Transcript
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Thank you for having me again. Uh it's
nice to be back. Uh as we were just
talking about the the whole um miracle
of of uh Hanukkah. You know what uh many
people don't realize is that the miracle
of Hanukkah is not necessarily just
because of a few Jewish men warriors
fought and obviously had Hashem's
miracle, you know, uh power that that he
gave them and and then he made a miracle
and they won the war or purely because,
you know, some oil instead of burning
for one day burned for eight days.
That's not really the true miracle. The
true miracle is how the women were in
those days. How courageous the women
were in those days. Uh to a much much
higher extent than most people give give
them credit for. And the reason why we
talk about it is because in today's age,
many many people that don't know about
the truth of Torah, especially women
that don't know much about Torah, think
that Judaism and the Torah is sexist.
They think that we're prejudice against
women. And it's that's nothing further
from the truth. As we talked about the
last time I was here, we're talking
about the power of the modesty of a
woman and how that is something that's
more significant than any mitzvah that
she can possibly do. A modest woman is
already completing 60% of her mitzvot.
That's 60%. Which means that an immodest
woman, even if she does 100% of all the
other mitzvot, she only has 40%. She
can't pass the test. So modesty is
already a big thing. But now the the
women of the time of two 2,000 years
ago, a little over 2,000 years ago, the
time of the Greeks when they were
persecuting the Jews, the whole story is
that the Greeks wanted to do to us what
pretty much is still happening today.
They wanted us to leave Judaism. They
had no interest in killing Jews. Unlike
the Nazis that wanted to kill Jews or
the Romans that wanted to kill Jews or
many other nations that have been
wanting to kill the Jews since the
beginning of time, the Greeks actually
had no interest in killing Jews. They
just wanted to kill Judaism. They said,
"Listen, if you leave the Shabbat, don't
keep Shabbat, don't do circumcision, and
don't learn Tawa, not only will we not
kill you, but we'll actually give you
very, very important and respectful
jobs.
We're going to give you very important
jobs. You could be the uh, you know, a
big lawyer, a big a uh accountant, a uh
a uh government member. You could have
all the respect. You could uh judge
matches in the uh you know in uh that we
have in all these fights. You could do a
lot of different things that Jews in
general were not entitled to at the
time.
And they said, "Listen, all we want you
to do is stop keeping this Shabbat of
yours. Stop keeping this circumcision.
Be like us. We don't keep Shabbat. We
don't think that there's a need to uh
declare that God created the heaven and
the earth in six days.
We think that maybe you know God created
the world but then he left. That's what
the Greeks believed. Yes, there had to
be a creator but he left. He doesn't
care if I do. He doesn't care if I do
feeling every day. He doesn't really
care if I turn on the light on Shabbat.
Why does he care? The Greeks said no. He
created the world because they were very
smart to Greeks. But he left. He doesn't
care about the small things.
What about circumcision? Circumcision?
Why? You're telling me that God made a
mistake? If God created you, he created
you perfect. So why are you ruining it?
Why are you cutting off a piece of the
body? You're saying that God made a
mistake. That was the argument, which is
a very rational, very logical argument.
You're telling me that God created you
not perfect and he needs you little
human
to make yourself perfect?
He needs your help. If you already
created everything, it's a very logical
argument. It's wrong, but it's a very
logical argument.
And then Torah, they knew the secret to
Judaism is Torah. The secret to a
connection with God is the Torah. A Jew
without Torah cannot be a Jew. He can
say he's Jewish. It could say on some
type of certificate or business card or
passport or anything in the world that
he's Jewish, but a connection with
Hashem, it's very very difficult to have
something that's real because Hashem
gave you the instructions of how to
connect with him in the Torah.
So if you if I'm not going to read the
Torah and I don't know what it says, I
just hear stories once a year during the
holidays when I go to synagogue. I hear
one, you know, I hear a story. Okay. So
once a year I have connection with
Hashem but if I go through rough times
or if I go through good times does you
know where am I going to look? I can't
really I don't know how to connect with
him. It's like saying yeah he's my best
friend but I don't have his phone
number.
So it's like having a uh an email. You
have a most important person in the
world's email. He says listen anything
you need email me from obviously Hashem
is much more than any important person
we have in the world. But the point is
that most important person in the world
you meet, he says, "Listen, anything you
need, just email me. No phone number, no
nothing else. Just email me." Wow. I
need a million dollars, sends me a
million dollars. I need uh, you know,
help with uh, you know, some type of uh,
medicine, he helps me with the medicine.
I need a job, he gets me a job. Anything
I need, it's perfect. You just answer it
right away. So, one day comes and you
need this help. I said, "Oh, great.
Where's the business card? Oh, I don't
have the business card, but I wrote it
on a napkin. You see the napkin got wet.
So, this one letter is missing. The
other one is you're not so sure if it's
a C or it's an O. So, you guess so you
guess. You type in the email, but you
keep getting an error message.
Invalid email.
There's one letter
in an entire email doesn't work. The
email is worthless.
Same thing with a Jew. He may think that
going to Beckness once a year or even
once a week or maybe uh you know a uh
saying that he's Jewish or writing on a
passport or any type of uh
identification that he's Jewish or
saying that his mom is Jewish or even
doing some of the mitzvot here and there
makes him Jewish. Yeah, it's good. It's
nice. It's a good start for, you know,
if you're, you know, two years old. But
to be really Jewish, you need the entire
email. You need the entire instructions.
And that's the connection with the
Torah. Tawa is required by a Jew every
day.
Whether it's 15 minutes or it's 15
hours, all depends on you. Different
people have different uh lives,
different levels. But every Jew is
required to learn Tawra every day.
The Greeks during this time a couple of
thousand years ago knew that this is our
connection. This is our direct dial with
the most important thing in the world.
And they said, "Listen, we can't beat
them. Even though there's only a few of
them, and there's many, many of us, we
have many, many uh, you know, weapons.
They have nothing. But they have this
god that somehow made them defeat every
other nation that came in their way."
The biggest nation in history, the
Egyptians, he beat them. the uh Nebuer
and and his people even though the Jews
didn't beat them eventually. Hashem
destroyed him. The Persians destroyed
him, the Turks destroyed, everybody else
is he destroyed somehow. And these Jews
are the only ones that survive
technically. They're not even supposed
to be here. So it must be this Hashem.
So if we stop the what's what's the
secret to this Hashem? Secret is their
connection with him, this Torah. So if
we stop them from learning Torah,
there's no connection anymore. We don't
need to kill them. They're killing
themselves eventually. How are they
going to kill themselves? How they don't
they're not going to actually kill
themselves? How are they going to kill
themselves? By saying, "Listen, if we
don't learn Torah, we're just like you."
So if we're just like you, our boys are
going to marry your girls and your girls
are going to marry our boys. So all of
us become instead of all, you know,
Jewish and and and Greeks, it becomes
everybody is one nation.
and the Jews are destroyed.
And this is what's happening today.
2,000 years later,
80% of the Jewish people do not keep
Shabbat.
Over 70% of the ones that are in America
not only do not keep Shabbat, but are
either in intermarriage relationships or
on their way.
And if you ask any any Jewish couple,
older couple, do you want your kids to
marry a non-Jew? Oh, mito.
But then 25 years later, when your son
or daughter brings a non-Jewish uh boy
or girl, oh, she's so cute, such a nice
person. What's wrong with her? What are
you going to do? That's who he hung out
with his whole life. He She was his next
door neighbor. Such a She is a nice
girl. There's nothing wrong with the
non-Jews.
Some of them are the most amazing people
you could ever meet. But God said,
"You're not allowed to be with them."
That's it. Simple as it gets.
So the Greeks knew all of this. They
were very very smart. They knew that the
secret to a connection with God is the
Torah. So they said, "Stop learning
Torah."
And some of the Jews unfortunately fell
for this trap and stopped learning Tawa.
And not only stopped learning Tawa, but
started taking advantage of what they
thought were taking advantage of all the
money-making opportunities with the
Greeks. They took these jobs. They
became government members and they felt
important and they started helping the
Greeks
to find any Jewish leader that's
dangerous for this Greek movement.
But the Jews as a whole were not
fighting.
What changed everything? The real
miracle,
the biggest miracle of Hanukkah is what
the women decided to do next.
There's two big stories that I know. I'm
sure there's many, many others,
but one of them is the story of what all
of the women did. The women decided that
they're seeing their men sitting doing
nothing against the Greeks. They're
seeing their people being destroyed.
They're seeing their Torah being
destroyed. They're seeing that the
connection with Hashem is getting worse
and worse with everyone. And little by
little, they're seeing the kids on the
street that used to wear, you know, the
Jewish clothes and go to Bikeset and go
to Yeshiva. All of a sudden, they're
wearing the clothes that the Greeks are
wearing, whether it's tight jeans like
people wear today or the tight shirts or
the guys that for some reason guys today
think like they all need to look like,
you know, homosexuals.
I don't know why, but for some reason
being being, you know, looking like you
just came out of a uh some type of m
plastic machine that wrapped the clothes
really tight to you that became very
popular today. I think there was a uh a
rapper by name of Little Wayne that made
it popular where he said you have to
wear girls jeans,
right? That's it. So uh so he's rich and
famous.
So people, you know, he has uh $500
million to wear this girl's jeans. Fine.
But what are you getting for wearing the
girls jeans?
You're paying the 200. You're making
them the $500 million. You're looking
like the Greeks.
So for some reason, this is this is a
disease amongst Israeli men. A lot of
Israeli men, I mean, Jews in general are
are doing it. And it's overall, not just
Jews, but a lot of people are doing it.
And it's become a modesty problem for
men. We've never had a modesty problem
for men in history until today.
Generally, the modesty problem has
always been with women. But the modesty
problem with women really wasn't around
until the last 100 years or so. Even
non-Jewish women used to be modest. If
you look at pictures of women that used
to go to the beach 100 years ago, they
would go with gowns. They would look
more modest than the most modest rait in
the world today. And I'm talking about
non-Jews.
Of course, the Jews would be modest. So,
the problem was with the women, but
today we have a problem with the women,
obviously,
but with the men, too. So, I'm not
really sure whether we're trying to
compete with Sodom and Gomorrah or not,
but things are deteriorating fast. And
that's why we pray every day that the
that Hashem saves us from it getting any
worse and the Mashiach comes because
we're not really sure what's going to be
left if we're around another generation.
So now the women back then saw that
their children are getting worse and
worse. They're not interested in Torah.
They're not interested in Judaism. And
the husbands are not doing anything
about it. So each woman that gave birth,
as soon as she gave birth, she took the
kid, she would go to the wall in
Jerusalem.
She'd climb the wall and she'd jump off
and kill herself.
And before she come jumped off and kill
us, she said, "If you're not going to
fight for our nation, we might as well
die now. At least we'll die Jewish." And
she would actually give the kid uh on
the eth day. She would wait 8 days, give
the child a circumcision, and then kill
ourselves.
Says, "You're already killing us anyway
by not doing anything. Might as well
die, but at least we're going to die
Jewish. At least my child will die
Jewish."
This is courage.
That's beyond our understanding because
when I saw this story,
nobody in the world can do something
like this today. Even telling the story
scares me. Thinking about a woman just
gave birth. Woman just gave birth right
now. Still in bed.
Well, she's not thinking about climbing
any walls, killing herself for this.
Listen, they have problems. They have
problems. Leave them alone. You just
gave birth. You carried a kid for 9
months. Oops. Who needs this uh problems
from these people? That's what people
today think. Back then it was very very
different. People were very close to
Hashem, very attached to Hashem. They
knew what the Torah meant. They knew
what the connection was.
And the woman realized that if she's not
going to take control,
there's not going to be Judaism. And
without Judaism, there's nothing nothing
for the Jews, nothing for the world. One
of the one of the uh parts in the Torah
says when hem speaks to he says that if
it wasn't for the Jews keeping the Torah
there's no purpose for the world.
None. So and says it himself if there
which is if it's not for my covenant
which he's referring to the Torah day
and night
the rules of the heaven and the earth
will cease to exist.
the world would cease to exist
instantly.
Now, when this was first written a few
thousand years ago, we all wondered how
could well, Hashem is going to bring he
already said he's not going to bring
another flood. So, how could it be?
After science discovered what has always
been there, but finally discovered it
themselves, discovered the atom,
they realized that the world is not what
we think it is.
If you look at the world as we see it,
everything looks solid. The TV, the
series looks solid, the wall looks
solid. You look solid, the rock looks
solid. Everything looks solid.
In reality, nothing is solid. In
reality, everything is made out of
atoms.
So to
cut it short, not get too scientific,
but to to explain to you what this means
is that everything that we have in the
world, everything that exists is made
out of atoms. It's energy. Now an atom
has these two parts. It has the nucleus.
It has the electron running around it
pretty much.
So but the two parts are significantly
different in size. So for example, if
one of them is this book and the other
one is this entire city, it's a huge
difference in size. So and the
separation between them because it's so
big is like between us and the sun.
Very very big difference.
So in reality most of the atom is
completely empty space. There's nothing
there.
Most of the atom is completely empty
space. There's nothing there. 99.9%
of the atom is empty space. which means
that 99%
of everything that we see is completely
empty space. We just see it as solid
because it's spinning really really
fast. The way to understand this is that
if you ever see a fan, okay, so we have
a fan here. But if the fan goes much
faster, then it looks like instead of
there being five blades, there's one
blade.
Why does it look like there's only one
blade? Cuz it's going really, really
fast. You think there's only one blade.
Once it slows down, it looks like
there's two blades. slows down a little
more, then we see three or four. Slows
down more, we see down there's five. So
you see the fact that it's going much
slower, we see more. But if it goes
faster, we see much less of what reality
is. Same concept applies to atoms
because everything look goes really
really fast. Everything seems like it's
solid.
Now the question is
what happens if it stops spinning?
