,
that's exactly what he would have had to
bring to you because it was the first
the most connected with the return on
all that investment, all that effort,
all that toil. It's also a lesson. The
other context I've quoted it in is the
notion of love. That love doesn't come
from getting. Love comes from giving.
And that's why we don't only love
people. We can love things that are an
extension of us. And that's why we just
read the three who are exempt from war.
The person who built a new home and
didn't live in it. One who married a
woman but hasn't had a year with her.
And the person who grew a vineyard but
didn't yet harvest the grapes and
produce wine. What are we likening?
Marriage. A woman a spouse is now like a
house or a grape. Of course not. God
forbid. What we're saying is the love of
having invested, having taken risk,
having given and yet not getting the
return on it yet. So in any case here in
Bikur, so just take that first tomato
FedEx to the Coen Sher move on with
life. You have to go to your you have to
say this whole recitation, this whole
proclamation, this whole parade, this
whole basket, this whole poppin
circumstance. What is going on over
here? Says the following.
Because the Jewish notion of gratitude
is not only zoomed in on this moment.
This is a lesson, a message about
gratitude. I love it. Gratitude is not
only about this moment right now, this
fruit. Gratitude demands that we zoom
out the lens with scope and perspective
of everything it took to get here. There
was a bar mitzvah in our last week and
the father grandfather of the bar
mitzvah boy
I just want you to think about the
miracle that is you. Do you know and do
you understand what it took for you to
be here? that your parents met, fell in
love, they chose to have you and it
worked. There was conception, there was
gestation, you're healthy, you're alive,
all the part works, and that you're
here. But not only that, he said, "Do
you understand what the miracle it is
that you're Jewish?" I actually tried to
prepare for this morning with my friend
Chachi BT. I asked to figure out the
probability that a Jew in 2025
using matrinal descent, what is the
probability that you'd be Jewish?
Meaning going back many dozens of
generations that not one person would
have married out. There was no
intermarriage, not at least one woman in
the change that determines Jewish
identity would have made the choice not
to marry or the choice not to have
children. What was the problem of
formulas and further questions and which
century and where because the odd
statist I said forget about it. Forget
about it.
The point is the message of this zeda to
the bar mitzvah boy his grandson was in
this moment that you just became a
Jewish man a god b is let us not worry
about the logo on the yarmaka and the
food at the buffet and talk let's just
for a moment pause and recognize the
miracle that is you you have parents and
they have parents and they had parents
and each of them had to meet each other
each of them had to be determined to
marry a Jew each of them had to want to
have children and each of them God had
to decide to answer yes and give them a
child and all of that went into you into
you being here. It was such a powerful
message. It was a short but powerful
speech of a he just wanted his grandson
to understand you are a walking miracle.
This day and this moment is a miracle.
What had to go into it and that's what
Barabbam says is what Mikra Bikuram is
all about. Farmer didn't just FedEx the
tomato. It wouldn't have been a tomato
because only applies to the seven fruit
of the land of Israel. It only applies
to the seven fruit.
So it would have been a tomato but a
fig. You don't just fed X the fig to
you go there and you present it and you
say, "Hashem, I wouldn't be here if you
hadn't let my great za Yakov overcome
his miserable father-in-law love. I
wouldn't be here. Thank you for that.
And our people then were subjugated
servitude in Egypt 210 years and you
took us out. Thank you for that. And you
brought us to this land, a land that you
promised us and we conquered the seven
Canaanite nations. Thank you for that.
And you divided it and my family got
this portion and I got a field and thank
you for that. And I planted that field
and what I plowed and what I planted it
took. There wasn't pestilence. There
wasn't a plague. There wasn't a famine.
There wasn't a drought. There was enough
rain. Not too much rain, there wasn't
flooding and everything grew. And thank
you for that. And I was able to harvest
it. And by the way, I was able to travel
here because the airlines were open,
country wasn't shut down. There weren't
misses falling and I was there wasn't a
COVID that kept me away. I was able to
travel here and bring this fruit today.
And by the way, thank you for that.
