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Rabbi Maor Bendel - Living Life with Bitachon | Chazaq
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Okay, good evening. Welcome everyone to
tonight's very special sheer. Of course
I'm Rabbi Khazak and Baruch to think of
course the show one Torah probably in
stores every single week.
And of course we're just
almost over a little bit of over a week
ago we had Shavuot and we know
that the receiving of the Torah was
done. He shall have a living heart with
with the entire Jewish people of all
backgrounds, everyone united as one. Of
course every single week this sheer
happens every every week every Monday
night 8:30 p.m. right over here. So of
course different topics of course the
same great Rabbi Mendel joins us all the
way from Brooklyn. So of course not only
come yourself, bring your friends, bring
your family except for this very special
sheer of course every single week. And
there's a special sheer tomorrow night
Rabbi Rabbi David Lau, the former Chief
Rabbi of Israel is speaking tomorrow
night at 8:00 in Shevach Israel on
Jamaica Estates. It's in the Young
Israel of Jamaica Estates.
Only about 10 minutes away from here.
And tonight's sheer is being dedicated
for a full shleima Moshe ben Kochava a
time better
Yaakov ben Adina Miriam bat Rafa should
have a complete and full shleima. Amen.
And also the zakar nishma in loving
memory of Elio ben Bucho, Ella bat
Miriam, Miriam bat Zilpa shalom and
Aliya. Amen.
And
I've so
there was there was a person right he he
was he for for years he was he got
inspired he saw there's
on the news on WhatsApp they they they
everyone's talking about the Olympics.
So what does he do? Pretends to train
he's like he's like I want to run 5
miles a day. He's running running
running. Finally gets he gets invited to
go to Beijing one of the countries to
actually perform in the Olympics. And
what happens? He sees there's these
these these these barriers these
obstacles that are in the way. So what
is that what happens? He go he goes over
to the official and says this is not
fair. I I didn't I didn't I didn't
practice for this there's obstacles get
them out of the way so we can start the
race. So what do you say? He said he
said in order for it to be the
that means there has to be obstacles.
There has to be barriers in the way."
And and of course in in life sometimes
you just want to go to the straight way
and we say, "Why does Hashem Why is this
happening to me?" But of course if we
have if we take the lessons that we're
going to learn tonight about having the
right bitachon and having the right
mindset of maybe things don't go exactly
as we want, but we have the right
mindset with the right lens, then we'll
definitely we'll we'll have the right
perspective and it'll be a definitely
great way of life and uh
and we're going to call upon our our
Rabbi Bender, of course, give us the
right perspective, the right lens on
>> So, you know what after that? I don't
think I need to speak anymore. I say
it's chalos. You covered it for tonight.
Beijing, Beirut
Hopefully not Beirut. Okay?
>> [laughter]
>> Baruch Hashem, we're meeting each other
since 2 weeks already.
We didn't get a chance to see each other
since after Shavuot.
I want to
It happens to be that uh
Rabbi Bender touched on a few points
that actually I want to talk about
tonight and I think that if we get into
these topics, we'll understand in the
end how all these things correlate.
>> Which Yom Tov?
>> We just came out of Shavuot.
I haven't seen you guys since then. I
know it's been a week. I haven't seen
you guys since then.
We came out of this immense holiday.
And you're counting up to the holiday
every day. 1 2 3 and you know that every
day you're supposed to work Mishnah
Pirkei Avot, 48 different levels and
every day we're working on another level
and we're growing and there's excitement
and it's building and the day is finally
coming.
And the week of you have cold feet,
you're like, "Oh, it's it's going to be
tonight." I don't know if I At least for
the men cuz you have to stay up all
night and you're like, "Oh, it's like I
had I had to speak Shavuot night twice.
I had to go speak at Shavuot night
twice. So, you know, in the middle of
the night at 2:00 in the morning to
speak is not
9:00 at night. You know what it is to
keep a crowd entertained at 2:00 in the
morning? It's not easy. It's a lot of
pressure. You're coming in, you're
having this aliyah of excitement.
And then you finish, you're praying in
the morning in the morning, you pray
Shacharit, you come home, you go to
sleep, you wake up, if you're lucky at
12:00, yeah, maybe 1:00, you wake up,
and you have a little chag, Yom Tov.
And then, holiday is over.
So, now what?
There's this momentum.
And now what?
And I think the greatest example of this
is like imagine a chatan vakallah.
Husband and wife, whoever is married,
Hashem will want this feeling. Whoever
is not, Hashem will get married this
year. Amen.