Unlike the fan which will show us that
there's five blades, the atom will show
us that there is nothing. That 99% of
everything we see does not exist.
It literally is nothing. So if the empty
space is exposed,
then everything would just disappear.
And the entire universe according to
scientists and also not too different
from the Torah. The entire
cosmos, the entire universe, everything
everything as far as the amount of
matter of actual stuff that actually
exists could all fit into a box of
matches.
Most of everything we see is nothing.
Why do I say this? Because Hashem said,
"If it's not for my covenant between me
and the nation of Israel, for them to
learn Torah every day, if for one
minute, for one second,
no one in the world is learning some
level of Torah,
everything will just cease to exist."
So the way we could visualize it now
with science helping us is that how
would it cease to exist? God said he's
not going to bring the flood. He's not
going to make a war. He's not he doesn't
need uh you know uh tanks or airplanes
or atomic bombs. He'll just stop the the
atoms from spinning and everything will
just disappear as if it never existed.
This is how important the Torah is. And
the women
that lived 2,000 years ago that saved
the Jewish people knew this. They knew
this much more than we know even after
we just what we just learned. They knew
Hashem.
They didn't just believe in him. That's
the goal that every Jew needs to have,
to know Hashem, to really truly know
that Hashem exists and not just believe
that Hashem exists.
Another big story about a uh was a the
story of Yodit. Yudit saw that the men
were not doing anything. So, she decided
that she's going to pretend like she
wants to marry one of the Greek leaders.
So the uh the Greeks made a law that
before any Jewish woman is allowed to
marry her husband
then she has to be with him first to
make sure that he tries everything and
she's not a virgin when she goes to to
her new husband. This is the wickedness
of the Greeks because again for them
body was everything. So if body is
everything I only want the best.
Why should I give it to these lowly
Jews? So she said, "Okay, I'm going to
take advantage of this stupidity that he
has and I'm going to bring to him. I'm
going to make it like as if I'm happy to
do it." So she brought to him a bunch of
cheeses, bunch of Jewish cheeses.
Now, if you eat a lot of cheese or eat
anything heavy, you get sleepy.
So she gave him this and he saw she's
bringing him wine. She's bringing him
cheese, celebration. Everybody's happy
and she's feeding him and feeding him.
He's like, "Oh, don't touch me yet.
Listen, I want you to be happy."
Eventually, he gets happy enough that he
gets very, very tired and he goes to
sleep. And at that very moment, she
takes a knife out of her bag and cuts
off his head. She puts the head back in
her bag.
And then she goes back to her Jewish
people, our Jewish brothers and sisters,
and she takes the leader of the Greeks
head, one of the Caesars, and she says,
"This is what I was able to do. How
could I do this and the rest of you are
doing nothing? And this gave the Jewish
people a lot of a lot of strength, a lot
of courage and it made a lot of fear in
the in the Greeks. The Greeks said our
leader just died. One of the main things
that in war what you do is you try to
kill the leaders.
You know the war with Iraq was over as
soon as Saddam Hussein was was done.
Most of the any war that was a major
war. Usually it's because the leader is
done. You know the uh World War II was
was over. Not because the Americans
joined, not because the British finally
started beating them. As soon as Hitler
was out of the picture, the war was
over.
As soon as soon as Hashem decided that
it's time for this leader to go, it was
over. So
Jewish women today need to understand
that in Judaism and the Torah, they have
much much more power than the men. much
much more significance in their, you
know, in their position in Judaism than
men do because you are responsible
for the Jewish household.
If you raise your kid to be Jewish, he
will be Jewish his whole life. Of
course, there's exceptions to the case.
Shalom, maybe he'll go off to death. But
if you give them a good foundation, you
make sure that it doesn't matter what
you have to do, whether you have to sell
the televisions and the and the
appliances to make sure they goes to
yeshiva, you have to beg to the rabbis
to give you money so your kid can go to
yeshiva and never step a foot into a
public school. That's what you have to
do as a mother.
How nice your house is is not important.
What's what's really what's really
important is whether your kid goes to
yeshiva or not, whether your kid's going
to have Jewish education or not. going
to public school, you're destroying the
kid.
And the reason why you're destroying the
kid is because he's going to be with a
bunch of Greeks. I'm not saying they're
bad people, but they're not Jewish. So,
what's going to happen? He's going to
wake up one day, he's 20 years old.
He's 20 years old, and he says, "Hey,
look, I have my girlfriend.
She's not Jewish, but she was my friend
for 20 years. There was nothing wrong
with her for 20 years. Why is there
something wrong with her now?" Aba,
why is there something wrong with it
now? You didn't tell me there's anything
wrong for 20 years. Why is there
something wrong now?
Somebody came to the Rabbi
one time. He was and he said, "Uh,
Rabbi, I have a big problem. My kid
wants to marry a nonjew."
He says, "What yeshiva?" And the father
is crying, crying, crying.
Rabbi
was very emotional. He got he is truly
connected to people. Sees one of the
fellow Jew crying. He starts crying with
him.
He says, "What yeshiva did you send your
boy?" Yeshiva. "No, no, no. You didn't
go to yeshiva."
What k did he go to? No, no, no. He
didn't go to k. So you taught him all
the Torah that he knows. No, no, he
doesn't know Torah.
So what does he know?
He says, "I'd send him to public school
and uh
I we did kush once in a while
despite loving amad." He told the truth
even when it hurt and he said
wicked it's your fault. It's not his
fault. He doesn't know anything.
It's your fault. You knew you was you
were responsible for everything.
And that's the thing that people don't
understand. I spoke to a woman uh just
the other day about Jewish education. I
have a group on Facebook. It's a couple
of thousand members. I post different
sharim, not just my own. Posted
something about Jewish education and
it's like an 8-minute video by Rabi Mahi
uh that really hits home. And uh one of
the women says, "Yes, but if you don't
have money, then public school has to
do."
A lot of people say, "Yeah, if you don't
have money, then public school is the is
the only answer." The reality of it is
that if we really want something,
especially a woman, you always find a
way to get it. If you want something
from your husband, you find a way to get
it. If you want something, if you want a
brand new car, you find a way to get it.
If you want to survive in life, you find
a way to get it. Now, obviously, if you
don't have money, then you have to find
a way by going to the rabbi and asking
for assistance. Yes, I know it's going
to hurt your pride. I know it's not it's
not fun to go asking for money or asking
for help, but you have to you have to
look at it a different way. You can't
look at it like I'm asking for money.
You're asking the rabbi and this
yeshiva. And if it's not one yeshiva,
it's another one. If it's not another
one, then another one. You keep going to
different ones until you find one that's
going to help you. And there's enough
good Jews in the world that someone's
going to help you.
You keep doing it until you find one.
Why? Because you're not you're not it's
not about the school. It's about saving
a soul.
You're making a path for your child to
succeed. I don't want to succeed in life
as far as money and and career, but
succeed with a a purpose in life. If
your kid's not going to go to is going
to go and be surrounded by non-Jews his
whole life, then one day he's going to
wake up and he's going to tell you,
"Listen, I don't feel Jew. There's
nothing there's no connection between me
and the creator."
This is why we celebrate Hanukkah
because Hanukkah is is a is a holiday
that not only did we have miracles from
above uh of winning a war be beating a a
giant uh army, a giant nation that hated
Judaism as a whole. But Hanukkah is a
holiday that we celebrate Judaism. We
celebrate being Jewish.
And there's never a time that it was at
more risk in the last 2,000 years than
at this time 2,000 years ago with the
Greeks because again like I said they
weren't interested in killing Jews.
And that's the thing that we have today.
Today we have a problem where many of
the uh Jewish people today have no
concept of what Judaism really is. And
it starts with this Torah. Now the uh
the shik
usually has usually is read during this
the time of Hanukkah. Not always but
usually is. And it's a continuation of
the story of what we went over uh last
week. Uh uh we talked about Joseph and
how his uh his brothers sold him purely
out of jealousy. But not jealousy in a
sense that they felt like a uh he's uh
better than them. uh and they wanted to
uh take advantage of the you know the
fact that he there were many in these
little
but jealousy in a sense that they felt
that he has a deeper connection with
their father
that maybe he doesn't deserve because
they felt that with his dreams and the
interpretation that he had with his
dreams maybe he's really trying to ruin
the plan that the family has and because
he says that one day all of you are
going to bow down to
Now, according to the prophecy that
Jacob have had and it'll be given from
God, there's not going to be one one of
the tribes that's going to lead all of
them. So, they're saying, you know,
there was supposed to be 12 tribes, 12
sons. This one son is saying that he's
going to lead all of us. This doesn't
seem like it fits the prophecy.
Maybe he's trying to ruin the plan.
Maybe he's trying to take over.
So, it's our obligation to kill him. But
maybe we're wrong. So instead of killing
him, we'll sell him.
So that way there's no blood on our
hands. But what they told Yakov, they
they told their father that they uh sold
him in order to they told their father
that they killed that he died from a an
animal.
So now at the end of last week's para
they talk about
Yseph being in jail
after the whole incident with Potifar's
wife. Ysef was not willing to uh violate
the uh you know violate Potifar's wife
even though she was begging him to do
it. He knew that he's not allowed to be
with a married woman. uh which uh you
know is something that is uh nonetheless
also a problem today. People don't see
that as a big deal. Not not only do
people don't think that it's a big deal,
but there's actually some couples that
ask each other to be with each other's
wife today
because they think that may stimulate
the passion in their home. So I'm saying
all of these things because they're real
because that's the world we live in
today. As much as we as much as it's
awful to hear, it's as real as it gets.
This is the world we live in. This is
everything that people need to
understand of why we need the Torah.
It's not about wanting the Torah. We
need it because as long as we don't have
the Torah, things like being with other
people's wives, walking around half
naked or completely naked, killing,
stealing, and pretty much every rule
that God gave us seem like an elective
seem like it's I could do it or not do
it.
Being nice becomes something subjective.
It's a uh I'm nice based on my own
definition.
Hitler
thought he was being nice. He was he
thought he believed truly that he was
doing the world a favor by killing all
of the Jews.
It wasn't that he thought that he was
evil. He didn't wake up every morning
and say, "Oh, I want to be the most evil
man in the world." He thought he was
doing the world a favor. This is what
happens when you don't have Torah in
your life. When you don't have
directions from the creator, from the
manufacturer of how to use the product,
there's no there's no telling of how
wrong you'll use it.
You could have a uh phone, but you've
never seen a phone before. So, to you,
it's just a box. So, you think, "Oh,
maybe this is a weapon. Maybe I'm
supposed to throw it at people.
Or maybe this is a cup holder. or maybe
this is something I'm supposed to uh put
into my dishwasher and uh just to uh to
hold it together. Who knows what it is?
Without following the instructions,
there's no telling of how wrong you're
going to be. There's no limit to how
wrong we're going to be. As smart as we
are, we're not we're not smarter than
the creator or even a 1% of him. So,
Hashem gave us the Torah because he
knows that this is the only way we're
going to survive.
We need the Torah because we need to
understand it's the only way we're going
to survive.
Even during this time, even though we
haven't received the Torah until almost
a uh several hundred years after this
whole story in Mount Sai,
the sages and the forefathers
uh the forefathers of Amitov and all of
their children were following the Torah,
most of the Torah.
So, Ysef goes to jail and then he has a
incident where these two cellmates
have a dream. He interprets their dream.
One of them dies. The other one gets his
job back being the wine the cup bearer
for for Pero. And he and Ysef asks him
to remember him once uh once he gets his
job back. Now because Ysef asked him
twice. He asked him the first time
remember me if the you know once you get
back to your job and then at the end of
the interpretation he said again don't
forget me. Remember me you know mention
me to to I'm innocent. They've been here
for 10 years already.
That was already too much, too much
effort on Ysef's level. And Hashem
punished them by adding two more years
to a sentence.
Each one of us is required to have some
level of effort in order for us to
survive.
The amount of effort versus the amount
of amuna, the amount of faith you have
to have in Hashem, all depends. If you
have a 100% faith that Hashem is going
to help you, then all you need to do is
learn to all day. You don't ever have to
worry about money and money will come.
But if you worry about money, if you're
worrying about how you're going to
survive, that means that you don't have
100% faith. Maybe it's 90%, maybe it's
60%, maybe it's 30%. So the amount of
effort you have to exert
is based on how much amuna you have. Now
that doesn't necessarily mean that all
of us need to stop working tomorrow and
just get into a room, close the doors
and and and learn Tawraat. Each person
has his own uh job in the world. But
it's very very important to have uh
serious amount of emad which you have to
work on on a daily basis not just
something you're born with and
use the amount of effort that is
what's necessary not necessarily you
know if you're working 18 hours a day
you pretty much have no whatsoever in
Hashem you're thinking that you're the
one that's going to make the money. If
you're working a normal day and then you
you make time for the family, you make
time to learn to okay fine then you have
then you're doing what you need to do.
But if you have no time for Torah
because you're working all the time
because you think that you need to make
money, then you have to know that you
have zero amuna.
You and Hashem don't have much of a
connection. This is this is as real as
it gets because
if you really believe that Hashem
created the heaven and the earth then
that means that you would believe that
if you do what he says he would provide
for you every day when we read anytime
you eat bread you have to do at the end
of say
I've been young I've been old and I've
never seen a righteous person ever
starve
never seen it's no such
If you do what Hashem says, of course
you're going to, you know, Hashem's
going to feed you. He's not going to
make you starve because uh you have uh
you know, you're learning Torah. So work
as far as how much time you spend at
work is again you have to make sure that
work is in order to show your effort.
But Torah has to be a priority. Now
when Ysef
asked in his level, he made too much
effort. He was supposed to ask once.
Okay. You want to ask help from this guy
that you helped that Hashem gave you
everything and uh you know to translate
the dream. You want to tell him listen
mention it to Paul. Fine. Once he asked
the second time, Hashem said, "No, you
crossed the line for that. You're going
to get punished for each request.
