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Pinchas - History’s Most Mysterious Man
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Who exactly was Pinchas? And why did he turn into Eliyahu Hanavi? And why doesn’t Eliyahu ever die?
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[Music]
One of the most, if not the most
mysterious characters in all of Tanakh
is Pinhas, a seemingly unassuming
grandchild of Arun, who goes ahead and
kills Zimry, the leader of the tribe of
Shim, amidst his adulterous act, is then
rewarded with the enigmatic
bree shalom which rabbaya writes shalom
is the acronym for shalom mace he won't
die he was rewarded with ultimate
longevity penas then goes on to become
the novi elohu who has surfaced and
resurfaced throughout the duration of
Jewish history and continues to do so
until this very day the garan sanhedrin
pad states that when the writes the word
and he will atone in hashem's blessing
of pinas it does so in the future tense,
hinting to the fact that Pinhas will
forever be the savior of the Jewish
people. Pinhas/awani
seems to show up wherever we go. At
every bris, we set up a chair for him.
At every peser, we set up a cup of wine
for him. We even go so far as to open
the door waiting for him to come in.
Every time we say, we ask Hashem to send
to bring us the good news.
as Eliohani
every mo Shabas we sing songs hoping for
his arrival the list can go on so what
was it about Pinas that gave him this
honor what did Pinas do that granted him
the status of being the perpetual savior
of the Jewish people in every generation
just because he got up and killed Zimry
don't we find many people in the Tyra
who did great things and yet they were
not rewarded with anything remotely as
dramatic as Pinas people like Schlommo
and David and Shel and Misha and Aaron
and Amram and Ysef and Yehuda. What was
it about Pinhas that made him so
remarkably great that he became the
immortal savior of Jews for eternity?
So there is virtually no way to explain
the mystique of Pinhas without entering,
albeit cautiously, into the dazzling
world of Tyra secrets, the proverbial
deep end of the Tyra's endless ocean.
And there we learned that Pinus was not
as unassuming as we may have thought. We
learned that his spiritual energy was
bottled up inside of him for years. In
fact, it actually preeded him. the Rami
Pano, an Italian sage who lived in the
Italian city of Fano in the 1500s in his
work Gilgoule Nishamas page 155 and the
Arisal in his safer safer guula both
write that Pinhas was actually the
Gilgal the spiritual reincarnation of
our forefather Yitsk. The zoyar emparaas
pinhas points out that the gimatrius the
numerical values of the word pinhas and
the word yitzuk are the exact same 28
telling us that they share the same
soul. The tune zar similarly says that
the names can be read kitai alluding to
the fact that the soul of will be around
until the end of days. The question is
why? Why of all the many souls that
graced our planet, all the many
haliganes
is the one that lives in the world
forever, the soul of Yitzk.
So they explain that Yitzk was the
ultimate paradigm of spiritual strength.
Our forefather Yitsk willingly allowed
himself to be bound up and burnt as an
offering to Hashem. Yitsk would live his
life completely enveloped in God and his
Tyra. He was about as perfect as a human
mortal could be. Perfect except one
flaw. He was blind. On that fateful day
when Yitzluk was laying on the altar
waiting for his father Aaram to
sacrifice him, the angels in heaven were
looking down and crying and those tears
dropped into Yitsluk's eyes and blinded
him. Hence writes the Arizal there was
one function he could not accomplish and
that was observing the world around him
and lending kindness to it spiritual
perceptiveness. He couldn't detect
spiritual or physical detriments around
him to the same extent a man with proper
eyesight could. And this he needed to
achieve before his soul's mission could
be completed. So thus at the end of his
life, Yitzk's soul was left a tad
incomplete. It needed to re-enter this
world and achieve what it previously
could not. It needed someone upon whom
it could rely to accomplish this. Pinhas
was the perfect candidate. He was the
grandson of Aron the Kayangodo and the
spiritual leader, the ultimate lover of
peace, the practical sort of guidance
counselor to the Jews at the time. And
conversely, he was also the grandson of
Yro, a former idol worshipper and priest
who converted to Judaism. Pinnus was a
man who saw it all. He absorbed it all.
The love of Jews, the titanic spiritual
abilities of any man, the ludicrousness
of idol worship. And additionally,
Pinhas demonstrated great humility when
all his cousins became khanim. And he
didn't. Unlike his cousin Kyra, who made
a big fuss about his status, Pinhas
accepted his with a smile. while he did
what needed to be done. Inim
it says that never in his life did Pinas
sin not even once.
So when the Tory focuses the story on
Pinas, it begins with the word Var. He
saw which means explains the Rami pano
that Pinas saw what Yitzk could not. He
picked up where Yitzk left off. When
Pinas was standing there in the back of
the crowd watching as Zimri, the leader
of the Shiv of Shim committed his
horrible act with a midionite woman, a
wave of spiritual energy suffused him.
