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The Yeshiva.net
There's a famous story
in Medrash
Medrash Eicha, Medrash Rabbah on Eicha.
And it's also in Talmud Yerushalmi in
Taanis
about a Jew
who was plowing with his ox
in a field
outside
of Jerusalem
in the region close to what's known as
Midbar Yehudah, the Judean deserts.
And he was busying himself with plowing
his field
for a new year of growth and harvest.
Nearby
say the sages, says the Medrash
there was an Arab Bedouin
who was also plowing his field
with his ox.
And this Arab Bedouin apparently had
that unique skill
I don't know what the proper term is to
be able to be sensitive
to the language of animals.
And the Chazal, our sages, continue goss
paroso pamachas.
His ox, the Bedouin's ox
mooed that um
grunted. Is that the word?
Not a donkey, an ox, an ox.
It gave It gave a
I can illustrate it, but I don't know
the word.
But it gave a long
extended moo
as an ox knows how to do.
And this Arab Bedouin
turned to the Jew and said,
"It's time for you to stop
plowing
because your temple
just went up in flames.
Your Beit Hamikdash
was just destroyed. It was just
decimated. You should stop plowing."
Meaning, even though the distance was
quite far,
it was far beyond the Judean deserts,
but from the language, from the music,
the sound of the ox,
he said, "This is the end.
Stop plowing."
A moment later, says the Midrash, his ox
gave a second
a second grunt, a second moo.
And the Arab Bedouin turns to the Jew
and says, "You could resume plowing."
Why?
Because nolad moshiach Yisrael.
The savior, the redeemer of the Jewish
people was just born.
You could resume the plowing again.
This is the end of the story in Talmud
Yerushalmi
and in Midrash Rabbah
Eichah.
The Midrash Rabbah is, of course, the
oral tradition and commentary of the
sages on Chumash and on Tanakh
and on the book of Eichah, the book of
Lamentations that the Gemara says in
Bava Batra was written by Yirmiyahu
in uh
section 1
51, perek aleph, parsha aleph, piska nun
aleph, the Midrash tells this story.
In fact, parenthetically, in
parentheses,
this Midrash was brought to the fore
in a very public and sad debate that
took place in the year 1263
in the 13th century
between one of the greatest sages of
Jewish history, the Ramban,
Rabbeinu Moshe ben Nachman, Nachmanides,
and a Jewish convert to Christianity by
the name of Pablo
Christiani.
In the Middle Ages,
the Christians often forced rabbis
to hold public debates with Christian
scholars and representatives to debate
the authenticity of Christianity versus
Judaism. The challenge was there was no
way the Jews could win this debate
because if you lost the debate, well,
you lost the debate. And if you won the
debate,
you lost even more
because the penalties for winning such a
debate were extravagant. The Ramban
himself, Nachmanides, was forced to
leave Spain and ultimately left to the
Holy Land, Eretz Yisrael, where he
settled during the last years of his
life and he passed on. You have in
Jerusalem still Beit Knesset, Beit
Knesset Ramban, famous shul that the
Ramban built in the 1200s when he left
Spain, his homeland, his original where
he was born and raised and led the Jews
and ultimately moved to Eretz Yisrael.
The debate was often held by Jews who
converted to Christianity and therefore
wanted to appease
the church
and wanted to out-gentile the gentiles,
meaning they wanted to show that they're
more Christian than the Christians, so
nobody should accuse them of being
Jewish and sometimes Jews suffered from
them more than everybody else because
they had to show their extreme
fundamental fundamentalist allegiance to
the church. And in this case, Pablo
Christiani debated the Ramban
and one of the
one of the
the items he pulled out of his bag was
this Midrash. He says, "You see, the
Messiah was born
right after the destruction of the
Temple." The Midrash says, "You claim
that the Messiah still has to arrive,
but your sages
your sages
have clearly said that he was already
born."
And the Ramban responded, the Ramban
wrote up this debate. It's called
Milhamot HaShem. The Ramban wrote up the
questions
that were put to him and his answers.
And he responded to this to this
question.
I mean, the response is not a very
complicated one
because
he said even according to their
calculations
the redeemer of the Christian world
by the time the second temple was burnt,
he was already dead. He was already
killed. The second Beit Hamikdash was
destroyed in the year 70 after the
common era.
According to Christian sources, he was
born in the year zero, which is when the
secular calendar begins. 2018
is 2018 since the year zero, which was
the year zero, and then 70 70 years
after that, the second Beit Hamikdash
the second temple was destroyed. So, he
was born much earlier, and he was
already gone by the time the second
temple was destroyed. So, he said this
Midrash anyway completely doesn't work
with any of uh
of your calculations. The Ramban said
other things about the Midrash, but I'm
just mentioning what a significant uh
important role this story about the
mooing of the ox
on the day of Tisha B'Av when the temple
was destroyed occupied the later in
Jewish history and more than a thousand
years later in the 13th century during
this great debate in Barcelona, in
Spain, in the presence of the king.
What I want to ask today is what is
really the meaning of this Midrash?
It's interesting that this story is also
brought in Halakha.
In the laws of Tisha B'Av in Shulchan
Aruch, the poskim many of the Halakhic
authorities bring that the reason that
when Tisha B'Av in the afternoon, the
ninth day of Av in in afternoon, we say
Nacham, there's a special prayer of
comfort
that is said Tisha B'Av in the afternoon
is because on Tisha B'Av, even though
it's the day of destruction, the ninth
day of the Hebrew month of Av is the day
that this happened, the day that the
temple went up in flames, both of them,
the first in 586 BCE, before the common
era, and the second in 70,
but since it's also the birth
the birth as this better one testified
from the sound of the ox, the birth of
Messiah, so the place can bring that the
Tisha B'Av, based on this Yerushalmi,
the Tisha B'Av no one would Messiah, the
Tisha B'Av is also the birthday
of Messiah, and that's why in Tisha B'Av
there's also the theme of consolation
and redemption and comfort, which is
brought in the name of the Arizal and
other places can bring it
why we say Nachem in the afternoon of
Tisha B'Av. But what does this really
mean?
What the what what is the meaning of the
story? Moments after the ox grunted the
first time, it gave a second grunt,
whether it was a minute afterwards or a
few seconds afterwards, this says right
afterwards,
and they say, "Your redeemer was born."
What is the significance of it? What
does it mean? Does it mean literally he
was born? I mean, Jews are still in
exile 2,000 years later, so obviously
he wasn't born, doesn't mean somebody
who had the potential to be Messiah was
born. Is it a symbolic idea?
So many of the commentators discussed
this over the generations. I'm going to
present one possible interpretation
today, but first introduce
another exhibit, another subject.
We have a principle in Yiddishkeit
that uh
the possuk says in Tehillim,
we say it in the morning in davening,
it's in the Psukei D'Zimra,
King David says in Psalms, I translate
everything into English, I try to, so
everybody could understand. Magid
D'varav L'Yaakov, Chukov U'Mishpatav
L'Yisrael.
He relates his words to Jacob, his laws
and statutes to Israel.
The Medrash Rabbah, again the Medrashic
commentary
in Shmoise Rabbah, I think parsha Lamed,
Medrash Rabbah on Shmoise section 30,
focuses on a nuance. It says he relates
his words to Jacob, his laws, his
statutes to Israel. You would think it
should say he gives laws to the Jewish
people.
He presents a constitution to the Jewish
people, we call it the Torah the
mitzvahs.
But the possuk, the verse in Tehillim
says it's his laws, chuko u mishpato.
So from this the sages derive
ma shehu mitzaveh l'acheirim laasos, hu
oiseh.
Whatever he tells others to do, he also
does. He is so to speak bound,
k'vayachol, by halacha. It's not just
the king, you know, they say say as I
say, do as I say, not as I do.
I say one thing and I do something else,
I'm the king, I can do what I want. So
the Medrash says no, Magid varov, chuko
u mishpato, these are his words, his
statutes, his laws, meaning he himself,
so to speak, confines himself, behaves
according to these laws.
