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it's
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okay yes today's uh tonight's share is
dedicated
uh for binyamin israel ben khanita that
he should have a refuge leima
the talksharkhold israel and all of the
divreitora
that we are saying tonight should be for
the benefit of his refura
and the benefit of all holy israel and
indeed those who are healthy should also
have the success of not getting getting
ill
again i appreciate the people that are
coming and good evening and
tonight we will be talking about the
parashat shevua
the parsha of the upcoming shabbos which
is vayishlach
but at the end we're going to segue a
little bit into hanukkah
and then god willing next week we will
talk
almost exclusively about chanukah
uh parties for isla you know the last
week's parsha parchesville
say was an action-filled parsha you know
jakob goes to a loved one's house he's
there
for 20 years he marries his four wives
uh leia and their maidservants bill and
zilpah
he has 11 of his 12 children the last
one binyamin is born only when he gets
back
11 of his 12 boys i should say he also
had a daughter dina
and according to rabbinic tradition each
sheave had also had a twin sister
that was born with them although that is
not specifically there
the parsha recounts the birth of the
tribes it recounts
the difficulties in yaakov's marriage
the fact that he had to work seven years
thinking he'll get raquel and then he
gets leia and then he has to work
another seven years
for raquel and then the various
cheatings and strategies
that love unemployed to deprive yaakov
of wealth and the miracles that god did
to give yaakov an increase in the wealth
so a lot of things are happening you
know when you read precious three say
you're out of breath
but finally at the end of the parsha
yaakov is finally given the green light
to return to eric israel return to the
land that he always yearned
to be connected to uh indeed
there's a very interesting drudgery as
i'll have
that when he sends a message to asa
because he hears that asa wants to kill
him
and he sends a message with gifts so he
says the lashon
imlavangarti i was dwelling with
love on for all of these years dharti
i was dwelling has the same letters as
taryag 613
and yaakov was essentially telling asaph
that all of the years in love one's
house i kept
the 613 commandments
that's a very very famous russia that
rashi brings
but the qusam cipher has sakasa that
there is a well-known
ramban that says that the of us
kept the torah even before it was given
they knew intuitively what the
commandments were
but they only kept the torah when they
were in the land of israel
when they were not in the land of israel
because of the holiness of the land they
did not feel it necessary
to keep the torah in fact this is
ramban's answer to a famous question
if the others kept the whole torah
before it was given well one of the
prohibitions in leviticus
is that a man is not allowed to marry
two sisters
polygamy was permitted indeed polygamy
the torah does permit
but the torah does not allow you to
marry two sisters so how could yaakov
marry rachel and leia
and you can't give me the answer it is
before the torah was given
because the avos kept the torah even
before it was given
so the ramban's famous answer is that
the avvos kept the whole torah only when
they were dwelling in the land of israel
and since yaakov married rachel and leia
outside of heritage israel
he was permitted to do so and that
that's one of the reasons why
rachel dies shortly after they return to
eric israel because at that point
he's not supposed to have two sisters as
a wife
now there are other answers to that
question and that's not the subject i
want to talk about tonight but
the sam cypher says according to the
ramban
how will the ramban explain yaakov's
statement
that i kept the 613 mitzvos when i was
in lovan's house
he obviously did not keep the 613
mitzvos
when he was in levin's house the proof
is he married two sisters
and he was not in the land of israel so
here the hassam cipher says
a beautiful beautiful thought he says
maybe we're mistranslating the word
shamarti
we translated it as i observed them i
kept to them but there might be an
alternative translation
we're going to read in a few weeks that
uh when yosef had all sorts of dreams of
the
stars bowing down to him and the sheaves
of grain bowing down to him
his brothers were very angry at him and
they were jealous and they hated him
because of it
but the passage says aviv his father
shamar
he kept that message in his mind and is
in his in his heart
rashi says shomar
means yoshev um
he was sitting and waiting and hoping
and
yearning when will yosef be raised
to a position of greatness so in other
words the verb shamira the verb
shamur does not have to mean you're
observing something
it refers to a certain attitude of hope
and expectation
so the kasam cipher says we can plug in
that definition
yaakov's statement taryag mitzvos
shamarte meaning yeah i wasn't keeping
all the mitzvos i wasn't in the land of
israel
but every single minute of my stay in
khutslawarets
i was yearning for when i could return
to this land
and this i'm speaking of course i'm from
you shalom and i'm not sure if
people hear this lahretz but this i
think is especially an important message
for those who are not yet here those who
are in florida
and again a person may have very
legitimate reasons i'm not questioning