You in jail for another two years." Now
at the beginning of this para it says it
happened at the end of the two years to
the day was dreaming that behold he was
standing over the river when behold out
of the river there emerged seven cows of
beautiful appearance and robust flesh
and they were grazing in the marshland.
So par has this first of all it's
telling us at the end of two years which
is shows that it's at the end of two
years exactly.
So this this is to teach us that when
Hashem gives us some type of punishment,
it's exact. Same thing that he gives us
any type of reward, it's exact. He's
very precise. No one will ever suffer
even an extra minute more than they need
to. This we also learned when when his
brothers when Yseph's brothers sold him,
instead of him being sent to Egypt in a
typical uh caravan that's usually full
of oil and tar, which smells very bad,
Hashem made those uh those merchants
carry uh uh perfume. So at least
throughout that whole journey,
he didn't suffer from bad smell because
okay, he had to suffer, but not that
much. Hashem limited the show to remind
Joseph, hey listen, I'm with you.
There's only a limited amount of
suffering that you're going to get and
I'm going to limit it. Same thing here
exactly after the uh 12 years the
suffering was over. This gives us a lot
of hope when we go through life and we
have problems. Everyone there's not a
person in the world that doesn't have
problems. The Jewish pro Jewish nation
has countless problems.
We have people that are chasing us with
knives. We have people that are, you
know, trying to evict us from countries.
They're trying to boycott us. They're
trying to Every single thing that you
can imagine is happening. And it's not
just in far away lands. It's happening
in America. It's happening in Israel.
It's happening at home.
You know, there was not too long ago
there was a uh murder in uh in in
Florida of, you know, just an innocent
uh Jew going to McNess. Some crazy uh
kid decided to murder him.
We have problems non-stop.
We need to understand that anything that
Hashem decrees is very precise.
So when we're going through our
problems,
we need to pray not because we need to
pray because we think that hey listen,
maybe Hashem made a mistake.
Whatever Hashem decided, it's for our
best interest. When Job got all the
punishment that he had in the book of
Job, his wife was telling him, "Why do
you even bother praying to this God
still?" And he says, "Foolish woman.
Hashem,
God gave, God took, says, anyway, may
his name be blessed."
But then as he kept going through more
and more problems
when God spoke to him through prophecy
he said before that actually he said
maybe God made a mistake maybe he thinks
that Job in Hebrew is a and a if you
change one of the letters and you move
it to another place it spells ov means
enemy
says maybe God thinks that instead of me
being a I'm really OV I'm an enemy. So
when God spoke to him in a in in
prophecy says God says to him, I know
every single one of your hairs on your
head. I know its name. Apparently each
one of our hairs has a name.
I know each one of its name.
Created the heaven and the earth. Every
single thing that moves in this world,
everything that operates, he knows it.
There's no, he doesn't give it to
anybody else to do. He does everything.
and you think I made a mistake with your
name to to think that you're an enemy.
No, you were supposed to get this and
that's it. So when we pray, it's not
that we pray that Hashem made a mistake.
We pray that Hashem have even extra
mercy to maybe make it end a little
sooner because we can't handle it.
We can't handle it. But in reality, it's
good to know that all bad things come to
an end. Eventually comes to an end.
Whether it's an illness or it's
financial difficulties or any any type
of difficulty, it's going to end. The
secret to making it end faster is
connect to the one that gave it to you.
Give him a reason.
Now, if I was to go to a king of flesh
and blood, I said, "Listen, I have some
financial problems
and I showed up to this king of flesh
and blood, do you think I would show up
with shorts and a t-shirt?"
No. Right.
Especially the shorts t-shirt that are
dirty and maybe one of them has a hole.
Probably not. Right. So over here, it
says that before he got to Pal, they
dressed him up. They ran him out of the
jail, which also shows that as soon as
the punishment was over, Hashem made
them actually make him run out of the
jail to translate Po's dream.
means they rushed him and Pharaoh sent,
you know, he was looking for somebody to
translate these dreams, but no, none of
his people were able to translate these
dreams until this uh cup bearer finally
remembered this Hebrew, this Jew that
was in jail with him two years ago that
helped him out. And he says, "Oh,
listen. Don't kill all of us." Because
per Pharaoh got really, really upset. He
says, "Listen, I have all I'm paying all
of you guys a lot of money to be
interpreters of dreams to be the wise
people. Apparently, you're all fools and
liars. If somebody doesn't translate my
dream today, you're all dying."
So, the cup bearer realized, "Okay,
we're all going to die or we're going to
have to find something." Finally,
desperate times calls for desperate
measures.
You remember this Hebrew that was in
jail.
So when they're bringing, he tells Po,
"Listen, when I was in jail two years
ago, I met this uh this Hebrew, this
slave, this young guy." He gives him a
really bad description to show that even
when a wicked person gives a uh doesn't
you do a favor, it's still not 100%
favor.
It's like he's giving you the money, but
in reality, he's kind of pulling it back
or he's trying to find a way that to
steal it from you. you know, he's
lending you money, but he also made you
sign a contract that 95% of all profits
go to him. So, you're never going to be
ahead. He's charging you 80% interest.
That's a wicked person. So, he's giving
a description to uh to Pharaoh and
Pharaoh makes them uh calls on him. They
they they run him out of this dungeon.
And not even moments later, the
punishment is pretty much over. They
dress him up.
They shave him. They dress him very
appropriately.
Now, if I was at this back to be talking
to this king of flesh and blood, if I
came to this king of flesh and blood
and I said, "Listen, I have some
financial problems."
Would I say it in a way where I'm
cursing
and yelling at him
and maybe even tell him, "Listen, you
owe me. You owe me this money. Why do I
owe you? I don't know. I just feel like
you're the king. You have a lot of
money. Give it to me." Most likely the
king is going to kill me to say the
least.
Right. He's not going to answer me with
a positive response.
Absolutely. All right. So, we have to
understand that when we're requesting
stuff from the real king, from the king
above us, when we show up to ask Hashem
for things, whether it's for pona,
whether it's for a zeu, whether you to
find a partner, a uh, you know, a wife
or a husband, uh, whether it's for
children, whether it's for any type of
salvation whatsoever, we have to show up
with something. We can't demand. Hashem
doesn't owe us anything. He's the king.
We're here to serve him. He's not here
to serve us. He's not Santa Claus.
So, we have to show up with something.
Now, what do we show up with? What can
we possibly offer someone that has
everything?
It's the only thing he wants from us.
Okay, Hashem, listen. Until now, I
wasn't modest.
I wasn't modest. From now on, I'm going
to be modest. But you can't say from now
on
if you give me this stuff Hashem. No,
first you're modest. First you take the
step. You say, "Look, Hashem, I've been
modest for the last week. Look, Hashem,
I've been modest for the last 6 months.
I'm reading more Torah. I'm being more
observant. I'm keeping better kosher.
I'm doing You're doing so You're showing
up to Hashem with some type of report.
Look, Hashem, I'm being a good boy.
Look, Hashem, I'm being a good girl. I'm
doing what you want me to do.
The best thing about Hashem is once you
start doing what he wants you to do, you
don't have to ask.
But even if you get to a point where you
need to ask, at least you have something
to show for it. Now Ysef, what did he
have to show for it for for a king of
flesh and blood?
King of flesh and blood asks him, Paul
asks him, listen, I heard about you. You
translate dreams. No, I don't translate
translate dreams. It's beyond me. Only
if God wants you to know the dream, he's
going to give it to me. But me, I don't
know. I'm just a human. Between you and
me, if I was in jail for 12 years and
somebody asked me, can you translate
dream time to? Yeah, sure. How many you
want?
Yeah.
Just don't put me back in jail.
Right. But you had tells the truth.
So now he translate the dreams and he
tells uh he gives a uh a a message
telling him listen you're going to have
seven years of abundance where you're
going to make a lot of money. The stock
market's going to go up every day like
it's been going since 2009 the market's
been going up on a daily basis.
Everything's going to be fine. You're
going to have a surplus.
But then there's going to be seven years
of famine. The market's going to crash.
It's going to crash so bad
they're going to forget that it was ever
good.
Which, by the way, personally, I've been
predicting the market's going to crash
for the last couple years. Obviously,
I've been wrong, but I still think that
it's going to crash very soon. Not
because of a profit, but just because
nothing makes sense.
Nothing makes sense. The fact that you
have technology companies that barely
make any money being valued at 50, 60,
70 billion. the fact that you have some
companies that are, you know, in
business for less than 10 years, make a
few dollars, but they're better
valuations than companies like Walmart
and Coca-Cola. A lot of things don't
make any sense. But people are stupid
and they're going to continue paying for
these uh companies and for these stocks.
And then when it crashes like it did in
2008, it's like, "Oh, I knew it's going
to do it. So why don't you sell?"
No, I just didn't think it's going to
happen then. Okay, but once it started,
why don't you sell? No. Like, so that's
the thing. No one knew anything. It's
because people are too greedy to really
change their ways. People always think
that it's gonna they're gonna win. So
now
is telling Paul, listen, you could be
like those people
or you could be smart. You could find a
very smart person that not only knows
finance, knows money, but also somebody
that knows how to preserve food. It's
not just putting your food in a bunch of
boxes and hope for the best.
So Po saw that this kid is special. The
reason why he saw he's special is
because when he translated his dream, Po
tried to make he tried to test Yseph. He
wanted to see if he's really just coming
up with whatever description he had. So
as Po is telling him the dream, he's
changing the dream. He's not really
telling him his dream.
He's telling, "Okay, so there was seven
cows, but then there was uh three mice
walking around."
Now,
Kazal says that Ysef
also dreamt the same dream the night
before.
He saw his dream.
Was no fool, right?
Paul was a genius. He was also a wizard.
He's very smart. He was very powerful.
So that's why he's testing him. Mhm.
He's saying if this guy knows my if he
really is a dream interpreter,
then he's going to catch me making a
mistake in the dream.
Is that
But if he's just a Bubba, if he's just
one of those guys, he can tell me,
"Okay, seven cows mean $7 million. Seven
other cows mean $7 billion. He's going
to tell me whatever he wants. How do I
know it's true?"
So he tries to test him in an unusual
way by saying making mistakes when he's
telling him to dream. And each time he
he says something fake, Ysef stops him
and says, "No, no, no. You didn't dream
that. There was no seven. There was no
mice. There was only the seven cows.
So every time you would do it, Ysef
would correct him. It got so much to the
point that by the end of the dream,
Po was telling him, "Were you watching
my dream? How do you know this stuff?"
There's something unusual about this
kid. Mhm.
So at the end after he tells him
everything that's going to happen,
Paul looks at his other servants, all of
his government members, all of the
people that he has, could we find
another like him? A man in whom is the
spirit of God? God is in this person. He
knows things that no one else could
possibly tell you that they know. Okay,
maybe this guy can make a stick turn
into a uh, you know, into a snake. Or
maybe this one can do a few magic tricks
here and there, but it's not real. It's
illusion. This kid actually knows my
dream. This kid actually knows a lot.
Can't find anybody like him.
The reason why he asked his servants is
because there was a lot of anti-semitism
at the time. The Egyptians hated the
Jews already.
So much so that they wouldn't even eat
at the same table as them.
And that's why later on in this para
when Joseph sits down with his brothers
to eat, his servants and he himself are
sitting at different tables.
He can't show that he's Jewish to his
brothers.
And his servants under no condition
would ever sit with a bunch of 10 Jews.
It's like
they they felt like we're a disease.
So po even though he's po he's telling
him listen forget about whether we like
them or not. There's nobody like this
kid
this is something uh this is something
better than all of us. Another thing
is that in order to there was a rule in
Egypt according to the there was a rule
in Egypt that the person that spoke the
most amount of languages
he would become parole.
Now P he had a throne where it wasn't
like just a seat like we see in the
movies. His throne had steps. He was
sitting on top of a throne. There was
many many steps over 70 steps. So with
every step so you would speak to Ysef in
a language. If Ysef knew the language,
you would speak to him back in that
language and he would take one step. And
then Ysef would speak in a language and
Po would speak in that language and he
would take another step. Now P was so
smart. He knew 70 languages.
70 languages.
Ysef had a miracle happen the night
before. An angel came down to uh Gabriel
came down. The angel Gabriel came.
Hashem sent Gabriel and he tried to
teach him
71 languages.
It was too much for Joseph's human body.
So Hashem just gave it to him. He just
gave him all all 71 languages. So when
he arrived at the throne
after 70, both of them know 70. And then
finally, Joseph speaks Hebrew, the 71st
language, which Pharaoh didn't know.
So Pharaoh says, "Listen, there's no one
like you, but I'm going to make a deal.
You can't tell anyone that you know one
more language than me,
but I'll make you king. But I'll make
you king.
I'll give you no one will be more
powerful than you. Only I can oversee
you." And that's what he says over here.
Pharaoh says to Joseph, "I am Pharaoh,
and without you, no man may lift his
hand or foot in all the land of Egypt.
and he gives him a special name
and then he gets him a wife which has a
story of its own but nonetheless it's
not just because he translated the dream
but in reality he showed him something
that in reality that if the Egyptians
found out about the 71 languages that
Joseph knew
they would make him king
they would make him king anyway
so Joseph made a sway made a nether and
this nether
is a swear in Judaism. He made a
promise. I I swear that he will never
tell anyone that he knows more languages
than Pharaoh.
Later on, this comes in very key once
Joseph's father uh many years later,
about 20 or so years later,
uh or 17 years later, um dies and Joseph
wants to go bury his father.
Pharaoh doesn't want Joseph to leave.
He's the king. They're making a lot of
money because of him. Everything is
great. They're almost worshiping this
kid. He's not a kid anymore, but they're
worshiping this young guy.
Pharaoh doesn't want him to leave. So,
Joseph says to Pharaoh, "Listen, I swore
to my father that I would bury him in
the cave of Mah.