Everything about this moment is not just
this fruit. It's about everything it
took to get here. And that is what
mikrauram is about. Gratitude. And you
see that at simas. You see that at simas
very often the grandfather, a father, a
mother, they get up and they talk about
not just the bar mitzvah, the b mitzvah
girl, the chevraas. They talk about I
want to tell you about your
grandparents. What did my grandparents
have to do with this bris? Grandparents
have been gone for many years.
Great-grandparents. What does it have to
do with it? Do you know what they
survived? Do you know how they
persevered? Do you know their
resilience? Do you know their courage
and conviction? Do you know their faith?
Do you understand that our family, why
we're on this path is only because of
them? Yes, it's a bris. It's a chevraas,
it's a bach mitzvah, it's an
anniversary, it's a birthday, whatever
it is. But each of those opportunities
of gratitude is an invitation to zoom
out the lens and remember the big
picture of everything it took to get
here. And that is the Jewish definition
of gratitude. the big picture, not in a
debilitating way. Right? So when I
return the cup of sugar I borrowed, I
don't have to thank you. Thank you you
were born. Thank you that your parents
raised you. Thank you you chose to be my
neighbor. Thank you that we developed a
friendship. Thank you. Here's your cup
of sugar. That'd also be beautiful. But
not I don't think the Torah is demanding
it. But gratitude in general means not
just this moment but zoom out the lens
to see so much more the many many many
steps that went into it and that brought
us to this moment.
You have to go back to the beginning
to go back to the yeah there was an
exodus.
Wow. Look at all the good and look at
where I am and look at how that likely
didn't have to happen. By the way, when
you do that, you also probably gain
perspective and you find more happiness
because in thanking you for the little
fig. I remember, oh yeah, my
grandparents survived the Holocaust. I'm
probably not going to complain that my
fig is smaller than that guy's fig.
We're all in the base me. We're all in
the B mdish lining up bringing our first
fig. Maybe I'm miserable my fig is
smaller than his fig. He's got more
influencers when he posts a picture of
his fig than I have for my fig and I'm
going to be miserable and depressed and
complain and negative and woe is me and
why is me. But when I deliver my fig, I
say, "Yeah, my grandparents survived the
Holocaust. Maybe I don't have to get so
upset about whose fig is bigger. Maybe I
should be more grateful for whatever I
have and the miracle that I am here."
It's a brilliant prescription for
happiness, for gratitude which is the
secrets for a life of serenity and
meaning and meaning and that is he has a
lot more but I want to keep going. So
that is number one. Number one. And this
by the way makes it way he says into
benching.
Every time we eat bread we say the grace
after meals. When you ate and you're
satiated you bench.
So benching could be
thanks for the grub. Thank you God. And
go on. Why do we have this long
benching?
Some people don't eat bread because they
have this fear of vengeance. They don't
want to bench. If they actually say
every word, it's going to take a few
minutes. I want to move on. So, I never
eat bread. I avoid bread altogether.
Fear of bread syndrome. Other people
like Mr. Senders who just passed away.
Our beloved Mr. Senders, I mentioned
this recently. He didn't bench because
he ate bread. Every day he made sure to
eat bed so he could bench. And why do
you want to bench? Because it's filled
with all these messages. But what do I
need? All these paragraphs. And if you
look at benching, it also talks about
took us out of Egypt and we inherited
the land and what a good land it is and
thank you for the land. And by the way,
you also bris and and there's also a
kingdom of David of David Aamelik and
build Jerusalem. All these ideas and
concepts are going back to the history
of the world in the beginning of time.
Just say God, yeah, it was a pretty good
sandwich. Thanks, God. The pizza it was
like the way I like it. It's well done.
Thin crust, sweet sauce. It's the way I
like it. Thank you, God. Like one
sentence, move on with life. I got to go
back to the history of the world saysam
it's the same idea because the ability
to have access to the sandwich, pay for
the sandwich, make the sandwich, shop
for the sandwich, chew the sandwich,
digest the sandwich. If you don't have
lactose intolerance, be grateful it was
a dairy sandwich. If you don't have
celiac, be grateful you could have a
wheat sandwich. There's a billion things
that half the world can't eat the
sandwich you just ate. Can't eat the
sandwich you just ate. You have the
teeth to bite into the sandwich. you
have the tools to make the sandwich, you
can afford the Have you seen what a
sandwich costs today? You can afford the
sandwich. There's like a million reasons
you shouldn't be able to have that
sandwich. So, when you say, "Thank you
for the sandwich." Yeah. You zoom out
the lens, you go back to the history of
the world, and you say, "Thank you I
have good teeth. Thank you I could pay.