the reasons of anyone who is not able to
be here
but one should know that even if for
whatever reason you're not
able to be in herita's realm and of
course because of covet you
can't even travel here really but every
moment
one should be yoshida zappa
eagerly waiting and hoping when will i
have the chance
maybe it will be when mashiach comes and
i'm yearning for mashiach
as we all should anyway but the point
basically is wherever your
guth is physically situated
your heart and your soul should be
connected to this land
and to this place and this of course
echoes the famous words
of the great poet yehuda halevi who
spent most of his life in spain
and according to legend and it may be a
legend
he finally got to eric israel and he was
murdered
by an arab horseman right in front of
the gates of jerusalem this is
an old tradition that we have and his
famous words are
liby libiba mizrah
my heart belongs to the east belongs to
eric israel
even though my goof is bamarav even
though my body
is to the west in spain whatever it
would be
and this is what yaakov is saying now
that's really only part of the sentence
the way rashi gives the grash he gives
the whole sentence
in love on ghati i lived with lavan
taryag mitzvah marti i kept the 613
mitzvahs
moddati this is the next half of the
sentence
i did not learn from his evil deeds
so one interpretation is yaakov is kind
of telling asaph
in a bit of a semi-belligerent tone
don't mess with me
even though i'm sending ace of gifts
because i was in a hostile environment
and i was still connected to the
holiness of the land and i didn't learn
i was not influenced
by love un's evil ways therefore asaph
i have certain spiritual merits that you
should not
yet he's doing in a very nice way very
gentle way but he's hinting to asav
that just keep your distance but i'll
tell you abshad from my
own rosh yeshiva the retriever of nari
israel rav yakovitz like ruderman
sadiq in which he says that
instead of yaakov kind of boasting or
intimating
he has specials yaakov is actually
giving musser to himself
yaakov was saying i was with this great
guy loving
this rush i love him for so long why
didn't i learn from him
because there's one thing you can learn
from evil-doers they approach their evil
with enthusiasm with geshmach
with passion yakov says i should
approach
my mitzvos with the same passion that he
approached his cheating
in other words
you have to learn there are things you
can learn even from rashaim
on one level of course you learn what
not to do okay that's that's obvious
but then the other level you have to
kind of take the passion and devotion
they have
to their perverted causes and apply that
passion and devotion to that which is
good
and therefore yaakov was actually giving
himself
did i not learn from the evildoers of
love and look at how determined he was
how many times he tried to cheat me he
never gave up
right he never gave up and in our
rookney as an arab
at hashem we also need to never give up
but be it is it may yaakov is frightened
and the guardian bracha says although
god had made a promise to him
in the miracle of the vision of the
latter that we read about last week
but jacob was afraid we discussed this
perhaps he sins perhaps he's not worthy
of divine
mercy and yaakov is frightened
and yaakov develops a number of
strategies cause i'll say
yaakov had three plans to protect
himself and his family from asap
first plan is to try to send him gifts
to butter him up to appeal to his vanity
to kind of acknowledge
asa superiority on some level to flatter
him
those are the gifts that he's sending he
sends a lot of gifts
there is a plan b in the event that asap
is not placated
yaakov is prepared to go to war
meaning the initial response is one of
reconciliation
if that's not going to work and asa was
going to try to kill you
you have to fight back someone who's
trying to kill you
hashgame the hiroglo kill them first
and then the third thing that yaakov
does
which is really the indispensable
element for either course of action
is the idea of prayer pray to hashem
because without tafila nothing works
without fila anything we do is going to
be ineffectual
yeah we can't just stop and we need to
engage in
diplomacy which is like gift giving or
war if necessary we have to do that
we need an army we're not on the madrega
where i simply do nothing and say hashem
heal me hashem give me parnassa
hashem give me security give me peace
we don't yet live in that type of world
tragically
and this goes back to adam harisha the
curse
we live in a work world where we have to
work for our parnassa
we have to seek medical attention for
our health
we need to develop a military and a
police force
yes we need to do that that is what is
called hishtadlus
but we also have to know that at the end
of the day
none of that is going to be successful
without god that's why i was so
hurt and offended and you know i'll
judge him la capsuchus
by a statement that governor cuomo made
in new york
now we know the jewish community
obviously has disagreements with hume
about the coveted regulations okay
putting that aside
but he made a statement uh about prayer
and this and
he said says it wasn't god that is
reducing
the number of sick people in new york
god did not intervene in this one god
let people die
it was our hard work that resulted
firstly had nothing to do with the
vaccine anyway but it was our hard work
that developed the vaccine that is a
