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Rabbi Benjamin Yudin Discusses the Final Days of Pesach (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 the final days of Pesach. Chag sameach from NSN!
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Good morning, nachum. Good morning. Good
yom tov to everybody.
We are beginning this evening the last
two days of Pesach.
Before we get to this evening, I just
want to make one
or two quick halachic observations. The
first thing we should all be familiar
with is the term chametz she'avar al lo
ha Pesach, which means chametz that was
in the possession of a Jew during the
holiday of Pesach and the Jew did not
dispose of it properly or he did not
sell it to a non-Jew, but rather it was
in his possession. So, the rabbis
imposed a fine,
a knas, and they said that not only the
one who had the chametz, but any Jew is
not permitted to eat it or get benefit
therefrom. So, therefore, even if a
supermarket is owned by a non-Jew, but
the distributor is Jewish and the
distributor had the chametz over Pesach,
it would be a problem consuming that
chametz after Pesach. It is for that
reason that you must consult with your
local rabbi and find out from which
stores you can purchase chametz after
Pesach.
Secondly,
as we go into the yom tov this evening,
we do not recite asher yatzar
in conjunction with the last days of
Pesach. Women do not recite asher yatzar
when they light the yom tov candles
and we do not recite the asher yatzar
by the kiddush. Please God, we
Now,
let's talk first about Shvi'i shel
Pesach when we celebrate the miraculous
deliverance
of the splitting of the Red Sea and the
way in which the Jewish people were
saved from the pursuing Egyptian army.
The Meshech Hochmah in his commentary on
Shemot
in chapter 12 pasuk
16 the Torah there tells us u'veyom
harishon mikra kodesh on the first day
of the holiday it should be just that, a
holy convocation a Yom Tov u'veyom
hashvi'i mikra kodesh yihyeh lakhem and
the seventh day as well should be a holy
convocation. This was told to them in
Mitzrayim before they had any clue about
a splitting of the Red Sea. Notes the
Meshech Hochmah
that the Torah therefore tells us about
Shvi'i shel Pesach
to remind us that we are not celebrating
the downfall of the Egyptians.
If anything the theme of the Shirah is
the miraculous salvation that God
performed on our behalf.
But to quote the Mishnah
from
the fourth chapter of
Pirkei Avot
where the Torah
that Shmuel haKatan teaches
binfol oyivkha
al tismah
which means when your enemy falls do not
be glad u'vikhshlo al yagel libekha and
he stumbles, that your heart not be
joyous. Penira Hashem verab enav, lest
Hashem should see, and this should
displease Hashem, veyashiv me'af kapo.
Apo, and he turned his wrath from him
the enemy, God forbid, to you. So,
therefore, on Purim, we don't celebrate
on the 13th of Adar, but we fought and
defeated our enemies, we celebrate on
the 14th, when we rested, when we had
the rest, as opposed to their downfall.
And similarly, even Shushan Purim is on
the 15th of Adar, because they fought as
well on the 14th, and we don't
celebrate, as for example, in France,
they celebrate July 14th as Bastille
Day, where they're celebrating the
downfall of the enemy, where the prison
in the fortress fell in 1789,
we have a very different perspective on
what we celebrate. And this could be
further substantiated by the Gemara in
Brakhos kaf alef,
whereby we taught that Hanu Biryone,
there were certain boors in the
neighborhood of Reb Meir that would give
him an extremely difficult time. So, Reb
Meir was once praying to God for mercy
that they should die. His wife Bruriah
said to him, "What are you doing? You
shouldn't pray that they should die,
because after all, you are focusing on,
are you not, the verse from
Borkhi Nafshi, of yitamu khata'im min
ha'aretz, it doesn't say in 104 at the
end of that till him verse 35. It
doesn't say that sinners should cease
from the earth. It says that sins should
cease. He said she said to her husband,
pray that they should do chuvah and
guess what? That's exactly what
happened. Remayer heated the wise
counsel of his wife Bruriah, prayed for
mercy regarding these people and they
indeed repented from their wickedness.
On the one hand, we have this concept
that we do not celebrate
the downfall of our enemies. What are we
celebrating? We're celebrating
on Shvi'i shel Pesach
that God's deliverance can come in the
most unexpected
manner.
The rabbis tell us and we can well
understand what was happening at the
Yam.
In front of the Jewish people was the
sea.
Behind them in hot pursuit was Pharaoh
and his army. To the right and to the
left was a desert with its wild animals
and Bnei Yisrael, if you were to stop
and ask any of them, do you believe?
Yes. Has God brought 10 plagues upon the
Egyptians and did did he take you out of
Egypt? Yes. Is he going to deliver you
from this predicament? Yes.
How is it going to happen?
They said, we don't know.
