Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
You're listening to the weekly partial
podcast with Ari Goldwag, recording with
the Shams now running assistance in
Ramat Beit Shemesh Israel 5786.
2026.
This week we don't have a partial
because we have the holiday of Pesach,
of Passover. So I'd like to share with
you a thought about Pesach.
And I'd like to read it to you from my
safer of my Rosh Yeshiva, Rabbi Per.
It's the current rocha.
Whose second yahrzeit is coming up
at the end of Pesach.
It says like this, "Chag Pesach v'geula
ha'asida."
He talks about the holiday of Pesach and
the future
redemption.
And as I've shared in past years, Rabbi
Per in his Haggadah
talks about the concept of the the
seder.
The seder and Pesach don't just talk
about something that happened in the
past. As it's as it's true in regards to
all of our holidays,
we're not just commemorating and
celebrating something
from history, but that spiritual
uh that spiritual power comes back into
the world again
in this time.
The redemption that happened then
happens again. It also happened in the
time of Purim. It was also on Pesach.
The story of Purim actually happened on
Pesach.
Esther Hamalka went into Achashverosh on
Pesach.
And the Gemara indicates that many
different salvations that happened for
the Jewish people happened on Pesach.
And so the future geula,
the the redemption of the Jewish people
also
there's a powerful time of redemption
which we experience. And as I've spoken
about, we're not going to get into that
so much from my Rosh Yeshiva, but
we say "Loi lonu Hashem, loi lonu."
We say full hallel on the first day of
Pesach. It's a special time when we move
deeply into humility. It's not because
of us. "Loi lonu Hashem,
ten kavod."
Should do it for your honor. When we say
that,
we got to mean it, of course.
But that creates yeshua, it creates
salvations, it creates redemption.
And this year is certainly
a powerful redemptive year where we see
the Jewish people
going through an incredible
salvation
every day. It's going on every day for
us here in Eretz Israel for the last
month.
Let's see together what my Rosh Yeshiva
says.
"V'chag Pesach yesh Yom Tov
b'techilaso."
So he points out something very
interesting.
Pesach has a Yom Tov at the beginning.
We have a festival at the beginning
of Pesach.
"V'ein es avinu mikum mitzvos." And we
have a number of commandments that were
given to us
for the first day. We have lots of
interesting things to do. "Ki si
preitzem Mitzrayim."
We get to talk about
the Exodus from Egypt. "Achilas matza."
We eat the matza
and the maror. And of course the korban
Pesach when there's a Beit Hamikdash.
"Ukrias hallel is a mitzvah to say full
hallel."
"V'gam b'seif hayom tov."
At the end of Yom Tov we also have
after the first six days there's a
seventh day. It's a Yom Tov as well.
It's a full festival. "V'hu yom echad
meyuchad m'vu'ar yoter m'melacha." But
it doesn't have any specific
mitzvos that are associated with that
day.
It's just an issur melacha where you're
allowed to do
any forbidden
conscious creative activities like
Shabbos.
"V'hu yom harishon she kar sh'mo
yom harishon." It would seem that the
first day of Yom Tov is the main day.
"K'mo she sharyam uvoinam rak l'chazek
rishonim v'acharonim." And it would seem
like if we look at it in a superficial
way, that the days that follow are just
there to
deepen perhaps the original impression
that we got from the first day of Yom
Tov.
"B'yom avinu ikar avodas hachag." And
that's when we had the main service that
we did of Yom Tov. We have the we have
the seder and we have
the korban Pesach and or the mitzvah of
matza and maror
etc.
Okay, so
and I would say also it's actually of
course the day tes vav, tonight and
tomorrow is the actual day that the
Jewish people were
freed from their bondage in Egypt. So
that seems to be the main day.
"Al ta'asi hashkafa zos." Says my Rosh
Yeshiva, says Rabbi Per, it's actually a
mistake. This is not the correct
understanding of what's going on.
"Mikumat ha'avodah hu emes." He says
it's almost the opposite the truth.
"Kol mitzvos hayom harishon kol sheshes
hayamim harishonim b'Pesach kulam machar
l'yom hashvi'i."
Says Rabbi Per,
all of the first six days of Pesach are
actually a preparation
for the seventh day.
Okay? And I'll read the note here.
"B'pshitus nitan l'havin k'shvi'i shel
Pesach hu av g'mar l'yetzi'as Mitzrayim
atzma."