The soul of Yitzk discovered its perfect
landing spot and Pinas realized that he
was on this earth to defend the Jewish
people. That presently meant to rid the
world of sinners. So he grabbed a spear
and he killed them both in one blow.
Right then and there, Hashem took a look
at Pinas and took a look at Yitzk
sitting up high in heaven and smiled.
This is what the Jewish people need. A
man with the spiritual dynamite of
Yitzk. And the love, the perception, and
the determination of Pinnus rolled into
one. He was perfect. He would be the one
to ride the train alongside the Jewish
people down history's long tracks. He
would be there to correct the wrongs, to
love the oppressed, to steer the Jews
when they go arai and give them hope
when all seems lost. And hence, Pinas
became Eliohanavi. Elio who would defend
and protect the Jewish people time and
time again. He would weed out the
sinners. He would inspire repentance. He
would encourage the blind, poor, and
needy. He was the only person in the
history of the world to have an openly
chronicled story of going to heaven
alive. He lived in both worlds much like
Yeetszlak Kuwal on the altar went up to
heaven and came back down. Alio says the
Ashik went up to heaven specifically in
the east bank of the Jordan River for
that is the precise location that Pinas
killed Zimry they are one and the same.
So when it says in Moed
that Elo is still alive it means that
Elio and Pinas carrying the soul of
Yitzka exist in this world in a literal
sense. He is here watching and listening
and nurturing us, showing up when we
need it the most. He's defending us and
he's empowering us.
The very last person on earth to be
graced with prophecy was the prophet
Malahi. He was the last person to have
heard Hashem's word in prophetic form.
The very last thing he heard Hashem say,
the very last time Hashem spoke directly
to a person on planet Earth was when
Hashem said the following.
Behold, I will send you Elio one of you
before the end of days and he will
restore peace within the land. Elio is
the one to herald in Mashiach for he is
the one who has been with us throughout
our journey. Hence, we mention Elio all
the time. We give him a seat at our
bris. We give him a se seat at our pes
table. We sing about him at weddings. We
mention his name while benching. And we
hear stories about people who are sure
that they've met him. So indebted are we
to his kindness and his protection that
we attach the words.
He is remembered for good. We attach
that to his actual name. The goodness
and blessing he gave and continues to
give the Jewish people made him so
synonymous with goodness that we
literally attach that title to his name.
Elio is referred to as El
in more than 60 instances in Madr.
Even the one time the phrase is tagged
onto someone else in Tanakh as inva
both the and the Ezra are quick to point
out the medish and estab which says that
carvona which is spelled differently
than the first evil carva mentioned in
the beginning of the migilla was in fact
Eliovi and he saved the day yet again
no person or book can possibly recount
all the kindnesses and favors Elio has
contributed towards the Jewish people.
His benevolence is incalcable. He is the
one who taught our teachers Tyra. Men
such like Rabbi Rea Ben Aua, Rev Murray,
Revas, Rev Anwakadesh, Owen, Medashan,
Kuma, Hazinu.
He saved Rebi from agonizing toothaches
and bracious Ramad. He appeared as a
Roman soldier to save the life of Noam
is Gamu and Tinfal.
He showed up as a horseman to save by
Ashi who was being attacked by a snake
in Shabisdaf
Ku.
He disguised himself as an Arab to save
a poor couple in med zafal.
And he dressed up as a woman to save her
mayor from a band of barbaric Romans
Alf. He was the one who informed Shiman
Bario of the Caesar's death. and he was
the one who showed up to Rabbaka's door
and enabled him to go to yeshiva
facilitating his becoming one of the
most important sages in the last 2,000
years according to Nadarim dun
and these are just the instances that we
know about when Elio is not traversing
the world saving Jews in their times of
peril or teaching our teachers Tyra
writes to say
he sits down and he writes down each and
every mitzvah that all of us are doing
or performing and he signs his name on
the bottom and he puts it in a safe
place storing it for the day that he
will read it in heaven. And when we go
to Shamayim, he's the one who's
welcoming us in and he reads those
mitzvah that we did all our life. He is
heaven's doorman.
Aside from helping us in this world, he
is the one ensuring our experience in
the next world is the absolute fullest.
Of course, there were great men before
Pinas and great men after Pinas, but few
harbored as deep a love and as burning a
desire to defend and help the Jewish
people as did/pinhas/avi
the abbanel in Malim Bud writes that
Moshe was on such a high level that upon
his death he just ascended directly to
God's throne in heaven where he now sits
beside not that he was rewarded with
anything less than pen not less just
different ribb Polisher adds that had
Moshe not gone through the process
of a regular death,
the Jewish populace would have wrongly
thought he was an angel and would have
would have given up aspiring to be
spiritually great, mistakenly thinking
that spiritual greatness is reserved for
angels and not mortal man. He had to go
through a normal death process. But
Pinhas on the other hand posed no such
threat and therefore was rewarded with
longevity with immortality.