again perhaps he didn't mean what he
said but that
is a tremendously arrogant statement
yeah a lot of human beings died and a
lot of people worked
you know endlessly to perfect this
vaccine it's a remarkable
a triumph really and by the way trump
should get a lot of credit for this
but ultimately why god didn't allow it
to be developed earlier or why did god
allow covet i don't know
why did so many people die of polio or
paralyze the polio
in the 1940s and 50s and before and why
was the vaccine not developed
until the late 50s or 60s i don't know
but the one thing i do know is that if
we did achieve a success and if we did
achieve a bracha
and if we did achieve a breakthrough it
is not because god was not involved
it's exactly the opposite it's because
god decided that now
is the time that he will bless our
efforts with success and again i
the vaccine hasn't been tried yet really
but as rather hashem
it should be successful so this is what
yaakov is saying on one hand when you
meet the enemy
there is diplomacy peace on the other
hand
be ready for war but know
that without prayer everything is patel
um
everything is nullified nothing is going
to work
you got to pray you got a job and they
say
like you know um they're going to get a
cup of coffee
this is like the psychic praise may i be
successful
like everything there is nothing
which you don't need hashem to give you
success
things can change in an instant like one
of the lessons of kobe
and i think we've said this more than
once is
that we think we live in a kind of a
secure world
but hashem shows us everything can
change on a dime
and you can't depend on anybody and
anything
and you need prayer so the thought that
i want to share with you is this
when ghazal would look at yaakov's
encounter with asa which actually seemed
to end well right asaf
who initially wanted to kill him with an
army of 400 people
asap winds up hugging him kissing him he
wants to travel with yakov and yanko
figures out an excuse maybe not right
now we'll we'll meet later rashi says
we'll meet where moshiach comes and
you'll be defeated etc
uh but you know asap seems to have a
change of heart jakob's encounter
worked in many many ways but when ghazal
looked at this
they saw this not only as an isolated
story
but they saw this as a prototype
of how a jew relates to a hostile
secular culture that often wants to
destroy the jew
in fact it is said that whenever the
rabbis whenever the
would have to meet with roman officials
either the emperor
or the governor the provincial governor
in caesarea
isseria they would always study
parshasvaishla because remember in
rabbinic tradition
rome is actually considered to be a
descendant of
asap in fact the roman exile which we're
still in because we still don't have the
temple they destroyed is called the
golos
of eddie the gulles of asus
it's an interesting question one can
delve into this a little bit uh
is the ham statement accurate in a
literal sense
are the romans descended from the
some say yes because some identify the
as the etruscans who were the
ancestral people in italy before the
romans and the romans intermarried ninja
bred so
there's a lot of stuck in rome
others look at it in more of a
metaphorical way that the spiritual
negative energy
of rome western civilization
comes from the ace of aspect of it but
whatever it is
khazal did identify rome as
edom dome is the red man which is
of course asap and whenever they would
negotiate with the romans over the
conditions of the jews and eretz israel
they would always read parshas
vayishlach
to extract lessons as to how you
negotiate
with a somewhat of a hostile enemy right
so they saw this
as a blueprint as a prototype
for dealing with secular culture so here
i want to suggest
in what way that would be that would be
the case
um and here let me share with you a
thought and this is where chanukah comes
in a little bit
from the great rav shimshin rafal hirsch
a little uh biography for a moment
rebecca falch was a great 19th century
german rabbi and in the mid and late
19th century
the reform movement had spread across
germany
literally like a cancer a hundred years
before
germany had been a a big makham torah
the city of frankfurt it was one of the
great great
torah communities in um israel
you had the pineal yoshua when the great
great godot
so fair came from frankfurt and the like
so it was really a city of torah it was
like
like lakewood whatever it would be and
yet in the course of 50 or 60 years
the reform movement decimated
destroyed religious life in frankfurt
it's quite amazing how rapidly it spread
but we even have accounts it's amazing
thing uh where a
a child and when they became an adult
they were writing about their
their own parents who were orthodox
rabbi and repetition
the day that they decided to become
reformed jews
and to to salmon salmonize that decision
they said we're going to go to a traif
butcher shop and buy pork
and the child actually describes the
story how the father and the mother were
trembling they were shaking
because they had never had trait in
their lives but they made a decision
they were going to be reformed jews and
they walked into the
almost like i mean it's almost like
they're doing a great mitzvah they're
entering
the holy of holies of course it's
exactly the opposite
and they buy the pork and these i mean
it's a very dramatic description
and the sun describes how his mother's
hand is shaking and shaking and shaking