Which is why the Gemara in Maseches
Brachos asks what does Hashem put on
tefillin, what does it say in his
tefillin?
What's written in his tefillin?
Or other mitzvahs that he performs, what
does it mean he puts on tefillin, it
doesn't mean physically puts on
tefillin, black boxes on a head and in
an arm like a mortal human being, but it
means that the concept of the mitzvah of
tefillin is observed not only by the
Jewish people, but also by the creator
of the world, by God himself, because
what he the chukim, the mishpatim, the
laws that he gives the Jewish people, he
himself also
observes. Says in Sifrei, how does he
observe the mitzvah of ahavas Hashem,
loving God?
Loving God, is it the love of self? It's
also the love of the Jewish people. I
have to ask him
I love you cuz every Jew is a piece of
God. So by loving the Jew, he also loves
God. The question that's brought in the
name of the market of Misrich is how
does Hashem observe the mitzvah of Yiras
Hashem, fear of God? How does God
observe the mitzvah one of the mitzvahs
is Hashem
to fear God. How can he observe the
mitzvah of fearing? How does God observe
the mitzvah of Yiras Hashem?
And the answer that's given is because
the Gamorah says Hakol B'Yedei Shamayim
Chutz M'Yiras Shamayim. Everything is in
the hands of heaven besides fear of
heaven. Meaning, everything that happens
is in the hands of heaven besides the
moral choices that a person makes.
That's depending on the person himself.
So Hashem, so to speak, is is fearful or
apprehensive about what is going to be
the next move of the human being because
here he waits in great anticipation and
awe and a form of fear and reverence
what is going to be your your next move.
You know, they say that there was once a
The Midrash brings a story there was
once a wise man who would travel to
various cities and he always had the
answer to all the questions. And
finally, one, you know, smart aleck
decided he's going to get him.
And uh
he uh he lifted up his uh his fist that
has been uh clenched and he says,
"The butterfly
that is in my hand, is it dead or is it
alive?"
The butterfly is it dead or is it alive?
And of course, there's no way to get
that answer right cuz if he says the
butterfly is dead,
he just uh
opens his fist and the butterfly soars.
And if he says the butterfly is alive,
well,
he tightens his fist and uh
that's the end of the butterfly.
So uh he says, "Tell me, you wise man,
is the butterfly dead or alive?" And he
looks at him and he says, the answer to
that question lay in your hand.
And that's true about much of life.
So, Yiras Shamayim, the fear of heaven,
but not the fear of heaven, the fear
that heaven has, the fear that God has
is
of those questions that the answer to
them lay in your hand or my hand or our
hand. How does Hashem observe the
mitzvah of mesirus nefesh, of sacrifice?
And the answer that's given to that in
S'varim
is
the Gemara says, Chazal tell us, Parshas
Naso in Maseches Sotah, that there were
situations where God, in order to create
peace
in a marriage between a husband and a
wife
when there was uh
profound suspect of betrayal
and no therapist or counselor could be
of help so God says, I myself will
intervene into this marriage and I will
serve as the therapist for this couple.
And in a very fascinating procedure that
existed during the time of the Mishkan
in the Beis Hamikdash, the couple would
come to the Beis Hamikdash a cup of
water was filled from the Kiyor, earth
was placed into the water, and
water with earth, and then the Kohen
wrote on a piece of parchment a portion
of Torah of Parshas Naso with Hashem's
name, and they put it into the water
where it dissolved. And God's name was
erased. When Hashem's name is written,
it's actually a presence of the
Shechinah, it's not just a symbol. When
God's name is written on something,
there is kedusha there, there is
holiness there.
So, Chazal say, Hashem nimcha klal
Yisrael bein ish u'beim ishto, this is
God's form of mesirus nefesh. We, so to
speak, sacrifices himself just to make
peace between a husband and a wife, to
have the name, his name dissolved and
erased in the water, which usually it's
forbidden to erase his name. Not because
not just because it's a sign of absence
of respect, but also because there's a
genuine manifestation of holiness in
that name, which is now obliterated and
erased and dissolved. So, for to make
peace,
to create harmony in a couple's
marriage, he's ready to sacrifice
himself. These are different examples.
According to this,
the question the following question is
asked. It was raised first by a famous
Turkish leader and Rabbi of Chaim
Palagi,
who asks the following question. How was
God allowed
to dispatch agents to destroy
the Beit Hamikdash, the first one and
the second one? Yirmiyahu Hanavi says in
a few places, the prophet of doom, the
one who prophesied the destruction, in a
few places in the book of Jeremiah, the
book of Yirmiyahu, which is
which consists of 52 chapters and is
dedicated to the theme of destruction
and redemption,
the Gemara says, Yirmiyahu Kulo
Churbana, it's the great book that deals
with the final years, the sunset of the
Jewish people. Yirmiyahu Hanavi,
who in English is known as Jeremiah the
prophet,
his prophecy spans through the last five
kings of Judah, the last five kings of
Yehuda. His prophecy spanned a few
decades, the last five kings, Yoshiyahu
and uh
and Yehoyakim
and Yehoahaz and Yehoyachin and the last
king,
anybody remembers?
Very good. Tzidkiyahu. Tzidkiyahu was
the last king who observed the
destruction and ultimately was exiled to
Babylonia.
And Yirmiyahu Hanavi saw that final
chapter of Jewish independence, of
Jewish commonwealth. He observed the
sunset of the Jewish people.
And he prophesied about it at length. He
wrote two books. The book of Yirmiyahu,
Jeremiah, and the book of Eichah,
Lamentations, that is read in Jewish
communities the world over on the night
and the morning some of the day also of
Tisha B'Av, the ninth of Av.
And Yirmiyahu says in a few places that
God tells him, "I'm going to send
Hineni sholeiach, I'm going to send
Nevuchadnetzar,
the emperor of ancient Babylonia,
present-day Iraq,
in order to destroy the Beit Hamikdash.
Now, one of the 365 prohibitions in
Torah,
one of the sins in Torah enumerated in
Deuteronomy in Parshas Re'eh is, "Lo
sa'asun kein lashem Elokeichem."
There is an absolute prohibition of
destroying even one brick,
even one brick,
in the Beit Hamikdash, in the sanctuary.
To quote the Rambam
in Hilchos Melachim, he says, "Hamoyseis
even achas min hamizbei'ach."
The Rambam in Hilchos, I'm sorry, Rambam
in Hilchos Beit Habechirah,
"Hamoyseis even achas min hamizbei'ach."
Somebody who smashes or destroys one
stone from the altar, "O mikol haheichal
o from the entire chamber, o mibein
ha'ulom v'eilam mizbei'ach, o from the
corridor, derech achashveira, to destroy
it, lo yikah." This is an absolute
negative prohibition with a penalty of
lashes, "Shenemar, 'V'nisatzu es
mizbeichosam lo sa'asun kein lashem
Elokeichem.'" And certainly the entire
Beit Hamikdash it's absolutely
forbidden. Not only that, this applies
not only to the Beit Hamikdash, but any
shul, any Beit Midrash, any Beit
Haknesses, any synagogue, any center of
learning, to destroy it is one of the
365 prohibitions. So, you might say,
"God felt that the Jewish people are not
deserving of it." Okay.
So, you can expel them from the Beit
Hamikdash, or you could do what you did
to the Mishkan. The Mishkan that Moshe
built in the desert wasn't destroyed, it
was hidden. In fact, there were some
pieces of furniture of the base of
migdal that also went into hiding or
were taken away or went into different
places. Hazal say that the doors of the
Bet Hamikdash
the gate sunk in the ground. There's
different methods to
deprive the Jewish people from using and
continuing to function and serve in the
Holy Temple. But what was the heter?