In the simple understanding we can say
that the seventh day of Pesach is the
completion of
of the yetzi'as Mitzrayim. Why? What
happens on the seventh day?
The seventh day is when we had the
miracle of the splitting of the sea.
It's where we went through the sea on
dry land. The Egyptians were drowned in
the sea and we came out on the other end
and we had a clarity
that we're not going back there.
"Moshe avinu nidmu la asir she
nishtachrer v'husar mimenu hakabalim."
It's like it's analogy to a person who
is incarcerated.
And he's getting freed and they took off
his handcuffs. "Sh'da'as nish'ar roshem
hakabalim b'saro." He still sees
the handcuffs, there's an impression on
you know on his skin. "Ad she yis'aref
ha'ishur l'gamrei."
Until his flesh gets completely well.
"K'mo she kein rak ha'ishur me'isur
asiya yetzi'ah m'isur asiya
b'vasar."
The impression that was left from the
from the
stranglehold
of the ropes that were tying our arms so
to speak, the impression left when we
saw that Egypt
the Egyptians had died there.
So
it was the completion.
The completion is on the last day of
Pesach.
"Omnam yesh omnam," says Rabbi Per,
"b'yom harishon yesh avinu mitzvos."
It's true
that on the on the first day there's a
lot of mitzvos of commandments. "Aval
acharei acharei hamitzvos she hayom shel
hachag." But after those and as the chag
as the holiday continues, "Hamitzvah piy
l'yom hashvi'i."
It's days of of
we're waiting for, we're anticipating
the seventh day.
"Oz yashir Moshe v'Yisrael."
Because on the seventh day we merit to
have the song.
Right? The song of Moshe and the Jewish
people
when they went through
the Yam Suf, when they got to the other
side of the Sea of Reeds, they sang a
song
of thanks to Hashem when they saw indeed
that they were saved.
"Al ten l'havin b'seider hatam b'shiras
hayam."
We need to contemplate what is the
secret which is hidden in the song of
the sea.
"Al ten l'havin yashar k'mo Rashi
b'peirusham." Rashi writes two
explanations on the words "Oz yashir"
which means then
Moshe and the children of Israel will
sing.
Right? The simple understanding is then
they sang. But actually the words mean
then they will sing.
"V'eichan amar loi libo sh'yashir." What
is "oz"? Let's focus on the word "oz".
Oz means then.
What's then? Then they say. Why does it
say then they say?
It should just say they sang. Oz means
then.
So Rashi says
there was something that happened and
then followed the song followed it. What
was it? "Amar loi libo sh'yashir."
Moshe Rabbeinu had he had a feeling in
his heart. His heart told him it's time
to sing. We need to sing.
"V'chein asah." And that's what he did.
So "oz yashir" means then he sang after
his heart told him to sing.
Beautiful thing.
>> [sighs]
>> "Moshe amar l'libo sh'yashir v'chein
asah."
"Ein adam l'havakash."
It says Rabbi Per,
when a person thinks has a good feeling,
has a good uh
inspiration. When a person is inspired
to something,
it doesn't necessarily mean that they're
going to actually do it.
Right? You could be inspired, I could be
inspired, but not actually per se
uh execute the feeling.
Don't take it lightly. He had a feeling
to sing and he sang.
"Ein adam she'eino b'libo la'asos
ma'aseh she'eino omer v'say." A person
having a good idea or a good inspiration
does not You might have experienced
this. I'm sure we all have.
Having a good thought does not actually
mean that they're going to actually do
it.
"K'mo l'havin achilah b'midas na'arus
u'midas ziknah."
Says Rabbi Per, we can understand over
here the difference between
the idea of youth and the idea of being
elderly.
"Mishum na'ar."
Someone who's young, someone who has the
vibrancy of youth. "K'mo na'ar l'davar
chadash." They're always awake to
something new.
You give a child a new toy, he gets
excited about it. Something new,
something new.
"K'shehu mit'orer b'meirus." He's
jumping quickly.
"K'she'ar ha'aros harishonah."
When the first awakening, the first
inspiration quiets, "Nish'ar b'chesron
shleimus."
Often
a person who's young doesn't necessarily
complete all the things that they've
started. Oh, wow, cool, a puzzle.
Start it up, they get tired of it.
Here he says on the bottom, Israel is
silly as an arm.
It's a Jewish trait.
An Israelite trait to be young, to be
youthful.
Right, I don't even cuz I let's just
call Dover. We like to get involved in
things.
I feel the arm shall have it. Sometimes
it's something that's meaning
meaningless.
