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Rabbi Benjamin Yudin Discusses Parshas Behar and Bechukosai (5786)
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Nachum Segal presented Rabbi Benjamin Yudin, Rabbi Emeritus of Congregation Shomrei Torah in Fairlawn, New Jersey, on this morning's JM in the AM to discuss Parshas Behar and Bechukosai. Shabbat shalom from NSN!
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Good morning. Good shabus everybody.
Tomorrow we have the privilege of
reading two parios that of
kosai. We complete safer vayikra. Whoa.
We are moving very close to kabala
shaturra. Okay. Let's know first of all
the breakdown of Bahar has 24 mitzvos
seven positive and 17 restrictions
andosai
contains 12 mitzvos
seven positive five restrictions so we
have a total of 36
mitzvos between the two parachios of
Bahar and Bhu Kosai okay I'd like to
begin a little bit different this week
than usual by a simple question like do
you really believe? What does that mean?
Do you really believe? Okay. Do you
really believe that the mountains all
complained to Hashem? Like what are you
doing? How could you give the Torah on
Hari?
Okay. Do you really believe that the
rocks were fighting among each other?
Namely, each one was saying, "Oh, let
Yakov put his head on me." And therefore
the Torah tells us that initially
Jacob takes from the stones of the place
and in the morning he takes the the
stone and he makes it into a mata. Well,
make up your mind. Where many stones?
One stone. Well, no problem. Say the
rabbis. As we know, Rashi brings it that
the many stones joined into one to
satisfy the desire of the sadic. And
here too, we have the mountains arguing
with each other. Now, if you take a look
in
Sam
who 68.
So what do we find in there? Amazing.
David Hamel speaks about the
mountains
having this desire each one that the
Torah should be given on it. Whoa.
Now don't get me wrong. Do you really
believe this? And the answer is yes. Why
do I believe it? I believe it through
this week's para or parote of
there's no question that the more we
look at the text the more we study the
more we realize that Eritel
the land of Israel is literally God's
majestic
playland
he does things at Erit Israel that
completely define nature show it to be
not simply a physical but a metaphysical
entity in of itself.
The nature of the world is that
agricultural societies
work the land for a year or two and then
they have quote crop rotation.
Here what the Torah is
providing us with six years of straight
working the land. And you'd imagine that
after six years, what do you have? Just
a little bit left because the land is
worn out. It is just after six years
that the Torah tells us not to work on
the seventh year. Okay? Only Hashem
is the only power in the world that can
tell an entire country, take the year
off.
Shabashem the land itself which has
feelings as we know. We know it from the
end of aos. We know it from the end of
Kadoshim that if immorality is wrong
all over the world. But the land of
Israel cannot tolerate immoral
immorality. And if one is immoral, a
people are immoral on the land of
Israel, the land will, as the Torah
says, vomit you out.
The land, the world cannot tolerate
injustice. But the land of Israel says
the Torah at the end of the book of
you shouldn't pollute the land. Meaning
that if there is a murderer who says,
"Don't kill me. I'll give you $20
million to build a hospital." And the
Torah says, "Don't take it." Okay, you
and I might have thought twice. The
Torah says, "Don't take it." Because not
only is it that the murderer is to be
put to death,
the land itself demands that there be
true justice in the land. Uh, so now
take a look. The Torah says for 6 years
you're to work. The seventh year you're
not to work. So you're not going to
plant until the eighth. If you're not
going to plant until the eth, it's not
going to come up until the 9th.
So how are you supposed to get by? So
the Torah tells us very simply. Now you
have to see twoim one after the other.
The first one is in Bahar chapter 25
which means or reads the orio the land
will give its fruit
and you will eat your fill
and
you'll live securely on the And good.
And then the Torah says,
"But if you should ask after all,
what are we going to eat in the seventh
year?"
We're not going to plant. We're not
going to gather in our crops. So, Hashem
says,
"I and only I will ordain my blessing."
Hashem promises for you in the sixth
year and it will yield a crop sufficient
for three years. Now, what does that
mean? It will yield a crop for three
years. It means that it'll be part of
what you plant in the sixth will be for
the seventh. You're not planting in the
seventh. So it will be for part of the
eth and part of the ninth. Unbelievable.
So what's going on here? What's going on
here is that this is beyond
nature, beyond the natural in any way to
look at it. And moreover, listen
carefully.
The Torah is teaching us the first verse
19,
you will eat and you will be satiated.
And Rashi says an incredible
three words. What does Rashi say?