but he finally ingests it
and suffice it to say as the sun remarks
somewhat sarcastically it was easier the
second time
and of course that's the nature of
average
so the point you have to know is that
frankfurt which was one of the great
jewish cities of am israel
was totally its religious life was
totally destroyed
and not only that but legally the reform
movement
in germany got financial control of
jewish institutions so they controlled a
lot of
money the community really couldn't the
few religious jews who were left
couldn't do anything
so there was a group of only 10
religious jews in frankfort
10 a minion and they had the audacity
to invite a very prominent rabbi who
already was leading
large congregations rabbi hirsch
and they asked him if he would become
thereof now if you think about that that
was an absolutely
almost idiotic thing to do it's like
asking the rosh shiva of love ponovich
or lakewood or mir
which has thousands of students to kind
of hey i'm starting a group of
five students can you become ir why
don't you leave me and leave pinovich
and come to my little yeshiva
it normally doesn't work that way and
yet refersh
saw this as his life's mission he saw
this as a message from heaven
and he gave up a large and prestigious
rabbinate
to simply lead a small little
congregation
and over the course of almost 50 years
see we know refers from his wonderful
writings that are still studied but one
also has to know what a community
builder he was
he built the community into thousands of
people and his message spread
throughout germany and uh
he was the one who really restored
orthodox judaism torah judaism
to the decimated german communities
uh his community in frankfurt was
destroyed in the holocaust
but it got transplanted and the there's
a big big
german shell and german community in
washington heights
upper manhattan and that is the
successor
of ref hershey's shulin frankfurt it's
the same name kahau
adas yeshuran which was the name of
hershey's kahima in frankfurt now the
reason i'm bringing this in
and again i think the biography is
helpful to put things in perspective
is reverse was universally acknowledged
as a great great man
a godot but he actually had a philosophy
that was somewhat different
than the philosophy of the main torah
centers which were in poland lithuania
and russia in poland lithuania and
russia the great yeshivas right the
great toshibas of mir
slobodka kamenetz spironovich brisk
these are the great great torah cities
there was a very strong belief that if
you were capable
your life should be devoted exclusively
to torah study
the notion of university the notion of
secular education
was considered to be destructive
worthless
no good get away from it we'll call that
superficially the torah only response
refers had a different school of thought
refersh developed a philosophy
that was called torah
eretz that means torah
combined with word worldly affairs
that's sometimes abbreviated i
like tide t-i-d-e torah
in derek and under the hershey and view
reverse did not see secular wisdom
as something to reject or first said
that within secular wisdom whether it's
science mathematics or even humanities
literature and poetry there might be
very very beautiful insights
that you can incorporate in your world
view
and that will enrich and deepen
your service of god and instead of
rejecting
involvement in the world as something
that is
destructive and negative the first says
you can embrace it and bring it in now
rehearse was very cognizant that there
are dangers there
there's much out there that is wrong
that is immoral that you have to reject
you can't simply have an attitude i
bring in everything
but refer says on a selective basis and
in fact there are two justifications for
this one is
i can take from that secular world and
bring it into my judaism and enrich it
but then it also works the opposite way
i take my jewish values
and i bring them into my secular life so
when i'm a lawyer
a doctor an accountant a businessman
i don't live like a split identity
meaning from nine to five i'm a lawyer
and after five i'm a religious jew no i
have to be a lawyer
in accordance with what a religious jew
is in terms of my ethics
in terms of my integrity in terms of the
derek eretz i have
uh for everybody i encounter whether
it's my clients whether it's
my competitors whether it's the other
side whether it's the secretary
whether it's the janitor you see there's
a double movement here
there's the bringing in of the secular
into your judaism
to deepen your understandings and then
there's the bringing of your jewish
values
into your secular life and reverse
actually held
that that was the ultimate realization
of the torah the ultimate fulfillment of
the torah
is not when you separate from the world
it is when you somehow bring the torah
perspective
because after all the torah envisioned a
jewish society in eretz israel
and in that society you had to have
businessmen
lawyers farmers accountants whatever it
would be
so obviously the torah envisions that
jewish people would be involved
in all of the activities that modern
society
needs and that would change of course
what those activities are
will change with with the time and place
and therefore there must has to be a
torah perspective in fact this is uh
i mean as you know the dominant
philosophy of the kharadi world in
israel is totally against this
and uh and as i say the eastern european
model