Now,
when you have a person who has a long
time been waiting to get married,
especially in the system of the shivah
for the woman, when you have a friend
that hasn't got married for a long time,
and they finally announce that they
found the one.
Right? It's It's exciting.
So, there was a boy who was having a
difficult time finding his shidduch. All
of his friends, you know, this one 21,
22, 21, 20, 18, 19. One was from Syria
at 16. Yeah, everyone had his own
had his own thing, you know what I mean?
And this guy is seeing it's taking him
time, and usually
at some point you get secluded out. Like
you're the guy, and okay, he's not there
yet, everyone's praying for you. He
finally goes on a shidduch, and he finds
a girl, and everybody hears that things
went well, and they're looking to to go
forward. If they're Ashkenazim, they're
ready to do the tenaim, the conditions.
If they're Sephardim, the parents
already met, they did a swainy. What is
it called? Swainy? I don't know. I'm not
sure. Swainy can't
Swainy can't really get
They're ready to go.
So, what happens now? Everybody's
excited for the day, they're counting
down the day. So, he's excited, it's
finally coming, the day is coming, and
he's counting, and he's doing everything
he can.
The wedding finally comes, beautiful
wedding, everything's amazing.
They have the next day they wake up
shivah brachot. By the way, we don't
have tachanun after shivah brachot for a
few days, shivah brachot. So, they have
simcha after the wedding.
And then afterwards, they have shivah
brachot. Every night with a different
celebration, friends are over, family.
And then all of a sudden
everything stops.
So, the guy comes to the guy and he says
to the guy,
"Rabbi, there was so much excitement and
momentum coming here. And now now what?"
Now the wedding is over, the counting is
over, we're not we were the day Now
what?
So, I would told him, "Now you build."
Now you build.
When you coming to Shavuot, we're
getting to the place where we are we
we come to the level where we're fit to
accept the Torah. We get the Torah. It's
the highest reach the peak. We reach the
pinnacle.
And then we come off of that. Now what?
You have this feeling of now what am I
supposed to do? Now you build.
Right? It's like a dose brings down that
every year
we're judged on Shavuot how much Torah
we're going to have for the next year.
Every year on this holiday Hashem
re-marries us. We re-marry the Torah.
And everybody knows in marriage the
first and most important year is shana
aleph.
The first year.
Why is that? It's because it's the year
they build the foundation.
The year they filled they filled they
build the foundation of their marriage.
I'm going to tell you this agav, side
note, just because I mentioned this
concept here.
A lot of people in the world said I
didn't want to rub they became very
prominent
to date for long periods of time before
getting married. And the reason why
even if you have to have a according to
nature it's not the right thing to do is
because when a husband when a man and a
woman build a foundation they build a
foundation in their home when they have
shared responsibilities.
They're in a house together now. They
have responsibilities, there's food,
there's kids. So, they build a reality
together which works together.
But when the husband when he lives at
home with his parents and she lives at
home with her parents they don't have
any shared responsibilities then their
foundation is built on a life of no
responsibilities.
They meet whenever they want, they go
whenever they want, they do whatever
they want. And then they date for a
period of time and the foundation was
built crooked. And then they tried to
build a house, and everyone ends up
happening, the house collapses.
Because once there was responsibilities
hit, it's like, "Wait a minute, I didn't
sign up for this. Wait a minute, I
didn't expect this. Wait a minute, when
we were dating, you didn't tell me."
Some people don't understand, they think
that it's a scary thing, the shidduch
process. I always tell people, "Give me
a resume." Resume, rabbi, I don't know
what it
As if it's something so scary, so
far-fetched. Like as if that they don't
have today a matrimonial dating app.
What's the difference if it's printed on
a piece of paper or virtual?
You have a a thing.
And you know what? And I spoke about it
in the past with the importance of it,
but shanah is the most important years
because you're building the foundation
of your relationship.
You're building what will be your home.
You're building the the connection
between the husband and the wife and
their joint responsibilities, how they
work together.
When a man comes into the house with the
woman,
he doesn't know all of these things that
he needs to do.
And therefore, when the foundation isn't
built right, when they come in from the
beginning, and they build together, she
tells them, "Look, I need you to be this
type of way, and I need help with this
and this and this and boundaries and And
then they'll have a happy marriage.
It'll be much easier for them because
they set the right responsibilities,
they have guidelines, and everything is
set up the right way. The first year is
the most important year because they're
building the foundation.
They're building the foundation of the
marriage, and every single year
we remarry the Torah every year. So,
every year is our first shanah, shanah
rishonah.
