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Heat. Heat.
[Music]
Okay, thank you for coming. I appreciate
it. Um
uh tonight Shorim are dedicated uh uh
for the aliata
uh in memory of Ruven Ben Simka
dedicated by Dana Bolad Krauss. Uh Mosha
Ben Manahim whose yard site is on the
23rd of Manakimab dedicated by Sarah
Fyer Routman in memory of her maternal
grandfather also in honor of Ri
Bradwoods for sensitivity to mental
health issues affecting the Jewish
community. Uh may he be to continue his
Torah. Thank you very much. I I
appreciate actually every braha and uh
the Ramban brings down an interesting
point just if I could digress that uh he
asked the kasha that sur when she hears
from the three
that she's going to have a child so she
laughs and the say to
why is she laughing and the raan asks
why is sor condemned surah thought they
were three Arabs sor thought they were
over there bodor uh she didn't know they
were angels of god But why should she
pay attention to it? So the Ramban says
an important that whenever you get a bra
from anybody any source you always say
amen. So I I say amen to the very nice
brah. I appreciate it. Number three uh
Miriam Basar Shimon Ley Shalam uh
dedicated by fine who were so to have
here tonight. Welcome. Uh and this is
his mother's yard site is the 28th of
August 8th. Um, oh that's today. Okay.
And thank you and thank you as well for
your own harra that uh many many people
enjoy. And finally a special dedication
by fineold for the aliyah nama for her
father David Mosha ban fish and her
brother Yon and David Mosha. Again we're
very very grateful for the support of
Tyra. May it be a big zus for all of the
families whether it's for Afua or
whether it's for the alias nama of of of
um the para this week I may zigzag a
little bit because last week I didn't
speak about av because I spoke about the
15th of a so I'm going to speak a little
bit about avail but this week's para is
para again remember that the entire book
of devour is taking place the last six
or seven weeks of Mosher Rabenu's life
this is the 40th year uh the book of
begins rovat
Moshe is going to die next month the
seventh of Adar so the entire book are
Moshe's farewell discourses as he is
leaving the world and Mosha Rabenu
starts off with the puk this this para
behold see I am placing before you
speaking in the name of Hashem a
blessing and a curse uh it's interesting
that paratrier is always read either
Rosheshello or the Shabas in which were
Rosheshello the Shabas before Roeshello
and the Mapor point out that there are
many many illusions in the para that we
are approaching the season of L the
season of introspection the season of
chuba the season in which we prepare
ourselves for the judgment of Roshashana
by trying to make ourselves as good as
we can we can do so let me just share
share with you a few of the illusions uh
of paras uh to to kello. First of all
note the following idea
uh grammatically the pusk is a little
inconsistent. It starts off re look see
that's a that is in the singular.
So in English you wouldn't know the
difference but literally you're
switching from a singular to a plural is
a
lif in front of you is the second person
plural. Why does the terrorist switch
from Yid to Rabim? Point number one. So
the clear gives actually a very very
beautiful simple straightforward answer
to this and he says that Mosher Rabenu
in this discourse is describing a
ceremony that is going to take place
when they cross the yard after his death
in which six tribes are going to stay be
on one mountain Mount Gerism and six
tribes on Mount Ael and the Kohanim and
Levim in the middle and they will be
pronouncing blessings and curses and the
nations will theatim will answer amen.
Now there was something very very
pivotal at the ceremony of mount gerism
and mount aal and that is the
introduction of a new fundamental idea
in Judaism called call is araven zazaf
every Jew is responsible for every other
Jew until that ceremony until they cross
the ardane which Mosher Rabenu was now
talking about everybody was responsible
for themselves if I did mitzvos I got
rewards
If I did aos, I got punished. But the
notion that I'm responsible for what you
do was aes the notion of kal is like one
goof and therefore there's a mutual
responsibility. The word ar is a
guarantor like a loan. You borrow money
and you have to pay. If I'm an ar which
is a foolish thing to be uh I am
guaranteeing the loan, right? Famous
last words. Oh, just sign your name. You
know you're not going to have to pay.
Again warns in the book of Mish many
many many times unless you're prepared
to give the money as saka which you know
if you can do it you can do it do not be
an ar because you're going to wind up
paying so
means that every Jew is literally a
guarantor but that was nitadesh
only after they cross the ardane at the
ceremony of mount kisma and mount a so
now the cleer says hashem is speaking to
the y Yay you the individual
you are now going to be connected to the
whole seabore so whatever you do will
impact not only on you it will impact on
everybody and therefore be very very
careful a person might say I don't care
if I go to hell in a hand basket it's my
business it's my life the answer is it's
not your life besides your immediate
family which of course you're always
connected to what you do affects am
Israel v that the path of bless blessing
and curses is in front of everybody. So
the cleer connects this to the idea of
krael aren zel that is going to become
activated in the ceremony of mount
gerism and mount ael which mosher rabenu
is describing right now although it's
not going to happen until the book of uh
the book of
inidas they have a beautiful pun because
the word which literally means guarantor
I am a guarantor for you you're a
guarantor for me can also be connected
at homalytically to the word which is
sweet.