was also against this that's why the
kedolum of eastern europe
had a bit of a problem with reference
they didn't know exactly what to do with
refursh
on one hand they admired him they saw
the great work that he did the great
transformation
that he affected in germany on the other
hand
he was espousing a model that they
actually rejected
so i don't want to get into all of the
technicalities here i just want to point
out
as a result they interpreted refursh in
a certain way which is probably not true
they interpreted reference to basically
mean listen
of course this secular stuff is
worthless no good counterproductive
but refursh is dealing with an
assimilated ignorant population
this is the best he could have done if
our first would have started talking
about
kolel and yeshiva they would have turned
his bat
their backs on him so he had to give
them a watered down
kind of almost distorted view of judaism
because that's the only way he could
bring them into the fold
the way this is often expressed is torah
im derek
is a bidi ebved and not
a live and the
approach would be the torah only
approach
i just want to point out that that does
not seem to be what jeff hirsch was
espousing where first seems to have been
espousing
an alternative ideology but of course
let me emphasize the obvious torah in
derek eritz does not mean
torah and worldly pursuits are equal
partners here
torah avodah sachem is the dominant goal
and you're simply using the secular
world
as ways of deepening your understandings
on one level
and on the other level bringing the
torah into those
secular pursuits we didn't many of the
greatest rabbis that ever lived
have an occupation whether the rambam
was a doctor
rashi who made one yeah yeah i had a
store yeah yes so here you have the
differential you get into a lot of
subtleties and and that is
if refresher's only point was a person
should have an occupation
so that already we go back to the rambam
you know parnassa
but refresh's idea was you can learn
something positive from these chakras
meaning
don't just go to get a job
but literature there are insights that
you can get
i'm just building this example a master
of
could you even learn the torah whether
it's the governor you drop whatever it
is without knowing astronomy without
knowing mathematics without knowing
the biology yeah that's a good point in
fact there is a quote in the name of the
vilna gum
who said that for every measure of
secular wisdom that you are lacking
there will be ten times as much torah
that you won't understand
and that's why the villenegon himself
now bill nagong is the prototype of what
is called the torah only right that the
village learned torah
18 hours a day and yet the vilnigan was
very very proficient
in science mathematics and he actually
commissioned his students
to translate euclid's geometry at euclid
the famous greek
really founder of geometry uh and he
he commissioned his students to
translate euclid into hebrew
so that people would be able to read
mathematical books but i still think
there's a bit of a difference because i
think the villenegon
would limit this with too much to what
you might call
objective knowledge science mathematics
astronomy uh but when it comes to the
humanities he would say
that's kind of traif you know we only
look at jewish things we don't look at
else right now
refuse brings a very beautiful source
for his philosophy and that goes back to
the story of noah
and again i'm going to segue back to you
by isla you'll see how all of this will
be connected
if you remember when noah got drunk
after the flood
and his nakedness was exposed and khan
was mocking his nakedness and calling
the brothers over
to look at it so shame and yet the other
two brothers
they draped a blanket over their
shoulders
and they walked backwards to cover their
father's nakedness without seeing it
right the famous so noah gave
is
shall give beauty it's a pun
yep ye yup god shall give
beauty to yether and he shall dwell
in the tents of shame now in english
that sounds very bad but in hebrew it's
not bad at all
the tense of shame shame is a name so
yes
shall dwell in the tense of shem
maybe i'll say shem instead of shame
shem
now what does that mean yep shall dwell
in the tents of shem refers says
this is very very interesting
that noah is giving these two sons kham
is kind of the excluded bad guy
so he's out of the picture but the triam
comes from the
canaanites come from okay they're
they're out
but sheim and yates are given two
missions
shame is given the mission
of spreading godliness into the world
hashem of course founded the famous
yeshiva of shem
and aver aver was his great-grandson so
shem's mission
is to teach the world what you might
call ethical
monotheism holiness morality
ethics faith in god
prayer shame himself began
the implementation of that mission but
the primary bearer of that mission was
shames
descendants several generations later
avraham avina
and ultimately the jewish people we are
called semites you know
semites comes from shem because we are
descended from shadow
so hashem is given the mission of
ethical
monotheism godliness and holiness
the fs is given an additional mission
a complementary mission and that is
to generate yofi to generate
beauty in the world now remember
one of the ephesus children was yavan
yavan means greece the ancestor of
greece comes from ephesus
greek culture above all we would
describe greek culture
which was a very very high culture