What was the permission halachically
asks Rav Chaim Palagi in the safer
nefesh chaim for God to dispatch his
agents as he testifies through the
prophet to destroy the base of migdal
when you say that every mitzvah you tell
the Jewish people to do, you yourself
are so to speak bound by that mitzvah.
There is a very interesting madras in
Yalkut Shimoni
in the beginning of Yirmiyahu. Yalkut
Shimoni is one of the midrashim
which are again the commentaries of the
sages on various books and chapters of
the Hebrew Bible of the Tanakh.
And in Yirmiyahu the beginning of
Yirmiyahu the Yalkut Shimoni gives the
following little poem or rhyme. And I'll
quote he says Allah aryeh bemazal aryeh
vehechriv es Ariel.
The lion
ascended during the constellation of the
lion
and destroyed the lion.
Al menat on the condition sheyaveh aryeh
bemazal aryeh veyivneh Ariel that the
lion should ascend during the
constellation of the lion and rebuild
the lion.
You understand what this means? The
month every month
those familiar a little bit with
astrology, you know, that there are the
12 mazalot, the 12 groups of stars that
parallel each month.
The constellation you have tleh shor
te'omim sartan aryeh betulah moznaim
akrav keshet gedi dli dagim. You know,
when you were born, I'm sure somebody
once asked you when you were born and
they explained to you all of your
wonderful features and values and why
your mother-in-law loves you because you
were born either you're a Gemini or
whatever you are.
The mazel, the constellation of the
month of Av is Aryeh.
Aryeh means a lion. What do they call
it?
Huh? Leo.
Which is lion.
I think the Latin for lion. So that's
mazel Aryeh. That's the month of Av, the
month of course when the temple, the
Beis Hamikdash was destroyed, both the
first one through Babylonia and the
second one through Rome
a few hundred years apart. The first as
I said 586 BCE and the second 70 after
the common era. Nevuchadnetzar, the
emperor of Babylonia is defined in the
book of Yirmiyahu chapter 4 as a lion.
He was a lion. Allah Aryeh misubacha,
the lion ascended from his den. It's
like when the lion comes out of his
habitat and is about to go and protect
his territory or or hunt. Usually the
lioness hunts, but the Aryeh comes up
from the den. Nevuchadnetzar is is
compared to that lion. The Beis
Hamikdash in Tanakh is also called
Ariel. Yeshayahu navi calls it Ariel
kiryas chana David. Also also a lion and
God in Tanakh is also called a lion. The
navi Amos says Aryeh sha'ag mi lo yira.
When the lion roars, who will not
who will not fear?
So the Yalkut Shimoni does display on
words.
The lion, Nevuchadnetzar,
ascended
in the month of the lion, the
constellation of the lion, Av, and
destroyed the lion, the Beis Hamikdash.
So that the lion God, Hashem, who's is a
lion, will come up in the month of the
lion and of and rebuild the lion by
Nebuchadnezzar Hashem
in the month of of.
Now, at first glance, it seems like
it seems cute. But, what's really the
Medrash trying to say?
It's like, okay, so we have a positive
Nebuchadnezzar is called a lion and
Hashem is called a lion.
And we know of this a lion. So, the lion
came up in the month of the lion to
destroy the lion so that another lion,
which is Hashem, was quite a
Nebuchadnezzar.
Nebuchadnezzar was a Russia Marusha. He
was
He was a vicious lion, an egomaniac,
a narcissist a narcissist. He said about
himself
the Nabi says, "I don't know how you are
alone but mostly of a dominant alien. I
will be I will be God. I am in the lieu
of God. I will ascend to the heavens. I
don't know I will become I will be
compare myself to alien to the supernal
one." That was Nebuchadnezzar. The
megalomaniac,
a
a quite a tyrant and a dictator and his
ego knew no bounds. If you're familiar
with the story in the history of
Nebuchadnezzar, especially in the book
of Daniel,
what he did and how he uh
created the culture of self worship in a
quite an exaggerated and dramatic way.
So, what's the point of the Medrash
comparing Hashem to Nebuchadnezzar
all through this image of the lion. The
lion comes up in the month of the lion
to destroy the lions that another lion
comes up in the month of lion to uh to
destroy the lion. But, here we will see
that this rhyme or uh
or prose of the Medrash is not just to
engage the audience and inculcate within
us the image of the lion in terms of the
Bais Hamikdash in reference to the Bais
Hamikdash,
but really
a very profound
question is being answered, the above
question question, and that is how the
Rebono Shel Olam, so to speak, who
observes all the mitzvahs
that he gave the Jewish people, how does
he allow, and not only allow it, but
it's his shlichus, was part of his
agency. He didn't he say "Leiyach
Nevuchadnetzar Melech Bavel Avdi." I'm
sending, he calls Nevuchadnetzar my
servant. He's so to speak doing this as
my servant, even though he had obviously
other intentions to destroy something
that a Jew is not allowed to destroy
even one brick of it, one one one beam,
one piece of wood, one iota of it, and
here the entire structure was
almost completely destroyed and
decimated.
You all know that the Shabbos before
Tisha B'Av is called by the Jewish
people Shabbos Chazon.
Why is it called Shabbos Chazon? Chazon
means a vision.
In Hebrew, Chazon means a vision,
because the Haftorah of the three weeks
between the 17th of Tammuz and the 9th
of Av is not the regular Haftorah that
we read every Shabbos, which is
connected primarily to the theme of the
Parsha,
but the three Haftorahs that are read on
the Shabbos between the 17th of Tammuz
and the 9th of Av, the three weeks when
the destruction really
became a real reality in the Jewish
world, because on the 17th of Tammuz
they managed to breach through the
fortresses, the walls of Jerusalem, and
three weeks later on the 9th of Av they
got to the Temple Mount, and they put
out they they
they put the Temple ablaze. So, those
three weeks the Haftorahs are dedicated
to the theme
themes of exile and the destruction and
the impending and the following
redemption. And the last, the first two
are from the book of Yirmiyahu, the book
of Jeremiah, chapter 1, chapter 2,
chapter 3, and the third week is the
first chapter of Yeshayahu, Isaiah.
And it opens up with the words Chazon
Yeshayahu ben Amotz.
As Chazal say, Yehudah va Yerushalayim.
The vision of Yeshayahu, the prophet
Yeshayahu, who lived, by the way,
a century before Yirmiyahu, a century, a
century and a half before Yirmiyahu
HaNavi. The vision that And therefore,
his his days were more tranquil than
Yirmiyahu. Yirmiyahu was mamesh there at
the end. Yeshayahu HaNavi was more than
a century earlier, 150 years earlier.
But Yeshayahu HaNavi saw, he saw a
vision for Yehudah and Yerushalayim, and
it's read the Shabbos before Tisha B'Av
Chazon Yeshayahu.
And when you read that vision,
it's naturally a disastrous vision. Some
of his famous lines, Eichah hayisah
l'zonah
kiryah ne'emanah tzedek yalin bah atah
maratzchim. For example, how
did such a faithful city like
Yerushalayim become a zonah, become a
harlot? Justice used to live here, and
now it's filled with murderers. Similar
verses about the terrible moral
failure and moral ruin and destruction
that the inhabitants of the Holy Land,
the Jewish inhabitants, have
have reached
as a result of their surrender to
idolatry and paganism and so forth.
There was a famous interpretation by the
great Chassidic master Reb Levi Yitzchak
of Berdichev.
Reb Levi Yitzchak of Berdichev, who
wrote a famous work Kedushas Levi,
and passed away in the year Tav kuf
ayin, 1800,
or actually 1799, it was still in the
It was after Tishrei, it was still
Tishrei time. Reb Levi Yitzchak of
Berdichev, who was the Rav of Berdichev,
Berdichev is a city in the Ukraine, you
could visit it, and he's buried there in
the cemetery of Berdichev. He has a very
different interpretation. And he says
the reason it's called Shabbos Chazon is
because on that Shabbos there is a
vision.
A vision of what?
Everybody is given a vision or at least
everybody is potentially given a vision
of the third base of Mitzvah.