Thank you I could shop and that I could
make it. Thank you I could digest it.
Thank you it didn't send me into
anaphylactic shock and to the hospital
and make me drop dead from the
sandwich." Yeah. You thank God for
everything from the beginning of time
and the beginning of history. That's the
idea of when you express gratitude,
the famous salant who when he traveled
and he asked for a cup of coffee and he
got the bill and he said, "I don't
understand. I'm staying in the hotel.
When I make the coffee at home, it costs
three cents. Why was it $6.58
for the same cup of black coffee?" So
they explain because you're not just
paying for the coffee, you're paying for
the atmosphere, you're paying for the
environment, right? That if you go in
Manhattan to a kosher restaurant versus
somewhere, all of a sudden your bill is
double and triple. Unclear why. Same
piece of meat, same distributor, same
grill it was made on. Why is this? Oh,
you're paying for the atmosphere, you're
paying for the environment, you're
paying what's it called? You're paying
for the
>> the ambiance. Thank the word ambia said.
So when he got the bill for the cup of
coffee at the nice hotel, he realized
Hashem, I'm not just thanking you for
the cup of coffee. I'm thanking you for
the ambiance that is your world. Thank
you. There's air conditioning. It's cool
in here while I drink this cup of coffee
because if it was hot, I couldn't drink
this half a cup of coffee. And if I
couldn't have the hot cup of coffee, you
couldn't talk to me. But if having a hot
cup of coffee meant I was going to sweat
my guts out. So thank you for the
ambiance.
It's not just on a cup of coffee. The
shahak is on everything. It's on so much
more. I have a third, but we're going to
keep going because I don't want to I
want to get to other things. Rabbi
Sachs, I believe the local Quran store
got in the Rabbi Saksh and I believe
they sold out of the I don't get any
royalty from it. Maybe I should because
we highly recommend it. Could go
Bookerone Synagogue. Not to me. The
ceremony of the first fruits right there
by sachs paras begins the ceremony
bringing the first fruits. The mission
gives a detailed account of what
happened. Those who were near brought
fresh figs and grapes. Those who were
far away brought dried figs and raisins.
Before them went the ox, its horns
overlain with gold with a root of
olives, leaves on its head. The flute
was played
until they came near Jerusalem. When
they were near Shalim, they sent
messengers bedck their first fruits.
Bed.
You understand? You had to buy your fig,
a nice necklace, a ring, earrings.
Your fig, a fig was bed.
The rulers and the prefects and the
treasures of the temple went forth to
meet them. All the craftsmen of your
used to rise up and greet them. This is
the mission of Bikuram. You made a g
parade, an entire entourage bed
decorated. You bring in Bikuram. You had
to hire a party planner. They probably
made cookies with your logo. It was a
whole whole thing. It was a magnificent
celebration, rightax. Its most
significant aspect was the declaration,
the mikra we've just been talking about.
Each individual made my ancestor was a
wandering Arabian. Here for the first
time, the retelling of the nation's past
became an obligation for every citizen
of the nation. The passage known as Vid
Burim, the confession made over the
first fruit was simple and elemental. It
is the entire history of the nation in
summary form. Most importantly, it's
written in the first person. It's
brilliant insight. Rabbi Saxs, my
ancestor.
My ancestor. The Lord brought us out of
Egypt. History is transformed into
memory. And the Rabbi Sak Haga, he
points out, he says, "What's the
difference between history and memory?"
History is his story. Memory begins with
me. history that you study or that you
tell over. History is his story. It's
someone else's story. It's in a book.