Now, if you tell me that I can't, you
being the king,
if you tell me that I can't keep this
swear and I have to cancel the swear I
made to my father, that means I also
have to make this swear that I made to
you 20 years ago.
And I have to tell everybody that I
speak 71 languages and that was the only
reason why Pharaoh let uh Joseph go bury
his father in a different place. So now
moving on you have Joseph in a matter of
moments goes from being in a dungeon for
12 years
suffering
to now he's the most powerful man in the
world.
No one could uh could say do anything
without him. The Midrash says that on
that day Pharaoh gave Joseph a gifts of
fields
um estates as well as three 3,00.
Now, in today's uh doing the math, in
today's numbers, that's somewhere in the
neighborhood of about 400 or $450
million.
He gave him on his first day at his job.
It's a nice boss to have.
Bonus.
It's a nice bonus.
Bonus.
It's better than Goldman Sachs.
So, Joseph didn't just have a position.
Now, he became very, very rich, too.
Now during the next seven years it
happened as Joseph said and the dream he
translated the dream. Uh if anyone wants
to know a little bit more about dreams I
talked about it in last night's sh that
I did at my house. Uh I speak about it
extensively about dreams. So I don't
want to go over the same thing. So you
should watch the video. Uh I sent it to
you and anyone that wants the videos you
could either subscribe or just give me
your uh
uh email or tech or uh phones and I
could text it to you. But uh everything
that he said in his dream happened and
uh this next seven years they're making
a lot of money. They're uh and Joseph
is preserving all of this extra food. A
few other people that were smart also
tried to preserve the food. But after
seven years when the famine starts
another miracle happens and all of the
other people that try to preserve food,
their food goes bad.
And only food that go that's that's
preserved is the food that Joseph
preserved. So putting Joseph in a
position of significant power having
giving him a monopoly.
Now the Egyptians
had some reserves that goes away. They
want to get some more food. They come to
uh Po. They come to Joseph. Joseph says
no. Okay. If you want to uh if you want
the food,
circumcise yourself.
Why do I have to circumcise myself?
We're not Jewish. Joseph knew that all
your this anti-semitism
is going to continue, especially when he
knows that he sees that his brothers are
going to come eventually. His family is
going to come. The Jewish people are
going to come. The 70 people that was in
the family of of Jacob at the time.
Okay.
Please. uh the 70 people uh that were uh
at the uh there were 70 Jews in the
world, 70 Hebrews or Israelites.
They're going to come to Egypt
and you're going to make fun of them
because they have circumcision. You call
them half a man, half of this. They're
collectible.
So
I don't want my family to be made fun of
because God's laws. So if you want food,
circumcise yourself.
So they all go to uh
they don't want to circumcise
themselves. They all run to uh to Po.
Paul says, "Listen, he's the one with
the power. Do whatever he says. Look at
everything that's happened." But when we
were making money the first seven years,
I said, "Okay, maybe you got lucky. We
made some money because of him." But
once the famine started, once exactly
the timing and we everyone, the whole
world started losing money except us.
It wasn't just a famine in Egypt. It was
a worldwide famine.
No one had food. The only place in the
world that had food was Egypt was
Joseph. So this this may if if Pharaoh
was rich
before Joseph get there right now
there's no limit to how much he has. If
he was a billionaire,
now he's a multi- trillionaire. Because
imagine one person in the entire world
has food.
You pay whatever you want. Whatever he
wants. He wants to charge you a million
dollars for an apple. You pay him a
million dollars for an apple.
So now you have a uh situation where the
uh they have to
circumcise themselves
and a couple of years pass into this
famine. It gets worse and worse. It gets
to a point where Yakov and his children
are starting to feel the pain back at
home.
So this was really the plan of uh of
Joseph where he says eventually these my
family is going to come.
And uh he told all of the servants
the day is going to come give me a
description of these uh few people. If
they walk into this city,
you let me know right away. But also
make sure anyone that's uh buying food.
Has to be the guy that uh wants to buy
the food. You can't send a a servant to
buy food for him
because I want to see every person
that's buying food. I couldn't tell them
it's because I'm looking for my
brothers. something.
So he had a whole plan of how to make
sure that when his brothers eventually
come,
he's going to see them. Now, the last
time he saw his brother was 22 years
ago. Last time he was a little
17year-old kid, no beard, clean shaven.
So his uh when his brothers finally
come, YaKob sends them. He says,
"Listen, go to Egypt. I I hear they're
the only ones that have food. go there,
but make sure that uh
all of you don't go into the same gate.
Go into 10 different gates. He sent 10
out of the 11. Benjamin stayed home. He
sent 10 out of the 11. He said go
through 10 different gates. The reason
why you have to go to 10 different gates
because if they see if everyone sees you
coming out of first gate, then they know
you're all from the same family
and they see you have so much they give
you the evil eye.
So this shows that the evil eye is very
real. It's not some illusion or some
superstition. Evil eye is 100% real.
Which by the way, the says
anyone that is uh scared of evil eye or
some you know uh they should do what um
Yakov teaches us. You take uh your uh
right hand and your left hand. You take
the two thumbs. You put them like this.
Say I am from the seed of uh your sadik
and he is above the uh the evil eye.
Uh and then there's another verse um
uh um and then you know you see this
this verse that Jacob says as the
blessing for Sadik before he dies and
it's a uh you know it's something that
protects you against evil eye. The other
thing that protects you against evil eye
is praying to Hashem. That's the best
thing. Every time you say if there's
good news always say
if there's bad news always say if you
want something say
everything either blessing of Hashem or
with Hashem's help always involve and
make Hashem as a constant part of your
of your speech
make him a constant part of your life.
The more you mention Hashem during your
day the more connected you are going to
be to him. But if Hashem, if you're only
connecting to Hashem through prayer,
okay, so you pray in the morning, you
pray in the afternoon. Okay, so you
connect to them twice a day. Okay, so I
do a blessing here and there. So you
connect them five times a day. Fine.
That's good. It's not bad. But what if
you instead of five, you connect them a
thousand times. It doesn't require that
much effort.
You just say it in I mean like obvious
you just say it for yourself or
you could say it to yourself. You could
say it when people speak to you. It's up
to you. uh you know it's a uh again you
have to you have to say Hashem because
you can't use the real name of Hashem
right
uh that's the third commandment you're
not allowed to use his name in vain
which means just talk saying the real
name of Hashem casually you're not
allowed
that's what you mean by that
right uh that's why we say Hashem means
that name so we're not actually saying a
name we're saying the names uh the the
real name is the one that we use during
prayer
uh or it's one of the real names so Now,
we're not allowed to use that. We say
Hashem. Hashem means the name. You can
say Hashem as many times as you want. Uh
to you, it means the same thing, but
it's obviously uh you're still giving
his name so much respect that you're not
actually saying it.
But again, you should make it a a part
of your language, make it a part of your
speech because that can help you stay
connected and remind you, especially
during difficult times. There's not a
day that goes by that people don't have
a difficult time. Whether it's an
employee or a boss or a customer or some
uh driver that just cut you off or
police officer that pulled us off, a
pull us over or or somebody that's
robbing you or somebody that's cheating
you there. It's constant problems. It's
constant every day. When we say when
somebody says, "Where are you going?" or
"What are you doing today?" Oh, but it's
not Hashem. I'm supposed to do ABC. that
already reminds us
today
he's here.
It subconsciously reminds you that he's
in control. Don't worry, whatever is
happening, he wants it to happen. It's
for your interest. So, make Hashem a
constant part of your speech because
that reminds you consciously and
subconsciously that he is a uh a
permanent part of your life.
Uh so now after uh Joseph makes all of
these elaborate laws to make sure that
when his brothers arrive,
he sees them.
The brothers arrive, all 10 of them,
they all go through 10 different gates
and uh after a few days, you know, we um
he hears about them, but then they don't
show up. So then Joseph sends his
soldiers to go look for these 10 people.
He gives description of what these
people look like. Even though he hasn't
seen them in 22 years, he remembers how
the older ones look like.
So, he gives a description. They get
arrested and they're all brought to his
house to uh to uh the uh to Joseph. Now,
Joseph uh
obviously they can't recognize him. It's
been 22 years. He has a beard now. He's
not a 17year-old kid.
I don't know. but he recognizes them.
And to make sure that they don't
recognize him, he doesn't speak their
language. He doesn't speak Hebrew. He
speaks to them through an interpreter.
And he speaks very harshly. He's very
mean to them. Oh, you're spies. No, no,
no. We're not spies. Uh, no, you're
spies. Why would you come through
through 10 10 different gates unless
you're spying for someone else? No,
really. We're looking for our brother.
Which brother you looking for?
And they tell him, "No, we have 12
brothers from the same father. One of
them is gone and one of them is still
with our father." And he said, "What if
I," the Midash says that he asks them,
"What if I found this brother of yours
or if someone found this brother of
yours,
but he didn't want to give him back to
you?"
and they respond to him.
We would fight until either they're dead
or we're dead to save this brother. This
really
made uh
see that there maybe there's a
possibility that they changed.
Amen.
So now
he goes back and forth with them. They
he's constantly calling them spies.
They're trying to convince him they're
not spies. He throws all of them in
jail.
They're in jail for 3 days.
After 3 days, he says, "Okay, you know
what? I'm not going to be uh like you.
I'm uh you know, I have some mercy on
this family of yours that's waiting back
at home. So, I'm going to give you guys
a chance by sending nine of you back
home. I'm going to keep Shimon, the
brother, in jail. So, if you want him
back, you have to come back. Not only
all nine of you, but you have to come
back with this 11th brother of yours
that you say you have. Because if you
really have another brother,
then uh you'll bring them. If you don't
have another brother, then obviously,
you know, then uh you I was writing you
as our spies and I'll track you down and
kill all of you.
Now, the big question here
is why were the
10 brothers so scared of Joseph?
Because what we're going to what we
learned in last week's para is that they
were all big warriors with supernatural
powers.
Mhm. the uh actually in last week's
shure we talked about how the source of
of uh of all superheroes like X-Men and
uh all the superheroes you see in the
movies today the whole concept of
superheroes comes from the Torah it
actually comes from the 12 tribes
because if you see the midrash you see
the oral Torah it talks about the wars
that they fought and it gives you real
details how they jumped over giant walls
and they picked up boulders and they
killed you know, 20, 30, 40,000 men in a
day, you know, just the 10 of them, not
talking about the dam and an army of
50,000 people.
So, they had superpowers. So, what do
these 10 people have uh so scared of
this one guy?
So, there's two answers to that. Number
one is the obvious answer that we see in
today's world, which is
always seeks peace first under all
conditions, even if it requires us to
suffer.
You see this in today's world with
Israel. Even though the Israeli
government is not exactly a uh observant
Jewish government, they're still Jewish
nonetheless.
And you see that when we go to war with
the terrorists, we do things that no
other government in their right mind
would ever do. Uh there was a video
recently posted by um the Prager
University
uh of a commander from the uh you know
United Kingdom army
uh talking about how the Israeli army
the IDF is the most um civil and uh
most merciful army in history of war
because he said I was at war with them
you know on their side
a couple years ago when they were going
against the uh Hamas
and because they did not want to hurt
civilians, they would actually call the
terrorist house and tell and put flyers
in the street telling them that they're
going to bomb the neighborhood. They're
going to bomb specific houses. Now, when
you're in war, civilians die. It's
unfortunate, but it's collateral damage.
It happens. Now, America did not call
Saddam Hussein's friends or and and tell
them, "Listen, by the way, we're going
to bomb your castle before they did it."
Japan did not call America before they
bombed the uh Pearl Harbor and say,
"Hey, by the way, the surfers that are
hanging out there, tell them not to go
to the beach there because we're going
to bomb." No one does this. But the
Israeli army that comes from the root of
Jacob says, "Listen, we don't want to
kill civilians. we know that you have
bombs in this house. So the few of you
that you know don't want to die and
hopefully are not terrorists. Leave and
it would put hundreds of thousand
millions of flyers all over the streets
telling people that they're going to
bomb this place. So this shows you that
you know in order to be a Jew you have
to have mercy. But Amad has even beyond
the mercy of a normal human being.
And Ysef says I have mercy. I'm going to
let you go
bring food to your families, but you got
to go bring me back this kid, this other
Why do you want this one uh one brother?
Because that was his natural brother.
The other brothers came from different
mothers. Benjamin is the only one that
came from the same mother from
now. When they go back
to uh tell uh Yakov what happened,
Shimon is back there. We have all this
food, but we lost one of our brothers.
It's not exactly the best news in the
world. Yakov is not very happy with
them. And especially when they when
Ruven tells him, listen, in order for us
to get Shimon back, we have to bring
Benjamin over there. Benjamin over
there.
There's a big problem.
He's not willing to do it. And Ruven
tells him, Ruven, the the oldest
brother, tells him, listen, if uh I'll
take the responsibility and if uh I
don't bring him back, you can kill both
of my kids.
So the Midash says that uh
Jacob ignored him, saying, "What a fool
my firstborn son is, thinking that his
two sons are not my two sons also,
that I would kill them." What kind of
deal is this? You're telling me that if
you don't bring one of my sons, I should
kill two more sons. How does that make
any sense?
But the w didn't really mean kill my
sons. He meant, you know, I'm going to
take responsibility. I'm really serious.
I'm very passionate. Now, having passion
when you're speaking is very, very
important because when you speak from
the heart, people will listen. Something
sometimes having too much passion
is not exactly the most effective thing.
So the uh there's a good story where
this one guy was a uh trying to teach
his kid Torah, trying to teach us to
Torah and uh
kid just doesn't learn, you know,
doesn't speak a word. He's three years
old, hasn't spoken a word, nothing. So
he's trying to teach the first words for
this kid. He wants to teach him
something. Kid is not saying one word.
One day, two days, one week, two weeks,
three weeks, he's not speaking.
