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The Three Weeks: The Keys are in Our Hands | Rabbi Sam Shor | July 8th 2025
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We are just a few days. We talked about
looking ahead to the art site a few days
from now. We're also just a few days
away from the fast day of Shivas Tamuz
and the beginning of the period of the
three weeks. We know the Mishab Bua
tells us that there are many many tragic
events that occurred throughout Jewish
history on the beginning on the 17th of
Tamuz continuing till the 9th of A. And
this entire period therefore is a period
of both introspection, sadness,
reflection. But not only those those
ideas, it's also an opportunity for us
to what to look towards the future and
towards a brighter tomorrow. And it's
these ideas that kind of that tension
that pushpull between reflecting on the
tragedies of the past and anticipating a
brighter tomorrow that really these
three weeks are are really all about.
That tension really personifies
everything we're meant to experience
during the three weeks. And this
morning, as as we look ahead to the
three weeks, I thought we could maybe uh
address that tension, maybe clarify what
we're meant to gain and accomplish
during these three weeks and how we're
supposed to use this entire period for
both personal and collective growth.
Okay, so that was our introduction.
We're going to begin. We're going to
jump right in on our sheets.
Text number one on our source sheets,
the Gamarra and Tanit towards the very
end of Messanit. The Gomorrah tells us,
"Our rabbis taught
when the first temple was destroyed,
groups of the young priests, the young
gathered together and they had the keys
to the B mikdash in their hands." Okay.
So, we're going to break this down, but
I want us to I want us as we read this
Gamarra together, think for questions
and clues to maybe unpacking this
Gamarra as we read it. So, I'm going to
read it again because I see a couple Rab
and others just joined us. Tan Raban.
Our rabbis taught when the first temple
was destroyed, they gathered together
groups and groups of the young kohanim
and they had the the keys to the ba
mikdash in their hands
and they went up to the roof of the
mikdash
and they said before
master of the universe
since we did not live up to our end of
the bargain. We didn't merit to live up
to our end of the bargain to be trusted
guardians of your enterprise of your
mikdash.
you,
we're going to give the keys back to
you. And they
and they throw the keys up to the
heavens.
And the proverbial hand of God appeared
in the heavens and took the keys back
from them.
and they fainted meaning the young
priest they faint and they fall and they
perish in the flames below.
So it's a very challenging on many
levels. Obviously the first question is
what does it mean? Why specifically the
young kanim? What is the significance of
the young kanim having the keys to the
enterprise in their hands? That's the
first question. The second question is
why
do they throw the keys back to God? And
the third question obviously is what
does it mean that the proverbial hand of
God appeared from in the heavens and
took the keys back from them? We know
that Baraku does not have an actual hand
or hands. So obviously we have to say
what what is the message that's being
communicated here by this by this
imagery of this agata. And lastly,
lastly,
what is it the the tragic ending that
they that they perish that they Yes. You
want has another question. What keys?
What gates? What?
Exactly. That's a that's an even better
question. Where are the I personally
have learned through
the Rambam numerous times and I don't
recall anywhere in in those of the
Rambam describing the closing the
locking the B mikdash with keys. So what
does it mean that they're holding the
keys in their hands? Okay, we're going
to come back to all these questions.
We're going to try to answer and address
all these questions as we continue. I
want to learn together another another
gumar that many of us are probably
familiar with. This is text number two,
the Garuma.
And during the time of Sheni, the Jewish
people kept mitzvos there was no it
wasn't that they basically were told
they was destroyed because they were
involved in all kinds of terrible acts.
Okay. But he during beni for the most
part we kept mitzvah. Okay. We actually
did for one another. Why was it
destroyed?
That despite the fact that there people
were seemingly seemingly in terms of
ritually observant.
What was what was what what what did
happen then during that time period?
We'll take questions at the end. Okay.