And because they're given a vision of
the third base of Mitzvah, that's why
it's called Shabbos Hazon, the Shabbos
of seeing, the Shabbos of vision. Now,
this is a classical Hasidic positive
twist on Hazon. Instead of saying the
vision of destruction, it's a vision of
the base of Mitzvah.
Yet,
I don't mean to be a party pooper,
but
I want to wonder about his
interpretation. I mean, any child,
anybody,
layman or scholar, who looks at the
haftorah and knows that Hazon is not a
vision of the base of Mitzvah.
The vision of Yeshayahu at that time,
sadly, was the vision of absolute moral,
spiritual
ruin and destruction, which would result
in physical ruin and destruction.
That's what he meant. Hazon, that's why
it's called Shabbos Hazon. So, Yitzchak
comes and says
comes and says, "No,
it's called Shabbos Hazon, it's the
vision of the third base of Mitzvah,
which says the exact opposite."
So, you could say it's just a cute, nice
vertel. You know what a vertel means? A
vertel means a vart. You know what a
vart means?
It's like a saying, okay, you know,
somebody said something nice, so are you
going to start challenging them?
But that's the real question. Does an
interpretation like this, is it
consistent with the literal meaning of
it?
Or it's just, you know, uh
just a nice homeopathic remedy or a
lozenge to make people feel a little
better and give it a positive twist.
So, you have followed with you followed
me with all the questions?
We started off, you remember, with the
ox
mooing and grunting and what the meaning
of that is.
We moved on to the question of how
Hashem
could destroy a Beit Hamikdash that he
himself prohibits the Jewish people
of doing, of engaging in such an act. We
moved on to the Medrash about the lions,
and finally the dual and paradoxical
interpretation of the meaning of Shabbos
Chazon.
And the answer to all of these questions
is really one, and it behooves us to be
able to open our eyes and see the deeper
layers of meaning that are being
conveyed through all of these above
stories, ideas, Medrashic insights, and
laws, and many more. I just used these
these four exhibits. There are many
more, but I limited myself to these four
to be able to give you a glimpse into
the deeper perspective
that is really being conveyed via all of
these, via all of these items.
The Zohar says,
Zohar volume three 221 says
that the first two temples, the first
two Beit Hamikdash's,
for those who don't know, the Beit
Hamikdash means the house of holiness.
In English, they call them the holy
temples.
I say the Beit Hamikdash, but if you
don't know the term, it's the holy
temple that the first was built by
Solomon
480 years after the Jews entered into
the holy land, and the second was built
by Ezra and Nehemiah and his colleagues
when they came back from Babylonia 70
years after they were exiled there by
Nebuchadnezzar, by the emperor of
Babylonia.
The first two temples, the first two
Beit Hamikdash's were built by people.
The first, as I said, was built by
Hamelech, by Solomon, and the
second by the group of Jews who came
back from Babylonia.
Says the Zohar, fascinatingly,
everything that is built by people
is destined to mortality.
Humans are mortal, and our structures
are mortal.
Even Lehman Brothers,
Bear Stearns,
powerful, powerful companies,
dare I say the Titanic,
which some said even God couldn't sink,
but humans are mortal.
Because humans are mortal, so the death
sentence that is imposed upon humans is
also imposed upon human enterprises.
What humans create
are cursed by the curse of mortality.
They may be powerful. The Roman Empire
ruled for
500 years, and it cast a dread
and a fear on every living person.
But ultimately, ultimately, it failed.
Uh
you don't really have to look far.
I grew up in a home of Russian parents
who suffered terribly under the hands of
Stalin.
Nobody imagined that the Soviet Empire
would come crumbling down
just one bright morning and without a
single
bullet, without a single gunshot in 19
89, 1990, when communism fell for 70
years,
it didn't only cast a dread, it's dread,
but it literally it ruled hundreds of
millions of lives. It held them in its
grip of of aggression, of terror, of
tyranny,
of of evil,
and one day it it crumbled. One of the
miracles of our days, those who remember
not so long ago, 1990.
But, everything, every human enterprise,
certainly evil ones, but even neutral
ones, it it comes to an end.
I'm not going to talk today about
Coca-Cola or the Yankees. Hopefully,
maybe they'll live for eternity in your
merit.
But, the bottom line is nothing lives
forever. It's just the way it is. Nobody
and nothing lives forever since
our dear forefathers and foremothers
decided to eat from the delicious tree
of knowledge.
Says the Zohar that the two temples, the
two base hamikdashas were built by
people, great people, extraordinary
people, but they were built by people,
and therefore
they ultimately also
could be destroyed. The third one,
the Zohar says, is binyona d'kusha
b'richo.
It's a structure built by the divine.
Versus the first two, which are binyona
d'varnaash, to quote the Zohar, a
structure built by humans.
And therefore, mikdash adna k'nunya
d'acha, we say in the shira, because
it's going to be a
a structure built by the divine. So,
just as the divine is eternal, chaila ad
v'kayam l'netzach, we say in baruch
she'amar, he lives forever, or we say in
the pasuk, Malachi says, ani Hashem lo
shaniti, I did not change, I did not
falter, v'atem b'nei Yaakov lo
chilitzem, you also will not perish.
It's going to be an eternal structure.
It will not be destined to the
powers, the the the weakness of
mortality, as we say in the unsaneh
tokef for shana yam kippur, adam y'sodo
me'afar,
v'sofo l'afar, chavak pareach
v'chachaloyim ya'uf. That which comes
from the earth ultimately ends back up
in the earth. That's what the fate of
the first two batei mikdash and that's
why the Zohar says the third one is
going to be a binyan nitzachi, a third
Beit Hamikdash, an eternal temple, an
eternal structure.
This now gives us a glimpse to come back
to our previous question of how God was
allowed to, so to speak, according to
the Midrash, destroy his own Beit
Hamikdash even if he felt the Jews were
on were undeserving of it.
The halakha is the law remains in
Shulchan Aruch, you have it in the Chaim
in Siman Kof Nun Aleph and the
commentators explain we're not allowed
to destroy a shul.
You're not allowed to demolish a Beit
Midrash or Beit Haknesset, certainly a
Beit Hamikdash, but even what's called a
mikdash me'at, Yechezkel Hanavi,
Ezekiel, calls every shul, every
synagogue, every place of davening and
learning a little Beit Hamikdash, the
Ehel Hamikdash Me'at, has the same
concept, it has the not the same level,
but it has the holiness
which is a reflection of the holiness in
the Beit Hamikdash and one is not
allowed to destroy it.
Is there any dispensation?
Is there ever a heter
to destroy
a shul? Is there? For example, let's say
we want to the halakha asks, we want to
in this in the olden days this was a
very practical question, we want to
build a shul elsewhere. We want to go to
a different street, a different section
of the city, a different part of the
neighborhood and build a shul. So we
want to destroy it here and build it
there. Maybe they'll even use the
material. You know, the old material is
is expensive today and it was expensive
in the days of yore and they'll take the
material and put it there.
And the halakha doesn't allow it. You're
not allowed to destroy a shul even if
you're going to build it
elsewhere.
Is You could of course build a second
shul, that's perfect.
But you cannot destroy this shul.
So the question the halakha asks is
there ever a dispensation, is there ever
a heter, is it ever permissible
to destroy a shul?
And the answer that's given is there's
only one way.
And the answer is and this is the
Halacha commentators discuss in Shulchan
Aruch and the Taz in Kuf Nun Aleph comes
from one of the Rishonim, the Mordechai
in Maseches Megillah, and he says if
you're going to renovate it in this is
very place.
If you're renovating it in this very
place, meaning you want to expand the
Shul, you want to make it larger and
more glorious, then you're allowed to
destroy it.
Why are you allowed to destroy it? How
could you demolish a Shul? Doesn't the
Torah say Lo Sason, can you not allow
them?