as a culture of beauty and this is true
in many many ways
there is the beauty of sculpture music
which the greeks did have art poetry
comedy drama
i'm not sure if the greeks were into
painting i'm not aware of any paintings
from there but
probably there was some type of visual
art there too
there is also the beauty of logic
mathematics philosophy
again although many of us are math
phobic but
people who are into mathematics often
describe it as beautiful elegance
right there's an elegance in mathematics
there is
the beauty even of athleticism
the human body the olympics
the glorification of what the body can
do
so yavan was a culture of beauty
intellectual beauty artistic beauty
athletic beauty
and this came from this was a mission
this was a legitimate
mission to bring beauty in the world
but what is nawak saying the beauty of
yepus which was carried out to his son
yavan
is beautiful but only
when it dwells
in the tent of shem only when its
subordinates
only when it's mavatel itself
to the ethical monotheism
of belief in hashem and submission
to morality and ethical constraints
meaning when the beauty becomes an end
in itself whether it's physical beauty
intellectual beauty artistic beauty
athletic beauty
whatever it is when that is separated
from the tents of shem and it's no
longer
seen as something that augments and
deepens
your service of god then it becomes
corrupt
then it becomes degrading then it
becomes sinful
then it becomes another form of idolatry
in which you're trying to create a
competition with god
and not only that it ultimately becomes
destructive in some ways
this is even connected to uh nazism
uh nazi germany officially
uh was a christian country but not
really
the roots of nazism are in paganism uh
they employed pagan symbols
uh essentially i mean you know god was
invoked sometimes just as an aside but
it was
not at all connected to the ethical
monotheism
of christianity which in turn is based
on judaism
i know people don't like the express
most people do it the judeo-christian
ethic
uh that's a very incomplete and
misleading phrase but but
on one level it is accurate dignity of
man etc immorality
at least on that level there is a
sadhashaba
in which christianity did derive some
truths
from judaism although they were
destroyed in that sense
nazism was very very there was a very
big glorification of beauty
i mean if you ever see the pictures of
nazi rallies you know kind of
very impressive the flags and the
uniforms and the discipline
and the dancers and the singers
yofi things were very pretty i mean i
hate perhaps to describe
nazism that way but it was a
beauty that was totally divorced from
any moral vision of submission
in fact it's so fascinating that hitler
hitler had a fairly deep understanding
of what judaism was
he knew a lot more about judaism
than many jews did he knew
that judaism limits your power
judaism says just because you're strong
you cannot oppress the weak
just because you can do something
doesn't mean
you may do something
he understood that the great
contribution of judaism in the world
was to put ethical constraints
and human autonomy that's a pretty deep
understanding
of course he hated that and that's why
he hated judaism and he hated
christianity
because he didn't want limits he wanted
there to be unlimited power
whatever you can do you should do
oppress the we conquer their land take
their property
you see he understood judaism very well
and he hated it in fact
a lot of his hatred for the jewish
people
is ultimately a hatred of what judaism
represented to the world
and he writes this in mankind he's very
very open
i mean it's an amazing thing hitler was
thought before 1933
because there was thought to be some
isolated lunatic
who would never get past dog catcher or
whatever whatever or whatever it would
be
but he wrote in mineconf when he was a
nobody
exactly what he was going to do
and rahman al-islam he did a lot of what
he said he was going to do
and this is this is it so what hersh is
saying
when we look at what greek culture
represents
aesthetics beauty the torah does not say
it's something bad
it is a blessing that noah gave to us
and it's a mission
that noah gave the efforts carried out
by yavan
but it becomes good when it's brought
into the tents of shem
but when it's separated from the tents
of shem
it can actually become a demonic
destructive
force so reverse use this verse
as the predicate of his philosophy
that we can and should embrace
what is good in the world because that
is also a blessing of god
that can deepen our connection to him
and deepen our service of him instead of
rejecting everything that is outside
of the four walls of the beta matters
now again refers
did make the point over and over again
that everything has to be in the service
of hashem and torah
these are not co-equal things and
refresh also acknowledge that there are
dangers that sometimes you might
incorporate
corrosive negative elements which you
have to be very vigilant
to keep out of your life keep out of
your philosophy and the lack
so based on this based on refresh i i'd
like to suggest
that maybe these are the three things
that yaga were doing
that these are metaphors for how you
respond
to a secular culture a secular life
yaakov's encounter with asap
how do i respond how do i relate
to a culture that is so
different than the torah that's
antagonistic to the torah
and the suggestion is you've got to
incorporate
