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Turning the Wheel | Parshas Matos-Masei
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This week's Parsha reminds us that every step along the way matters. It's all part of our story, even if it wasn't planned. And if you find yourself stuck, not sure where to go next, reach out. Amudim is here and our Case Managers can help you figure out that next step. Wishing you all a wonderful Shabbos.
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Yes, 42. That's the number of stops the
Jews made in the desert as the parsha
tells us.
Rashi asks, why does the Torah list
every single stop?
What's the point of recording every
encampment, every place of failure,
every location of a struggle and pain?
Why not just tell us where they started
and where they ended?
And Rashi answers with a parable.
A king whose son was ill. The king took
him on a journey to find healing.
On the way home, the king listed every
single stop. He said, "Here is where you
had a fever, here is where you couldn't
sleep, here is where we almost had to
turn back." Not to shame his son,
>> [music]
>> but to show him how far he had come. To
say, "Look at every single place you
survived. Look at everything you came
through in order to get here."
This is why the Torah lists every
[music] single one of the 42 journeys,
because every single stop matters. Even
the painful ones, even the places of
failure, even the detours [music] that
felt like they had no purpose. Hashem is
saying, "I was there and at every single
one, and none of it [music] was wasted."
Rav Shimshon Dovid Pinkhas zt"l was
killed in a terrible car accident along
with his wife, [music]
Rebbetzin Chaya, and an 18-year-old
daughter.
Three other children were injured at the
scene.
His son, Eliyahu, just 30 years old, had
to make decisions [music] in the
immediate aftermath that no human being
should ever have to face.
He was asked [music] how the family
found the strength to continue. And he
said something that I have never
forgotten.
He said, "Their mission in this world is
not complete. Their task was [music] to
increase spirituality in the world.
Whoever continues with that mission is
assured that the souls of the departed
will assist them."
He didn't let the most painful stop on
the journey become his last stop.
He picked up his father's torch. He
continued the journey.
>> [music]
>> And Rav Pinkhas's Torah, Seforim, his
recordings, and his teachings continue
to transform lives across [music] the
world to this day.
The painful stop did not end the
journey. It became fuel for the next leg
of it. And this is the message of Matis
Miller say for every single person
watching this. Your 42 journeys are not
a list of your failures.
>> [music]
>> They are a map of everything you
survived and Hashem has been at every
single stop recording everyone saying,
>> [music]
>> "I was there. I see how far you've come.
Your journey is not over.
It was never over. And if you're
watching [music] this and you feel like
you're stuck at a painful stop with no
way forward, please reach out because
the next [music] leg of your journey is
waiting and you do not have to take it
alone.
This is turning the wheel because the
road to healing isn't straight, but no
one [music] should have to travel it
alone. Wishing you a wonderful Shabbos.