He's thinking this this kid is I don't
know is a fool or he's maybe he's uh
something wrong with him. So one day he
takes him with him to uh to the market
to the Israeli market. In Israel it
doesn't matter whether it's 2015 the
year 2015 or 1915. There's certain parts
of Israel that are still like the old
days. So even today you go to the middle
of Tel Aviv, you're always going to find
a guy with a donkey and watermelons
carrying watermelons. And the guy with
the donkey with the watermelons screams
which is watermelon on the knife like
you get fresh watermelon and the guy is
screaming at the top of his lungs. So he
passed by this watermelon salesman and
the kid 2 minutes later starts saying
he starts saying watermelon on the
knife. So the father so the father says
I'm trying to teach this kid Hebrew
Torah for three weeks. He's this fool
kid doesn't doesn't want to listen to
anything. He listens to this
uh watermelon salesman for two minutes
and he already says it. He goes to the
rabbi and tells him what my kid there's
something wrong with him. He goes, "No."
He said, "When you were trying to teach
him a Torah, you're just trying to teach
him just to get it over with." The guy
that's selling watermelons, he's
thinking about if I don't sell these
watermelons, they're going to evict me
out of my house. So when he says when he
says watermelon, he's trying to sell
them. He's saying it with his all of his
heart.
If you're going to teach Torah, Teach it
with all your heart. Don't be a
computer.
You want to want to teach your kids
something, teach it with all your heart.
Don't be one of these people. Yes. It
says 20 March through uh put some
passion into it. Show them that you
care. Be involved. Be involved. You
know, that's that's the the most
important thing in education is to be
involved. You have to make it like
you're learning also. Even if you're not
learning, even if your kid's six years
old and obviously you know the math that
he's learning, you know the uh English
that he's learning, you know the Torah
that he's learning, even if you know all
of it, act like you're learning also
because if you're excited about it,
they're going to be excited about it.
But if you look at it like A B C, and if
you're boring, they're going to think
it's boring. Where are they going to go?
Mommy, where I hate school.
You hate school. What' school do to you?
Somebody beat you up? No. The teacher
make fun of you? No. Then why? I don't
know. All the There's no reason. They
just hate school. Why do they hate
school? They hate school because of you.
Cuz you're showing them that they that's
boring. You tell them I hate wood. And
you're watching the TV on the side. I
can't wait till this be over. It's like
you're praying to Hashem that this
homework is going to be over. It's like,
you know what, honey? Go play. I'll do
the homework for you. And you do the
kid. You do the homework for the kid.
It's the worst thing you can do. Do go
watch TV. Go watch TV. I'll finish the
homework for you. You can't take it.
You're killing your kid. You're
destroying him. He's going to hate
school.
He's going to hate school. It's not
good. School is very important. One of
the most important things for for for uh
that people need to understand about
school is that even though most of what
you learn, especially public school,
most of what you learn in school you're
not going to use in real life.
So, what's the point of school? School
teaches you how to think. It's not that
you need to know history and what uh
Antio did 2,300 years ago. Antio is not
coming back from the dead. He's not
going to talk to you. He's not going to
ask you, do you remember me?
It's not that you need to remember, you
know, who was the first president of uh
United States
before you die. They're not going to ask
you, listen, before you die, we need to
ask you, do you know who the first
president was? No one cares.
No one's going to ask you if you know
what the coine or the tangent of a
number is in math. No one's going to ask
you if you know the square root of 81.
None of that stuff is actually used in
real life. The point of all of it, the
point of whether it's grade school,
kindergarten, high school, obviously
hopefully all of them being Jewish
organizations for Jews.
um and even college is to teach you how
to think.
If you're going to go to college, the
reality of it is most of the time you're
going to spend in college is complete
waste of money. The only valuable time
you have is probably the la, you know,
maybe a junior year, your third year,
maybe the part of your senior year. Most
of college is just partying and wasting
aba's money because most kids don't know
anything about what they want to do. And
even if they finished school, they still
don't know if they want to do it.
And even if they want to do it, it's a
real job. They have to go to more
school.
So if you're going to school, you know,
regular school, obviously you have to
already go into it thinking that school
is going to teach me how to think, how
to make my brain work. The beauty about
the Torah is that if you teach a kid
from being young kid Torah, by the time
he's 12 or 13 years old, his brain is
sharper than any doctor you have in the
in the world. At 13 years old, if he
learned mala at 13 years old, bring any
doctor you want in the world. He's the
kid's going to be smarter than him
because the teaches you to work your
brain in in some in a completely
different way. It takes you to a
different level. Any yeshiva kid you're
gonna bring next to him, someone that
really learns. I'm talking about
somebody that learns an hour a day,
someone that truly learns Torah, serious
student, even a teenager, it's going to
be smarter than anybody you want in the
world. It's completely changes your
brain. And it's never too late. Doesn't
have to doesn't mean that the kid has to
be born with the in his hand. Even if
you start at 40 years old, never learn a
page of you start now. After 5, 6, 7, 10
years of serious studying, you're going
to start looking at the world like it's
two different places. You can't
recognize the world you live in. You
can't even recognize yourself from 10
years ago.
Changes your brain completely. The Torah
has something not only spiritual in it,
but it's also something that makes you
think in a completely unusual way to
secular knowledge. So, first thing is to
teach us how to think.
As far as if you're going to go for a
career in the world and you're going to
go to college for it, then it better be
a meaningful career. If you're already
going to work, I already always tell
people, listen, as far as business, I
spent some time in the business world.
We had a uh, you know, some big
successes at times.
I've decided to spend my life to be in
the in the Torah world now. And um, it's
not because I can't get a job. It's not
because of any other reason other than
the fact that I think that God needs
more Jews than he does need business
people. It doesn't necessarily mean that
everybody has to do it. He gave me a
gift. I could speak. I like to learn. So
the two go together and I could
influence people to do chan. Hashem,
we've had a lot of success doing it. But
at the same token, this knowledge that
he's given me about business over all
these years and the experience that I
have, I still have it. So I try to help
people with business. And I tell him,
listen, if you're already going to do
business, at least do it the right way.
Don't go there and waste your time. If
you're going to go to work and just
making $5 an hour, you know, while the
guy sitting right next to you is making
150 just because he spends an extra hour
at work, there's something wrong with
you. If you're going, you know, so if
you're going to do anything, at least do
it the right way. If someone is going to
go to college and they want to go for a
career, have some type of direction.
Don't go for a communications degree.
Don't go for an English degree. Don't
waste $100,000, $200,000 of your
parents' money for absolutely no reason
whatsoever. If you're going to go for a
degree, go for a real degree. What you
want to be an engineer, you want to be a
lawyer, you want to be a doctor, you
want to be, I don't know, something. But
don't be, oh, no, I'm going there
because I want to be a teacher. You
don't need to go to the most fanciest
college in the world to be a teacher. Go
to community school, pay $3,000 a year,
and you'll be just as good of a teacher.
That's what you want to do, then. So
again, when we're educating our kids,
it's when it comes down to Jewish
education, the most important thing we
need to understand is that Jewish
education is saving their soul. More
important than any career in the world
you're ever going to give them, you have
to give them Jewish education in school,
not just at home. It has to be 24/7.
They have to understand they're Jewish
24 hours a day. Second thing is if you
want to make your kids succeed in life
in general, make sure that they learn as
early as possible, which you know the
yeshiva will do that.
And third of all, if if the kid
eventually once they're 17, 18 years
old, they get to a point where they want
to go towards the career world, then if
they've been learning, you know, their
whole life, they're going to be a top
student and they'll do they'll make some
good decisions. But in general, try to
be a a light to them by giving them a
direction. Don't just send your kid and
hope for the best that he's going to
make the decision by themselves cuz at
the end of the day they're still 17, 18
years old. They don't really know that
much. They know maybe they'll know some
Torah, but they're not going to know
life yet. So if you if you want your kid
to be excited about learning, you have
to be excited. If you have little kids,
you're doing their homework for them,
don't do the homework for them. Even if
it's the kid goes to it's better that
the kid goes to school with no homework
than you doing the homework for them.
Why? But then he's going to fail,
right? So why why is it what parents
wants their kid to fail?
No one. Right? But what happens when you
fail?
You get embarrassed. You're not happy.
No one wants to be a loser. So when you
realize that you failed, okay, I have to
do better.
Now I'm going to do homework better. Now
I'm not going to play anymore. It builds
the kid's self-esteem.
You can't make a kid expect you to do
everything for them because the real
world is not like that. You can't do
everything for the kid and the kid's 25
years old. He's still expecting mommy to
wake him up in the morning and make him
lunch. He's 25. He's a real man. Go
away. Do you know live your life? So,
when you're doing their homework and
saying that, "No, no, don't worry, it's
a uh I'll do it for you." That's what
you're training him to be. You're
training to be one of these 30-year-old
kids that's still living at home. And
you don't want that. So you want them to
be excited about learning. And so my
best suggestion is to fake it until you
make it.
You know, they say even pretend that
you're excited about it even though it's
boring, even though it's annoying, even
though you rather be doing a million and
a half other things. If you show
excitement about it after a few times,
you're not going to have to help them.
They're going to do it by themselves
because you're excited about it.
Everybody, every everybody wants to do
something you're excited about.
Just imagine if you're excited about a
TV show, your kids automatically love
it. If you're excited about a certain
sport, your kids are automatically fans.
If you're excited about a certain food,
all of a sudden, this is my favorite
food. Well, you've never eaten it
before. No, it's my favorite. Em, my
favorite. You never eat it before. No,
no, I know. It's my favorite. Anything
you're excited, they're excited about
because a kid thinks that you're the
best. You're you're you're idol. So, if
you're going to teach them all these
things, be excited about it. And I think
that's that makes them much more
effective. Now after this going back to
the para you have the situation with
Jacob has to make a difficult decision.
Now I already have one son that
supposedly got killed another son is in
jail. In order for me to save the one
son I have to risk
nine because it's possibility that this
terrible you know visceroy may not uh
you know may kill all of them. Maybe
he's asking for all of them to come. So
the Midash says that uh Yakov Yakov is
it's not just a simple language. He says
here listen you should go bring him a
gift and hopefully he has mercy. The
real the real thing about Yakov Yakov
wasn't someone to fool around with.
Yakov had a direct connection with God.
If you collect all of the people in the
world, all of the holy and everything in
the world, maybe maybe all of us could
be the equivalent of his nail. Jacob had
a direct connection with God.
So Yakov when he went to Asav,
a lot of people think that Yakov was
just giving compliments to a wicked
person by saying, "Hey, listen. I seeing
you is like seeing the face of an
angel."
The real hidden message here is that it
wasn't like that. He said, "Yes, seeing
you is like seeing a hidden the face of
an angel. The real secret is that he was
telling him, by the way, I'm not the
same yeshiva boy I was 34 years ago.
Seeing a face of an angel, that means
that my friends are angels. I see angels
all the time.
So, don't mess with me. You hang out
with a bunch of clowns, a bunch of ISIS
members,
bunch of uh drug dealers and uh and uh
you know, scavengers that murder people
for fun. I hang out with angels. We
could destroy you in a second.
You understand? So just like somebody
says in a
says that the uh what is this like? It's
like somebody that goes gets invited to
a a house and he finds out that the host
wants to kill him.
So how does he get out of this
situation? So he tells the host, "Oh
wow, the food is so good. It reminds me
of the food that I had at the king's
house.
So, what does the host think? Host
immediately thinks, "Wait, he went to
eat at the king's house? That means
they're friends. Nobody just goes to the
king's house to eat lunch. That means
they're friends. So, if I kill him, the
king's going to find out. The king finds
out he's going to kill me." So,
automatically, the host doesn't want to
kill him anymore. So, this is what Yakob
is doing to
the way I hang out with your your face
reminds me of angels because I'm trying
to tell you that I hang out with angels.
Don't mess with me. Same thing as what
he did to this mysterious king that he
hasn't met. He tells his sons, "Listen,
just like I brought to Isab, I I send
him special gifts." That's to buy them
to soften their heart a little bit.
Prayer, I'll pray for El Shai. I I'll
pray for the God that created the heaven
and the earth to say enough. D means uh
in Hebrew means enough.
So the the God that created the heaven
and the earth, but eventually he said
enough. I created enough. That's it. No
more creations. Nothing's going to be
created. So just like he said enough of
creations
and he ended creation after the six
days.
He's going to say the end of my pro
problems. No more problems for Yakov
anymore. So I'll pray to I'll pray to
God to so you have mercy but also
give him this letter.
So in this letter it says it's a really
interesting letter
and he tells him and so I'm going to
summarize it and uh he tells this
mysterious king I heard you're smart I
heard you're nice da da da but I also
heard that you accused my children of
being spies
and at the moment that I heard that
you're accusing my kids of being spies
and took one of them to jail I almost
looked up at the heavens and had two
tears come out of my eyes. And if those
two tears would have come out, the God
of heaven and the earth would have
turned your entire country and kingdom
and friends and everything you have into
dust. So make sure that when my kids get
there, you treat them nice.
He sends them a threat letter.
So make sure that when I send my kids
there, you bring all of them back
and you treat them good.
So he sends him a threat letter. So you
know when you read the Torah sometimes,
you know, it seems like why was why were
the 12 tribes scared? Why was Yakov so
passive? That's why you have to read the
story behind the story. So now going
back to the question of why were the 12
tribes scared if they uh the 11 you know
10 of them why were they so scared of
this one guy because
when they saw Yoseph and they saw that
he had this not just this position of
money and everything but he also had
this wisdom and he started telling them
things about their past that they forgot
about reminding them of Joseph reminding
them of their past reminding them of
their own sin at that moment
they started feeling guilty.
And as soon as they started feeling
guilty, all of the powers that Hashem
gave them disappeared.
So they felt like just regular people.
But then they started admiring this guy.
They started saying, "Listen, you know,
to saying to their father, listen, he's
not exactly the most wicked person
because look, he even sent us home. He
had mercy on us. He sent us with a lot
of food.