Every Jew is sweet to the other Jew. I
look at another Jew and I see sweetness.
I see goodness. Let me point out that
is not just a spiritual concept in terms
of how God interacts with us which is
important enough. It also has very
concrete implications. You know, the
general rule is that I cannot be
mozzardated.
So that's why a who knows Hebrew
cannot blow chauffeur or read migillah.
Um a woman who is not in chauffeur
because it's a timebound commandment
although it's customary that they hear
it cannot blow chauffeur for a man. a
kan below bar mitzvah cannot do any
mitzvah for somebody who is in a mitzvah
because this is a famous rule a very a
very important idea that if you're not
muy in the mitzvah you cannot do it for
somebody else so now let's ponder the
following let's imagine it's Friday
night and I made kdish for my family so
I was yay kdish I'm no longer kayan
kdish I was yay kdish and Then you show
up and you knock at my door and let's
assume for whatever reason I can offer
you to make kdish. Yeah, but let's
assume you don't want to make kdish. Am
I allowed to make kdish again for you?
Now if you were to apply the simple rule
that once I'm not in a mitzvah, I can't
do it for anybody else. I'm not in the
mitzvah anymore. So how can I do it for
you? It's a blessing in vain. So Rashi
explains that I am since every Jew is
responsible for another Jew. If you
didn't hear Kdish, it's not just your
obligation. It's my obligation. So I
could make kdish again. And if after I
made it for you, somebody else showed
up, I can make it again and again and
again and again. And Rashi says
explicitly that this principle is based
on Israel
that is enough to make you know I'm not
only in my mitzvah I'm obligated in the
mitzvah that you have right so that's
and the explains that that is the shift
from the to the because the is going to
be assuming a responsibility again The
Tommy Drew Shami gives uh the famous
mushel of people on a boat. We're all on
a boat and there's a leak that develops
under my seat and the water's coming in
and the other people on the boat want to
fix the leak and I say, "Mind your own
business. It's under my seat." The
answer is if my part of the boat has a
leak, the whole ship is going to sink.
And therefore, like the old cliche, a
chain is only as strong as the weakest
link. also applies to the Jewish people.
We have a of
responsibility towards each other.
So that's uh the first observation and
of course as we enter the season of yum
no we have to think about our mutual
responsibility it is brought down salant
a very beautiful thing that one of the
atos one of the practical strategies for
trying to elicit a good judgment is to
make yourself a person that other people
depend on because even if I don't have
so much merit on my own but if other
people need me, I kind of get the
benefit of their needing me. It's good
to be a person that is needed by others
and whatever level whatever level it is
because then you get the benefit of the
zusim of the other people not just not
just yourself. Okay. Uh second point
again these are just general connections
between uh the message of the parha and
the season of yim
is you will note that there's only two
choices here. Behold, I am giving you,
Hashem says, a path of blessing which
gives you life and connection to God and
happiness and a path that leads to death
and destruction. Even if in the short
term there may be some pleasures that
you get. Now, we don't think of things
as two choices. I mean, isn't there a
third choice called neutral? There's the
path of life, the path of death, and
then there's the path of neutral. Since
the Torah does not talk about three
roads, it only talks about two roads.
That actually means as the Alavos writes
that there is no such thing as a neutral
decision in life. Something either
brings you closer to God
or if it does not bring you closer to
God, by definition, it's wrong and will
take you further from God. Yeah, that
doesn't mean that does not mean that the
only thing you can do in your life are
mitzvah. I mean within this framework
there is room for vacation. There is
room for recreation. There's room to go
out to eat. But the above explains and
again the Rambam re reiterates this with
great eloquence that every single
decision you make has to be done with
some type of intention that this will
feed into my avodas hashem my service of
God. So if a person needs relaxation a
person needs recreation a person needs
to calm themselves down because there's
anxiety or agitation.
So yeah, so go on vacation, do whatever
you need to do. That's
but understand that you're doing it to
replenish your batteries and to
regenerate enthusiasm and avote.
And then the Rambam says even the
recreation becomes a mitzvah becomes a
hashem because you're doing it for the
purpose of being able to serve God. So
therefore a person has to ask himself
actually there's a Christian book but
but the title is good so I'm going to
borrow the title. Uh it's called the
purposedriven life.