It's academic. But when you take history
and it becomes memory, it's me. It's
mine. So here, every citizen of the
nation didn't tell history. They shared
memory. My ancestor took us out of
Egypt. This is not a detached tale of
some disembodied past. It is the story
of where I came from, who I am, which
led the sages of the Mishna to say in
every generation, every person person
should see himself as if he came out of
Egypt. It is impossible to overestimate
the impact had on the Jewish people from
then to now. Identity is not just a
matter of who my parents were. It's a
matter of what they remembered and
handed on to me. Identity is shaped by
memory. telling the story regularly as a
religious duty sustained Jewish identity
across the centuries even on the absence
of all the normal accompiments of
nationhood land geographical proximity
independence self-determination when we
missed everything else that defined a
nation what did we keep memory so that
little children growing up in a little
called bokeh because of pes because of
yontiff because of shabas because of
para they have memory this is their
story. It's their memory. To know who we
are is in large part to understand which
story or stories we are apart. That is
what makes Jewish identity so rich and
resonant. In an age in which computer
memories have grown while human memories
have become forcehortened, this remains
an important message not just to Jews,
but also to humanity. Stop anyone and
ask them their own phone number they
don't remember. Because why would they
need to? Now they tell their phone,
"Call m everyone's things are going to
start doing things if I say this out
loud. Call mom. Call wife, call right,
you now. So you don't have to remember
anything. The more memory our devices
have, the less memory we have.
There was an article in the Atlantic
many years ago called, "Is technology
making us stupid?" And the answer was
yes. We no longer have a sense of
directions because we put the
coordinates in ways and stop paying
attention. We no longer can remember
anything because technology does it for
us. Sort of saxs is pointing out as
technology has greater memory terabyte I
don't even know what the next it has
it's going to soon have unlimited memory
as its memory gets greater ours gets
more diminished is smaller but we can't
lose our memory because our memory is
part of identity our memory is what
makes us us maybe you can delegate
history to computers looking it up when
you need it but you cannot delegate
memory memory is inherently inescapably
p personal it is what makes us who we
are if you seek To sustain identity, you
have to renew memory regularly. Teach it
to the next generation. Those who tell
the story of their past have already
begun to build their children's future.
Beautiful, beautiful insight. Okay, then
he gets into first fruit, but we're
going to keep on moving.
Okay, moving right along. So, we have
the rest of Mikurim and the rest of the
confession of the tithes. We've studied
in the past. I'm not going to answer it
now. It's a very funny confession.
What's this confession? The farmer says,
"I didn't violate anything." I didn't
leave anything out.
I
heard everything God said. I did
everything according to God's will. It's
like my coming home today and saying, "I
have to make a confession. Sit down. I
need to confess." She starts to worry.
Oh boy. What's this confession? What did
you do? What did you do now?
I said, 'N no, listen to my confession.
My confession is I have to confess. I'm
perfect.
I have to confess. I did everything
right. I heard what you said. I got it
done. I've done everything right. I I
confess. And yet, this is called viser
the confession. What kind of confession
is this? We've discussed it in the past.
We don't have time now.
God and the Jewish people are
inseparable. We have a new brisk, a new
covenant, a new commitment. Chapter 27,
page 1072.
Godam
Moshe and the elders commanded the
people shamur observe this mitzvah that
I'm commanding you today.
On the day you cross the Jordan and you
enter the land, I want you to put up two
big stones,
an enormous monument as he enter the
land. It's a beautiful image
on the Jordan River. Before you enter
the land, before you go in, you're going
to encounter, I want you to place huge
stones and layer them with with cement
the so that you can inscribe and write
on them coldos.
I want you to inscribe the Torah on
them. We've studied this too in the past
and we've seen some commentators
likening it too.
Just like a doorway has a muza, before
you enter a room or a home, the land has
an enormous muza. One of my favorite
parts of landing in Israel. When you go
down that ramp, sadly and tragically
still has pictures of too many hostages.
But before you get to customs, there's
this huge muza. It's like my height on
the wall. It's a huge muza. And it's
like screaming, "You're in the Jewish
land. Welcome home." You're entering
Israel before you go to customs and
stamp your passport. walk by and kiss,
touch this muza. This is a place that's
informed by what's in this muza. So the
commentators here explain that these
huge stones were like the muza of the
land. Anyone who would visit, any Jew
who came home, you'd walk by and you'd
see this billboard that captured the
motto, the mission statement of the
Jewish people. So in this
write,
so when you enter the land that God gave
you, the land flowing of milk and
like your God your father commanded to
LA. Listen to what Rabbi Saxs writes on
this.