Is what?
baseless hatred. So of course we can ask
the question, we have to ask the
question, how could it be that in a
society where people for the most part
seemingly ritualistically kept mitzvos
and even were engaged in acts of how in
such an environment could could a
could that baseless hatred even come
into existence? And so we have to
understand number one what is
and how can we begin to fix
So as we know this course is called
modern masters. The first of the modern
masters we're going to learn from today
is Rabbi Aramshaw. Rabbi Aram Shaw is
the son of a more a more well-known
Torah personality. That's Rabbi
Gdalashore.
Rabbi Gdal of course was the longtime
Roshiva of Yeshivas Tara Vadas and also
the author of a beautiful set of farm
known as Oridal Yahu. It's his son Rabbi
Ramshaw who actually edited the ordal
Yahu and Rabbi Abramshaw's farmer are
called Halaku. Rabbi Ramshaw lives today
in Brooklyn. He's a prominent Torah
personality in Brooklyn and a master
teacher of in Brooklyn. So this is text
number three in our sheets says Ramshore
the work that a Jew needs to do during
these months of of
that what do we need to do what do we
need to strive to do what do we need to
work on during these months of tamuz we
need to work on fixing the many
transgressions and tragedies that have
occurred
during these months. He's going to give
us examples.
The story of
that we just read a few weeks ago. Okay,
that occurred during the month of Tamuz
and the beginning of the month of
and it's all it's this transgression of
the which sets the course ultimately for
the future destruction of the BT explain
what he means by that
because it's the what what's the root of
their transgression.
It's misuse of speech, inappropriate
speech. Okay.
And as we learned in the arg that we
just learned together.
Why was the second destroyed? Because of
baseless hatred.
And we know that the source of all
baseless hatred is what? Inappropriate
speech.
As we learned from many,
where does hatred begin? What's the
first step to to hatred beingcome
manifest? It's what? accepting words of
lashar for one another
and other such um inappropriate speech.
Inappropriate speech and other
inappropriate speech says
is the source of all of all hatred. The
and therefore the work that we need to
do during this time period during the
three weeks during the months of of
is what
says Rabbi Ram the first thing we're
meant to work on during these three
weeks is what
how we use
how we use the power of speech.
No it's
the person says it just accept
and and he says
so it's not just it's not there is he
says acceptance is what kind of spirals
it forward but you you can't if there's
no being spoken then there's no for us
to struggle with accepting or not so
really really what he suggests is what
we need to work to be careful uh with
our speech and as says I think he's
correct also the things we listen to and
we're going to hear that we're going to
see that emphasized them a little bit
from Kakon as well. Uh, Binetta. Okay.
So,
what other things do we are we meant to
work on during this time period? Okay.
It's very nice that we talk about the
reflection the reflection on the and
overcoming the the sin of and the sin of
and working on our our speech. But what
else are we meant to work on during
these three weeks? So if you take a look
at text number four,
this is a gamarra that should be
familiar to most of us.
The inab
said,
"Okay, the moment when a person appears
after the age of 120 in Shayim to be
judged in Shayim,
they meaning the the ministering angels
will say to him,
"Did you engage faithfully in business?
Were you honest in your business
dealings?
Did you set aside regular time for
Torah? Did you come to every Tuesday
morning to learn Torah?
Did you do everything in your capacity
to try to to fulfill the mitzvah of
procreation? Okay. And then finally,
here's the last one that's maybe a
little bit out there for most of us,
unfortunately.
Yeshua. Did you anticipate redemption?
We know those of us that learned
together with Rabbi Bowitz these past
number months we know that in the
okay we're all familiar that one of the
the most important ones and the most
familiar ones is this idea that we
believe with perfect faith in in the
coming of Msiah and even though he may
tar every single day what we're waiting
for him. So what exactly does that mean?
What does it mean Yeshua? And by the
way, if at the age of 120, please God,
when we get up to the next world, okay,
if you would have, I think last week we
spoke about Kaplan had this beautiful
safer if you were God, right? So if you
were God and you were listing the things
that you're going to quiz people on
terms of what they accomplished during
their time here on earth, okay, why all
the were you honest in business? Might
be might be a thing I would something I
would think about. Were you kind to
others might be something I would think
about. Did you set aside time for Torah?