That's a very good that's a very good
phrase. Purpose driven meaning every
decision you make
should be based on the purpose of your
existence.
Lincoln again
Lincoln.
Oh Lincoln said so Rick Warren got it
from Lincoln. Huh? Victor Frankle.
Oh, Victor Frankle. Okay. I'm not sure
if Okay. I'm not sure um if Rick Warren
got it from Frankle or not, but okay. Uh
obviously Victor Frankle talks about
man's search for meaning, but he uses
the phrase uh purpose- driven life.
Okay. But but it's the same it's the
same idea for sure. So therefore, that's
why there's no such thing as a middle
road. Something either gets you in the
right direction or ma automatically
takes you in the wrong direction. The
vil nagon says in his commentary to Mish
when a person is not going up in life
they are inevitably going down. It
reminds me of an escalator. I don't know
if you did this when you were a kid. I
used to do it. I haven't done it lately.
And that is when you have an escalator
going up. I'm sorry going down going
down. So you try to go faster. Can can
you go up on an escalator when it's
going down? So you got to be faster than
the escalator. If you simply stand still
on a escalator going down, you're not
going to remain where you are. You're
going to go down automatically.
You have to exert energy just to stay in
place. So there's no such thing as being
stagnant. And therefore the rem here to
the two roads is you're either choosing
to advance in life or you're
automatically going to be dragged going
to be dragged down. That's uh point uh
point number two. Now point number three
is actually a little subtle and uh it
depends on closely looking at the words
of the puss.
Let's look at the words of the puss.
Behold I am placing before you today. Re
see that I'm placing before you today a
blessing and a curse. Okay. Then it says
the blessing is
a tishu that you will listen
to the commandments of God. Now let's
look at the curse puzz. The curse puzz
makes sense. The curse will be if
you don't listen to God's will, bad
things will befall you.
So note that this is not symmetrical.
What the Torah should have said to be
consistent is the blessing is if you
will listen to the commandments, God
will give you good things.
The curse is if you don't listen to the
commandments, God will bring bad things.
That would have been an equivalence
between the blessing and the curse. But
that's not what the Torah says. The
Torah does not say the blessing is if
you keep the commandments you will have
good things. It says the blessing is
that you will keep the commandments.
So what does that mean? So the em is
Rashi was sensitive. One of the great
things about Rashi and the Kamaliitz
used to emphasize this over and over
again is that Rashi almost always is
trying to answer a question even though
Rashi doesn't always ask the question.
Meaning Rashi will give comments on
verses.
But when you ask yourself why is Rashi
saying what he's saying you will often
not always you will often discover some
textual difficulty that Rashi is trying
to answer even though he doesn't
particularly point out what the
difficulty is. Uh so uh one of um
Tomidum was a good friend of mine who
was a very eminent clinical psychologist
Dr. Vic bancheka
uh and uh he was a kim but also he was
close to and he wrote five volumes in
English called what's bothering rashi
which exactly goes to a lot of rashis
and shows how rashi's comment is
answering a question now rashi comments
on the braha is that you will listen the
word ashare and rashi says aare does not
mean that in this pk but it means alinas
on the condition that you will listen.
So therefore what rashi is trying to do
is by a re-ransation
of the word aair the braha is if or on
the condition that you will listen rashi
is creating the symmetry between the
braha and the klala. So rashi is bada
trying to make them the same. But in
truth this is a bit of a forced
interpretation because ashair normally
means that you will listen. So how do
you explain it? The braha is that you
will listen. So the truth is you can
actually explain this with a very uh
interesting and important teaching of
the Rambam Mymanades
in Hilas Chuva in the laws of repentance
and my manades discusses hab right the
Rambam discusses that the reward for
mitzvos is not in this world you really
do not get rewarded for mitzvos in this
world that's why righteous people
sometimes suffer all reward for mitzvos
is in the world to come. And this is the
teaching of our sages
mitzvah
bah alma lea reward for mitzvos in this
world doesn't really exist. So then the
ram asks an obvious question.