Can I just say it's real positive in
Osea?
All right, I'm going to be ashamed of
Sham.
Osea says about the Jewish people that
we are young.
Cuz you're all the right and believe
Israel when an idea comes into our
minds.
Yeah, cuz in the comment we quickly
initiate it.
I don't know if it's a good song to
listen to or listen to God mercy in
ours. We believe I shall my own Messiah.
Right, it's also a youthful thing to
to start and do things that may not be
significant, may not be worth
completing.
Okay?
So, that's the meter of youth.
Young people are excited. Young people
are involved. Young people are looking.
They're looking
for what they can accomplish and do.
Okay?
Not always doing it.
Not always completing it.
The most zealous talking.
If we look at an elderly person, call it
an experienced person.
Ain't nobody has to be so cool
Doesn't allow himself to get so inspired
all the time to do all kinds of
different things.
Should I engage him a lot of the
Marshall King?
Right? When I was young, I made up a lot
of songs.
And you know, you can't put out every
song that you make up.
As you get older, I mean, it's been my
experience as I get older,
I make up less songs.
Because not every song can be brought to
completion completion.
You learn that you need to be picky
about what you get inspired by and into.
All right, so an an older person, a more
experienced person, ain't no Messiah of
the car.
Doesn't get inspired or doesn't get
motivated to do something so easily.
Because he started many tasks and he's
not always completed them.
When they should fire Islam in the
market or recon Ryan is volume.
Since the elderly person has already
learned
to recognize
the emptiness
of very high ideals ideals doesn't mean
I shouldn't be idealistic, but it means
I need to know that I can't do
everything.
We built the Marshall moment. Many
things I've not completed.
This is the condition of our claw. The
danger is that a person who has a lot of
experience will say, "Look, ah, I'm not
even going to bother at all."
I know I don't finish things.
I know I get very inspired and do a lot
of things, but I don't ever finish them.
So, that's the danger of a lot of
sucking a hawk on.
An elderly person who's wise, we're
going to get to a point here. We're
going to see what the point here is.
It's important. Stay with me.
You shouldn't be a Messiah
An older person who's wise, even though
he doesn't get
so inspired all all the time.
But when he does find something that
moves him, when he does find something
that he's got to
This is the right This is what I need to
do.
He takes it all the way to the end. He
makes sure to to complete it.
Okay, I got loose as you might have been
reading the Rashi.
So, now we see something important about
Mosha.
And what Rashi said, let's remember
Mosha Rabenu at this point is 80 years
old. So, he's not young.
Kila Rashi all of the living in the
Mashira.
Not only was he awakened by his heart to
say to sing.
He was inspired to sing. Let action is
our last so I shall have also.
Not only was he inspired to do it, so he
has both, right? He's got the
inspiration of youth.
And he does it. He has the ability to
complete it. He has that
appreciation
of the elderly.
Of the wise.
Okay? So, that's about Mosha. That's the
song. That's the completion.
Now, let's talk about the completion of
the hug, which is the seventh day.
That's what I am from the Mashira.
The seventh day
of Pesach is the day that we married
that song.
We married this song. We married this
idea of being awakened
and wanting to take it to its end.
We have to fish out of the Hamala of
Halulu. So, this is the Yontif. The last
day of Pesach and the Yontif that has
these two advantages.
I think I might have already been
chasing the Shamash of the hug.
Through the experiences that we've had
from the first day through the next
altogether six days
of Yontif.
So, we're inspired.
Messiah in the Mashira. We're inspired
to sing.
We're inspired to appreciate
the miracles that Hashem is doing for
us.
The odds of Sham and pile.
And then we
actively sing. And I And I want to say
this is such an important thing for
right now because
there are miracles happening every day.
Every day to call Israel right now.
And we can get used to it cuz like, "Oh,
wow."
Wow.
Wow, BUT HOW MANY HOW MANY TIMES DO you
say wow, right?
When we get used to it.
This is saying, "No, no, no."
Let it inspire you and
culminate in a song. Let it awaken the
song inside of us.
We can be the Halulu of the hug.
I'm a star of the berries mark.
When we get these
these meters, these character traits,
and we absorb them
and inculcate them into ourselves,
so we have the ability to emulate Hashem
as it were.
I'm a shy of the Mashira covenant.
I have
the because I can walk across.
I rush to be saved in the Shacharis.
We say in the beautiful
Shira covenant on the Zemer as we say in
Shacharis.