Did you try to bring life into the
world? Those are all beautiful things.
But Yeshua,
did you anticipate redemption? That
that's one of the core values that you
be quizzed about in terms of how what
you how you used your time here on
earth.
Sadly
for most of us, I don't think if we
didn't see this gamarra, if we were
asked what we to list the the values by
which we spent every single moment here
on this earth, if we were to list the
top the top 10, so to speak, let's be
honest, how many of us would have would
put cit Yeshua right up there?
So my question is,
what does it mean to anticipate
Mashiach? And why is this such a
fundamental idea of Jewish life? Okay,
before we learn the next piece on the
Shalom from the son of
I, I want to share with you a story
that's attributed to of the great Russ
of one Shabas afternoon, one Arab Shabas
afternoon on a Friday is sitting in his
home study. He's not in the B yeshiva.
He's sitting in his home study and he
hears a great commotion coming from the
streets
and he first ignores the commotion
coming from the street and then his wife
says to him, "I'm going now to the shook
to buy a few last things for Shabas. I'm
going to the market. I'm leaving the
soup on the fire. Okay, please keep an
eye on the soup." And Raan goes back to
goes back to his learning. his wife
leaves and then once again he hears
noise coming from the shook and this
time it's even louder than before and
intrigued he finally goes to the window
of the balcony and looks out to the
street and he hears them announcing
Mashiachu
Mashiach is here Mashiach is here so
quickly runs to his closet he puts on to
to put on his shabas frock and he looks
at a shabas fra and he notices that it
has a stain on it and it's missing a
button and he begins to cry and he's
literally paralyzed as he's crying
and he says how can I greet Mashia Senu
with a stained
stained garment that's missing a button
and then all of a sudden he hears the
familiar voice of his wife
kind of not so pleasantly calling him
from in the kitchen saying, "Kayen,
I thought I asked you to watch the soup.
The soup is boiled over. It's spoiled.
It's ruined." And Ra realized that he
had just experienced a day a daydream.
He had gone into a a days, a trance. He
was so filled with this idea of
anticipating Mashiach. The Mashiah could
come at any moment that lit
the greatest arguably one of the
greatest lan in the history of the
Jewish people. He was so focused on this
idea of anticipating Mashia and that
Mashiah could come at any moment that
literally he had gone into a daydream a
trance and thought that Mashiach had
indeed arrived. So what does it mean to
anticipate Mashiach? What does it mean
that after 120 when we get up there and
we finish this lifetime we're going to
be asked did you anticipate Msiah? So
we're now going to learn a beautiful
piece from the
is hopefully going to give us a little
bit of of clarity on this idea. This is
text number six on our sheets.
And we learn in the words of the we just
learned together.
Okay. When a person leaves the world,
just as we said, they're going to ask
him, did he set aside time for Torah?
Did he deal fairly in business? And do
they anticipate redemption?
We're speaking here, by the way, not
about just a Jew that's not that's not
so connected. We're talking specifically
about a Jew who seemingly is ritually
observant. Okay? Did he anticipate
Msiah?
And even though he was ritually
observant and committed,
the one of the first questions we're
going to be asked after 120 is, did you
anticipate
salvation?
The question is not did he believe in
the coming of Msiah, the concept that
there will be a Messiah. Okay, that's
not the question.
He said, "But rather did you anticipate,
did you long for? Did you wait every
single moment and realize that Hashem's
whole purpose of creating the world?"
Okay. Is that we should eventually get
to that era of Mashiachu
and completing the world, perfecting the
world, making it a better place.
This idea is one of the essential
questions that a Jew is going to be
quizzed about about after they leave
this world.
And just as the question of that's
asked, did you set aside time to learn
Torah is one of the fundamentals of
Jewish life
in the Torah? So too,
so too, he's asked, "Did you anticipate
redemption?"