Right now, we're in shanah alef. Right
now, we're in the first year of our
marriage to the Torah.
And yes, the marriage is exciting and
the engagement process and the picking
out the flowers and picking out the
dress, and all those things are very
exciting, but they're not when you're
building your relationship with your
spouse.
The building happens after the fact. So,
right now, we're in a state of building.
Right now is where we're building the
foundation of relationship with the
Torah.
And how do we build this foundation?
What is the pillar
of the foundation a person needs in
order to get to
to the proper relationship with
What is the proper foundation he needs
to have?
And in this I want to bring you a proof
from the Torah.
We just came out of Naso
and Bamidbar.
Over there counts the Jewish nation.
But counts
the Levi'im, the Levite tribe,
separately.
Says the Midrash, Bamidbar Rabbah, Moshe
Rabbenu was concerned. He said, "Why are
you counting them separately?
Maybe they have a blemish." Moshe
Rabbenu said, "Maybe the Levi'im are
something is wrong with them. They're
not counting them with everybody else."
And reassured him, he says, "No.
I separated this nation for myself
because they're the ones who are going
to do the in the Mikdash. They're the
ones who are going to be the
They're the ones who are going to do all
the
and therefore I will count them
separately.
They're going to carry the Aron, the
Parochet, everything. All these things
we're going to see in a minute. And
therefore I'm counting them separately,
not because something is wrong with
them, rather to show you their elevated
status."
And the Midrash tells something very
interesting. What does it tell us? It
tells us that tells Moshe Rabbenu
everyone else was counted from 20 and
up.
The Torah says from 30 till 50 the
Levites were counted, but the Midrash
tells us that they were counted from
birth.
From as little as a few days, few weeks.
So Moshe says, "How am I going to know
how many Levites there are in their
houses? It's not appropriate. Imagine
now I come to your house.
A rabbi comes knocking at your door,
"How many are you in there?"
Moshe Rabbenu said,
"It's not Oh, yeah, I'm going to go to
people's houses now, standing outside of
the tent trying to count. It's not
It's not nice. I'm going to go to
people's houses now. I'm Moshe Rabbenu,
not that Moshe Rabbenu was the most
humble person that ever lived. He would
have done it, but it just wasn't for the
Torah, for the rabbi to be standing
outside of your house to ask you how
many babies you have in the house."
says, "Don't worry.
You go to the tent. You just stand
outside. Don't even knock on the door.
I'll tell you who's how many are in
there." So Moshe Rabbenu went to the
tent and he heard a bat kol, a heavenly
voice come out and say eight. Okay,
eight in this house. Next, nine, 10 and
so on and so forth.
What was he teaching Moshe Rabbeinu?
Lo alecha hamlacha ligmor
ve'ein ata ben chorin l'hivatel mimena.
The Mishna in Pirkei Avot says, it's not
for you to finish the job, however,
you're not exempt from trying.
Hashem tells Moshe Rabbeinu to do the
maximum effort you can possibly do and
I'll do the rest.
Go and stand outside of the tent. But
according to the teva, according to
nature, just standing outside of the
tent I'm not going to get the numbers.
Hashem says, don't worry, divinely
intervention, I will take care of the
rest.
And so too it is when a person lives his
life with Hakadosh Baruch Hu. And I'll
tell you even further,
Bnei Kehat,
the family of Kehat, which were the ones
who are the highest elevated level, they
were the ones who were in charge of
carrying the Aron. They had the highest
job, three brothers. Three brothers they
were in the Levi family. You know who
they were?
You had Gershon, Kehat, and Merari.
Three brothers.
However, interestingly enough,
Hashem switches the orders of Kehat and
Gershon. He takes the older brother and
puts him in the middle and takes the
middle brother and puts him on the top.
He counts him first. Says the Midrash,
what happened over here?
The Midrash answers because Kehat was
the one who held onto the Aron, Hashem
elevated his status.
Hashem counted him first even though he
wasn't a bechor because he was the one
who held onto the Aron. He was the one
who carried the holy ark.
The holy Aron.
Now listen to this. This is where I was
trying to get to. And we're going to get
there in a minute. I want to just talk
about a point in that as well, remind
me.
Or they also have to tell we'll see in a
minute.
Three brothers. And I want you to know,
Chazal teach us that when a parent names
a child, Hashem gives them a little bit
of ruach hakodesh. Everybody's name has
a reasoning. Whatever your name is is
mamash shayach to your purpose in the
world.