How can kazal say there is no reward for
mitzvah in this world? Doesn't the Torah
say in this parha and in last week's
para and many places that if you keep
the mitzvah of God,
you will be rewarded in this world with
health and with wealth and with
prosperity and with fertility. The Tory
very specifically always ties reward to
this world, not necessarily the next
world. So the Rambam gives the following
answer. The Rambam's answer is
when you do mitzvah and God gives you
goodies in this world, he is not really
rewarding you. Your real reward is
but what God is doing is since you've
shown you want to do mitzvah, I will
give you more opportunities to do
mitzvah. You'll have more money so you
give sodaka. You'll be healthy so you
can learn more Torah. In other words,
according to the Rambam, the reward you
get in this world is not reward. It is
enhanced
opportunity. And that is why by the way
a righteous person will sometimes suffer
because the righteous person is so good
that he will do the mitzvah even under
conditions of difficulty and therefore
he doesn't need the carrot of enhanced
opportunity to rise to the occasion. You
see, if this would be an issue of
reward, it's unfair to deprive the sadic
of reward. But if you understand that
the whole purpose of what are called
rewards are simply mechanisms to enhance
opportunity. So that sadic doesn't need
those incentives and therefore he what
he'll do through difficulty counts much
more. So this is how the Rambam
interprets the meaning in Peravos of the
Mishna
that says mitzvah mitzvah.
The reward of a mitzvah
is a mitzvah. Exactly that. The reward
that God gives you for a mitzvah is the
opportunity to do more mitzvah. And if
that means you need to be healthy, if
that means you need to be comfortable,
if that means uh uh you need uh a more
serene life, then that may be given to
you but not as reward. It doesn't come
out of your but as enhanced
opportunities. So the ubiquitous thing
that
I tell you when you give them stuck
mitzvos, may you merit doing mitzvos.
That's exactly what the Rambam says the
nature of reward. Now based on that
Rambam the Puk is actually very very
exact.
The blessing is a share tishma that you
will be able to do more and more
mitzvah. Yeah. And if that means uh more
and health and everything else you'll
get that. But it is only in the nature
of directing you and enabling you and
empowering you to do more mitzvah. So
according to the rama
the lion of tishmo is very very exact.
Uh all right so so far I think we
mentioned uh you know three points. We
mentioned the shift of lash to lashim
based on k is every Jew is responsible
uh for uh each other. We mentioned the
idea that there is no neutrality in
life. Every decision should be made in
terms of does it bring me to my goal or
does it not bring me to my goal. And as
the vagon says
uh ano y ano ola mala mala when a person
is not going up it is inevitable he will
be y ma ma. And then the notion that
what we pray for in life is not so much
I want to be rich, I want to be healthy,
I want to have children. We pray for the
mechanisms that will enable me to serve
Hashem in the best possible way. And if
it includes all of those things, then
yes, then I should ask Hashem for them.
But I'm not asking them as a reward for
my mitzvah. I'm asking them as enhanced
opportunities. That's why in the
when we ask Hashem to remember us for
life, it says
remember us for life
the God that's desirous of life
inscribe us in the book of life
for your benefit. So the explain that's
the type of life you're asking for. Give
me a life that will be lived for your
glory. In other words, not that inscribe
me in the book of life for your sake.
Rather, it means give me a life that's
that will be for your for your sake.
Right? So that's the uh third point.
Okay. Uh I'm I'm sorry that's the second
one. Third point, the third point was
the notion that aer tishu again means
that the reward is given for the
enhanced opportunities. Okay. Um a
fourth point is the word hayom. That's
very critical. Look look at the word
here. See
I am placing before you today
underline today a blessing and a curse.
You are at the fork of a road. The
highway branches off in two directions.
There is a direction of life
and a direction of death.
Now you're at this fork of the road
today.
What day is today?
Today is whatever day it is. Every day
is a today.
When Mosher Rabenu was speaking, today
was the day he was speaking. When I read
the Torah, today
is now.
Right? Those words
have an eternal reverberation across
time.
And this is extremely important. Rabeno
Yona
uh one of the great rishonim
wrote a classic book that is often
studied during this time of year called
Share Chuva the gates of repentance it's
been translated in English as well a few
times and he goes through the steps of
changing yourself improving yourself
growing how to come to God and ask for
forgiveness very very beautiful book by
the way legend has
that the reason he wrote the book Shahit
Chuva is as a young man he participated
in a campaign against the Rambam's
philosophical writings
to the perplexed where the Rambam tried
to integrate Aristotilian philosophy and
Judaism
and there were segments of uh the
karedum of the time who thought that was
improper and they wanted to ban the
Rambam's books And in a few places the
Catholic Church actually burnt the
Rambam's books uh because if the Jews
were opposing it that gave them an
excuse to burn them
and Rabeno Yona later felt that this was
very very improper especially since
around a few years later there were 24
wagon loads of Gammoras
handscopied manuscripts of Tolman that
were burnt in Paris
and that virtually destroyed destroyed
all of the swarm
in France
and the gdollum of the time were were
connecting that as divine punishment
for what was done to the Rambam's books.
You burned the Rambam's books, we're
going to burn your books. Gantishov, one
of the keynotes on Tishabove
from the Mami Rutenberg Rutenberg is
about the incident of the burning of the
24 wagon loads of the Gomorrah that's
shalliame.