So, we refer to Hashem as being young
and old.
Seeing long flowing black beard, long
flowing white beard. Hashem has both
aspects.
Hashem is inspired to create.
And he's
hunkers down to complete it as it were.
So, creates the world.
Hashem brings it to its completion.
So, we are also emulating Hashem when we
behave in this way.
Is that volume with Peru Hashem shall
Rashi know?
Now, here we come to the second
explanation of Rashi.
All the positive of us Yasha, then they
sing.
All of us have become the same in the
Torah.
He said something amazing. He says
that our sages find in this statement of
us Yasha, then they will sing.
It's a hint to the fact that there's
going to be some amazing.
The dead will be revived.
I might as well I just want to say
Mosha.
In the future, Mosha will sing again.
When there's a
when the final redemption occurs, Mosha
is resuscitated. He's brought back from
the dead. And he's going to sing again
with call Israel.
Kikisha Niska like nice team in the
Halulu.
Cuz when we acquire these two
assets, these two characteristics,
one of youthfulness, willingness to be
inspired,
but also the ability to bring things to
completion.
As Niska the Mashira as love you with my
Lucy and guy I'll be marrying a man.
Amen.
Call Israel is in this
elderly state.
But Zikna and you who positive says,
"Until you are old," Hashem says to I'm
Israel, "I will still be with you. I
will still carry you. I will get you to
the finish line of Gula. I'm Israel,
we've been waiting a long time
for Messiah to arrive, for the Messiah
to arrive. We've been waiting a long
time for Kiva's Galius.
We're starting to see it.
Almost 8 million Jews in Israel, right?
We've been waiting a long time for
Messiah to arrive, for base I mean this
to be built, for the Sheena to return,
for I mean this to be able to come back
here.
Right?
Wait it out. Don't give up at the end.
You got to still be inspired. We got to
still be inspired.
I sure you should have been Mashira
Pesach.
The song that we married to sing on the
seventh day of Pesach.
It's the song that we're waiting for.
It's the song that's inspiring us to
wait also.
The summer see how many years you sang
in the Mashira hug.
It symbolizes
the level that we attain,
the highest level that we attain
through the hug of Pesach.
I'm a Messiah Gula see the Shisha of I
got a second.
I am.
And it also represents
the future redemption, which is the
result of what we've gained, what we're
meant to gain from Pesach. What are we
meant to gain from Pesach?
The ability to stay inspired.
The ability to appreciate over and over
again
the miracles that Hashem is doing for
us. The ability to recognize, "Hey,
we're far along in the path towards
Messiah. Look what's going on.
Look how many Jews are living in Israel.
Look how Israel is being rebuilt. 100
years ago, there was 20, 30,000 Jews
here. That's it.
In 1926, that's it.
And now, here we are. Unbelievable
things that are going on.
Appreciate it. We Don't be old. The old
person doesn't have the inspiration to
say, "Hey, we're almost there. Hey,
let's start singing."
We got to be the wise old person.
We got to learn from basic to be the
wise person who is singing.
I'm going to read from the note here.
V'ray an azeh. This idea sh'gulah
sh'mishrayim sh'yachas
b'gulah sh'yida yishmo so we can dusha
sh'mosa he says
that
there's a parallel between
the g'ulah of Mitzrayim of Egypt and the
final redemption, which we are standing
on the cusp of.
You can see a hint to this in in Kedusha
in Musaf of Shabbos. Yom Tov
We say Hashem is going to make it heard
again.
It's going to be a second time. Besides
through the first time that Hashem made
heard, the whole world knows about the
redemption from Egypt.
Right? Everybody knows about it.
Hashem is going to make it known again.
It's going to be heard again. Wow, the
Jewish people were redeemed a second
time.
So, this is the second time we're we're
facing now.
The original time, the first redemption
was Egypt.
We're on the cusp of another one, second
one.
Pasuk says that like the days when you
went out of Egypt, I will show you
wonders again.
The future g'ulah, the future redemption
is going to be like the redemption from
Egypt.
And we request of God that just like the
purpose
of the redemption from Egypt was for
Hashem to become our God.
So, he became our God, our king.
He guided us and gave us the Torah, he
showed us what a a relationship with him
looks like.
So, too, it's going to happen again. So,
he's going to redeem us again.
And he's going to
reassert
his covenant with us. There's going to
be a new relationship. Another time,
Hashem is going to do what he did taking
us out of Egypt. He's going to bring us
back into a relationship with him again.