You know, if he just wanted to kill us,
he could have killed us on the spot. He
sent us all back.
So, and also his wisdom is amazing. He
knows things about us that we didn't
even know. He knew exactly what kind of
beds we slept in when we were young.
They don't realize that it's really
their brother telling them.
So
now Yakov
doesn't want to do it initially. Doesn't
want to send them initially. And then
after they start getting to the point of
uh running out of food. As we said
earlier, desperate times call for
desperate measures. And Jacob says,
"Okay,
go and get the uh get the food."
And he said, "You Judah comes to me." He
goes, "Yeah, but we have to bring
Benjamin."
And at that time, all the little kids,
all the children of the brothers came
and telling Yakov, "We're all going to
die if we're if we don't get food." So
they hit his heart a little bit, made
the made made Sabah feel a little
guilty, he says, "Okay, take Ben Beyamin
and also take this letter."
So they all get to Egypt
and to their surprise,
Ysef welcomes them, welcomes them in his
house. Now they're thinking initially
that he's maybe he's welcome us
welcoming us in his house because he
wants to arrest us and kill all of us.
So immediately they take the money that
uh was left in their bags which they
thought that uh somebody was trying to
trap them and they
give it they try to give it to this uh
servant of the uh of of Ysef which ends
up being Manasha his son which they
don't know yet. And he said, "No, no,
there was a mistake made. Uh, the last
time we came here, we bought some food,
but for some reason, the money was put
back in our bags."
And Masha says, "No, no, no. You've paid
you paid full uh full price. All the
money that uh
you gave me, I have. This money is a
blessing from your god."
To surprised, he's like, "You have
nothing to worry about. you were invited
here to have lunch with the uh with uh
the visceroy.
Now they are very very surprised.
Now at the same token they also know
that they cannot eat
food with the grain.
First of all the Egyptians didn't eat
meat. didn't eat they didn't eat uh cows
or uh or sheep they worshiped them
but Jews that was their main meal
so that was also part of the reason why
the Egyptians would not sit with the
Jews because they would be disgusted
that they're eating their god.
Uh second thing is Jews have kosher laws
and even though we didn't get the Torah
until a few hundred years after this
happened,
the uh the patriarchs and the 12 tribes
were all keeping kosher laws. So since
Joseph was a Jew, 100% kosher Jew, um
he uh made sure that he told Manasha,
his son,
take one of the uh take one of the
animals and bring them to the slaughter
and show them how you slaughter it. So
they see that you're slaughtering it in
a kosher way. and also show them all of
the food that you're preparing in a
kosher way so they don't have a problem
eating. So the all these guys are
staring the tribes have seen this.
They're amazed. How does this Egyptian
know about all of these rules? There's
only 70 people in the world know about
this stuff. It's not like today where
there's internet, there's Facebook,
there's millions of Jews. I mean there's
really only 15 million Jews or so in the
world, but if you ask the go, they think
there's at least two or three billion.
But still the Jews have a big influence
in the world today. Back then there's 70
of us.
70 that's it. 70 is you know it's one
family.
So they're asking how do these people
from Egypt know know these know these
rules? How do this know this stuff?
And he continues to amaze them. Now as
soon as he arrives
he sees the brother. He sees Beyamin
and he says, "Oh, so this is the brother
you you were talking about." And he uh
takes Beenyamin privately and he starts
talking to him again. He's uh wants to
find out about his younger brother, but
he can't tell him that he's the brother.
He says, "So, uh what happened to this
other brother of yours that they say is
gone?" He's like, "Oh, yeah." Benjamin
starts talking about him. "Oh yeah, Ben,
I miss him. He's this." Starts saying
all these compliments about him. So he
says, "Oh yeah. Um, do you have any
kids? Cuz Benjamin says, "Yeah, I have
10 kids." He says, "What's the names of
your kids?" And he gives him the 10
names of the kids. He goes, "How did
these are unusual names? Where did you
get these names?" And he explains to
Ysef every one of the names, how it's
named after Ysef.
10 kids all named after after his
brother. At that moment, Ysef became
very very emotional and he ran away. He
couldn't do It says in the paral he says
he had to uh his um emotions overtook
him and he had to walk away because he
could he couldn't handle it.
So he went to wash his face
and then he came back and he says okay
it's time to eat and then he started
calling out each one of the brothers
names but he called them to and where to
sit but he called them out in order of
of birth. Now there again, these are 10
adults. They're not It's not like a kids
where you say, "Okay, one's 17 and I can
tell the difference between a 12 12y old
and a 17y old and a 25y old." They're
all adults.
So, especially the older ones, how can
you tell the difference? So, he calls
each one of them in order of where to
sit. And after all of them, says, "Oh,
and Benjamin,
I also used to have a brother like him,
and my mom also died, so he's going to
sit next to me.
So he gives him special treatment and he
gives him five times the amount of food
than the the rest of the brothers. And
the reason why he did this is he wanted
to see if the other brothers are going
to be jealous of Benjamin just like they
were jealous of Ysef. So throughout this
whole this whole show that he's putting
is to test out to see if they're going
to do if they're willing to do to
Benjamin what they did to him. After
this, he sends them all on their way,
but with a trap, he puts a uh his uh his
cup
in uh he puts it in in the sack of
Benjamin.
And before they leave the city, before
they go out, 2,000 Amote,
he sends his son Mina to catch them.
Now, why why why 2,000 amote?
because the uh that day that they were
supposed to leave was Shabbat.
And on Shabbat,
you're not allowed to uh leave a city,
not allowed to go beyond 2,000.
Now, even though the uh um the brothers
were all keeping Shabbat to them, it was
to leave the king's house, you know, was
saving our life, but Ysef knew that
they're not really saving their life.
He's not going to kill them. So, he
doesn't want them to violate Shabbat. So
he's going to have them stop right
before they reach the limit
to make sure they don't violate Shabbat.
This also teaches us again in regards to
driving on Shabbat when people when I
tell people about you know how you're
better off never walking into a beset in
your entire life than driving on Shabbat
to a Bikeset once. Never ever go to a
beset. If your bikes is not close enough
to your house, don't go. pray at home.
Not allowed to drive to Not allowed to
drive to bikes. You're not allowed to
drive on Shabbat ever. There's never an
excuse to drive on Shabbat to a Bikeset.
The only time you're allowed to drive on
Shabbat is if it's to save a life.
If Shalom something happens, you have to
take somebody to the hospital, you
yourself have to go to the hospital,
fine, you're allowed to drive. Shabbat
is put on hold. It's not Shabbat is
canled. Shabbat is put on hold. Meaning
that as soon as you arrive to the to the
hospital, the danger is over because
control is taken by the doctors and the
nurses and everything. So at that moment
that you arrive to the hospital, Shabbat
is back on. That means you cannot go
back. You can't stop watching TV and uh
drive back home. You have to leave your
car on at the hospital and you know
maybe ask a nonjud to shut it off or
tell him, "Listen, I'm leaving my car
there. Give him the keys and hope that
he gets the picture." You're not allowed
to drive the car back home, maybe go to
the mall. You know, I already violated
Shabbat. I ruined it. No. Shabbat is put
on hold until there's no more life risk.
As soon as the life risk is over,
Shabbat is back on.
So, this is another reason why I explain
to people, you know, as far as as far as
driving on Shabbat, it's not just that
it's obvious that it's fire. And with
with cars, it's every time you press the
gas pedal, it's a new fire. It's a new
violation of Shabbat. It's not just one
violation of Shabbat.
It's you could drive from point A to 15
minutes. You could be doing 15 million
uh violations of Shabbat
because you pressing the gas pedal,
pressing the brake, turning the radio,
turning it off, you know, a uh
a million and a half things you're doing
in the car. So it's not just one
violation of Shabbat. That's why I'm
very It makes me very upset sometimes to
hear that rabbis tell their people,
"Listen, come to the
even though they know they drive.
You can't drive on Shabbat. It's
according to all according to Judaism.
You're not ever allowed to drive. Now
what do you do in a situation where the
basset is too far from your house? You
have one of two things that you can do.
One, find a new masset that's closer. If
there's no other mass that's closer and
obviously you can't just you're not a
multi-millionaire that just buy a house
the next day next to the mcnesset you
have a friend in the masset stay there
for Shabbat
go to a friend tell them listen I live
25 minutes away from the nearest mcneset
you live 2 minutes from the mcnesset you
live 5 minutes mcnesset let me stay at
your house for they'll spend Shabbat
together until I find another situation
until I move until I I arrange something
one friend two friend if you go into the
same mcess for a while you develop
relationship with a a lot of people. So
each each week you do with somebody
else. It becomes fun also having guests
in the house. It's a you could be like
having guests. It's a big privilege, a
big mitzvah to bring guests into your
house, especially if you're helping them
keep Shabbat. So it makes it's very it's
very upsetting when when rabbis take
this uh notion that it's okay to tell
people to drive on Shabbat as long as
they come to the masses because maybe if
they come to the Mikess for a long
amount of time, eventually they're going
to keep Shabbat on their own. That's
complete nonsense.
And the reason why it's nonsense is
because it's against all logic.
If you're telling people that it's okay
to violate Shabbat now,
what's to tell them that it's not okay
to violate Shabbat in 5 years from now?
It was okay then. I don't want to go to
level B. I'm still a level A. If the
rabbis say it's okay for me to be a
level A, which means God is okay with me
being a level A, I'm going to stay at
level A. I don't want to be a level B. I
want to drive to Shabbat forever.
All human logic will go against
ever going to level B and stopping to
drive. Which means you have to treat
people like adults. Tell them the truth.
They make their own decisions. I'm not
judging anyone. I'm not telling anyone
that they're a bad person shalom or
anything like that. This is what God
said. You do what you want.
Somebody wants to succeed in life, they
do certain things. If it's money that
they're chasing, they work certain jobs.
They work certain hours. They make
certain investments. Someone wants to
succeed with a relationship with God. It
requires nothing less than that.
Simple. But you tell people the truth.
Let them decide for themselves. You
know, it's not my responsibility or
anyone else's responsibility to make
decisions for you. You make your own
decisions.
So when a rabbi is telling them, "No,
no, I can't tell them the truth about
Shabbat because if I tell them the truth
about Shabbat, they're not allowed to
drive. They're not going to be able to
handle it. And maybe they're not going
to come anymore."
How do you know they're not going to
come anymore? Well, you're them. You're
in their brain. You're in their heart.
Maybe they love Hashem more than you.
They just don't know. I have a guy when
I first started doing the sharim in in
Florida about a year and a half ago.
This one guy, wonderful guy, what an
amazing guy. Amash golden heart. This
guy Nissan, the first guy that used to
come to uh come to the sh to this day.
Amazing person,
just didn't know much.
So we started, I told him from the
beginning, said, "Listen, I'll tell you
the truth. I'll never judge you. You do
what you want."
So I mention Shabbat almost every
lecture.
So because I think it's very very
critical uh not based just on my
teachings based on what Hashem said and
it's a very critical problem in today's
age because a lot of people don't keep
it.
So
I mentioned Shabbat to him and he tells
me he's like, "Listen, I've been driving
to Shu for 20 years. No one told me
since he never learned to lie in his
life.
His knowledge came from the besset.
Whatever they would say,
that's what he knew. He didn't take
Torah books to his house and read on his
own. He didn't do anything like that.
So whatever they said in any sh at the
besset on Shabbat when he would go there
because he's not going the rest of the
week. So he goes on Shabbat once a week.
A rabbi gives a lecture. He talks about
I don't know whatever he talks about.
That's his knowledge.
That's it. That's all he knows. And the
people,
they all know him. They know what he
does. He's not the only one that drives.
So now he tells me, "I've been driving
to shoe for 20 years.
I didn't know I couldn't drive."
I knew it wasn't exactly what the black
and white ultraorththodox do, but I
didn't know it was that bad.
As we continue learning,
if you guys ever want to see a lecture
about some more details about Shabbat, I
made one. It's on YouTube. You'll see
that every time Hashem talks about
Shabbat and the punishment of Shabbat in
the Torah, he puts it right next to the
punishment of idol worship.
Because someone that violates Shabbat is
the same thing as someone that's idol
worshiping. Same thing in Hashem's eyes,
not my eyes. I love everyone. Hashem
loves everyone. But Hashem made the
rules. I didn't he didn't ask me for
permission.
This is what he says. I brought I put a
lecture. It talks about how it could how
it doesn't make any logical sense to us
that violating Shabbat is the same thing
as a guy that bought a uh a statue from
Chinatown for $10 and is bowing to it
like a Doesn't make any sense.
But that's what it says. So now when we
learn these things,
the key is that it helps us know the
truth. Once we know the truth,
maybe we can change. Oh, it's not my
car. I was thinking maybe it's my car.
Um,
we can make a decision at that point. No
rabbi in the world is allowed to make a
decision for you. I don't care if
they're the biggest, smartest, most
successful, or they're a beginner.
You need to make decisions for yourself.
Of course, it's very, very important for
someone to when they're doing chuba to
get themselves a rabbi, someone that's
honest, someone that knows the rules,
someone that's going to tell you things
based on you. Now, you can't take every
single mitzvah on overnight because
you'll overwhelm yourself. But that's
why it's important to, you know, develop
a relationship with a rabbi because they
know you. know what you're ready for as
far as the things that are beyond the
basics. No one could ever say you're not
ready for Shabbat
cuz Shabbat is the minimum requirement.
They could say, "Okay, maybe you're not
ready to do. You could drink regular
milk and not milk directly from Israel.
Maybe there's certain blessings you
don't need to do. There's certain you're
at certain levels. Fine. But there are
certain things that are a minimum
necessity of what a Jew needs in order
to have a relationship with God in the
first place. Shabbat is is that one.