It's towards the end of the keynotes. I
think it's number.
Uh but it is said that Rabenu Yona was
so heartbroken
over the sins of his youth
that he resolved
to write a manual
teaching others how to do chuva which he
applied to himself. And in addition he
lived in Spain. And he wanted to travel
to Erit Israel to ask forgiveness
at the grave of the Rambam. The Rambam
was buried and is buried in Tavaria.
And what's the if I hurt somebody and I
didn't have a chance to ask their
forgiveness while they were alive?
According to the I am to go to the grave
with a minion of people
and ask Maka at the grave.
Rabeno Yona wanted to go to the Kev
of the Rambam. The story has it that he
left Spain to go to Erat Israel and he
died before he got there. So he never
got to Erit Israel. But be as it may um
if you have the occasion, it would be
very worthwhile
uh to look at the safer Shahit Chuva.
But Rabenu Yona wrote a much much
shorter version almost a summary of
Shahit Chuva only like five pages that's
called Yodat Chuva the foundation of
Chuva and in some moxars I think the
arch moxar they don't reprint the shar
chua that would have been 200 pages but
they they reprint the assoda chuva which
is like a five-page summary so it's very
to look at but it's interesting that in
the Isodacha
even though it's supposed to be a
summary he actually says some things
that he doesn't say in Shah Chua so
there's actually some new points in
Yodachuva
that are not emphasized in Shahit Chuva
and one of the most beautiful points
that he makes in Yodachuva is the very
first thing a Balchuva has to understand
is I'll paraphrase like the t-shirt
saying Today is the first day of the
rest of your life. Meaning sometimes a
person might feel that they're so lost,
they're so far from Hashem, they're so
much on the wrong road
that there's no way they can retrace
their steps
and never get back.
And Rabeno says, "No, every single day,
not just every single day, every single
minute is a new decision."
Meaning, no matter where you are on
whatever road you are,
you can decide
to go on the right road. And that's the
greatness of Hayom.
Every day is new. Every day is a new
beginning. There is no such thing as
your being locked in to your past life.
What you were does not limit what you
can be now.
And what you can become is not limited
by what you are now either. Right? So
your past doesn't dictate your present
and your present doesn't dictate your
past.
The notion of hay
today
the vil nagon even talks about this ina
he says if the beat you as you were
saying one you're saying you're asking
god for knowledge your mind is wandering
so he beat you for that one you come
back with the next
or whatever it would be meaning you
don't you don't have to have this idea
like people sometimes say oh well This
shimona assay is a waste. All right, I
might as well just get it over with.
Even in learning, a person's in yeshiva.
So you have a long learning session of
three four hours and let's assume that
you know for 2 and 1/2 hours you know
you were just wasting time. It happens
you know so there's only a half an hour
left. So sometimes ah it's only half an
hour I'll just skip it. No no no you get
a half an hour in five minutes you know
you can make the last five minutes
worthwhile. person has to understand
every moment
there are new decisions and that's the
power of hayom and that's why yona says
that although it is part of chuva that
we think about our past and we regret
our misdeeds
but you don't start with that because if
you start with focusing on the past you
get immobilized
you get depressed
you kind of say ah it's just too hard
rather don't think about the past just
say hey what are my opportunities right
now and then you build yourself up and
then you have progress
and then afterward you go back and you
confront the things you got to fix but
it shouldn't be the start of your
process because at that point if you
focus too much on the past you're not
going to move towards the future and
therefore that is the greatness that is
The greatness of Hayong
every day is a new start, right? And
that that of course is a very very
important message. I I mentioned last
week, but I'll repeat it and I'll
probably repeat it in future weeks as
well as we get closer to the Yam Ray.
You know, uh particularly those who have
been in yeshivos,
uh the the the month of El has, we might
say, a certain heaviness about it. And
the truth is you can never shake you can
never really shake that heaviness. It's
a serious time and people go around you
know sometimes with a very serious
demeanor like nobody in fact this goes
back to Europe. I mean we saw Solander
tells the story now we saw Solander died
uh towards the end of the 19th century.
So he grew up in the 1800s. So he writes
when he was a child like 1830 1820 he
was talking about the amadin the fear of
judgment that existed during and he he
said when he was a child he remembered
that when the would say when they would
bless the new moon roes l will be you
know yeom
there would be a cry from the women's
section and women would faint they would
swoon now that was Not because of the
cooking they would have to do on a
three-day object, but rather there was
such a fear of judgment.
And you know, people from Lithuania say
they they remember stories. I I hear a
lot of these stories. If uh two kids
were fighting, just fighting like kids
fight uh the mother would just stick her
head out of the window and say, "It's
evil." And the kids was like, "Stop,
right? Stop right away." So there was a
certain notion of amasadin.