So the Mordechai, one of the great
Rishonim,
he gives a very
sharp, very accurate description to
explain it. He says in Maseches
Megillah, "Haheena Sitsah Binyan Mikri."
When you demolish a structure
as part of the renovation, it's not
called destruction. It's called
construction.
Everybody understands that renovation of
a home includes two phases.
Phase number one, which is not Gishmak
to talk about,
but it's part of it, is called
demolition.
Phase number two is called construction.
Renovation.
Anybody of you any of you who built a
home,
whether you gutted a home and you built
a new one or you destroyed a home that
was too small or uncomfortable for you
and you rebuilt it, everybody knows
Dagmas Nefesh, the mental stress and
anxiety that people who build a home
have, especially if God gave you a real
contractor as a winner,
to give you endless nights of migraine
headaches, stress and anxiety, and when
he thinks everything is done, you walk
into the house and you're like, "I
really don't
I really don't like this work."
The Gemara says people who build homes,
it's not easy. Mismaskan, it's a
difficult difficult challenge. And yet,
if I have a small kitchen,
not enough bedrooms, a small dining
room, a small living room, without
demolition, it's impossible to rebuild a
grander, more comfortable, larger, more
glorious, more beautiful home.
Demolition is always the prerequisite
for construction. And the answer The
reason is very simple. The confined
walls are there. If I'm not ready to
break down those walls, how can I expand
the rooms? How can I expand the home?
So, first I have to smash the walls.
And when I smash the walls, I can then
rebuild them in a different place, from
a different angle, from a different
perspective, and create a new home. So,
somebody comes running to you and says,
"There are tractors that are destroying
your home. Call the police. Call the
city."
And you'll say, "They're not destroying
my home. They're renovating my home."
Don't use the word destruction. The word
is not destruction. The word is
renovation. Renovation has two phases.
Phase number one is demolition, which
looks like destruction, because they are
physically destroying the home. But it's
a prerequisite. It's a beginning. It's a
It's a preparation. It's a
It's the catalyst. It's what allows you
then to rebuild the structure in a
completely new and different way. So,
the Mordecai says, "If I come and
destroy your shul, cuz I want to take
the material, I want to take the lumber,
and build somewhere else a shul,
this shul got destroyed." I'm not
allowed to do that.
I'm not allowed to do that under
ordinary circumstances.
There are unique circumstances, but
usually you're not allowed to destroy
your shul.
But if I'm renovating the shul, so I
take down a wall, I of course smash the
bricks. That you're allowed to. Why?
Because you're not destroying the shul.
You're trying to build the shul. But in
order to build the shul, and you want to
expand it, and you want to redo it in a
much more powerful and glorious way, you
have to do that. This is This is what
the Halakha explained and we could we
all understand the profound difference.
Ah.
So, now when we look at the destruction
of the Beit Hamikdash, we could really
look at it in two ways.
One is
the Beit Hamikdash was destroyed. It
went up in flames. It was decimated. It
was demolished. And that's what we call
Hurban Beit Hamikdash. And it's true.
And the pain of that and the grief of
that is real, authentic, and profound.
But there is a deeper perspective.
And that is, of course, it was
destroyed. But the destruction,
the demolition, was really the beginning
of the renovation
of the third and eternal Beit Hamikdash.
Because back to the Zohar,
if the mortal structure remains,
it's ultimately destined
to die.
In order to create a divine structure,
the mortal structure has to give away.
It has to yield to the divine structure.
So, by being demolished, it's creating
the space, the opening for a new type of
Beit Hamikdash, of temple to be rebuilt
in that very space. Like the renovation
of a shul, which is as the Zohar says,
Binyan Hakadosh Baruch Hu, the divine
structure.
Let me take this for a moment from the
world of the collective of the Jewish
people in Jewish history to personal
lives in different areas.
A couple gets married.
The marriage is nice. It's fine. She's
excited. He's excited.
It's peaceful.
It's tranquil.
Life moves on.
A family is created. A home is built.
People become a little older,
a little more mature.
The scars and pains of life
affect every person in their own way.
People observe certain things. People
become open to certain things. Certain
triggers
create new realities for people.
And one day,
you take a look at your life, at your
married life, and you see there are
cracks everywhere.
And just as in your home, if you come
one day and you see cracks in the
ceiling here and cracks in the ceiling
there and cracks in the wall cracks in
the wall, you immediately call an expert
because even though right now it's still
standing, it's not dark yet, but it's
getting there.
It's not broken yet, but it's getting
there.
And one day, and this happens to many a
couple, 5 years later, a year later, 10
years later, 15 years later, 20 years
later, whatever the situation is,
sometimes little cracks show up in the
beginning and then they grow and expand,
and there are cracks in the marriage.
There are cracks in the relationship.
Suddenly, there's a lack of trust.
There's a lack of openness. There's a
lack of vulnerability.
There's a lack of just natural joy,
exuberance,
happiness. The relationship is
suffering.
And every Jewish home is a little base
hamikdash.
When the Torah introduces the building
of the first sanctuary, it says, "I will
dwell not in it, but in them, among
them." So, the Alshich and the Rashba
say that Allah says it means in every
person's heart, in every home.
So, every home is that little temple,
that little base hamikdash. The
shulchan, the table is considered the
mizbeach, the altar, which is one of the
reasons we have salt on our mizbeach. We
say Torah on our tables, etc. Tables are
important
institutions in the Jewish home.
They're compared to the mizbeach, to the
the
And suddenly, there are cracks in this
home.
So, when there are physical cracks,
hopefully you have in your telephone the
number of the person or people call and
the first thing you think about is who
are we going to sue.
At least if we can make
some money from the situation.
But what happens when the cracks show up
in the spiritual home and the emotional
home and the psychological home?
The marriage is just not what it was.
Maybe it revealed that there were always
cracks.
It's just for a few years people are in
denial. Denial is not only a river in
Egypt.
It's also part of people's part of
people's lives. I was once in Palm Beach
for a Shabbatone in Florida.
So, there was a couple there in shul
and they were celebrating their 60th
anniversary.
And they seemed very happy. So, I asked
the husband, I said, "Tell me, what was
the secret?
Maybe we could, you know,
spread this truth around the world.
What's the secret of such a good
marriage?" He says, "For 60 years I've
been half blind and half deaf."
So, I turned to his wife
and said, "And what was your secret?"
She says, "For 60 years I've been
completely blind and completely deaf."
So, she made sure to get back at his
at his comment.
And sometimes these cracks reveal what
was always going on, but they're, you
know, pushed pushed under the rug.
And at some point one can't push them
under the rug.
What ought to be one's approach at such
a moment?
Now, I always say that what I'm going to
say I'm going to say, but always with
the greatest qualifier that my following
words do not apply to every situation.
Sometimes the cracks are so dangerous
and so severe
and so overwhelming that the following
words do not apply to that situation.
But I'm talking about
what should be the proper response at
least often in many situations. I could
look at these cracks in two ways.
One,
it's the end.
My base amic dish is being destroyed.
What I thought would be a blissful
and beautiful loving marriage
never materialized and I don't think
it will materialize. I always imagined
when I was young, when I was 17, 18, 19,
20, 25, 30, that my marriage is going to
be different, as somebody once told me,
than my parents' marriage or my
grandparents' marriage or my uncle's
marriage. I'm going to have the most
beautiful relationship. I learned from
all of my mothers' and fathers'
mistakes.
And then years down the line, the same
person takes a look and says,
I never thought
which means, I don't know how you
translate that.
It didn't It didn't work out that way.
That's one way of looking at it and
people resign.
They resign to mediocrity.
They resign to despair. They resign to
what one poet said most people live
lives of quiet desperation.
Thoreau?
T. S. Eliot. Thank you.
Quiet desperation. Quiet desperation
means most people won't even know. There
won't be a ruckus.
There may not be a great commotion.
If both of them are civil and more or
less menschlich, they can work it out
in a subtle way, but you become like a
cold business partner. You do your
duties, he does his duties, but the
fire, the joy
is gone.