Because that anticipation of Messiah,
the belief, the longing for Messiah, the
belief that a Mashiach could come
literally at any moment, that is a
fundamental that needs to be rooted in
the hearts and minds of every single Jew
in the same way that
is embedded in all of us. So that's the
first point that the Rebi makes. Now he
continues,
And the other thing we have to
understand is what that if a person
doesn't go through life anticipating
Msiah then that's means what then he's
also lacking in his understanding and
his trust and belief okay of what
believing in Mashiach is really all
about and what the purpose of our
existence is really all about.
Yeshua.
There's another aspect of anticipating
redemption that is brought by our many
many holy books.
[Music]
The power of amuna, okay, can bring
forth what? That thing that we believe
in. Okay.
It's a famous
through the merit of our ancestors
were brought forth from it and through
the merit of amuna we will also
experience the final redemption. So the
sunbi in this beautiful piece number one
reiterates the importance of this idea
okay this that it's one of the
fundamental isot of of of mach is this
idea not only of believing in msiah but
anticipating longing and the mashia come
at any moment and more than that the if
we're lacking that then in that
anticipation
could cause what
the delay the delay And this is idea
that we've shared many many times and
I'm just gonna spend one minute to just
review this. uh we we shared many times
that the teaching from
okay the great master related to the
mitzvah of eating on
okay I'm just going to review this idea
because it's a fundamental idea that
demonstrates exactly this point that the
rebi is making here okay in his
commentaries on on the on the
he mentions that the sed begins the mi
begins with the words
the the Arab mitzvah that this matzah
that we eat on loyal seder is represents
what the slaves rations that our
ancestors ate while they were enforced
servitude in mit that's how the mi
begins and towards the end of the mi
comes rail and ragl says whoever doesn't
discuss these three ideas okay is not
does not fulfill the mitzah
and the three things we need to speak
about are pak matzah. And when it comes
to matzah, rabiel explains why do we eat
matzah? Not to recall the slaves
rations, but we eat matzah to recall
what that once it was clear the Jewish
people were going free. They didn't
allow their dough to rise and they went
forth from in great haste. Okay. Soak
asked a question. He says, I don't
understand. Sed begins with
the whole 210 years that the Jewish
people were enslaved. This is what they
ate. What sustained them? Matzah. But
then later on, okay, after Hashem's done
all the miracles, okay, and demonstrated
clearly that he has their back, all of a
sudden the the we're going forth and we
don't let the dough rise. All we've had
to eat for 210 years is matzah. Okay, we
don't let the dough rise. So obviously
the answer is what what's what's
correct. Obviously the answer is both.
Okay. Matzah and Leiser represents both
these ideas. The slaves rations as well
as the fact that we left in great haste.
But then ask the question. He says
that's if that's true. Why' they leave
in such great haste?
Why' they leave in such great haste? For
210 years all they had to eat was
matzah. All they had to eat the slaves
rations was matzah. They're finally they
see Hashem has their back. They Hashem's
done all these miraculous things, okay?
And all of a sudden, you know, they're
going to go forth and you don't let the
bread rise like 10 10 minutes more. So
instead of having that that flat fuka
mata that we've eaten for 210 years,
okay, we maybe let it rise a few
minutes. We could have a a bila, we
could have a a marble rye. So says
and this is this point that the Rabbi is
making right here. Sometimes a bar
presents us
with windows of opportunities to
experience miracles. And if a Jew
believes with all his heart and
anticipates with all his heart that
Hashem can indeed bring Yeshua Yeshua,
that Hashem can bring salvation at the
blink of an eye. that when those windows
open up before us, what do we do? We
jump right through those windows because
why? Our hearts and minds are plugged in
and anticipating, longing for,
anticipating that moment when that
Yeshua comes. But if
we don't go through life with a sense of
anticipation
and our our belief in miracles is maybe
a little bit half-hearted then what can
happen says when those windows take
questions at the end when those windows
open up and our hearts and minds are
closed to those opportunities
we might miss that opportunity and
therefore that's what the is saying here
the when we go through life with this
idea of Yeshua are when we experience
life where where every single moment
we're we're ready, we're demonstrating,
we're longing for, we're ready for that
Yeshua to come. Okay? Our bags are packy
packed, but we're we're ready to pack
those bags in 10 seconds if we need to.