Amasadin is fear. We're on trial for our
life.
Very very serious time.
And in truth we can't deny that on
rashana
god decides who will live who will die.
On rashashana there's a preliminary
judgment.
The judgment is sealed on yum.
But there's a big downside to this
because if we focus so much on the fear
and the trepidation.
So there are some negative consequences
there.
Either we get depressed, we get broken,
we lose our sim in our vote
which is very very tragic.
Or what might happen is since we don't
want to be in a depressed state, we tune
out and just ignore the message. I'm not
talking about going off the deck. I'm
talking about people who are keeping
mitzvah. meaning I just want to glide
through rashashana and yam kipper just
kind of being catatonic until I get to
sukus when can I when when I can finally
have a good time and be relieved of this
incessant internal pressure that keeps
on gnawing at me. So these are the two
responses that are both dysfunctional.
One is the response of depression,
nervous breakdown
and the other is the response of
obliviousness. I just want to forget
about this. I want to be catatonic. I
wish I could sleep from roesh
till not not even till
get up for
but the thing that we got to remember is
that side by side with this idea of God
as judge
l
is a time of love
a time of reconciliation a time of care
a time of compassion Remember
that ll has many illusions in different
verses
but the most famous illusion
is the puk in Shiraim.
Now Shirram is a romantic book of the
Bible. It describes a passionate
relationship
between a woman who seems to be a
princess
and a shepherd. Actually, if you if you
if you look at Shira Shirim totally from
the narrative structure,
it's not so clear is it a three
character play or is it a two character
play? Meaning to say the following. We
have this woman and she's in love with
somebody, but that somebody is sometimes
described as a shepherd and sometimes
described as a king. So there is a
question are we talking about two men
are vying over her or is the king the
shepherd and it's all the same as I even
from a literary standpoint it's not
clear if you were to simply say what is
the story line in Shirim it's not so
simple but the point is though that
kazal deemphasized
the human romantic aspect of Shirim
in fact
there were rabbis who didn't want shirim
to be in the Bible. They wanted to ban
it like banned in Boston. They wanted to
censor the Song of Songs. They said,
"What are you putting in romantic love
songs in Tanakh?" It almost got
excluded.
Although, as I say, as is true for all
censored books, probably more people
would have read Shir had it got
censored. But okay, but it was going to
be censored from Tanakh.
So, who was the great savior? Who was
the great protector of Shirim? Rabi
Yaka. Rabi Yaka taught if all of the
songs and all of the poetry in Tanakh is
holy, Shirim
is the holiest of holy because it is a
metaphor. It is a martial the passionate
love that God has for the Jewish people.
God is the king. God is the shepherd
and the Jewish people is the woman. And
therefore all of the romance, all of the
passion, all of the emotion, all of the
feeling
is God and us together. Even the tragic
misses, right? There's scenes in Shira
Shirim where the king or the shepherd
knocks at the woman's door at night and
the woman plays hard to get and she
says, "I've gone to bed. I've taken up
my robe. You know, how can I go back
again?"
She's kind of playing hard to get. And
then she finally gets up and opens the
door and her lover is no longer there.
And she wanders the city looking for him
and she gets beaten and harassed.
Do you see what that is describing in a
metaphoric way? God is waiting to redeem
us. He's knocking at the door. of Salvia
without getting into Zionism wrote a
very very famous beautiful drussia
that's been translated into English cold
doc the voice of my beloved is knocking
regarding the state of Israel regarding
the implications
right this is from a religious scientist
perspective that this is God knocking on
the door to redeem us and we're not
ready we want to do other things but
when we finally get our act together
Hashem They say it's not the right time
right now. Right? So, Shir is a power
once you understand this, it's a
powerful metaphor. All of the different
scenes
are playing out how much God yearns for
us and how much we yearn for God. But
sometimes the yearnings don't mesh cuz
God has a schedule which is not
necessarily our schedule. And when we're
ready, you know, Hashem says it may not
be the time. So in that song of songs
there is a repeating phrase a phrase
that appears more than once
where the woman proclaims
an
I am for my beloved one. I pledge my
loyalty
and my love and my devotion
to my beloved one
and I'm confident. The woman says, "My
beloved one pledges to me."
[Music]
So what do the commentaries say? The
commentaries say that if you take the
first letter of those four words, alf
it spells the word. Lol is Anila doi.
Now think about that because that is so
different than the image of lol that I
portrayed a few minutes ago. I portrayed
the image of ll as heavy, as depressing,
as scary, as frightening, as
guiltridden.