Probably nobody
would ever have thought that the sea
would split. Perhaps well, the Ibn Ezra
says
it's almost
or most unnatural
for a slave to be able to raise his hand
against his former master
which is why they were afraid of the
pursuing Egyptians. They were in the
majority. God could have literally given
them that strength of character to fight
their former masters, but no, the
salvation came in the most unexpected
way, and that's why, interestingly, the
Talmud compares both the finding of a
wife as well as success in business to
the splitting of the Red Sea. We think
that we will meet our bashert in one
way, but in reality it comes in a most
unexpected way. He happened to have been
there, she happened to have been there,
and the rest turns out to be a beautiful
story orchestrated by God. And even in
business, people think that they know
how they're going to be successful, only
to find out that from the most
unexpected source, this one who they
happen to meet, if they happen to be at
the right place at the right time, all
this is orchestrated by God coming from
the concept of the Red Sea.
Now, something which is very, very
fascinating. On the last day of
Pesach,
the Kriyat HaTorah comes from the end of
Parshat Sre A. We read this when we
recite Yizkor, because Ish K'Matnat
Yado, the Torah itself says that each
person is to bring with them a gift when
they come to the Mikdash, and we bring
as well the donation of tzedakah when we
recite the prayer of Yizkor. But it's
the Haftorah of the last day, this
Thursday, please God, that I wish to
speak about, namely, the coming of
Mashiach. And just as on the seventh
day, the Yeshua at the Yam Suf happened
in the most unexpected way,
the Gemara in Sanhedrin chapter 76 amud
aleph, 80 Excuse me, 98a
tells us a most fascinating piece of
Gemara that Rebbi Yehoshua ben Levi met
Elijah the Prophet and he said to him,
"Tell me, when is Mashiach coming?" Said
the prophet to the great scholar, Rebbi
Yehoshua ben Levi, "Why don't you go and
ask him yourself?" So asked Rebbi
Yehoshua ben Levi over Eliyahu,
"Deheicha yosein?" "Where is he sitting?
Where is he to be found?" So Eliyahu
answered him, "Apischa d'karuta." "At
the At the gate of the city." And the
Gra, the Vilna Gaon, understands this to
mean "Apischa d'Romei." "At the gate of
Rome." It doesn't say that he is found
in Eretz Yisrael. The Or HaChaim
HaKadosh tells us he'll be born in Eretz
Yisrael. But where is he? He's in the
most unexpected of places. And what's he
doing there? Unbelievable, says Eliyahu,
"You'll find him among the poor who are
afflicted with disease. He sits among
those that have tzara'as. He's not found
among the elite. He's found literally
giving compassion to those who are in
that terrible state afflicted with
leprosy. And an interesting aside, the
Gemara tells us that all the other
people untie and tie all their bandages
at the same time, but he, the Mashiach,
unties and ties his bandages one at a
time. Why? Cuz he says, "Dilma min ba'ei
eina. Maybe I might be needed at any
moment. Any moment God's going to say to
the Messiah now is the time for you to
come to low e a cave and I don't want
because of my bandages, I don't want to
be delayed even for a moment. Wow. The
Messiah will come.
But it will be from the most unexpected
of sources
and places. Think about it. Moshe
of all the people to be the one to lead
them out of Mitzrayim. True, he was
raised initially in Paro's palace. But
60 years he was away and he's the one
who will lead them out of Mitzrayim. Who
would have thought that David would be
David
Melech Yisrael Chai v'kayam a descendant
of Ruth, right? Someone regarding whom
there was
much controversy.
What emerges from this very clearly is
as the prophet tells us ki lo
machsh'vosai machsh'vosaychem.
We don't understand. And literally,
God's thinking is so different from
ours. We would orchestrate it, we would
plan it one way and Hakadosh Baruch Hu
does it in his own innumerable way.
But what comes out from
the last days of Pesach is just as we
were redeemed in the past, so too we are
promised and that's such a strong word.
We are promised that there will be a
coming of the Messiah and I close with
reading to you one
or two verses from
this haftorah. You know, "Yom ba yom ha
hu and it will be on that day
Yosif Hashem sheinis yodo Hashem will
again show his strength liklos es shar
amo to acquire the remnant of his people
asher yishayer that will have remained
me Ashur u'Mitzrayim
mi Pasros mi Kush mi Eilam mi Shinar mi
Chamas u'mei iyey hayam."
Wherever the Jew will be, God will find
him and redeem him. "V'nosa nes lagoyim
and he, the Moshiach, will raise a
banner for the nations. V'yasaf nidchey
Yisrael and assemble the castaways of
Israel u'futsos Yehudah y'kabets and the
dispersed ones of Judah will he gather
in me arba kanfos ha'aretz from the four
corners of the earth."
Pesach is almost gone,
but we're left with this sweet taste
of for sure
the coming of our Moshiach.
Good Yom Tov
to all.
>> Mhm.