That's one way of looking at the cracks
showing up all over the walls. But
there's another way of looking at it.
And the other way of looking at it is
this is
God's invitation
to build a completely new structure.
But to build a new structure, the old
one has to go.
Is it possible
that the marriage of old
existed, and for some years it was nice,
but ultimately
it didn't have the real depth
and maturity
that comes from two people
who are really ready
to open up their souls to each other,
express their ultimate vulnerabilities,
and recreate
a foundation of trust
that is deeply and truly profound
because it takes into account all of the
voids, all of the pain,
all of the insecurities
that we so often run away from.
Any relationship that doesn't take into
account the cracks of people's lives,
the vulnerabilities of people's lives,
the pain of people's lives, the fears of
people's lives, and the
inhibitions and limitations that each of
us as being part of the human race has.
If a marriage ignores that, if a
marriage doesn't encompass that, how
real can it be?
How deep can it be? How authentic can it
be?
Perhaps this is actually an invitation
for a marriage and a relationship that
is so deep
that it will trump
the previous
blissful-looking
relationship on the outside. And the
difference is that was a human edifice,
and this will be a divine edifice. And
every human edifice, by definition,
is mortal. A divine edifice is timeless.
Is it possible that our relationship was
still governed by the ego.
By human pompousness that says I want to
protect my ego. I want to cover up my
ego. I want to defend my insecurities.
And what made it so powerful was human
power and all human power on its own is
destined to mortality. Maybe this is an
invitation to create a new type of
relationship that the foundations are
not the human ego. The foundations are
the divine eternal reality. The
foundations of a marriage that come from
the realization
that I need not
protect my insecurities and my egos
because in my essence I am part of the
divine. And because I'm part of the
divine, I have the infinite wholesome
confidence, happiness, power of
invincibility like my creator. Each and
every one of us is the divine light
manifested in this world and therefore
you never have to
protect yourself from your core. Your
core will never be revealed to be evil,
grotesque, repulsive. How many people
are afraid that if you really really
knew me, you would run miles away. As
long as you don't really know me, you
say "Gut Shabbos, how are you?" May even
invite me for a Shabbos meal. But if you
would really really know me with all of
my meshugasen, with all of my craziness,
with all of my history, you would run to
China.
Deep down, this is what often motivates
a lot of our behaviors. But what if
really deep down you could surrender and
allow yourself to be who you really are,
the light of Hashem? Then you can create
a divine base hamikdash in your home.
And when a couple learns to do that, to
be able to surrender all of these
cover-ups that they're trying to protect
themselves and others with, but really
doesn't allow them to trust each other
fully, to be able to open their wounds
to each other and therefore also their
love and trust to each other, it remains
a very flimsy structure. Many marriages
work, but they're flimsy. Flimsy means a
hurricane comes, I don't mean a physical
hurricane, an emotional hurricane comes
and they collapse because the
foundations are not there. The roots are
not there. They're workable. They're
both civil, they're workable. What if
you can create a binyana d'kusha
b'richu, a divine edifice. So, when I
see cracks,
I could look at the cracks and say,
"This is the end."
And you know what?
It's true.
I could look at the cracks and say,
"It's the end
of one phase
and it's the beginning It's the
beginning of a new one."
I remember my father passed away 12 or
13 years ago, 2005.
My father was a uh
quite a gigantic personality, a very,
very interesting and colorful person.
And all of us, all of his children and
many others learned a lot from him. He
was a seasoned journalist. He was a
a Renaissance man, a quite an
interesting figure.
And um I was talking to my nephew. I
think it was the last day of shiva, the
last days we went outside from the
house. I was talking to him.
And I said to my nephew, I said, you
know,
just instinctively I said,
"It's the end of an era."
And he looked at me and he said, "My
dear uncle,
that's true.
That's true.
But you'll make it the beginning of a
new one."
And it was a very
It was a very He didn't mean it as a
cliché or as some He's a poet, but he
didn't mean it as you know, a cute poem.
It also came instinctively from him.
And what I understood it at the time and
it meant a lot to me was,
in life we always experience ends and
disappointments.
Doors close on us constantly. First of
all, there are people that always slam a
door in your face. Ever happen to you?
But that's physically. Then there are
emotionally the people that slam doors
in your face.
Disappointments of relationships that
end,
of seasons that end.
You know, you look at your children,
they're two, three, four, they're
angelic babies.
And then you blink your eyes, you close
your eyes for a few seconds, and
suddenly they have opinions,
they have perspectives, they disagree
with you, they have their own
personalities that are very different
than yours. And you look and go, "You?
You little tsatske who I carried for 9
months in my womb and you were the
hardest baby in the world. For 4 years
you kept me up every single night."
And there's always a loss. There's a
certain loss of innocence.
The loss of the easy years when,
you know, the worst thing your baby can
do is fight with you if he's getting
another lollipop or another ice cream.
When they're 17, suddenly the
disagreements are not about lollipops
and ice creams. You wish they were about
lollipops and ice creams. And then as
they get older,
every phase of life
ends and a new one begins. And when you
look at these phases,
there is an element of of sadness in it,
even if it was very positive, but it
comes to an end. You remember when you
were a teenager and you took off two
two weeks of school cuz you were reading
a good novel, those 2,000-page novels
and you tucked yourself under your
blanket, officially you had a virus,
and you made sure that the virus
continued for a few extra days, and it
was those cold winter days, snow all
over the place, you know, a foot of
snow, and you're under your blanket with
your teddy bear, whatever you had there,
your doll, and you're reading this
1,500-2,000-page
novel, and you don't want it to end.
But, then it ends.
It ends. Zest sayfer told us Adam,
life is really a book and a book ends.
It ends and whenever you finish a good
book,
it's very sad.
You don't want it to It was so
entertaining. It was so enthralling. It
extricated you from the realities of
life and it took you into this fictional
world of of the writer of the novel,
whatever type of book it is.
But, it comes to an end. And what
happens now? What happens now is now
you're summoned
to write your own book. Now you're
summoned to open a new chapter. One
window closes
and a new window opens.
It's true in every area of life. How How
deeply true when it comes to areas of of
of happiness, of wholesomeness.
You know, you grew up more or less a
fine home, a functional home or not,
but you made a life for yourself. You're
successful. You're more or less happy.
You already did your 2 years of therapy.
You think you know yourself. You emerged
more or less you're functional. You're
not that neurotic,
psychotic,
chaotic
individual. You know, things are more or
less fine, but I say more or less. And
then one day you wake up in the morning
and and things are falling apart in your
system.
You feel miserable. You feel unhealthy.
You feel unsatisfied.
You don't like what you look like on the
outside and especially on the inside.
And this is where people see cracks
everywhere. And this is a challenge and
that's a challenge and people become
very very uh
hurt by who they are. Yes, we continue
living. I mean, we're talking about
responsible people who are committed and
and are dutiful and fulfill their
responsibilities, but the inner oomph,
the inner fire, the inner passion is
gone.
And how do you look at all of these
situations, whether it's your
relationship with yourself, your
relationship with your children, your
relationship with your spouse, your
relationship with God,
and simply your own experience of life.
And that's the depth of what the Midrash
is saying.
The lion came up in the month of the
lion and destroyed the lion so that the
other lion could come up in the month of
lion and rebuild the lion. Is just just
you found a word for lion found that's
just called lion. God is lion make this
is lion of is lion great we're bringing
all the lions in together we have six
lions playing a game. Wonderful.
It's much deeper. What the Midrash is
trying to say is there's two ways of
looking at every destruction.
And that's why the same name that is
used for the one who rebuilds
is the same name that's used for the one
who destroys.
Because when the inner
netzer comes up and destroys your Beit
Hamikdash in the month of the lion and
destroys the lion.
I could look at all of these realities.
I look at my life and I look back and
say where was I all these years? Why did
I allow this to happen? Why didn't I
deal with this problem 10 years ago, 20
years ago, 30 years ago?