If your name is Gavriel, if your name is
Binyamin, and so on and so forth. That's
why I do not like, I'm telling you
personally, I don't like when people use
nicknames.
Because it's mutima mazal shelim.
And this is not only I write, I talk
about it.
That when you go to the they call you
Israel. When they give you a name, your
name is your dusha. And therefore if you
give a kid two names, you have to use
both names.
You call him
Yakov Israel, Meir Israel.
So you have to call him by his names.
All my children
Leah, Yakov and Chaya. I don't give them
two names. Why don't I give them two
names? Because no one's going to call
them by those two names.
And I'm
to call all of my children by their
name.
So
because that's their mazal.
Your mazal is in your name and your name
has a direct origin of who you are.
Hashem gave your family divine your
parents divine intervention when they
named you because your name like for
example, what's my name? My first name?
Huh? It's Ma'or. What's Ma'or mean?
Light.
Not because I give light to the world,
huh? So I said oh you see Ma'or Ma'or. I
said well you're not reading it right.
It's Ma'or. What does that mean? Ma'or.
Where you place emphasis. Ma'or. This
guy's light.
This guy's light.
>> [laughter]
>> This what? Light? No. They see me and
say this guy's light. Light. But it
means that there's a in the name. And
every person same thing.
So too Hashem gave every single one of
these tribes a name. Kehat
Gershon, Merari.
What is Kehat?
Kehat was the one who held the Aron. He
was on the highest level.
This is the one who's right now you're
holding on to
every single one of them has an with
Hashem. Every single one of them has a
job in Hashem's life. What does that
mean? Every single one of them has a
purpose in reality. Sometimes you're
going to be Kehat. You're going to be
holding on to the Aron. You're going to
feel hot. You're going to feel
excitement. You're going to feel
motivated.
That's Kehat. Kehat. That's what someone
told me in English. Kehat, I'm hot.
I didn't realize that until after he
told me that. But yeah, you're hot right
now. You're holding onto the Aron. And
Gershon, what was their job? They held
onto the curtains.
What is the word Gershon? Yeshu.
They kind of distanced me. Yeshuti. They
moved me back. Someone is holding onto
the curtain now. And Merari,
bitter.
And what was their What did they hold?
Merari. What were they holding? What did
they carry? The pillars.
Merari were in charge of of holding the
pillars. The foundation. Make.
Sometimes in life you're going to feel
hot. Sometimes you're going to feel
pushed back. And sometimes you're going
to feel like my life is bitter.
Guess what? That bitterness is the
foundation.
Is the pillars of the Torah.
You don't get to the point of Kehat of
holding onto the Aron if you're never
with Merari.
At the bitterness in those moments of
your life is Hashem telling you right
now, I'm growing you. I'm advancing you.
I'm taking you to the next level.
And that's why it's the pillar. You ever
seen a pillar of a house? Are they
pretty?
Are beams pretty?
Pillars are the most unbeautiful thing,
the most non-beautiful thing in the
whole in the whole house.
And most of the time you don't see them.
Where are the pillars over here? Anyone
see any pillars?
They cover them up. They put them away.
Why? Cuz nobody sees them. But what
happens if I take out one of the
pillars? What happens? The building
collapses.
So Merari could be the least pretty
thing in the whole entire world. Yeah.
It could be the thing that doesn't make
any sense. Yeah, I was tired. No.
Those moments are the pillars of your
life.
Those are the times when you build the
foundation of your relationship with
Hakadosh Baruch Hu in the difficult
moments.
In the hard times is when you build a
relationship with Hakadosh Baruch Hu.
And then slowly you make your way from
Merari to Kehat to Gershon.
But you have to know
who is the one who's carrying you.
Says the message of Sota,
when they carry the Aron,
how do they carry it?
You were so on those pictures,
illustrations. Yeah, you have like the
the four beams and one is carrying like
this, another one like that. So, the
make it hot, everyone had to be facing
it. So, the one in the front were
walking like this.
No one could have their back turned to
that one. That's how they would carry
it. Everyone would carry with their face
facing the Aron.
How much did the Aron weigh?
Huh?
Says the message of Sota, it was
weightless.
>> So,
>> Weightless. What is it weightless?
They didn't carry it, it carried them.
What does that mean?
Whenever they held on to the Aron, the
Aron lifted them up.
Sounds weird. Sounds a little bit far
fetched, whatever.
Well, let me tell you a story that comes
down in Yeshua Ben Nun, you mean.
You guys know Yeshua Ben Nun, right?