The reason why we have ten commandments,
they're all in order. The first three
are directly between us and God. God
says, "I'm the only God. Don't use my
name in vain." That's the third one. The
second one is don't have a idol. And the
fourth one is Shabbat. Observe the
Shabbat. Fifth one is respect your
parents. Sixth one is murder. Why is
sixth one murder and the fourth one
Shabbat? Because Shabbat is considered
higher than murder. Violating Shabbat is
considered worse than murdering someone
according to God's eyes. Our logic would
say no. I said our logic would say
shalom God is wrong. Murdering somebody
is much worse. How do we know? You want
to tell me what?
How?
Because
if we found out that one of the people
we know murdered somebody shalom,
then we're not going to invite him for
Shabbat dinner. We're not going to
invite him to our birthday party. He's a
murderer, right? But our friends that
are violating Shabbat every week, there
are best men in the wedding. There are
best friends. There are the best people
in the world. We don't think it's that
bad. So, it's time for us to start
thinking about what does God think?
Forget about what people think. What
does God think?
That's why it's important to learn some
of these things because these are the
basics of Judaism that are necessary for
us to have a relationship with the
creator that we want so much from. He's
already giving us a lot we want even
more. So, it's good. It's fine. Give him
a reason.
So now when a
someone really wants a relationship with
God, he wants to listen to the truth.
It's not always easy to hear the truth
because sometimes it means that we're
wrong. But in uh Proverbs
Melik, which was the smartest man of all
time, Hashem gave him a gift both of
wealth
and wisdom. Wisdom beyond any man in
history.
When he was 12 years old, he became the
king.
And anyone that becomes a king, what
does he want? He wants power. He wants
dominance. He wants material.
Instead, this 12-year-old kid, son of
King David,
one of the most righteous people in
history. Even the goim reads psalms that
King David wrote, most of them.
asks Hashem for the knowledge
to judge his nation justly.
Doesn't ask for money, doesn't ask for
women, doesn't ask to be popular,
doesn't ask for uh anything. He asks to
have the wisdom. So Hashem says, "You
ask me for something that's the perfect
request. I'm going to give you
everything that a person would want and
on top of that." So
King Solomon had all the money in the
world. He had all the power. He had
complete peace throughout his entire
kingdom. Uh but uh his whole uh his
whole time that he lived. No war, no
nothing, no problems.
So he knew what he was talking about is
my point. Not only is he smart, he had
experience, he had money, he had
everything that you could possibly want.
So when he writes in his he wrote three
books that are part of the Tanakh
uh Song of Songs, Proverbs and um
Ecclesiastes.
And um in Proverbs 19:3 he says
the foolishness of man meaning the
foolishness of man his sins
perverts his way
which means it brings him to punishment
but his heart frets against Hashem
meaning that a a person doesn't doesn't
learn Tawa. So he makes a bunch of sins.
So it's just foolishness. Out of
ignorance, he makes sins.
Eventually he has to pay the bill. He
sees punishment. He says things are not
going good in his life. His job is not
as good. His marriage is not good. His
kids don't like him. His wife doesn't
like him. His friends no everything is
bad.
And he doesn't even realize that if this
continues, the next world is even worse.
Says so eventually has to pay the bill.
Eventually gets the punishment. Life's
not exactly great. Once he gets it, this
guy instead of doing chah, he get he
blames Hashem,
he blames Hashem for his misfortune,
which is really the wrong out of his own
actions. So what is King Solomon trying
to tell us here?
He's trying to tell us that we as human
beings are different than every other
species in the world.
were the only things that can change.
A lion cannot change. He cannot one day
wake up and say, "Listen, you know what?
I don't want to be a lion anymore. I
want to be a lawyer." The zebra says,
"You know what? I don't like these
stripes. I want I want to be solid. I
want to change my clothes." The
alligator says, "You know what? I want
to become vegetarian."
Can't happen.
The dog can't run the house. Even though
in some families, the dog does run the
house.
can't it can't happen.
Mankind is the only thing that can
improve. We are the only ones that can
make ourselves better. We could improve
our midot our characteristics. We could
turn from being the most angry person in
the world to being huh
I remember before I had to as a
permanent part of my life. The first
word out of my mouth in the morning
instead of today saying thank you God
for bringing back my soul. First word
out of my mouth was a curse was a curse
word. I always felt like I was late to
something.
You know, when you're you're in a
material world, you're in a business
world, you're always, you know, time is
money. You're thinking that time is
money. You're thinking that something's
not happen. Even I only slept 2 hours, 3
hours. I figured that 3 hours was too
much. I would tell people I would sleep.
I'm sleep. I'll sleep when I die. I need
to go make money. I need to do this. I
need to buy this. I need to do I was
constantly in that. The first word out
of my mouth was a was a curse.
I don't know how my wife stayed with me
to be honest with you. Shows she is. But
seriously, it's when you're in that
world, when you're completely away from
Hashem, there's no boundaries to how bad
you can be because everything is up to
you to decide what's good and bad. And
like we said earlier, Hitler, Pharaoh,
Nebuchadnezzar,
ISIS,
everyone that's evil in everyone else's
eyes is not evil in their own eyes.
There are some people that think they're
good
because it's all based on their
definition. Even though they don't know
anything about what's good or bad, the
only one that knows what's good or bad
is the one that manufactured everything,
the one that created everything.
So, King Solomon is telling us here that
you have the power to improve. It
doesn't matter whether you're 20 or 15
or 40 or 60. Obviously, as you get
older, it becomes more difficult, but
it's never impossible. As long as the
light is on, you can change.
Our goal in life is not only to just to
be robots. Our goal in life is to
connect to Hashem which has
extraordinary benefits in this world and
the next. By connecting to Hashem in
multiple ways. One is to make him
involved in our daily life. Two is to do
what he wants. That's how we're making
him involved in our daily life. Three is
to act like him.
Emulate his behavior. Hashem is slow to
anger. We should be slow to anger.
Hashem is merciful. We should be
merciful. Hashem is forgiving. We should
be forgiving. Emulate his behavior
because the way you behave is the way
he's going to behave towards you. If you
don't forgive someone for making a
mistake, he's not going to forgive you
cuz he's going to show you, listen, oh,
your wife said the wrong thing to you.
Oh, what'd you do? Oh, look, you did you
didn't forgive her for three days. Oh,
okay. So, why should I forgive you?
Oh, she said sorry and you didn't say
you didn't accept it. So why should I
accept your sorry?
Oh, the homeless guy asked you for some
money and you didn't want to give him.
Even though you had $300 in your pocket,
you couldn't give him two bucks. You
couldn't give him $3. So why should I
give you? The way we act is the way he's
going to act with us.
This is the most important lessons that
we could learn from from the Torah. The
Torah is not a history book. The Torah
is instructions of how to live. We're
supposed to learn the through the story.
We're supposed to learn the their
behavior and what is the purpose of
life. Not just about learning a nice
story. We like the midrashim. We like
the different things that happened. We
like the fact that Joseph has this whole
plan of how to test his brothers, how
Jacob is sending a threatening letter.
It's all very, very enjoyable. But the
message behind the story is why Hashem
wrote the Torah. Because if it was
purely a history book, there would be a
lot more details,
a lot more. He would tell you exactly
every day that they lived. He would tell
you about every day. But here you can
see one Pala is in the year 1600 from
creation. The next pala is in 1948, 300
years later. The next pala is 60 years
later. Next pala is a day later. you
know, there's no there's no way uh uh
exact order as far as not day by day
because Hashem included everything that
we can learn from to impact our life.
So when we're able
to hear things like the wisdom of the
Torah that King Solomon is teaching here
by telling us don't be one of these
fools that makes sins
gets punished and then blames Hashem.
Okay, you made sins. Fine. Hashem said
before I created the the world, I
created choubba. Everything is subject
to choubba.
Everyone can do chuba.
Even the worst kind can do cha there is
in which is ethics of our fathers. It's
a um
it says uh 5:21
says whoever influences the masses to
become
uh righteous to do cha shall not be the
cause of sin. meaning anyone that helps
people do chuva, Hashem
puts things in his way to make sure he
doesn't sin. So even if he's naturally
going to sin and you know, let's say
looking at women, he's not going to put
women in his way. If he's really really
connected to Hashem, he's going to
literally eliminate the opportunities to
sin from his way. Because if this person
is worrying about Hashem's children,
he's trying to help people do chuba, get
back to Hashem. Hashem is going to worry
more about him. But then he talks about
another person.
But one who influences the masses to sin
will not be given the means to repent.
Says one that makes other people sin.
Instead of tell Shabbat, he tells them,
"Come on, let's go to a baseball game on
Shabbat.
instead of uh listen to kosher
restaurant that you want to go to kosher
restaurant instead of eat kosher I want
to go to a restaurant I want to go to
kosher restaurant
come on pork is so much more delicious
instead of come on let's go to bnesset
let's uh pray no aess let's go to the
beach
somebody that does those things which
all seem innocent they all happen in all
of our life we have plenty of those
friends that do that those people are
creating a very very big bill for
themselves. It says here that they don't
they they instead of what they do for
the person that makes other people do
chuva that they make them not make sense
pretty much for this person they close
the doors of chuva for that person.
What does it mean when when it the
heavens close the doors of chuva?
It means that it becomes more difficult
for them to do chuva. Everyone can do
chuva.
Even what even this particular means
that it's not that they can't do cha but
they have less opportunities. So instead
of let's say for example messages from
Hashem being sent to you in 10 different
ways. You got to work you're thinking
what is my purpose of life? Hashem gave
you a thought. All of a sudden you see
something on the computer and you see a
shield to by someone interesting. Next
thing you know, your wife calls you and
says, "By the way, you know, and she
mentions something about uh that she saw
that's really inspiring. That's
connections you to Hashem." So, there's
a bunch of different ways that Hashem is
connecting to you, helping you do chuva,
giving you the message in 10 different
ways. Someone that makes other people
sin, yeah, he can do chuva, but he's not
going to send them as many messages.
Maybe he'll send them one.
So, that's what it means when he closes
the door. at least one of one of the
meanings of when they close the doors of
chuva, everyone could do chuva, but if
you make other people sin, it's going to
be much much more difficult for you to
do cha. So, the key is for us to listen
to this uh great m that
teaches us, which is that we want to
make sure that we're not those fools
that wake up one day after we sin, we
blame Hashem. Why don't you tell me?
Because he told us,
I'm not here by coincidence. He didn't
send me into your life and he didn't
send you into my life by pure
coincidence. No such thing as
coincidence.
You need whatever I'm saying, he's
telling me what to say. I didn't prepare
the lecture.
So the key here is someone here needs to
hear whatever I'm saying or somebody
somebody online that's going to watch
this video needs to hear what I'm
saying. The key is that we want to be
one of those people that says, "No, no,
I'm not going to be the fool. I'm going
to be the one that changes. I'm going to
be the one that repents. I'm going to be
the one that does what Hashem wants."
How do I know what Hashem wants? It's in
the Tawra
and each week will do shim once a week,
once twice a month, whatever it is. The
key is anytime that you want to get
closer to Hashem, the instructions are
not far from you. The end of this para
which what we'll finish with because the
story continues next in next week's para
is that
Ysef sends the brothers with a trap of
this goblet this cup to see if they're
going to give up their brother because
he puts it in the sack of Benjamin of
Benjamin. As soon as he uh as uh they
get caught,
they don't think that they did anything
and they realize that their the brother
Benjamin took or at least it looks like
he took this this goblet
and they go back begging this king to
forgive them.
And that's actually where the para ends.
But throughout this whole process,
you're going to see how the
12 tribes are the 10 brothers or 11
brothers are all going to be tested,
including yourself are all going to be
tested in what they truly feel about
each other.
If
they don't really care about Benjamin,
they say, "You know what? What are we
fighting with this big giant king?
Leave this kid. He stole the goblet.
That's it. Leave him alone. Let me go
home. I'll tell that father, I'm sorry.
What could I do? He stole. It's his
problem."
If they feel a little more for him,
they're going to try to convince the
king. If the king says, "No, figure out
something else. Maybe fight. maybe pray,
do something. On the other hand, Joseph
has to test himself.
How long can I keep the story going on?
There comes a time in a person's life
that they're going to get tested.
They're going to get a very, very big
test.
It's going to test your character.
Hashem is going to test your character.
Do you really want a true connection
with me or do you want to just tell
people you have one?
Do you really want to be directly
connected with me
or are you one of these people that just
likes to say, "No, I I'm Jewish, but I
don't keep that much."
Are you going to defend my Torah and
tell people the truth, or are you
spineless and feel like people can't
handle it or you can't handle their
reactions?
There's going to come a time that God is
going to test your character.
We know this because that's what he did
to anyone he loved.
anyone he loved in the Torah, whether it
was Abraham, whether it was Isaac,
whether it was Jacob, whether it was the
12 tribes individually or together,
whether it was Moses, the one the only
person in history that spoke to him face
to face, whether it was Aaron or Miriam,
King David, Solomon,
everyone, everyone he loved, the closest
people to him, he tested each and every
one of them with the most difficult
tests. You look at the most righteous
people in today's age, you see them
going through tests.
Those tests are not for nothing. God is
not torturing us for no reason. He's
testing our character. And he says it
specifically in Torah. I test you
because I want to see if you truly love
me.
Do you really love me or you want to
just tell people that
is a Shabbat as important to you as it
is to me?
or you think that you can make a new
rule,
override my rule because my rules are
not not not available anymore. They're
not they're not relevant anymore like
people think. And that's some of the
things that people need to understand is
that again, it's not easy or it's not
simple to be a simple Jew. It's not
simple to be a simple Jew,
but
it's worth it.
And that's what we learned from all of
these stories is that these important
characters are being tested. We're being
tested.
We're going to find out what they did
with their test.
We're going to find out what we did with
our test, too.
Hopefully, all of us have the same
positive results. Unless you guys have
any questions.
I have a I have a question.
Right.
Question. I don't know. people
question. What is what is mik
that's in the beginning of the para
[Music]
what's the question?
