The Torah Reveals Levels Of Holiness Even Through A Missing Letter.
The Torah’s language is precise down to every letter. When Moshe Rabbeinu is told to remove his shoes at the burning bush, the word for shoes is written maleh—full—indicating two shoes. This reflects total self-nullification before absolute Divine revelation. By contrast, when Yehoshua bin Nun is told to remove his shoe, the word is written deficient—missing a letter—signaling only one shoe. Yehoshua’s holiness operates within the world, not beyond it. Shoes symbolize separation from holiness; how many must be removed depends on the level of revelation. The closer one stands to infinity, the more layers must fall away. When Yehoshua bin Nun encounters the angel before Jericho, the Torah uses a deficient spelling—missing the yud—indicating one shoe. Meaning: Yehoshua’s revelation is holy, but not absolute like Moshe’s. He must remove one layer, not all: The physical barrier is removed But he remains a leader within the world, preparing for conquest, strategy, action. Why This Matters? This teaches a fundamental Torah principle: Not all holiness requires the same level of self-nullification. • Moshe represents Torah from Heaven • Yehoshua represents Torah entering history • One stands outside time • One works within time The Deeper Pattern • Two shoes → Total transcendence • One shoe → Partial elevation • Shoes in general → Where you stand determines what you must remove Holiness is not uniform. The closer you are to infinity, the less of you can remain. #TorahDepth #MosheRabbeinu #YehoshuaBinNun #HebrewWisdom #LayersOfHoliness #InfiniteTorah #BiblicalInsight #JewishThought Follow us: https://www.youtube.com/@Hidabrootcom https://www.instagram.com/hidabroot.global https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbCYZjl1CYoa4ulQIK2q
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