We're ready for Yeshua
or do we live our lives
as lip service? Yeah, we believe in the
Msiach. It's a nice idea.
and says what says the son of mabbi the
consequences of of of that of that fine
line okay could be disastrous we could
we could be causing or miss the the or
missing the opportunity when it presents
ourselves okay so just to build on this
a little bit more
we're now going to learn a short piece
from
this is text number seven on our sheets
says the following
quotes.
Okay. Mashiach is not going to come
until what? Until the last coin falls
from our change, our pocket. Right? And
now he's going to explain what that
means.
That is until what? There cease to exist
heretics that don't believe in miracles
and they write off every miraculous
event by the laws of nature and they
fail to see theem in those miracles.
Belief in nim belief in the miraculous
is a fundamental idea of yk. We need to
live every single moment believing that
miracles can come true. They do come
true. That miracles can happen at any
moment. Yeshua Yeshua.
Okay. So now we're going to look at a
difficulty.
This is text number eight.
every generation did not merit to build
the Bikdash in their days.
They're considered as if what they
destroyed the B mikdash in their days.
So that's a very very difficult idea.
There are so many sadikum
so many sadik sadik
is that have existed throughout the many
many centuries. There have been good
people that have existed and have done
good in the world. How could it possibly
be that they're somehow held accountable
because for whatever reason they didn't
merit to d to build the base of mikdash.
They're somehow held accountable as if
what they continued to contribute to its
destruction.
So every single day we're going to come
we're going to come back to that
question in a moment. Every single day
we dive in three times a day as part of
we say
and these are the words I want to focus
on.
And it
Hashem should build these
speedily.
Well, most of us translate that sentence
as what? Hashem should build your shine
speedily in our in our days. But the
Rebi Ruptitz has a very different take
on that sentence. And Rabbi Barak Simon
and his beautiful text number 10, the
the next modern master we're going to
learn from is Rabbi Barak Simon. Rabbi
Barak Simon is one of the Russian Shiva
in Yeshiva University today and is a
beautiful setar called Imra Barak. And
Simon in
shares the following beautiful idea from
the rebi of ruptured. Okayesheresh.
We learn in the beautiful work of the
ruptured known as mayes
for the holy
ruptured memory
and explaining the words that we say
every single day.
builds as the says.
And how does he build
with our days? Not in our days, says the
rabbi of but in or with our days.
Through the way we spend our days.
Every day that that a Jew worships God
all in accordance to to their
capability.
We are contributing to what? To
building.
There are those that in one day can
build what? A whole wall.
While others, depending on our spiritual
capacities, others might only be able to
place one proverbial brick.
This is how a Jew, every single Jew
builds can build the B mikdash as they
serve Hashem every day
until the B mikdash will be built
completely speedily in our days. So just
to begin to bring this all together,
we are we learned in the beginning this
this
powerful and challenging story of the
young Kanim and I asked the question why
Davka the the imagery of the youth and I
think it's to suggest to us that at that
moment of bias Hashem is already setting
the tone that the future what do the
youth represent the future generations
okay the keys are in in the hands of the
future generations. If we want to build
the bas mikdash, we want to see the basa
mikdash, the keys, the proverbial keys
are in our hands. Okay? Hashem gives us
the keys. The keys are our hands. What
are those keys? Exactly what the rupture
teaches us here. How we spend our days.