Senator Rabbi Saxs, whenever I visit
Washington DC, I make a point of going
to see the presidential memorials.
Jefferson, Roosevelt, Lincoln's each
carries inscriptions taken from their
words. Jefferson's, we hold these truths
to be self-evident. Roosevelts, the only
thing we have to fear, fear itself.
Lincoln's Gettysburg address and a
second inaugural. with malice toward
none, with charity for all. London has
no equivalent that I know of. There are
memorials and statues everywhere, each
with a brief inscription saying who the
statue represents, but no speeches, no
quotations, no sound bites. Even the
statue of Churchill, whose speeches
rivaled Lincoln's in power, carry only
one word, Churchill. This phenomenon is
of a piece with the fact that the clubs
and gathering places of Britain's
governing elite have no signs or name
plates. You only know where they are if
someone in the no shows you. It is as if
you have to ask, you don't belong.
Knowledge that in America is publicly
displayed is in Britain, tacit and taken
for granted. Those who need to know
know. America tells national stories.
Britain doesn't. By the way, only Rabbi
Saxs could rank on Britain.
This is his words, not mine. So, Mosha
Labra lacks. The reason is that the two
nations have different political
cultures. America is based on covenant,
Britain on hierarchy and tradition.
Telling the story is the heart of
covenantal politics. It sustains
identity and creates a sense of
collective belonging. It binds the
generations, reminds us of where the
nation came from and is going to. It
locates national identity in a set of
historic events. Speaking of the values
for which those who came before us
fought and of which we are the guardians
for the sake of the future. It must be
an inclusive narrative capable of being
owned by newcomers as well as by those
whose families have been there for many
generations. Storytelling can bind
without dividing. Narrative politics
telling the story can be egalitarian
without being confrontational. At the
border of the land of Israel is to stand
not a gatekeeper but a set of boulders
engraved with a summary of the law.
according to or the full text of Torah
from braces bar according to Ramban.
This will display to all comers that
though we are a dispar collection of
tribes and individuals this covenant
this shared code accessible to all makes
us together who we are. What a beautiful
description of what the purpose of that
billboard of what those boulders of why
they are there and what they're meant to
communicate. Beautiful
point by
Moshe said these which shall stand to
bless the people on
when you pass over the Jordan you
encounter these two mountains haral we
divide the nations six of the tribes
stand on this mountain six of the tribes
stand on that mountain in between stand
the levim and they proclaim the set of
blessing the set of curses And the
nation surround sound. This is the
origin of surround sound. Six tribes on
this mountain, six tribes on that. With
surround sound, they all answer a
wonders.
When it comes to the blessing, it's
written in the singular.
So,
bless the nation. But with the kala it
says
the man blessing bless the people curse
curse the person.
Why did we go from the plural to the
singular from the nation to the
individual says
wondrous insight. This is the kindness
of God.
If one person does the right thing, they
can earn a merit of a blessing for many.
One person doing the right thing can
bring blessing to themselves, but to the
community, to the people, to the nation.
But that's not true when it comes to a
curse. The curse God only holds
accountable the person himself.
If there weren't other accompllices who
supported who egged on who partnered in
that mistake in that in that sin God
only punishes the individual
says based on this insight we should be
inspired to realize the power of the
right thing that we do. One good
decision one right decision one merit we
can impact the many the many. I spoke
yesterday to the middle school at one of
our local schools and I told them
yesterday on such a difficult day for
Kairo we lost 10 holy precious innocent
souls yesterday in one day the six in
Ramote and four soldiers in Gaza and to
be a Jew is to feel the pain is to feel
united we're learning in sitter snippets
the last of the shalom
bless us our father
when does God bless us as a father when
we're united as a And what does it mean
to be united is to feel the pain of
another. So you'll say, "What difference
does it make? I'm here in Bokeh." The
answer is how we act in Bokeh protects
our brothers and sisters in how they act
in your protects us here in Bokeh. A Jew
has an opportunity to do the right thing
to make a difference in the merit. We
can impact and bring blessing to the
entire Jewish people. But the opposite,
if we make a mistake, Hashem only holds
us accountable. He would never punish
the many. And you see that from the
change in the tense points out.