three strategies it's not a
one-size-fit-all
it's not monochromatic giving gifts
is a symbol of welcoming right when i
give you a gift
i'm welcoming you so strategy one is
be open to the good in these cultures
and bring it in don't reject everything
understand as our sages have said if
someone tells you
that there is wisdom among the nations
of the world come in
believe them torah they don't have
but a great deal of wisdom they do have
um many many examples of course uh ravi
poston mentioned
the example of the rambam learning
medicine of the villenegon with
mathematics
uh the but in a more recent example we
have vulba
who was a great great balmooser that at
one point when he was a young man he was
stranded in
switzerland during world war ii which
was one was a neutral country
so in switzerland was a fellow a
non-jewish man
jean piaget piaget was considered to be
the greatest
child psychiatrist in the world he was
an
expert and his particular interest was
how do
children develop a sense of morality
right and wrong right and that's a very
important question because
all of us want to develop in our
children a sense of
right and wrong and revolver who was a
student of musser which focuses on
improving your character he actually
apprenticed himself to piaget
to kind of understand how human beings
develop
an intuitive sense of morality now
piaget was not based on the torah
in any in any direct way he was not
jewish
but ravoba thought that from psja he
could get insights
that he would apply in his mushroom
teachings
ravarin lipstenstein the corner of raqqa
was a great rosh yeshiva
in the dutilium world he was the
son-in-law
of rabbi joseph sullivan
ravaran literature was a big thomas
racham and rosh yeshiva for many years
but he had a phd in english literature
from harvard university and his thesis
was about i believe connected to john
milton's paradise lost
now if you uh know uh what paradise loss
is about i mean
it's essentially a story about the fall
of adam from ghanaian but
it's really full of christian imagery it
is really a christian piece but he saw
that he was able to kind of
extract from all of the stuff that
we could not accept certain ideas that
helped him in his abode of hashem
right so there is this concept of some
things
you can welcome but
we then have the second stage waging war
in other words metaphorically what i'm
suggesting is
the idea that yaakov gave gifts
and prepared for war expresses exactly
the kind of double response we have to
have
to the culture of the world there are
things we can
embrace and things that we have to
totally reject and either respond
standing alone
[Music]
is not a good response because if you
have a response i reject everything
that's secular or you have a response i
accept everything that's out there
either way you're making a mistake now i
will tell you the truth if you had to
make a choice
between rejecting everything and
accepting everything
rejecting everything is probably a
better choice
because accepting everything will poison
you so much meaning
if i reject everything secular
so i'm limiting myself my judaism is not
as rich it's not as deep it's not as
colorful okay but at least i'll be a
good jew
if i accept everything then i'm going
down the rabbit hole
because then abortion gay rights you
know i'm okay you're okay
transgender that gay rights is an old
it's not even an issue anymore now we're
talking about
uh transgender a whole whole new set of
silence
and and the like so i respect a person
who basically says
i will try to limit my connection to the
secular as much as possible because
frankly we're afraid
we're afraid that those influences may
be poisonous
and that is a real concern but you need
to understand
that's not the optimal jewish way that
is the lesser of two evils
in other words i'm going to reject
everything because
the risks of infiltration are too big
i got it i respect it but ultimately
the highest and richest form of avodah
is when you can take the goods and bring
it in
and at the same time repel the negative
and that's the idea of why yakov has to
engage
in the strategy of both
milkhamma waging war
and giving gifts to welcome things
to reject things now
how do you know what to accept what you
reject
that's step three you gotta dive in you
need a lot of divine assistance
it's not an easy thing to do and as i
say
maybe an individual family might decide
that we're not capable of that decision
again and again i
i as i say if you have to make a choice
that is the better choice to make
if it's neither or a decision it's
better to err on the side of
rejecting but at the same time
there's also another element here every
child is different within a family
canoquelinaro p d'arco a child may have
a certain interest
in astronomy in medicine in science and
math and poetry or music
you have to be careful as a pedagogical
matter
not to shut off those avenues of
expression
because that's kind of where his soul is
beckoning
you see so this is why yaakov employs
multiple strategies because yaakov is
reminding us
that our encounter with the world is not
a fight or flight choice
it involves an integration a synthesis
a harmonization and that's a difficult
skill
that takes wisdom that takes discernment
that takes
judgment and the like so uh we know that
mozai shabbos when shabbos is over
in the amidah of arvids we recite
abdullah we recite that god separates
between the
holy and the profane now in which bracha
which blessing of the amidah is the