Pinas with a burning desire to save the
Jews threatened by a devastating plague
brought about due to the adulterous acts
they were performing rose up and became
the timeless defender of the Jewish
people. He took the soul entrusted
within him and showed up at the doorstep
of Jews in distress for the duration of
our history with passion in his heart
and a fire in his soul. He wants nothing
more than to stand up for us when we are
down and lift us up when we lose hope.
Be it physically, be it spiritually.
Another intriguing example, anytime in
Gamarra there is a question so piercing
none of the brilliant sages know the
answer to it. The Gamarra writes the
word teu. The word teu is really an
acronym for the words tishparitus
vias meaning to say that elio came from
the word t that city tishpi will one day
tell us the answers to all our
questions. It may be later in our lives
in the form of a mysterious sage or in
the end times when Elio ushers in
Messiah. So there's a question why is
Elio the one to answer all our Torah
questions when Mosher Rabina was the one
who handed us the Torah? Wouldn't Moshe
be the best candidate to tell us the
answers to all our questions? Wouldn't
it be more appropriate for the Gumar to
write me as in Moshaaritus?
Soich
explains that Elio is the most fitting
to answer all our questions for not only
does he live comfortably in the next
world with access to the greatest
reservoirs of Tyra in existence. He has
additionally been here on earth with us
through the thick and through the thin.
He understands us. He comprehends our
issues and our struggles. He speaks our
language and hence he will be the one to
take all our questions and answer them
for he more than anyone intimately knows
us. He is the champion of our
grandparents and the champion of our
parents. He is the champion of us. Us in
600, us in 1433, us in 1654, us in 1822,
us yesterday, us today.
On September 11th, 2001,
at 8:07 a.m., exactly 39 minutes before
al-Qaeda terrorist Muhammad Ata and Wid
Al-Shari flew American Airlines plane
number 11, into the Twin Towers, a group
of nine Jewish businessmen stood at a
nearby Schul waiting for a minion.
Normally there would have been more than
enough people filling the minion but
that morning over 100 people attended
the schllesim the one month remembrance
of Jews who died in a Grand Canyon
helicopter crash utterly aware of the
tragedy that was about to take place.
The men began losing patience. These
were serious men. These were
professionals. And all of them had to be
at their desk in the World Trade Center
well before 9:00 a.m. At 8:11 a.m.,
exactly 35 minutes before the horror
began, the men were sitting in the shaw
impatiently tapping their watches.
Let's just dive and be ais, one of them
said. I I have a meeting. No, another
replied. Let's wait a few more minutes.
They waited some more. At 8:15, exactly
31 minutes before the first plane burst
through the first tower, one man got up
and said, "Okay, I'm leaving. I'm just
going to dive into my office." And just
as he was about to pick up his tallest
bag and walk out, they heard the door of
the Shaw creek open. An elderly man they
have never seen before walked into the
Shaw and marched right up to the um and
declared, "I have yard sight and
mazdav."
The man about to leave groggly sat down
in his seat. At 8:17 a.m., exactly 29
minutes before the plane began its
slaughter of thousands of people, the
old man started domining. Unlike the
other members of the minion, he was in
no rush. He had yard sight and he was
going to make it count. Excruciatingly
slowly, the man carefully uttered the
words. Wanting to leave, but stuck there
to ensure the quota of 10 was complete.
The other men stayed until the very last
Amain. The very minute the old man
finished saying kadesh at the end of
divining at exactly 8:46 a.m. The men
picked up their belongings and ran
outside only to see a sight that is
seared into their minds forever. A plane
crashing into the World Trade Center,
setting the entire building a flame.
They stopped in their tracks. They
looked up at the smoke. They looked up
at the death. They looked up at the
fire. They looked up to see hundreds of
people jumping from the top floors of
the building to their horrible deaths
below. They looked up and realized that
that should have been them. Had that
minion finished even 3 minutes earlier,
they could have been dead. They then
realized that the seemingly ordinary old
man who just happened to show up at that
show probably wasn't so ordinary. They
ran back in to see who he was, but he
was gone. Gone to help the next Jew from
his plight. Gone to teach the next Tyra
scholar. gone to help the next young
widow feed her children. The men looked
at that empty shaw and realized that if
not for that mysterious old man, they
would be dead. They went back outside
and ran for their lives. Each and every
week for hundreds of years, Jews after
making havdala softly sing the song
Eliovi.
We look to the upcoming week and hope
that Elio will be there to guide us and
to inspire us. We sing hoping that the
soul of Yeitzk with the love and
strength of Pinas will be with us each
day. But most of all, we sing the hope
and the prayer that this will be the
week where Elio brings us the news we've
all been waiting for and all been crying
for and all been hoping for. The news of
the arrival of Messiah.