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Rabbi Ilan Meirov - Getting Ready for Shavuot
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We're standing here tonight
commemorating the shloshim
for our dear friend
Yaakov ben Malkah
alav hashalom.
It's still very hard to understand how
we lost
this pillar in our community.
A man that brought so much joy, so much
achdut, so much ahavah.
Not just to his family, but to the
members of the shul,
to the members of all the shuls he was
part of.
And now we're commemorating 30 days
since his tragic passing.
You know, we're standing right now
basically 48 hours away from Shavuot.
If I would ask you, what is
the most powerful day
in the world?
The most powerful day, most known day,
most effective day, influential day in
the history of the world? What would it
be?
Matan Torah.
The giving of the Torah. Why is that?
Because besides the Jews believing in
that day,
>> [snorts]
>> you have 2.4 billion Christians that
believe in that day.
And you have 2 billion Muslims that
believe in that day.
We're talking about 55, 60% of the world
believes in Matan Torah, the day Hashem
gave the Torah to Am Yisrael.
So, I'll ask you a question now. Very
simple question.
The holiday we're celebrating in 2 days
is called Shavuot.
Wouldn't it make more sense to call the
holiday Matan Torah?
Shavuot means weeks.
Matan Torah means the day the Torah was
given.
If I WOULD HAVE TO DECIDE ABOUT THE
NAME,
I would call it Matan Torah.
Why was the official name that's
accepted
called Shavuot, weeks?
So, rabotai, I'll give you guys a very
simple example
to make it more practical for us.
You know, when I was
about 15 years old,
there was a very big boxing match
that the whole world was talking about.
It was Mike Tyson versus Who know Who
remembers this?
>> [laughter]
>> We have good memory over here.
A guy named Holyfield.
Now, I did not go to watch this boxing
match. I actually went to go study with
my friend in Yeshiva in his house.
But, it happened to be that his father
invited 20 friends to his house.
So, they were all there glued to the TV
while me and my friend were sitting
studying for a program or test. I'm not
sure what it was.
And suddenly,
after I don't know, 20 minutes or so, I
HEAR EVERYONE SCREAMING, JUMPING, MAKING
NOISE. AH, WHAT HAPPENED?
IT'S A huge commotion.
It turned out that one of the fighters
bit the ear of the other fighter.
And I was like, "Wow, I thought you use
your hands in boxing. I didn't know you
use your mouth."
But, you know, when it comes to boxing,
for all those 20 guys in the room,
those 20 guys, you know how long it took
them to prepare for this match? One day.
They called each other up. Guys, get
together at this and this location. You
bring the food. You bring the drinks.
You bring the this. WE HAVE A GOOD TIME.
AND THEY WERE THERE WATCHING FROM A TV
SCREEN.
You look at the boxers
and you look at the spectators.
The boxers, they didn't prepare for one
day.
They prepared for how many days, guys?
Weeks, months, maybe even years in
advance.
They change their eating habits,
their sleeping habits,
their routine in terms of exercising.
They have so many months of preparation
FOR THAT ONE FIGHT THAT COULD TAKE
ANYWHERE between 3 and 15-20 minutes.
So, for the spectators, it's one day.
For the fighters,
it's an extended period of time.
When it comes to Matan Torah,
when it comes to the holiday
of accepting the Torah,
FOR SOME PEOPLE,
they're spectators.
They come, they give a kiss to the
Torah. You know, we're attached to
Hashem. We love you, Hashem. They have
the high necklace, Shema Yisrael.
Then you have other people
that are the actual fighters, quote
unquote.
They're preparing for weeks upon weeks,
improving their midos, character traits,
trying to understand the purpose of
life, trying to learn and analyze more
in-depth.
So, if you call the holiday Matan Torah,
it means just that day.
If you call the holiday Shavuot, it
means what? It's a process.
You don't get to the finish line
in one day. You got to work for quite
some time.
Rabbeinu Tam, there's one message we can
say about Yaakov
ben Malkah, alav hashalom.
He had, you know, different phases of
his life.
When he turned that about the truth of
the Torah,
he didn't become a Yom Kippur Jew
or a Shabbat Jew.
He was a person that put in day after
day, week after week, month after month
to invest in his spiritual growth.
And then eventually, baruch Hashem, with
his wife, and then building a family.
Rabbeinu Tam, he was
a person that was a fighter.
He wanted to be part of the action, not
just a spectator.
How many guys we know come to this world
as spectators?
But there's everyone saying this, saying
that. Everyone says this, says that.
Everyone does this. Amen. Amen.
They're not part of the process.
YAAKOV WAS NOT SATISFIED with being a
spectator.
He got to the point he's able to learn
and delve and pray and understand AND
TEACH and explain.
That's an unbelievable level that he
reached in a very short time period.
And now unfortunately we're sitting here
commemorating 30 days since his tragic
passing.
But we must keep his legacy, his way of
life alive.
He loved having
guests. He loved being around people.
So let's learn from him
to delve deep, to learn, to analyze.
Not just to be a
come to the day of, but build yourself
to the day of.
his family
his wife, his children, his whole family
should live long. And we should always
always have good health.
We have a special speaker here tonight.
I feel like I'm going back to third
grade. Rabbi, what are you doing here?
You're making me nervous. Rabbi Jonathan
is a rabbi who's been inspiring tens of
thousands of people around the world.
And his not just his lectures, but his
books,
his CDs over the years have really
touched so many lives and he agreed to
come here tonight to speak in memory of
our good friend Yaakov ben Malkas. We're
going to give him the
the microphone.