If I was 19 and I would have just been a
little more upright than normal and
moral, I would have dealt with it I
don't have to deal with it decades
later.
Why was I not attuned to what's going on
in the life of my child? Why was I not
attuned to what's going on in the life
of my spouse? Why was I not attuned to
what's going on in my own brains in my
own life?
Why did I allow myself to be sometimes
manipulated by this person or by that
person? Why did I allow myself to be
manipulated by myself?
By my
own
insecurities and voids and fears. Why?
Why did I do this?
So one person could look and say, "Why?
Cuz I'm a disaster.
Why? Because I'm a loser. Why? Cuz I'm a
victim. Why? Because I'm traumatized.
Why?"
And this is a big one for many religious
Jews cuz God hates me. Another one,
"Why? Because of all my sins." That's
one way of looking at it. Where does
that bring you to?
It brings you to wallow,
to sink more into the quagmire
of despondency,
melancholy, dejection, despair,
alienation, and depression. Alienation
from yourself.
Never mind from the people around you,
close and far. But there's another way.
And that is the lion came up and
destroyed. So that the lion could come
up and rebuild. They both have the same
name, which means I have the opportunity
to be able to look at the first lion and
see him from the perspective of the
second lion.
I have the ability to look at every
aspect of demolition in my life and see
it as the beginning of destruction
or the beginning of renovation.
The fact is,
everything you or I or anybody have been
through,
if you could view it from the proper
perspective,
it creates humility and awareness that
allows you to rebuild a very powerful
structure, unparalleled to any other
structure that you ever created before.
Ignorance is bliss. That's true, but you
weren't privy to that bliss.
If you were privy, God bless you, you
could leave the class right now.
Only people I know who are perfect are
the people I don't know.
The only people I know whose marriages
are perfect, besides you, are the people
I don't know.
Not everybody is privy to that type of
bliss. If you don't understand anything
I said in this class, God bless you.
Give us the recipe. Give us the
tranquilizer. We'll all take it, right?
Who they told Lincoln about General
Grant?
Some of his friends didn't like his
performance and they told about General
Grant that he's taking something.
So, LINCOLN SAID, "FIND OUT WHAT HE'S
TAKING AND GIVE IT TO ALL MY GENERALS."
Find out what he's taking. Give it to
all my generals if that's how they
perform afterwards.
But not everybody is privy to that.
So, the Gamorah says in Maseches Suma
page 86 that when somebody does truva
out of love, is doing noise not so like
is a curious. Their sins become
mitzvahs.
How can you say that a sin becomes a
mitzvah? And the answer is because
every mistake
when we learn from it becomes a
springboard for such a powerful level of
awareness that creates a much deeper
relationship than you could have had
without it.
So, every single aspect of my life
I say there's a crack here and there's a
crack there and the marriage is
suffering and my relation with myself is
suffering and there's an issue with the
child and an issue with the career and
an issue with my happiness and every
person, whatever they have a or the
family, a personal, emotional,
psychological, physical, financial,
spiritual, chemical, etc.
The demolition is painful.
Nobody says that on Tisha B'Av the
Jewish people
did not grieve and do not grieve.
Demolition is always painful. Even when
you're renovating your home,
waiting for completion is painful.
Because demolition is never fun, it's
never exciting.
But with the proper perspective, one
realizes that every experience of
demolition in life can be viewed from
two very different perspectives. One
perspective is God is trying to destroy
me, life is trying to destroy me, nature
is trying to destroy me, karma is trying
to destroy me, this one is trying to
destroy me, I'm destroying myself, or
you're actually being summoned.
You're being invited
to rebuild your life,
but in a completely different way.
This time, you're going to rebuild it as
a divine edifice.
And a divine edifice will not be
subjected to those levels of flimsy
mortality and frailty that come from a
very frail and weak structure. Rather,
it will have the power
of true depth, of infinite depth, of
timeless depth, of the depth that comes
from real, real awareness, from a real
relationship with the deepest divine
core in yourself, and your deepest
relationship with the divine source of
reality, so that you could connect the
people, also your loved ones and other
people from that space, and when you
connect from that space, it's an
entirely different connection, cuz
nothing has to be covered up
in order to be able to be joined
into that part of the relationship.
So, when the Medrash tells a story, the
Bedouin Arabs' ox gave a moo, moo,
and he said, "Stop plowing.
Your temple was just destroyed."
And a moment later, he mooed again, and
he said, "You could resume the plowing.
Your salvation, your redeemer was born."
What is the meaning in this story?
These are not two separate events. It's
exactly the same event, and that is the
point.
Your temple was destroyed.
That's true, and you should stop
plowing, because that's very painful.
A moment later, he says, "But your
redeemer was also born."
Phase two is not different than phase
one. It's exactly the same thing.
It's about perspective.
When anything is destroyed, one could
look at it at the as the end
or what can what can one can look at it
as the beginning.
A door closes, but another opened. A
window closed, but another opened. An
era ended,
but a new one began.
The ending of an era is painful.
I have to say goodbye to my comfort
zones. I have to say goodbye to my
status quo. I have to say goodbye to the
life that was so familiar to me. Who
wants to say goodbye to that which is
familiar to us? And what is most
familiar to us in life? Our thought
patterns. My thought patterns. I have
certain patterns, the way I respond to
things. You say something, and you
trigger in me an emotional response, AND
I GO WITH IT, AND I TRAVEL TO New
Zealand with it and back.
You know that feeling? You come home,
your husband makes that same comment
he's been making it for 28 years.
Almost every single day, it triggers an
emotion.
With your thoughts, you travel to China,
first class or economy class? Usually
economy class, smashed up. You go back
if that thought process, but you're a
mature woman. You're not a male baby,
you're a female lioness.
So, you don't respond. You want to save
this home, you want to save this
marriage, but your thoughts go there,
and they come back, and then you say,
"Supper will be ready in 6 minutes."
But deep down, you know exactly what
happened.
Because our thought patterns are the
most familiar thing to us, and we often
fail to challenge them because that's
who I am.
But that's also not who I am. Those are
also comfort zones, patterns that I
developed as a result of the triggers
that I created in me. What if I could
say, "Stop! Halt!"
And the THOUGHT PATTERN SAY, "DON'T STOP
ANYTHING. THIS IS WHERE YOU WANT TO GO."
NO, NO. We're redoing this. We're
creating a new life. We're creating a
new home. We're creating new paradigms.
Let's face it, it's painful.
It's painful simply because whenever the
old gets destroyed, it's painful. Even
if it was dysfunctional. Even if it was
limited by my own insecurities, it's
still painful because it's the breakfast
that I know.
It's the home I know. It's the life I
know. Why do Jews keep on telling Moshe,
"Let's go back to Egypt?" What do you
have in Egypt? Tyrants, oppressors,
killers.
It's the evil that I know
that is much better than the evil that I
don't know. So, I'll go back. I'll go
back. I know I'm familiar with it.
We all know the battered woman syndrome.
I go back to the places that I know.
But even those who are not battered, God
forbid.
But sometimes we're battered by life and
I want to go back to those familiar
places even if they're dysfunctional.
Never mind if they're more or less
functional cuz I don't have that crazy
in a life of some.
But I still go back there.
And for me, that's an old structure
that ultimately cannot live forever
because it's not based on eternity.
Whenever you see cracks in your life,
never see it as the end.
Always see it as a beginning.
It's the genesis of a new discovery.
It's a genesis of a new awareness. It's
your horizons being opened up to a new
reality and therefore never be afraid of
it. Look at it
and say,
"How am I and how are we going to be
blessed through this?" But it could only
come if there's an element of
awareness of the pain of the challenge.
If the Jews were dancing on Tisha B'Av,
there would be something off about it.
We don't dance on Tisha B'Av. We fast on
Tisha B'Av. We grieve on Tisha B'Av.
Why?