Do we spend our days involved in
mitzvos? Do we spend our days not only
involved in our misses, but do we spend
our days anticipating, longing for
Msiach? Do we want to see Mashiach in
our days or is that just a concept
that's buried deep in the back of our
minds? How we spend our days can make a
difference whether we can actually turn
the proverbial keys and and open up the
BA mikdash once again or whether the BA
mikdash will remain in ruins. So what
what are we meant to do during these
three weeks? We began by saying that the
first thing we need to work on is what
and not only but not to be
okay to fix to be the
was the first idea we learned. The
second idea we learned that we need to
really work on during these three three
weeks and we all based on the faces as
we discussed this we all know we need to
work on this and that's the idea of
Yeshua anticipating redemption
wholeheartedly fullheartedly believing
trusting and believing that at any
moment Hashem can bring Mashiach and
finally we also spoke about what this
idea of recognizing the keys are in our
hands how we spend our days what we do
during these three weeks can make a
difference whether or not we will be to
see
or that the mikdash will remain in. Now
I want to share one last idea
in the he says actually this is all
mapped out for us already
they decided which which haos we're
going to read during these three weeks
he says let's take a look at the opening
words of each of those hauros we have
first we have yahu okay yahu spoke shimu
devarashem
heed the word of god is the next haftra
and the Third Torah is
okay
had a vision. So says
it's mapped out for us how we're meant
to spend these three weeks. Okay, these
three weeks are meant to walk first
begin with by by by working on our words
yahu working on our speech. We also in
the second haftra shimashem
we're being taught and reminded that to
work on what just as reb
that we have to work on not being the
cabel inappropriate speech we have to be
careful with the things we not only the
things we say but the things we listen
to and the last idea is
and that is what we have to be careful
of the things we
We have to intuititude ourselves not
just to see appropriate or inappropriate
around us but we have to condition
ourselves to see the bigger picture and
to anticipate that despite all the
ugliness and confusion we see in this
world right now we have to anticipate
and see the bigger picture. Rev cook
in a beautiful mammar that we may have
learned together in this cla class over
the weeks in the past weeks. Raf cook
describes how the redemption from and
the future redemption of Msiahu is one
act that has not ceased. It began Hashem
extended his outstretched arm and strong
hand initim and it continues to weave
its way through all eventualities. Cesar
Cook, all of the ups and downs, the
hills and valleys, the peaks and valleys
of Jewish history are all contributing
to the drama, the continued unfolding
drama of the destiny of the Jewish
people. It's a process. We are in a
process. If you go into were to go into
an art gallery or this will close. Rabbi
David Aaron, it's a martial that I've
shared many many times. If you were to
go into an art gallery and look at all
the different pieces of work works of
art in the wall, okay, we walk in, we
see masterpieces, okay, but what would
happen if we were to literally go up and
put our faces against right up against
each one of those tapestries, what would
we see? We wouldn't see a masterpiece.
We'd see a bunch of ugly random blotches
of paint, a bunch of squiggly, confusing
lines, and it would look like total
chaos and disarray. It's only when we
begin to take a step back and begin to
see the entire picture and take in the
entire picture that we gain perspective
and those ugly random squiggly lines,
confusing squiggly lines and ugly
blotches
begin to come together to form a
masterpiece. My friends, we have lived
through some very confusing times, some
very challenging times. And when we're
in that moment, when we're in that
moment, we may be dazed, we may be
confused, but if we begin to take a step
back and see those confusing,
ugly, troubling moments within the
greater context of the bigger picture of
the unfolding destiny of the Jewish
people, then we can see that each of
those confusing moments, each of those
ugly blotches are actually coming
together as to form a masterpiece. that
is well on its way.
If we can take these ideas to heart over
these next three weeks and can work on
these ideas, the ideas of appropriate
speech, heeding the right messages,
seeing the right messages, then we will
be to see that masterpiece come to its
fruition with the greeting of Msiahu.
Not as just a an idea in the back of our
heads, but literally there will be to
greet Mashia and the B mikdash. The
keys, my friends, are in our hands. Have
a great week.