Now we get to the bulk of the harsh
rebuke that God Moshe threatens. Now for
the second time we saw it in Par
and now twice this speech is repeated.
If we're disobedient, if we're not
observant, if we're not compliant, then
there are consequences. These aren't
just feel good. They're not suggestions
from God. This is the way of life we're
meant to live and Hashem has something
to say if we don't. So it says
do another
first in the blessings before he gets to
the curses. He has the blessings.
Chapter 28 verse 6
in the list of blessings. Do the right
thing.
If you do the right thing, blessing is
going to pursue you. Your life will be
filled with blessing and you're going to
have you're going to see it, feel it,
acquire it. Blessed when you come in.
You'll be blessed when you come in and
blessed when you go out. What does that
mean to be blessed when you come in and
blessed when you go out? says
that
you'll leave this world as innocent and
pure and sin-free as the way that you
came into this world. Says,
"I get why it's a blessing to have lived
a life that's sinree that you leave the
world innocent and pure and sinfree."
But what's the blessing of? Of course,
you came into the world sin free. We all
start from neutral. We all start a blank
slate. So, what's the blessing of
In that way says there are two ways to
be free of sin. You could either be
tempted by it but each time try to
overcome it or transform yourself into
such a person that you don't even have
any desire or drive for it. Meaning you
could have some really juicy good lush
and har gossip about someone else. You
so badly want to share it. You so badly
want to tell it over. Such good gossip.
and you don't, you hold back. You really
want to and they deserve it, but you
don't because you're worried lightning
is going to strike. Whatever reason you
don't or you could be the kind of person
that loves every Jew, you c you're
incapable of saying something bad about
them. You're incapable of gossiping
about them because you love every Jew.
So says, "The blessing is that the
reason you're not telling
the same way when you were born, you had
no animist towards any Jew, you couldn't
gossip about them. Let your being
gossip-free be because of the way you
came into the world that you're love
every Jew. You're not even tempted to
say gossip. That's the comparison. Leave
this world the way you came into it the
same way.
What do we do next? We've not yet
learned how to slow down time.
I have a lot to say on
in the
God says, "You know why this will all be
visited on you? You know when you're
going to be accountable? You know when
you need a big patch? When
page 1080 verse 47
because you did not serve Hashem with
joy and joy in your heart when
everything was abundant.
If you choose to walk around miserable
and fissen and complaining and negative
and resentful and angry and down and
depressed, not clinical depression,
which we have no judgment of, clinical
depression deserves our support,
treatment, and so on. Not grieving,
somebody who's sustained a terrible loss
and is in a state of a veil of grief.
talking about the average person on the
average day. If you're gonna walk around
miserable and angry and negative and
pessimistic and resentful and bitter,
then Hashem says, "Oh, here comes the
for you because we have to be." And I
have a lot to share on that, including
someone just gifted me this book,
someone maybe from this year,
practical guidance from the Reb for
living and serving Hashem with
happiness. So I happened to look at it
this morning because of this PK and he
has a whole chapter on this PK. We're
commanded to observe the Torah in a way
of joy and gladness of the heart. As the
PK says, serve Hashem with joy and
gladness of the heart above all. What
does that mean and why? And that's it.
The whole to everything that gets
visited upon you is because you didn't
have a smile. You didn't choose to be
happy. Really? Where does it say you
have to be happy? Who says that's a
mitzvah?
So that's what I wanted to talk to you
about, but we won't have time. I'll just
tell you one part of it is because I my
my son's bar mitzvah is in six or seven
weeks. Everybody's invited Noah. I hope
you got the shul. Everybody's invited
Noah. So in preparing, not preparing
him, preparing with him. So what's the
first mitzvah mitzvah boy should do on
his
three stars come out the night of his
birthday? He turns 13. He goes from
being a child to a man. What's the first
mitzvah? Goes from volunteering to do
mitzvah to being obligated in them.
What's the first mitzvah he should do?