havdallah
placed it is placed in the blessing
about wisdom and knowledge
so the gemara asks why do you put
abdullah
in the blessing about wisdom and
knowledge
and the gemara's answer is because
without
wisdom and knowledge a person is not
able to make separations
meaning to be able to discriminate to be
able to identify which is good and which
is bad
takes a great deal of wisdom so
sometimes
i might have to throw out the baby with
the bath water so to speak
but that's too bad i'm losing a baby
right so
it takes a great deal of wisdom and uh
but i think ultimately this is kind of a
mission
that we should strive to achieve now the
reason i'm connecting this to hanukkah
is the following
and again i'll have to i'll continue
this next week
the typical understanding of chanuk and
this is very important
is that although chanukah was a military
struggle against the oven and that
military struggle culminated
in political independence of a jewish
state the hasmoneans established
a jewish state that lasted for more than
a hundred years
until the romans came in so you could
look at hanukkah but i'm i'm not dealing
with the candlestick i'm talking about
the military victory
you could look at this as kind of a
military victory
re-establishing jewish sovereignty
similar
somewhat to the war of independence in
it was like a revolutionary war to
overthrow
foreign oppression you can look at it
that way
but it's very clear from the alhanism
prayer
that we say on hanukkah that although
this was a war for political
independence
it was not undertaken for political
purposes
it was undertaken to be able to keep the
torah
that antiochus institute a policy in
which jews were not allowed to keep
mitzvos and the hasmoneans fought
to throw off the yoke of oppression why
not because they just wanted political
independence
they wanted to be able to keep hashem's
torah
and they were willing to risk their
lives
to keep the almighty's tower that's why
the al-anism emphasizes over and over
again
that the goal of the ivanim was
to make you forget the torah lahaviram
to take you away
m from the
laws of god's will that's very important
chanukah was not about political
independence
it was about religious ability to keep
the torah
the war was a means
to that end that is why by the way uh
the malchus of the khashoggi had kind of
a tragic ending
because eventually these the the
hasmonean kings
became persecutors of the
and they became the very enemy that they
overthrew it's quite
amazing in fact it's also such a
uh paradox that you know the the israel
kind of olympic analog is called the
maccabee games
it's i mean the maccabees were fighting
against all of those elements of greek
culture
so typically what you're going to hear
in every yeshiva schmooze and again
it's accurate i'm not saying it's wrong
is that this was the war
against yavan yavan represented the
culture
that was antagonistic to god
and the hasmoneans overthrew yavan
and that of course is true but the point
i want to make is
it is not inevitable that yavan is
totally repudiated
the yavan that separates from the tense
of shame
becomes a destructive evil force
that needs to be eliminated but that
doesn't mean
we reject the beauty that can be within
the oven
rather our goal is to take that beauty
and bring it into the tents of shem
and have it augment our connection to
hashem
and our jewish identity the minori in
the temple didn't have
you know eight that had the three on
each side they represents the
six branches of wisdom yeah that that's
absolutely correct
uh that in the ancient world there was a
kind of six branches of wisdom i always
forget what they are but
there's mathematics there's rhetoric
they're different uh astronomy they're
different types of
and what's interesting is that all of
the wicks
of the six have to go to the center
shaft of the menorah
which represents god and the torah
meaning all of the are useful and good
when they are employed in the service of
hashem
so when we talk about chanaka as a war
against yavan
you have to redefine it you have to
tweak it a little bit
it's not so much a war against the oven
it's a war against the yavan
that does not dwell as a subordinate
force
within the tents of shem but when it
dwells within the tenth hashem
it then becomes something good and
something positive
and their avodah hashem can be enriched
by those insights and by those obviously
that's true
for hard science in which astronomy and
mathematics are necessary
to understand the torah but even in
elements of humanities there are certain
unders like revolver
and uh jean-pierre dr piaget
there are ways we can understand life
by looking at the collective wisdom of
others and of course a very
very current example we just nifter a
few weeks ago i think we already spoke
about
uh rabbi jonathan sachs lord sachs
uh
and he of course was an exemplar of the
modern example
of the person who drew on all of these
to convey the message of judaism to
audiences
who would otherwise not understand what
that message is
and that's kind of an example and a
model for all of us to try to follow
in our albeit in our greatly diminished
way so that was my message for tonight i
actually had more to say but i'll
carry it over to next week i wish you
all a
shavua tov and may this hanukkah
which is upcoming be a source of great
light
and redemption and may it be the light
that shines
through the deepest and greatest
[Music]
darkness
[Music]
here