Yeshua Ben Nun was the one who took over
after Moshe Rabbeinu. He's the one who
brought the Jewish nation into Eretz
Yisrael.
It was the 10th of Nissan, 2,488,
40 years after Matan Torah Tino.
Yeshua Ben Nun is comes to Yarden. You
know what Yarden is? Jordan.
Now, the Jordan in the spring time, you
know, the river is roaring downstream.
The Jewish nation says, "How are we
going to get through? Oy oy oy, how are
we going to pass?"
Yeshua Ben Nun Ben Nevuah, in godly
intervention, he tells the Kohanim,
"Take the Aron from the Levi'im, even
though they normally carry it, you carry
it now.
And Hashem is going to show you guys a
miracle now that you will know that
Hashem will be with you as you cross
this river, and you will be goyish, you
will take out all the people from this
land, and you will get the land that
Hashem promised you from the creation of
the world. This will be your land, you
have nothing to fear."
Kohanim take the Aron, they put their
feet, their toes touch the water. All of
a sudden, like a wall, boom, the
downstream stops. And they have
wet, dry land.
Yeshua tells everybody to pass except
for the Kohanim. Everybody crosses to
the west side of west bank of the
Jordan. And then, the Kohanim are
sitting over there with the Aron on the
other side.
Joshua ben Nun tells them to take off
your leg. They take off their legs, the
stream goes down again. How are we going
to get across now?
How are the Kohanim going to get across
now?
This is what Rashi brings down.
The Aron picks them up in the air
and carries them over to the other side
of the river to show them the miraculous
way.
Says the Tiferes Tzion, "Masha madim,
something amazing."
He says, "This is what we actually get
to see before
with our own eyes a time when Hashem
carried us and we didn't carry him."
What does it mean?
The Torah carries us, we get to see what
the Gemara in Sotah tells us, we get to
see with our own eyes. The Jewish nation
saw when the Kohanim were picked up by
the Aron and and taken over the Jordan.
And he says, "Take it even a step
further." Wow, this is masha masha
madim. Everyone pay attention what the
Tiferes Tzion says in the Pri Yemidrash.
Shemot Rabbah.
He says four things Hashem commanded us
to do.
He tells the Mikdash to carry the Aron.
Carry the Aron.
Why?
Because every one of the things Hashem
asked us to do in this world are only
small manifestations of whatever Hashem
does with the world itself. Hashem tells
Mikdash, "Carry the Aron the same way I
carry the world."
Hashem tells the Kohanim and the Leviim
to guard the Mishkan the same way guards
the world. He tells them light the
menorah the same way I light the world.
He tells bring korbanos on the altar the
same way I sustain the world.
Here's the Tiferes Tzion. All of these
things Hashem told you to do in this
world, even though he doesn't need you
to, every single one of these things are
only a small manifestation of what
Hashem does with the world in order to
teach you that everything you do is not
for Hashem.
"I don't need you to carry the Aron. I
don't need you to light the menorah. I
don't need you to bring sacrifice. I
don't need you to pray. I don't need you
to come. I don't need you to do
anything.
Hashem doesn't need you to do anything.
Hashem tells you, "Guess what? I can do
it all by myself, but I don't want to.
I want you to do these things,
but not for me, for you.
Cuz when they're carrying that on, they
don't realize they think they're
carrying that on. They're one is really
carrying them.
When you come to shul, you come to shul
Torah, you think you're carrying the
Torah on your shoulders now? No, the
Torah is carrying you.
Every single you do in life, when you
make a bracha, you think you're carrying
the Torah? You think you're carrying the
bracha? No, the bracha is carrying you.
When you live a life of Torah, that
becomes a shira. That becomes your
guidance. That becomes what helps you in
life.
I gave you something amazing, good
lecha.
It's two ways to pronounce lecha. I gave
you something amazing. Don't leave it.
Why? Not because Hashem benefits
anything, because you benefit anything.
But we have to know
that we're the ones on Hashem's back,
that Hashem is the one who's carrying
us. And therefore, in those moments of
worry, in those moments we feel bitter,
we feel like, "Hashem, where did you go?
How did you leave us? What happened?" We
have to understand that
is with us in these moments. And about
those are the moments we're growing the
most.
Those are the moments he's lifting us
up. We can only understand
is the one who's is the one who's
holding us.
The Maggid of Dubno.
You guys heard of the Maggid of Dubno?
The Maggid of Dubno was famous for
always having a parable for everything.
I think I told you guys last week how he
always had a parable. I won't say the
story again. I want to show you everyone
has a sefer called Mishlei Yaakov on the
parasha. He always brings out parables.