So many say
take the yoke of heaven, express faith
in God. And the first mitzvah is
belief in God. Belief in God. The rebal
in the summer and he told my son that
you know when you host guests
When you have a guest in your home, they
walk in the door, what's the first thing
you say to them? Can I get you?
Something to eat or drink.
So when the when you when your body now
welcomes and is going to host this new
soul, this new gul this new soul called
an adult, the first thing you should
offer is something to eat. And what does
the soul eat? Torah. So he said when the
clock turns three stars when it's your
when you become an adult let the new
soul enter you welcome the guest feed
him Torah let him find you learning
Torah be learning Torah that night at
that moment and welcome the guest by
feeding Torah but theam gives a third
answer we could spend all our time on
the different answers says you know what
is the first mitzvah the baritzvah boy
should do that night by the same notion
a girl who turns 12 she becomes a gdola
obligated mitzvah should do that night
of her bo you know what she should do be
choose happiness
the first mitzvah to do as an adult be
happy don't worry be happy that's the
first mitzvah wow where does it say it's
a mitzvah how do you fulfill that
mitzvah what if you don't feel like
doing that mitzvah you don't feel like
you're happy is a decision not an
emotion a lot more to say in it but we
don't have the time. We don't have the
time right now. Instead, I want to focus
in our last few minutes on another
go back page 1078
verse 28.
One of the things it says
will strike you with madness, with
blindness. Madness, we know people have
gone mad. They've gone crazy. Blindness,
sadly, we know.
But what is the third threat?
Translate the words.
You could cheat. What does the say?
Confounding of the heart. Anyone here
suffer from confounding of the heart?
What is bewilderment? What is
bewilderment?
What is bewilderment? What is
confounding of the heart? What is it?
What is it?
So the altar of Kelm
points us to Rashi. Rashi says, "But
what's
the ceiling, the closing of the heart?
What does that mean?" So the author of
Kelum says the following
and this appears in the final vid. We
say yum kipper this mot we start
it's unavoidable the season is upon us
trust me I'm feeling it in a big way
and the final that we say is the
what is it comes from our para the I
don't even remember doing it why am I
apologizing for it what is it sim
comes from your
says the clogging of the heart. Just
like cholesterol can clog your arteries
and you get heart disease, apathy clogs
the spiritual arteries and you get
hard-heartedness
and that's a curse. And that's what the
author of Kelm said. He said the
following sim I'll read it to you in the
English because we're almost out of
time. Simon is the closing off of the
heart as if a deep sleep overwhelms the
person. It's similar to when a person is
put to sleep with anesthesia for
purposes of an operation on one of the
limbs. While he is submerged in a deep
sleep, he feels nothing when they cut
his flesh. So too, when a person's heart
has been struck with the clogging of the
heart, he is stuck in a deep sleep and
doesn't wake up even if his life is in
danger. What is simh? It's living a
mindless life, coasting through life,
letting momentum carry you through life.
It is living a life in which you're not
paying attention. You're not present.
You're not conscious. You're not
conscientious. You're just coasting
through life. You're not mindful and
you're not present. Simon, the clogging
of the heart. You're not feeling. You're
not awake. You're not alive. You're not
present. You're not engaged. You're not
experiencing. You're not moved. You're
not listening. You're not being
influenced as we spoke about this past
being open to influence. You see that in
the end of our para. Our para ends
fulfill all of it. And here the Torah
gives us the reason for all of Torah and
mitzvah. You ready?
Keep everything. Do everything. Why?
What's the whole purpose of Torah and
mitzvos? Why does God care? Which shoe I
put on? How I tie my shoelaces? What
blessing I say on different foods, which
jelly bean I take on chabas, the good
from the bad, the one I want from the
one I don't. All these whether I wear
wool and linen. Why does God care? What
is the point and purpose of it all? Says
the Torah
is
so that you will succeed in all that
you're doing.
Okay. How does that lead to success?
[Applause]
So you have success. So if I put my
shoes on in the right order, my stock
portfolio goes up. If I take the jelly
beans the right way. If I sneak chill on
Friday night observing all the laws of
how to take chill and still put it back.
If I keep shabas and kosher and
shottness and blessings, I have a good m
I I have success. What does that mean?
So the shami translates the word
differently. Listen to how the
translates it.