Within your stomach, within your
intestines,
normally it takes a full sandwich, two
halves of a sandwich to satisfy a
growing boy. here your growing boy is
going to eat a half a sandwich and that
is going to completely satiate him. If
you take the Torah literally and you're
going to have three years of produce,
you need more silos. You need more
workers. It's going to be a wow bounty,
but it's also going to be extra pain and
trouble in the neck. Here we're getting
at everything but we're getting it in
quality not quantity. Whoa. Now with
this I believe we can understand the
very first verse in or the second verse
I'm sorry the very first verse in paras
God spoke to Moshe
Bhari Lemore literally on Mount Si
saying so the obvious question is it's
wonderful that the Torah is teaching us
the laws because of Shmita
and Rashi says, "Oh, what does this come
to teach us?" Just as Shmita has this or
these qualities just at this mitzvah of
Shmita has these qualities and were
given to us at Sinai. So too, says
Rashi, were all the mitzvah given to us
at Sinai. But the obvious question is
what's so special about Sinai that we
have to learn that all the mitzvos
emulate Sinai. So the shame is
in his commentary on paras
gives the following beautiful
explanation.
This Torah tells us as we will read on
the first day of Shabuos. And the Torah
tells us in chapter 19 in the book of
Schmos, the Torah says,
"On this day midbari,
on this day we came to Mount Si, the
mountain of Si, the wilderness of Si."
And then the Torah tells us again
and
and Israel what camped in the wilderness
opposite the mountain. So what's going
on here with the Torah stressing that we
were in the midbar of Sai and that we
camped as one by the mountain. So the
Mishmo says beautifully that really
Sinai encapsulates
two
opposite characteristics
both of which are needed on the one hand
we need the fact that Sinai as we tell
our children but it's much more than a
children's uh story. It is that which we
believe that all of nature is involved
in praising Hashem. And so the idea
behind it is it that when the Torah I'm
sorry when Tim says in TM 6
8 wo and go to verse 17.
Why do you prance oh you mountains of
majestic peace? Meaning what? Why did
you not give the Torah on us? And the
next verse 17 continues
that
the mountain that God desired for his
abode. And what is that?
because it is one of the smaller
mountains teaching us humility. So on
the one hand in order for the Jewish
people to achieve
is and
you need to have unity. You need to have
a sense of bele one to another. You need
to have anova humility. But at the same
time you also have to have as it says by
inbraim
whereby in
you do need a certain sense of pride in
being a Jew in being proud of all the
mitzvah of the Torah. So which one is
it? The answer is Sinai reflects both. H
so we're to learn from Sinai that we
need to have both. This is what Erit
Israel teaches us. Not just for the fact
that you have the laws of which defy all
of nature which is what our Torah is
beyond the natural. But take a look
everybody at one of my favorite sukim in
Vayikra whereby the Torah says in 26
colon 32
God promised that I will keep the land
of Israel as long as you are away in
gulos which was for almost 2,000 years.
God says, "I will keep the landow
and your enemies will be amazed that the
land is going to be desolate. They're
not going to be able to grow lemons,
oranges, potatoes, wheat to sustain
them. The land will be babysat by Hashem
himself." And I honestly believe that
each and every one of us should look at
this in two ways. On the one hand, like
God is giving each and every one of us a
divine wink. How important are you? You
are living in times. Take a look how the
land of Israel. Take a look in the
prophetes
chapter 36
verse 8. The land of Israel produces
commensurate with the number of Jews
that come. More Jews that come to Erit
Israel, the more the land produces. You
can't explain it to me logically, but
this is a miracle happening in front of
our days. And this is a divine wink for
all of us to recognize this miracle. But
on the other hand, we have to appreciate
and realize that it doesn't come from
us. It comes from him. And we are so
proud and try so hard for this perfect
harmony between on the one hand his
providing for us and our being the ones
who participate in this prophecy. Wow.
Ashenu,
how precious is our Torah. How real of
are all these metaphors that the rabbis
tell us? The rocks were arguing, the
mountains were arguing, everyone is
true. As it says in the sixth chapter of
of
chapter 6, Mishna 2. The Mishna says
that every day in the
levy every day a heavenly voice goes out
from Senai and says whoa unfortunate are
those who don't appreciate Torah. How
privileged are those who do appreciate
Torah. Every time we study Torah, we
should try and believe me it does come.
After the years, you will hear the voice
from heaven. Shabbat shalom to all.