It's amazing to see it. Every time I see
it,
it's as if something how he thought
about these things is amazing. He was a
mind of a genius.
He said there was once a rich man
walking in the along the way. In the
times, there was no cars. There were
horses and chariots.
And the rich man goes around the way.
And he's going through this trail
on his horse with his chariot and he has
his rider and
and he's in the back.
And they see this popper,
poor man, sitting on the side of the
road.
So, the rich man has a hamim. He says,
"I have feel feel bad for the guy. Let's
give him a ride."
So, the guy, poor popper popper, he gets
into the carriage
and he's sitting over there with the guy
and he's holding his bag on his back.
So, halfway to the way they driving they
riding they riding they riding they
riding
the rich man looks at the poor man and
says that, "Why don't you take off your
book bag?
Put it on the floor. Put it somewhere
over here. Put it on the chair." He
goes, "No, no, I don't want to add any
anything more on you. You guys already
helped me out so much. I don't want to
put the weight of my bag on you as
well."
The rich man tells the poor man, "Are
you crazy?
>> [laughter]
>> You're already here.
What is he going to help you holding the
bag? Just put the bag down. Anyways,
we're holding the weight."
This is like a mashal for a person in
life who thinks he's carrying himself. I
goes to you already gave me life, but
this burden I'm
going to go says you're already standing
in my carriage. You're already standing
on my shoulders. You're already with me.
Just put the bag down.
But the reason we get to the places of
we get to the difficulties in life
because we think we're holding the bag.
I should just put the bag down.
Put the bag down.
You're in my carriage. You put it down.
This is the beginning of the we should
not be like this this foolish popper.
I goes to you I'm holding you.
You're in my carriage now.
I'm lifting you. I'm carrying you. Put
the bag down.
But instead when struggles come our way
when difficulty come our way we don't
allow ourselves
to run away from it.
I mean, we don't allow ourselves to put
the bag down.
We allow it to fester and sit and cause
us more pain and anguish and make our
lives more difficult because we think
that we're holding the bag.
But the minute we realize that who is
the one who's holding that we're holding
on to
and he's the one who's carrying us,
then we realize that the only answer we
have in life is to hold on to that one.
And the way you get out of me is you go
to Gershon and then you get to Kohath.
What does that mean? There's steps.
First things first, you have to you feel
like I'm in me, I feel bitter.
Then you have to realize, wait a minute,
it's not bitter. So, what did you just
get to now? You upgraded to Gershon,
Gershon, you're a little bit further
away. And only then can you reach the
level of Kohath, which is upholding onto
that one.
We all have these moments in our life.
We're going to feel motivated, we're
going to feel driven, we're going to
feel amazing, we're going to feel like
we're holding onto that one because I
feel like I am with you.
I feel like I am close to you. And by
the way, cuz our teachers, you know what
they can have used to do when they're
holding that one? They would sing songs.
You know why?
To resemble Malachei Hashareit,
the ministering angels of God. They show
you the same way Hashem, they're close
to you up there, we're close to you down
here.
A person who knows that he's carrying
that one, and that one is really
carrying him, reaches a place where he
can sing to Kodesh Baruch Hu.
Tov l'hodos l'Hashem.
Constantly, every day.
To pray to Kodesh Baruch Hu, to sing to
Kodesh Baruch Hu, because you're close
to him.
And the way you get closer is to come to
these things.
When we separate ourselves, when we make
ourselves go away,
we think that
I'll tell you a beautiful chiddush.
This week's parashah
talks about Behaalotecha. What is
Behaalotecha?
It doesn't say hadlakatecha. It doesn't
say when you light. It says when you
uplift.
Says the Pnei Me'orot, he brings Kad
HaZal, Rashi brings it. Why does it say
when you rise up?
Because there was a step they had to
rise up to.
Says the Pnei Me'orot, Baal HaChassidut,
he brings down in Chassidut languages
that what was this step that a person
needs to step up to? He says Yirat
Hashem.
Before a person can get to the place
where he's the menorah, he has to get to
Yirat Hashem.
And therefore, when the Torah says seven
menorahs, he says over there talking
about what? That the seven days of the
week
draw the success and the sustenance from
where? From Shabbat.
Because on Shabbat, a person is to get
the Hashem
awareness of God, which is dragged
itself to the whole entire week.
Now, on this point
Okay? This is what the This is what the
9 says.
On this point
I want to say specifically the day
that the
in the eyes of people is the most
difficult day.
Is the most restricted day.