Because when the is demolished and Jews
are sent into exile and the place of
is destroyed, it's not fun. It's not
exciting.
Cry they did. The pain they felt
acutely,
but they did not despair.
They did not lose that word and language
of hope.
They did not cease to sing. They did not
give up on their lives. On the contrary,
they understood this is the beginning of
an unprecedented structure.
Now, how do I know God is Jewish?
Because it's taking him 2,000 years.
Renovation should not be taking 2,000
years, in my opinion.
The guy told you it's going to be 6
months. By Pesach, you're going to move
in. Go to a hotel for Pesach. You come
back, you move in. By the summer, you're
moving in. Sure. That's why you're still
renting.
I don't know that. I don't know I don't
have that answer for that.
I don't know why God's con- contracting
work
takes so long. The Gemara says in
Sanhedrin, "Kol kol hakitsin, ready the
times of the Gemara, the ends are done."
Ve'ein od avodah ela b'chush.
But when Jews saw this on Tisha B'Av,
they didn't only see destruction.
They saw the beginning of renovation, of
a new structure.
Even as painful as it is, which is why
the concept, the reality of Geulah of
Mashiach
became ingrained into the Jewish people
cuz it was part of how they viewed the
Churban. So, when it comes to Shabbos
Chazon,
what's Chazon? Chazon is a vision. A
vision of what?
Yeshayahu Hanavi had a vision of
destruction. Comes Reb Itzik of
Bardichev and says, "No, you have a
vision of the Third Beis Hamikdash." Was
he in Lalaland? He didn't learn the
Haftarah?
No, Reb Itzik of Bardichev wasn't
imposing a cute, charming void by shalah
shudos to make people feel good as
they're eating sponge cake.
Reb Itzik of Bardichev was revealing the
depth of the real meaning of Chazon. Of
course, Khazon means the vision of
destruction, but what does it mean
vision of destruction? What does it
mean? What are you seeing?
When you're looking at those aspects in
your life
that Khila are crumbling.
When you're looking at a sense of
dissatisfaction,
disintegration, when things are just not
working out, what are you seeing?
You could look at it and say, "Wow, it's
a disaster.
My life is just a disaster." Or you
could say,
"You're seeing a third base Hamikdash.
You're seeing the springboard, the
catalyst,
the groundbreaking
of a completely new reality that can
come into your life now. Not without
a lot of inner work, the work of saying
goodbye to the old and embracing the
new.
The work of education, the work of
awareness, the work of trust, the work
of opening yourself up to God's love,
of opening yourself up to God's grace,
of opening yourself up to possibilities
of infinite joy.
Opening myself up to those possibilities
are very hard because the devils
love
becoming cynical on me and on us. They
say there's no such possibilities. Just
go back into your box and just
just be satisfied and start comparing
yourself to other lives, which is what
we do when we want to justify our
desperation. At least I'm not as bad as
this one, not as bad as this one, and
look at this one, and we read on the
news websites all of the tragedies, and
today everybody knows everybody's
tragedies before even it happened, and
you could crack and crack and crack and
say, "Okay, let me move on."
But the truth is, we don't help anybody
else by us becoming small.
We help other people when we can
manifest the full infinity of our
potential and our light and our love. We
help other people be able to experience
the full infinity of potential of their
love.
And the truth is, I should say it even
it you know, this is also true in the
world of finances. Very often
you had a great job for 20 years.
And I know there's some people sitting
here in this room who are going to
relate to this. And one day your boss
calls you in and says
say shalom shalom
malachei hashalom. I was used to it. I
was comfortable with it. A fellow came
to me a guy came to me you know yeah
there's a job for 23 years and now it
was a whole new reality. The guy doesn't
want him anymore. And here again, you
could look at it as mama destruction.
What did I do so bad to deserve such a
horrible fate? And of course a person
should always be introspective. But I
told him how do you know it's a
punishment?
Maybe this is the greatest thing that
ever happened to you. You're talented.
You're skilled.
Maybe God wants you to be autonomous,
independent, creative. Maybe he wants
you to change the world. Although over
there you were mama shalom,
mishubad you were subjugated, you had
the yoke of somebody else on your head
and you were plowing away from 9:00 to
5:00. Maybe it's time for you to
discover that it's time to get out of
the nest, find your wings and soar away.
And I said in 5 years from now, I hope
to hear some great things about you.
He said I didn't think about it in that
way. We always have to be able to look
at every crack and say if it's coming
from the source of goodness, it's not
here to destroy.
It's always here to build, to rebuild. I
saw once a very powerful uh
uh
a little story that happened. There was
a young chemist
and he's been working for some time
at developing a new bonding agent.
He wanted to develop a type of glue.
After years of hardship
the work was complete. He finally
developed or he thought he developed
this new bonding agent.
He tried it out
and of course
in good old Murphy's Murphy's law it
didn't stick.
Now, what is the use of glue that
doesn't stick? Anybody?
Nothing, right? It belongs in the
garbage.
So, most people told them, "Okay, you
failed."
And he told himself, "I guess I'm a
failure. I'm a disappointment. Time
wasted, money wasted, resources wasted,
effort spent in vain."
And the young chemist should have been
broken and devastated. But this young
chemist decided to think otherwise.
Instead of deciding that his work was a
failure, he asked himself a very
different question. What if my work was
actually a success?
What if my work was a success? The glue
that didn't stick was a success. What if
I have discovered not failure, but
actually discovered a solution?
I discovered a solution. The only thing
that's left is to discover the problem.
But the solution, I got. Most of us it's
like, I have the problem. Now, what's
the solution? He said, "No, I got the
solution. We're going to figure out the
problem." He refused to give up and he
kept on asking himself this question.
What is the use of an underachieving
adhesive? What is the benefit of an
underachieving
bonding agent of glue? Is there any
benefit to an agent of adhesion of of
connecting that is an under
underachiever? Is there?
Eventually, he found it
and it became a huge gigantic commercial
success.
They're little
and they stick, but not too hard. That's
what we call
Post-it.
The Post-it notes were invented at that
moment from this young chemist's
invention.
So,
he made a lot of money.
He became renowned. This was an
a gigantic commercial success. You go to
any office and on the computer, right?
You'll have Some people have 30 Post-it
notes. Some people have 80. The
organized ones among you have only two.
And the real, real organized ones to the
point of absolute chaos won't have it
because either you already took care of
it or it should be in the garbage or you
gave it to somebody else that took care
of it. That if you took That's if you
took a 6-week course on time management.
But, uh most of us who are not as
perfect have some of those have some of
those notes.
When anything happens in my life, in
your life, you could see it as a failure
or like the chemist, you can turn it
into a success.
And like the butterfly in the hand, is
it dead or alive?
The answer to that lay in your hand.
Whatever our fate, whatever your past,
whatever the realities you encountered
as a child, as a young adult, as an
adult,
whatever circumstances
were dealt and given your way, we always
have a choice between seeing it as a
crushing reality devoid of meaning,
devoid of goodness, devoid of purpose,
simply an act of destruction and more
destruction and more destruction or
as a challenge, maybe as a tragedy
sometimes, which contains the seeds of
something
profoundly positive.
The reason we're here 2,000 years later,
Rome
is gone like every mortal structure.
Babylonia
is gone like every mortal structure. As
is Egypt, Assyria, the Greek Empire, the
Byzantine Empire, the Communist Empire,
and the Third Reich. Like every human
mortal structure, even those who are
neutral, never mind those who are devoid
of absolute meaning because of their
depth of evil. The reason we're here is
because when we saw that holy building,
holy divine structure, Beit Hamikdash,
go up in flames,
the Jews never lost the word hope. And
we refused to look at it as the end.
We chose
to view it from a completely different
perspective. This was the painful
genesis of the renovation of a new era,
a new reality,
new horizons, and a new world that will
be completed bimheira biyameinu with the
construction of the Third Beit
Hamikdash, the eternal one.
Have a wonderful week.
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