But, the future
revelation Hashem is going to
perform
will be for the entire world. Not just
for Am Yisrael. Not just for all of us.
Are you the g'ulah sh'yisrael? But, it
will be through the redemption of Klal
Yisrael that we all, the entire world
will be redeemed.
Because
says Rabbi Paretz
because the first day of Pesach,
beginning of Pesach, the first six days
of Pesach
are just a preparation for the last day.
So, more miracles were seen
at
the Yam Suf at the Sea of Reeds. There
were
if there were 10 plagues in Egypt, there
was five times that.
50 50 plagues at the at the sea.
What's the concept? Why are Hazal
teaching us that? We say that we all
know this from the Haggadah.
But, what is the concept of it? The
concept of it is
that here's the big show.
You had the little show until now, but
here's the big show.
It's the culmination.
And it's representative I'm saying I
think that's what he's hinting to. It's
representative of what it's going to be
like when Mashiach comes, when the
Messiah arrives. It's going to be the
big show so to speak.
The attainment, the the spiritual
enlightenment that they received and and
experienced at Yam Suf was
awesome.
It was so powerful. It was the the most
uninitiated person
the most spiritually, perhaps we could
say
not sophisticated person
experienced a higher revelation than
Yechezkel Hanavi, Ezekiel the prophet.
And we know about the Ma'aseh Merkavah,
what it looks like in heaven from
Yechezkel. We know about the angels.
Yechezkel's description first perek of
Yechezkel.
Similarly
in the Haggadah
on the night of Pesach
the variation.
We're talking mainly in the Haggadah
about
Yetzias Mitzrayim, about the the first
night. What happened on the first night?
We went out. We were freed, first day.
But, we don't stop there.
We also talk extensively
about what happened at the Yam Suf.
We're talking about the miracles and the
numbers of how many miracles there were.
Excuse me, how many plagues there were
at
the splitting of the sea.
According to one explanation, there were
plagues.
And we also hint
we also hint to the fact that
we're not just talking about something
that happened in the past but we're also
talking about something that's going to
happen in the future. By the g'ulah
by the future redemption of the Jewish
people.
Where it says
It says blood and fire and pillars of
smoke.
Right? What is it talking about? It's
not talking about Egypt. If you look at
the pasuk, it's talking about the g'ulah
sh'yida, the future redemption.
So, it's it's hinted to
by referencing that pasuk that we're not
just talking about something that
happened in the past.
We're talking about something that's
going to happen in the future, the
future redemption of Klal Yisrael.
It's going to happen in the end of days.
Not only that, but the fifth
cup, which we call the cup of Eliyahu
Elijah the prophet's cup.
Who is Elijah? Who's Eliyahu Hanavi?
He's the one who comes at the at the end
of days. Hinei Anochi shole'ach l'chem
es Eliyahu Hanavi.
Elijah the prophet is going to be
returned to us.
Before that great and awesome day,
before the redemption occurs.
And his job will be to
bring us back together, to bring the
fathers and the sons' hearts back
together, to open our hearts.
Really, Eliyahu Hanavi is going to do
that.
So, hinted to in the fifth cup, the cup
of Elijah the prophet is
the very future
that we're so
so anticipating. We're so dearly
anticipating.
It's all We're waiting for that moment.
Don't get old.
Don't allow ourselves We can't allow
ourselves to get to the point where
we're not inspired anymore. We have to
be like we're Moshe Rabbeinu.
We have to be ready to sing Az Yashir.
Inspiration, bring it out.
Bring it out.
Let's bring it out. Let's bring out that
inspiration in ourselves.
And in our kids. We have an awesome
opportunity. It's Pesach.
We've got to
make it real, make it come to life.
Bring that song to life.
It's something that we have
to have an appreciation for what's going
on, what's been going on. What's going
on right now, where we are, how close we
are.
And we're going to see it down to its
completion. With Hashem's help, I want
to bless you, ask you to bless me.
Hashem should help us that we should
merit to be able to be inspired, that
our hearts should be moved. And we
should be able to sing that song.
Not just of the redemption of Egypt, but
the song, the ultimate song
of Klal Yisrael and the world's full
redemption. May it be speedily and in
our days. Thank you so much for
listening. Have a Chag Kasher v'Sameach,
a beautiful Pesach
and a good Shabbos.
This podcast was made possible through
the gracious donations of listeners like
[music] you. For more podcasts like
this, please visit www.arigoldweg.com
or search on iTunes, Ari Goldwag.