Is the day that you can't do exactly
what you want. Is the day that the rest
of the week draws sustenance from.
It's specifically specifically from the
E
from the limitation, from the
difficulty, where you draw sustenance to
the heart.
It's from when things are difficult,
that's when you grow. That's when you
take it to the next level. And that's
what is giving you new souls.
A new face came here.
But you have to go through it.
But when you understand that I'm here
now, put down the bag. Stop holding on
to it.
Let go.
I wrote down this a long time ago. One
of my favorite E.
One of my favorite parables.
There was a guy
walking in a snowy path.
And he starts to notice
that next to him
he's seeing footsteps. He's walking and
he sees footsteps.
He gets afraid. Oh, what's going ON?
WHO'S OVER HERE? ANYBODY? OH, WHAT'S
GOING ON?
AND THEN HE HEARS A HEAVENLY VOICE COME
OUT FROM HEAVEN.
He says, "Oh, it's me, I'm walking with
you.
I'm walking with you."
Okay, you're walking with me.
Thank God.
And they walk and they walk.
And all of a sudden the lion comes.
And the lion starts coming to attack.
And he looks down and he only sees his
one footstep.
So, he screams at the shamayim and says,
"Hashem, how come you left me in my
moment of need?"
Hashem tells him, "You're mistaken, my
boy. The footsteps you see are not
yours, they're mine. You're standing on
my shoulders."
You hear me?
When difficult times come in our lives,
we think, "Hashem, why did you leave
me?" Hashem is telling you, "I didn't
leave you. The reason you only see two
footsteps is because you're standing on
my shoulders."
Close. The problem is that we don't know
that.
We have to put down the bag.
We have to let go
in those moments
and have the faith.
That by holding on to the Torah
Hashem says, "This Torah that you think
you're uplifting now, it's really
uplifting you."
This avodah that you think you're doing
now, you think it's uplifting, you're
lifting if you think that you're doing
something with it, you're doing
A person who lives a life I told the guy
today,
a guy that was a working guy,
full-time working guy,
he left everything went to yeshiva.
Comes to me today and tells me, "Abba, I
don't know, it's very difficult, it's
very hard. My family, my this, my that."
I told him,
I heard one time Rabbi Elimelech he says
beautifully,
we know that Torah was meyuchas
was given to who? The Levi'im.
That who? The ones in Egypt? Who are the
ones who went to war? The ones who never
became slaves? The Levi'im.
The Torah is meyuchas to Levi'im.
Comes Rabbi Elimelech and he asks the
Rebbi Pesach, "What do we tell the kids
to do with the afikoman?"
To steal it.
We tell them, "We're going to hide it,
you find it and steal it away. And if
you want to if if you ask for it back,
we have to give you presents. Oh, I'm
going to buy you next week a toy."
What are we teaching the kid? To steal?
In the Pesach, now we're teaching you to
steal.
You know, your lesson for Pesach is be a
ganav.
Not only you're a ganav, you're a ganav
in ganav cuz I also was a ganav when I
was your age.
>> [laughter]
>> You have seen
you teaching him to steal?
So he brings a question to the Rambam
that he says what are you teaching him
to steal?
The Torah.
So you're right, I'm not a Levi.
But I can be a Levi. How? By learning
the Torah. Anyone who learns he brings
the Rambam, anyone who learns Torah
becomes a Levi.
Anyone who learns the Torah gets the
ethos.
But you can own it there.
Steal it. Embrace it.
I told you you're on what an honor it
is.
You know what a scoot it is?
So you steal it, you embrace it, you
have it. It's the best thing you could
possibly ever have.
But it's difficult.
This is the mega lady. This is the
difficult moments of your life. But
guess what?
When you overcome this,
that's when everything becomes more
sunny.
But first things first you have to
overcome the difficulty.
If you look throughout history,
all of the greatest people in the world
always had difficulty in their lives.
Even Hacham Ovadia,
when he came out with Sefri Hilchot Olam
and the Ben Ish Hai,
there was Rabbis in Eretz Yisrael who
would burn his Sefarim in the streets.
They would take his books and they would
burn them.
And Hacham Yitzhak would come to Abba
and say Abba Koev, it hurts to see
people coming and burning Maran's
Sefarim, Abba's Sefarim.
Not random people now, more Am Haaretz,
guy doesn't know nothing. Rabbanim
Chashuvim, big Rabbis in Eretz Yisrael
are coming and taking your books and
burning them.