But the icker idea of ll is this is the
month of love and reconciliation.
where we can fix things, we can repair
things, we can make things good again.
And God is yearning. God is not like a
gotcha person looking for our little
flaws. We can say gotcha, gotcha,
gotcha.
He doesn't want us to fail.
He's rooting for our success.
Which will ultimately be to our benefit
much more than than his benefit. So as a
result therefore lol itself
is this great amount of love
and as RV cook points out and again I'm
I'm drawing on things I said already but
it's worthwhile to repeat
comes when you feel a security in your
relationship with God.
If you feel God hates you, you know,
you're going to say, "What's the point?
What's the point of trying anything?"
You got to be secure
in God's love. And then you build then
you try to become a better person
because you're secure in that love. You
know the love is there. And therefore of
Cook points out that although Chuva does
require introspection
and Chuva does require a lot of internal
work but it's and that may involve
confronting dark corners and things that
are not so pleasant,
right? Parts of us that we would prefer
we didn't have to look at. But
ultimately it comes out of joy. It comes
out of inner joy. the inner joy of
fixing things, making things good
because I'm confident and secure in
God's love. And that comes from the
notion of hayam. Going back, segueing
back to the notion that the past is the
past, but I got a present to deal with.
And I can make the present good. I can
choose any given moment. There's no such
thing as being so far along the negative
road that you can't get back. It's as if
imagine uh exit ramps. There are
infinite exit ramps off the road of
death onto the road of life, right? So
you miss this exit, there's another exit
like immediately, right? Exit, exit,
exit. The exit ramps are always going to
going to be there, right? So these are
some of the great great uh lessons in
para sria as we prepare for the notion
of chuva. One final point and then I'll
say something about last week's para
just to be yay last week's para uh is
that note that the term that's used to
introduce the idea of a blessing and a
curse is the verb that says ri
see look
and again inasides there's a very big
point
that it's sometimes not enough to have a
braha
you need a braha
to be able to see the braha.
You know, God gives us many, many
blessings,
but we just don't see them. Remember by
Hagar when Hagar was expelled from
Abraham's house and Ishmael is dying of
thirst.
So, it says God sent an angel who opened
her eyes
and she saw a well.
It doesn't say God made a well.
God opened her eyes to see
the well that was already there.
Now that's an idea that applies to a lot
of life.
Life is filled
with blessings,
but we don't see them. The re is God is
telling you if you keep my commandments,
make the right choices, I will give you
the eyes
to see
the blessings that are already there.
And that is why hakara sat
is such an evocative expression. The
term we use for gratitude in Hebrew is
hakar sat. But if you translate the
words very very literally
means to recognize the good.
Right? It's not called uh
it's not called thank thanking for the
good. It's recognizing good because the
very first step that enables you to be
grateful for something is to know that
you have it.
Until you recognize it,
you're not going to ever be
appreciative.
So the rea is see the blessings in your
life. See the blessings. You know, Rabbi
Victor Miller was a libera
um a great great teacher. He died a few
years ago. Uh he taught for over 70
years. Um he's a little controversial
now. It's interesting because uh there
there were almost I sometimes think
there were two Rabbi Millers around uh
but I'm going to talk about the
non-controversial Rabbi Miller uh who
stressed over and over and over and over
again based on the Salvos the idea of
gratitude of seeing the blessings in
life that God gives you. uh he has a
long talk I mean I can't do it justice
like 20 25 minutes description of what
you might call a meditation on eating an
apple where he talks about color and
taste and the mix of acidity and
sweetness and the texture and he has the
same thing for banana the idea of
meditating on fruit and and all of these
different things uh as a way of
fostering gratitude. He talks about how
you raise your children that way that
you know we often complain about the
weather right that's Mark Twain's famous
remark everybody complains about the
weather but nobody does anything about
it uh so when it rains I remember there
was a cartoon in the New Yorker it's a
it's great cartoon where two elephants
are coming down the gang plank of the
cava of Noah's arc
one elephant says to the other elephant
what a lousy vacation it didn't stop
raining for 40 days you know it's like
not even realizing their life was saved,
you know, because they were on the ark
and the like. And we're kind of that
situation where uh you know, we complain
or we don't appreciate it's too hot,
etc. So, so Miller had a whole thing
that you try to raise your children with
a certain attitude of optimism in life
that when it rains instead of saying,
"Oh, it's rainy, you talk about how
great the rain is and when it's hot, you
talk about how great the sun is." And
you try to turn everything positive.