Yeah. Yeah. What is what was the meaning
of?
Oh, it happened like it's a uh mik means
it ended. It's the end. K is end.
Okay.
Kimme is end of times.
Okay.
Okay. The other one is talk a bit about
Joseph's wife. We heard innat
Yeah. Uh Osnat once once once Joseph got
the position
of a uh of being the visceroy, being the
in essence the king of Egypt.
Pharaoh said it's not a um it's not good
for a king to be a bachelor to be a
single guy. So let's say uh let's get
you married. Now Joseph can't just marry
any woman,
right?
So but every woman in Egypt wanted him.
Yeah.
So on one end he knows that he comes
from the uh the Hebrews. He goes he
comes from from the chosen people of
Hashem.
On other end, he's in the middle of
Egypt and he's being forced to get
married. What is he going to do? So,
Hashem already gave the cure to the
ailment before we even knew there is an
ailment.
A couple of weeks ago, we learned that
actually when I came here, we learned
about Dena
and how she got raped,
right,
by Right.
Yeah.
Out of that rape
came a a girl, a daughter.
Now, Dena was very embarrassed that this
rape ended up resulting in a child. You
know, in Judaism, we're not allowed to
uh abort, not allow abortions.
Mhm.
It's considered complete murder. So,
even back then, they knew it. So, she
couldn't kill the baby. Even though
technically if it's a if it's a rape and
it's situations like that there is ways
there is a uh certain scheme that would
allow it if it's really really early on.
Nonetheless, it's a very controversial
issue and both in Judaism and otherwise.
But the point to stay on topic here is
that she gave birth to this daughter but
she was too embarrassed to see this kid
every day. So Jacob, her her father
said, "Listen,
why don't you send uh the the girl away
to a good family? He'll find the
family." And he found the family. Who's
the family? The family of Potifa.
Potifer and his wife. His wife was one
of the most beautiful women in history.
They weren't able to have kids. But so
they were happily going to adopt this
baby.
Now this baby is not. Now, how did
Hashem
make sure that uh Joseph knew that
Ashnot is allowed to him is because
Jacob wanted to make sure that Ashnot
knew that she was Jewish. So, he gave
her a medallion and on the medallion he
inscribed that she comes, you know, my
name is so and so and I come from the
seed of Jacob,
Isaac and Abraham.
So when uh when Pharaoh gave the uh the
position to uh to Joseph, he gave him a
bunch. He gave him a special gold
necklace and a ring and also a special
uh caravan like a uh a chariot chariot.
So when uh when Joseph was uh traveling
in the city, all the women would throw
their underweares at him say showing
that they're available and then one
woman threw a medallion
and he picked up the medallion and he
said and he saw what it wrote. He saw
that in he it's inscribed in Hebrew. No
one else in Egypt knew Hebrew, you know.
So he saw inscribed in Hebrew. I'm from
the family of Jacob. He found out who
the girl was and that's who he married.
Mhm.
So, this also shows us, one of the
things that it shows us is that the um
the the big lesson here is that Hashem
will always give us the cure before we
even realize we're sick.
Any problem that we have, Hashem already
has the cure. It's just that we have to
be patient enough to see it through. Um
any type of issue that we've always had
throughout history is Hashem already has
a solution for it. It's just that we
have to number one be patient. Number
two, be deserving.
You know, meaning by deserving, I don't
mean that you have to a uh you know, be
the most righteous person in history to
deserve Hashem to help you. Even you
believing in Hashem is enough of a
reason for him to help you. The point is
is that Hashem is going to give you
different tests based on your level,
based on how you improve. If you're in
level A, he's going to give you level A
tests. If you're in level B, he's going
to give you a little bit more difficult
tests. But he's going to give you all of
these tests in order to make you grow to
get better. Same thing if you want, you
know, if somebody wants to become very
strong, wants to become a bodybuilder,
they have to go to the gym. Now,
logically, it doesn't make sense. Why
would you want to lift more weights? I
want to lift less. I don't even want to
lift any weights. I want to stay at
home. But if you want to get big and
strong, you have to lift weights. So, in
the beginning, it's 5 lb, then it's 10
lb, then it's 20 lb, then it's 50 lbs,
and so on. You keep lifting more and
more weights because you want to rip
more muscles and eventually become
bigger. Same concept with the test.
Hashem is going to keep giving you more
tests to build your character.
And but the solution to all of these
things that sometimes we feel are never
going to end. He already has the problem
that someone may have with a uh you know
let's say with uh finding a house.
Hashem already has exactly the house
that he's belongs to this person that
he's entitled to that he wants to give
him. He just wants this person to pass a
test and eventually he's going to show
him this house. Money, Hashem already
has the money ready for him. Anything,
anything in life that a person desires,
Hashem already has everything ready for
you. It's just that sometimes we're not
ready to see it.
What else?
Good.
Any other questions?
No, no, there two questions. I already
ask them two questions.
You can ask many as you want. So, I'm
here
anything
about the chabbat that you cannot ch
right on.
I say only two way to solve the problem
is
my question is somebody else give you a
right is not allowed neither.
Somebody gives you a right to where the
tokness you mean?
Yeah.
It's a uh if someone needs to go
somewhere and there it's a uh they're
old and sick,
then it uh could potentially be
permitted for a non-Jew to give them a
ride somewhere. But on a occasional
basis, you know, you could find
potentially, you know, some uh some pKe
that will permit that if they're old or
sick.
If they're normal like you and I, then
ride won't work. They have to find a
better way to uh get closer to the
Basset if they want to go.
I know this this is very this is a very
big this is a very big problem in in
Florida and around around the the US.
It's not as much of a problem in New
York where I lived before I moved here
because New York is everything's on top
of each other and there's a math in
every corner. Mhm.
But here in Florida, everyone drives
and everything's far away. Everything's
15 minutes away.
Uh so I know this is a problem and it's
a very very big test, a very big
difficulty for people. But I promise
you, I've seen it for my own life. I've
seen it for my own tests. And if you
want to see some of the tests that I've
gone through, there's a lecture number
45 number 45 on YouTube. That's my uh
that's one of the ones that I did. It's
a big part of a uh my personal story and
uh tells most of it, not all of it.
There's some details that were just too
gruesome to tell people. Uh but some of
my own personal stories, hell, and a
bunch of other things that I've gone
through. And I promise you,
if you do what Hashem wants, you can't
lose. Maybe you won't see the reward
right in first day or first week, but I
promise you if you do what he wants,
you'll only win and you'll win a lot
more than you could ever even want.
And it's a uh it's uh some of the stuff
that I say. I know it's not what you
hear from most rabbis. Uh it's not what
people uh people get shocked sometimes
when they hear that Shabbat is worse
than murder or that uh driving on
Shabbat to Bikeset is not only it's not
okay, you're better off not never going
to besset. And I've even had a uh you
know couple of times where people that
were supposed to know
um
told me not to say it. And I don't care
what people say. I care what what God
says. The people that I look up to are
people that see the truth. One of them
is Rabbi M. Rahi, which I've given you
guys some CDs
of his stuff. Uh he has thousands of
lectures. He's been doing it for over 20
years. Um he tells the truth exactly how
it is, both in Hebrew and English. And
some of his stuff has been um translated
to other languages. Rabbi Kaflo, he's
he's been my kava and my rabbi for since
I started this whole journey several
years ago. Um
he's again there's only one version of
the truth. There's no two versions of
the truth. Even though sometimes the
truth is painful.
No one wants to know that they are not
perfect. But the reality of it is that
we are none of us are perfect. The
beauty is that we could all improve.
Whatever mistakes you made until now
it's fine but get better.
You know, some woman asked me recently,
how do I,
you know, fix the sins that I made
because she was very promiscuous?
I don't I don't know what kind or what
level, but point is that she was very
promiscuous woman. And uh she how do I
um
fix what I did? The first thing I told
is stop sinning. Okay, of course there's
a million other things you can do.
There's prayers, there's jad, there's
this, there's that. But the first thing
you need to do is stop doing it.
You know, that's that's that's really
the most important thing. Figure out a
way. Again, I know Bikes is far away.
It's 20 minutes, 25 minutes. It's not
exactly
uh
ideal for us to ask people for a favor.
Listen, I want to go to Besset. Can you
let me stay at your house uh this
weekend or pay for a hotel that's
closer? It costs money. I know it's not
easy, but I promise you, it says it in
the Torah.
Make his will into your will and he will
make your will into his will. Do what he
says like he wants you to do it and
he'll do whatever you want without you
even asking.
So you win. It's just that you have to
have the patience to see the prize,
you know. So it's it's a uh there's no
such thing as a Jew that does what
Hashem wants and loses. no such thing.
It's just that some of the tests are
bigger than others. But uh again, it's a
um the reward is so much bigger that
it's just like when
Joseph interpreted the dream for Pharaoh
Pharaoh, you know, he told Pharaoh,
listen, the seven first seven years are
be going to be good. The second seven
years are going to be really bad, but so
bad that you're going to forget about
the good. God is the opposite. In the
beginning, it's a little difficult
because you're changing your life. If
you're changing, you know, some tests
here and there, but the good that you're
going to get after is so good, you're
going to forget there was ever any bad,
you're going to forget there was ever
any tests. When you get to a point, you
could even get to a level where every
time there's a test, you're like, "Oh,
thank God. Wow, great. I got another
test." You're excited for the tests
because that's we all get to that level.
But all the sages, all the people that
you see that are the really big
mubaleim,
they um they bless Hashem
for
the tests as much as they bless him for
bless him for the rewards,
you know, and uh it's it's important for
us to know the truth because it's the
only way we can change,
you you know, I mean, as far as as far
as uh uh driving and things like that,
which with Shabbat, again, there's
different levels of Shabbat, but uh
driving under no condition is it ever
allowed. I just uh recommend that um if
you find either either a closer
synagogue or find a place to stay, it's
closer. Um and if there's no choice
whatsoever, stay home.
you know, I mean, staying home is not is
not it's not not the ideal, but under no
condition is it uh you know, is it is it
the right decision for you to drive, but
I'm sure you have enough friends in this
community that uh would be more than
happy to have you uh stay with them for
Shabbat. It's much more fun also
once you once you shut off yourself from
the real world
from the world that we see every day
from cars from cell phones from TV from
you know restaurants from all that stuff
when you shut off you shut off one day
seventh day this is just between me and
God and you have your family you have
your friends that's true
this is the greatest day in the world
it's the greatest day in the world I had
no one in the world had more excuses
than me to not keep Shabbat. I was a big
businessman. My meetings were on
Shabbat. My fun was on Shabbat.
So if it was if it was for business
reasons when I can't meet him during the
week, I worked during the week. And if
it's like, "Oh, finally I'm not working.
So I want to go have fun. I want to go
to a casino. I want to go to a vacation.
I want to do this. I want to do that."
I'm telling you, no. And I had money and
I had everything available to me. So
there was no restrictions whatsoever. So
when I found out about Shabbat, I
started saying, "No, but how can I keep
Shabbat? I have meetings, but okay,
maybe I can make the meetings on
Sunday." Then I started saying, "Okay,
but what about my vacations? What about
this?" And then I started listening to
myself say these excuses
and I just said to myself, I was
actually on the phone with a with Rabbi
Kakum
and I said, "I'm so full of it.
It's all nonsense. It's all excuses. If
I really wanted to keep Shabbat, I just
keep Shabbat.
just find a way. Just like I found a way
to do everything else in the world. You
have to find a way. And I listened to my
own words saying, "No, but I have
meanings. No, but I have this. No, but I
have this." But every one of the excuses
that I had, even though it seemed like
it was the size of a mountain, in
reality was nothing. It was just the was
the evil inclination.
And I just said to him, "Honestly, I'm
just full of it. I'm just going to keep
Shabbat. I don't know how, but I'll just
find a way." And that's how I kept
Shabbat. That's how I kept my first
Shabbat. And um my wife and I kept the
Shabbat. We were in the house. We
couldn't leave the house. We were living
on the 35th floor. So, you can't go up
and down the stairs of 35 floors. So, we
just stayed home the whole uh the whole
Shabbat.
And uh you know she made food, we got
the hot plate, you know um we got a the
Torah and science book I think it was or
some other book that we just read
together and we had I prayed at home and
it was probably one of the greatest days
of my life
because it was so different
than anything else I ever experienced.
Even though when I was, you know, maybe
almost 20 years ago, when I was uh 17, I
kept Shabbat for about a year and a
half.
Uh but then I stopped. So I kept Shabbat
for a while, but it was nothing like
this. My Shabbat when I was 17 years old
was I'd sleep as much as possible until
Shabbat was over because I had no
connection to any synagogue. I had no
connection to Torah. I would listen here
and there, but I wasn't truly connected.
So the Shabbat that if you want to truly
enjoy Shabbat,
involve it with the family, involve it
with people you love, and most
importantly, involve it with Hashem.
Study some Torah. Shabbat is the best
time to learn Tawa. If you get a reward
of just for for argument sake, if you
get a reward
of $100 for every minute that you uh
that you study Torah during the week on
Shabbat, you get a thousand times that.
You get a million dollars
for every time for for all Shabbat that
you uh all to every minute that you
learn Tawa. Shabbat's reward of learning
Tawa is a thousand times more than
during the week. So, it's very very
worthwhile to learn Tawra during
Shabbat.
But again, we can't learn we can't learn
Torah while we're driving in the car.
You know, it's like showing up to the
king asking him for a million dollars
while I'm throwing spears at him.
It's not it's not it's not. So, again,
we have to find a way. But it's not the
you will find a way. I see you love
Hashem. No pe regular people that don't
love Hashem don't show up to ash at 10
o'clock at night 11 o'clock at night
just uh you know you know so obviously
all of you love Hashem all of you want
to connect with Hashem on a much deeper
level and you will you'll succeed you
know and again you need anything you
have any questions I only know one
version of the truth so I'd love to
answer anything
amen