Maran told them this is Mishna Pirkei
Avot. Kol Machloket Leshem Shamayim,
Sofah Lehitkayem. Any Machloket that's
for the right purposes, Sofah
Lehitkayem, its end will continue.
He says you're going to see there's
going to be a time when I leave this
world after 120,
when Maran after leaving this world,
there will not be a Shul in the whole
entire world that will not be one of my
books in it.
Until today you're never going to find a
not one in the world. In the whole
entire world, doesn't matter if they're
about or if they ask, doesn't matter who
they are, they don't have at least one
safer of Maran.
To prove that all the he was in
Shamashamai. And today we see it.
Everyone in the world has moments of his
life, especially when you want to do
something good, there's always going to
be pushback.
There's always going to be people
telling you, "Don't, no, this, that."
How many times?
But guess what? When you're the one who
perseveres,
how many people are we know?
Think about it right now. Think about
your friend group. Think about people
who who who became more religious and
everyone started laughing at them. "Bro,
come out. You going to
Come out. You're not going to come and
play Shabbat and play basketball now
with us. Oh, the big rabbi, the big
rabbi."
They love to make jokes.
But guess what?
Fast forward in 10 years, that same guy
who was the big rabbi, the big rabbi,
actually is the big rabbi.
And guess what? Who's calling him for
questions and answers? "Rabbi, I'm
struggling." Who is that? The same guy
who told him, "Rabbi, you're not going
to come and play basketball with us on
Shabbat." Yes.
I tell you
my circle you.
This is something that happens every
single day.
It's the ones who hold themselves
accountable.
The ones who take themselves in their
hands and say, "You know what? I'm
responsible for my reality."
If I'm not
me, if I'm not for myself, then who will
be for me?
And therefore, it's my responsibility to
hold on to Torah.
When I hold on to Torah, the Torah is
uplifting me.
And everyone else in the world laughs,
and he has his bitterness, but guess
what? Through that bitterness, through
that difficulty now everyone is telling
me something and giving me comments,
from that will come the biggest growth.
From that I'm going to reach the heart.
From that I'm going to reach to the
place where I'm holding on to the own.
So, every single one of us are looking
for the issue.
And that's how we get there.
We get there, like Robbie said in the
beginning, with the obstacles.
That's how we do it.
That's how we overcome, that's how we
grow, and specifically in those
difficult moments where Sham gives you
all the issue that you need.
That's when opens up for everything.
Therefore, don't run away from that
adversity.
Embrace it.
And say, you know what,
right now I'm
no problem. Now I'm going to move up the
ladder to get strong. I know that I'm
with you. Until I get to
I realize I'm holding on to that one.
Really, that one is holding on me. Then
I can let go of the bag that I've been
holding on to this whole time and
realize really I'm not alone here. I'm
on your shoulders and this burden is not
on me.
And that's where the issue comes.
That's where the salvation of every
single person in life comes.
When he realizes these things.
And therefore, every time in your life
when you find yourself in a difficult
tell yourself, I'm growing from this.
I'm growing from this.
I can't wait to see.
Someone is different when something
difficult you should be happy.
Should be elated. You understand? You
think that is a no? Every time a guy
something bad that comes his way, you
think he's crazy and the heck is he's
thinking and he's dancing, he's happy.
So, what's going on with you?
I You know why I'm happy?
Because I know that if this is what's
coming to me, wow, I can only imagine
what is being done in Shamayim.
He's not thinking about today. He's
thinking about wow, if this is what's
coming now, then guess what's going to
be tomorrow.
When you realize that every time in your
life
when there was a little bit of
bitterness,
it was only for you to get to
get to the point where you're holding on
to that one.
Then those moments come and you're
happy.
Cuz you're growing from them.
That's how we elevate our self.
That's it.
That's how we go up that level.
Specifically when we do the things that
seem difficult, that's how we grow in
life.
That's what wants from
us. That's what he wants from every
single one of us. And not for ourselves.
I mean, not for for ourselves.
Everything we do is not for him, it's
for us.
So, says take this responsibility, hold
on to it. You're coming at a now. Now
it's your year to build.
Now it's your time to build your
relationship with me.
Make your commitments. Build your
structure of the day. Build your times.
Build your in.
But build.
Build. Don't leave everything up in the
air. I have a class this night. I'm
doing this. I'm doing that. I'm doing
that. I'm building the foundation of our
marriage.
And so to every single year, that's how
we grow in the Torah.
It's exactly what we're doing now.
The magic may have faded. We feel like
we already passed it all. No. Now it's
time that we actually build the
foundation of our marriages, which will
give us everlasting happiness.