Positive. Now it sounds like a game and
maybe to some degree it is a game but
the games that you play the games that
we play do have an impact on how our
children view the world and even have an
impact as to how we view we view the
world. We can change our perceptions in
a lot of ways. We can't necessarily
change the external realities and this
does go back to Franco. The realities
are what they are although they do have
that thing. What is that thing they call
it again? Uh you think hard enough about
something you can change the it's like a
pop culture thing now. Uh but I'm not
going with that. Let's assume that you
know I more or less don't have control
over the external realities but I can
view them in different ways. There was a
movie. Now the movie's premise even to
me sounds utterly preposterous but but
it it made an interesting point. What
was it called? It was about a father and
a son in a concentration camp of all
things, a concentration camp. And the
father didn't want the son to know that
he was really in a death camp. So he
made it like a game. So the kid said he
was hungry and the father said, "Well,
that's our adventure. you know we're
going to see you know and somehow again
the premise is so preposterous it's very
very difficult to believe in that
context but it was making a point that
you can take very difficult situations
and you can reframe them and look at
them in different ways and then the
perception movie
say again
Italian movie
yes what's that movie life is
okay I I know the English I don't
remember the English title I mean I am
aware of it in English but I think it
was made Life is beautiful.
Life is beautiful. That That's correct.
That's correct. So again, it's such
almost an absurd premise, but but in its
core, it's conveying a certain insight
that is very very true, although using
it in a very extreme extreme uh
situation, right? And that's the notion
of gratitude sat.
Hashem will give you a braha to see to
see the brahos that he put into your
life. Very very important idea. Now I
remember um well so this will actually
give me a segue to the final thing I
want to share with you from last week's
para and that is um last week's para we
learned that there is a mitzvah of
benching. When you eat food, whether
it's bread or whatever it is, you got to
thank God, right? You have to
and that's
you eat and you're satisfied and you
bless God. Now, this is the blessing
after you eat. The blessing before you
eat, interestingly enough, the
Gomorrah's conclusion is is midra.
You don't have to make a bra
before you eat food
and you have to
you only have to make a bra after you
eat food. Now the interesting thing is
when it comes to Torah learning
we actually go with the opposite
premise. You're obligated to make a brah
on your Torah before you learn it. And
according to Nakmanadities, that's a
Torah requirement.
But you're not obligated to make a
blessing after you learn Torah.
So the question is why when it comes to
food,
the after braha is more important than
the before braha.
And when it comes to Torah study, the
before braha
is more important. There isn't even an
after braha except when you're called up
to the Torah.
So the meta sim
says a very beautiful thought
says that what is the purpose of a
braha? The purpose of a braha is to
sensitize us to be grateful
for what god has done for us. Teach us
gratitude.
So he says when it comes to food when
you're in a state of need
the gratitude is instinctual and natural
and automatic and it doesn't have to be
concretized
in a fixed lurggical text. So imagine
you've been walking in the street and
say hot summer day for an hour without
water. though not a good step. Always
carry your water bless I didn't have
water and I'm talking to myself I'm
often there without any water. So
finally you get home and you can have
some water. So what do you think in your
poor
in other words even before I make the
braha the gratitude is there. So at
least on a Torah level it didn't have to
be expressed
but after you eat and drink even though
you would think logically I ought to be
more grateful but it's the other way
around. The Torah itself warns us that
we get fat and we kick at God and we
don't need God anymore. We forget about
how hungry and deprived we were 5
minutes before. So the Torah says, "Hey,
after you eat and you think you don't
need God anymore, remember where the
food came from and be grateful." Right?
So that's why the Torah was more
concerned with the braha after eating
than before because before the gratitude
is more natural. When it comes to Torah
learning,
he says exactly the opposite. He says
that before I learn Torah, I don't
always appreciate what a gift it is. I'd
rather sleep a little more, read the
newspaper, have a cup of coffee. I don't
want to shle out tobaca or what whatever
it is Tuesday night. So I need the braha
to remind me hey this is a real precious
gift. But says
after you learn Torah
of course your gratitude is going to be
profound because you see how beautiful
it is. Meaning when it comes to food my
gratitude is stronger when I'm hungry
than when I'm full. When it comes to
Torah the gratitude is greater after you
get the Torah. Now, what if somebody
says, "Well, even after I learned Torah,
I don't feel that great, so maybe I
should make a bra." Yeah. The answer is
that these lurggical
uh systems are designed to tell you what
type of person we should try to be, even
if we're not there yet. Meaning,
ideally, I should be a person who feels
the sweetness of Torah all the time. So,
be hashem. Every day, we pray to Hashem
in the blessings over the Torah.
Make the Torah sweetness
of the Torah. Okay. So, yeah, we do have
to learn Torah even if it's a burden.
That's very true. But the goal is to
feel what is called the sweetness of of
Torah. So, thank you. Um
You see your
birthday
[Music]