You guard the words of the Torah. Why?
So that
his bonus so that you're contemplative
in all that you do. If you keep the laws
of kosher, you're going to be mindful
with everything you put in your mouth.
If you keep the laws of gossip and
speaking, you'll be mindful of
everything that comes out of your mouth.
If you keep the laws of business ethics,
you'll be mindful of how you conduct
yourself with integrity and honesty and
all the business that you do. If you are
insured to pray shakus before the last
time in the right time, everything in
the right time, you're going to have a
time awareness. You're going to be
mindful of time. All the laws, the laws
of family purity are going to be make
you mindful of relationships with your
spouse. The laws of Nia make you mindful
of touch. The laws of Mser make you
mindful of income.
is all about how to live a mindful,
present, contemplative life. And that is
what it means to be alive. Many or most
are sleepwalking. They're sleep even
while they're ostensibly awake. They're
sleepwalking through life.
Sleepwalking through life. How many
times do you drive and you follow
whatever ways or Google Maps tells you
that you don't even remember once
stepping on the gas or break? You don't
remember once taking a turn. All you do
is pull up and say, "How did I get
here?"
Now, that's a very good thing in some
ways. It's an efficiency that we now are
able to do. You talked on the phone, you
listened to a sheir, you spent time with
someone in the car, and you didn't have
to designate effort to where you were.
Maybe that's a blessing. But if all of
your life is led so mindlessly, your
whole life is you get to the end of the
day and you have no idea how you got
there, the end of the week, the end of
the year, the end of your life, and you
don't remember how you got there. What
kind of life is that? You got to the end
of the bag of potato chips and you don't
remember how you got there. You finished
the plate, you don't remember how you
got there. Then that's not a life.
So that's what it means.
A clogged heart means you're not living
a mindful, contemplative, present,
conscious life. And the curse is male.
And the Hashem, I'm so sorry. I was
mindless. I was asleep even while I was
awake. I was a creature and a victim of
just momentum carrying me. That's And we
did do it. Moments of mindlessness. And
instead we pro promise and pledge to be
mindful to be present to be thinking
about everything in our mouth everything
out of our heart time intimacy touch
finances this whole world to live this
world one of the many books one of my
many books that you've not yet read
because it's not yet written but one of
my many books that's been it's already
printed it's a bestseller in my head
because it's so popular today the notion
of mindfulness it was taken it comes
from Torah and I wanted to write a book
about mindfulness. The first chapter is
defining and what it is modern
mindfulness the science of mindfulness
but every chapter would then be how the
Torah is a prescription and formula for
a mindful life. So a chapter on eating
laws of kashras laws of blessings the
laws of all of all of the laws
surrounding eating are making you
mindful about eating. And as I was just
telling you about time, about touch,
about resources. Each of the laws that
govern each of these things, does God
really care about which shoe you put on
first? Yes. There is a notion to the
right and the left and there are
mystical and beautiful ideas. But more
than that, he wants you to be awake from
the moment you're putting on your shoes.
And if you don't remember and you're not
paying attention to which one you put on
first, then you're asleep even while
you're awake. So even which shoe you put
on first, the right, then the left, and
you tie the left, then the right, by the
way, is the proper way to do it. If
you're not paying attention to how you
put on your shoes, then you're not
awake. See, even something seemingly
petty and insign your shoes is part of
the prescription for a mindful life. And
that's what all Torah is, a platform for
a mindful life. Not because mindfulness
is the ends, but mindfulness is the
means to a purposeful life. And that's
what mindfulness is. a lot more to say
about it and much else. Remind me next
year to talk about sim and joy and tas
why it would be just because of this.
How could it be? Maybe we'll get into it
tomorrow at the amunes. Since I didn't
sneak it in here, I got to get it out.
So maybe tomorrow at the amunashir. I
hope by the end of this year it began
with their taking out some of kamasan
da. I hope we gave the IDF an hour.
Mossad an hour. I hope by the end of
this year we'll now learn they took out
the rest of the leadership. May the
hostages come home. Our soldiers be safe
that we have only bes
remain to say if we divide all of it
I'll take just a few minutes to say all
of them in that great merit