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Why Nothing Goes Unrewarded? - Ari Abramowitz: The Land of Israel Fellowship
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What if your smallest, most imperfect actions mattered more than you think? Could a single moment of respect change the course of history? And is it possible that the spark of redemption is hiding in the most unlikely place? This week’s Torah portion of Balak holds a powerful secret. Watch now. If you enjoyed this video, join the Land of Israel Fellowship 👉👉CLICK HERE 👉 👉 https://thelandofisrael.com/store/ 👈👈 📍Connect & learn with our online classes & communities CLICK HERE 👉: https://thelandofisrael.com/online-courses-and-communities/ 🇮🇱 Stay connected to Israel & join this channel: @thelandofisrael
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Transcript
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So, one of the the themes we've been
exploring together is the incredible
spiritual power of our prayers and uh
and the the strengths of every single
word that we utter. And I sometimes I
get into these things and it's like it
could be three weeks, it could be a
month, it could be two months. I'm just
hyperfocusing on that. And I feel like
we are in the times of prayer. I keep
telling Jeremy on so many different
fronts, you know, when you go to the uh
to get a car wash and the wheels get
into the groove and he says, "Put it on
neutral." It's like out of your hands
now. That's sort of how things feel for
me right now. And all we really have to
do to contribute at this point, although
it may feel like we have a lot that we
can do, really the most powerful
contribution is our prayer. We are in
times of prayer. And every word we
speak, prayer or not, within prayer,
every word we speak releases immense
creative energy whether we're aware of
it or not. Uh so last week we discussed
how what you know might appear to be a
relatively minor incident, right, where
Moses struck the rock instead of
speaking to it, it was in truth anything
but minor. In that moment, Moshe may
have missed a golden opportunity to show
the nation the transformative strength
of prayer and the the the creative power
just of the spoken word. A lesson that
is so profound that it might have
prevented the sins that ultimately led
to the destruction of the beta mikdash
of the holy temple itself. That if he
spoke to that rock instead of hitting
it, the temple may never have been
destroyed. We talked about that last
week. If you weren't here, it's worth
giving it a listen. But, you know, I
guess when you are a hammer, right,
everything's a nail because when I was
studying this week's para, this very
lesson leapt out at me again in what
felt like was the most powerful way
imaginable. And I truly believe that if
we open our hearts right now, it can
transform how we see our own challenges,
our own imperfections, and uh and the
way that we pray. You know, so the
portion begins with one of Israel's
greatest enemies, Balak, the evil king
of Moab, who spent enormous resources to
hire Bilam to curse the Jewish people,
hoping to destroy them, not through open
battle, but through supernatural means.
His motives were purely self-serving and
malicious. He wanted Israel gone because
he saw them as a threat to his power,
despite Israel not attacking Moav in any
way at all. Israel expressing that it
didn't want to attack Moaf in any way at
all. There is a very pure and
unadulterated
uh desire within his heart to destroy
Israel. And yet
hidden inside this man who dedicated
himself to cursing Israel and destroying
Israel. Hidden within his heart is the
spark of Mashiach himself.
I I believe this story has everything to
teach us about the power of our own
deeds. even the imperfect ones, about
the hidden ripple effects of our
choices, and about how if Hashem can
turn even the twisted sacrifices of
Balac into the spark of redemption
itself, how much more so can he
transform the pure, sincere prayers and
desires and deeds of every one of us.
And so that's where we're going today,
my friends. So, let's dive in. Let's
let's set the scene here, right? It was
Balak, the king of Moab. standing on the
edge of his land and he looks out across
the wilderness and he sees Israel
encamped on his borders and he panics.
He panics. Which is so ironic. I have to
mention it every single time that the
spies came back and they said, "We're
grasshoppers in their eyes. They want to
crush us. They see us as nothing." And
then we hear that that was actually just
projection. That wasn't true at all. The
nation that just emerged from Egypt,
crushing powerful kings, is now moving
closer and closer to Balak's territory.
And he is terrified and he wants to
curse the nation. And therefore, he
reaches out to the king of curses,
the renowned evil prophet Bilam, who
wanted to curse the Israelites as well
on his own. By the way, now he didn't
want just riches, esteem, and honor from
Balak. I'm sure he wanted that. But even
without all of that, he wanted from his
own deep place of hatred for Israel to
curse them. And so Balak and Bilam are
the most natural allies. Now there's a
lot of things to say about all of this,
how they came back and he dreamt and
Hashem spoke to him in the dream and the
talking donkey. So much of it, you know,
it's such a rich and a beautiful
portion. But I want to jump straight
ahead to Bilam's arrival on the scene.
The minute he arrived, the sacrifices to
Hashem began. Sacrifices that Balak
hoped would curry favor would curry
Hashem's favor for the Moabites at the
expense of his favor for the children of
Israel. So let's look inside at chapter
22:40.
Balak slaughtered cattle and sheep and
sent them to Bil and the officers who
were with him. From the very beginning,
Balak is offering sacrifices. Again, not
to bless Israel, but to curse them. I
mean, in our eyes, this seems ridiculous
and absurd, but in his eyes, why not?
There's a God, and if you offer him a
lot of money and power, a lot of blood
and sacrifices, then it's like a bribe.
That's the that was their relationship
and that's what Bilam thought and that's
what Balak thought and so the sacrifices
began and then Bam says to Balak uh
23:es 1 and 2 and Bam said to Balak
build for me here seven altars and
prepare for me here seven bulls and
seven rams and Balak did as Bilam had
spoken and Balak and Bam offered a bull
and a ram on each of the altars on each
altar. Seven altars, each with a bull
and a ram. That's 14 sacrifices right
there.
Then Bilam tries again. He changes
places thinking that perhaps from
another vantage point, Balak sacrifices
could successfully curse Israel. And the
Torah says, "And he took him to the
field of Sofim to the top of the
mountain, and he built seven altars and
offered a bull and a ram on each altar."
Okay, so that's another 14 sacrifices.
So now we're at 28. But Bam still can't
curse Israel. So Balak tries a third
location. And the Torah tells us, "And
Bam said to Balak, build for me here
seven altars, and prepare for me here
seven bulls and seven rams." And Balak
did as Bilis said and offered a bull and
a ram on each altar. Another 14
sacrifices. That is three sets of 14
sacrifices. Just imagine the exhaustion,
the blood, the animals, the altars built
again and again, all in hopes of cursing
Israel.
But here's the turn that really spoke to
me so deeply. Even though Balac's
motives were utterly evil, he wanted
Israel destroyed. Now, this may be hard
to swallow, but this is really just even
without the sages of Israel, just a very
clear teaching. He wanted Israel
destroyed with all of his heart. He
wanted to destroy Israel. These
corbanote Hashem, Hashem would not
ignore them. He would not let them go
unrewarded because of the principle in
the Torah that Hashem does not let any
act of service go unrewarded as the
sages teach. The Holy One, blessed be
He, does not withhold the reward of any
creature. That's right. Even someone as
evil as King Balak who wanted to destroy
the entire nation of Israel, God's
beloved people. Even someone as evil as
him who offered sacrifices to Hashem for
the most sinister and nefarious
motivations. As hard as it may be for us
to imagine, Hashem would not deny him
reward for those sacrifices. And now we
come to one of the Torah's greatest
secrets. Balak's story doesn't end in
his own lifetime. And by the way, it
didn't really begin there either.
But it doesn't end in his lifetime
because we learn the astonishing lineage
emerging from Balac.
From Balac emerged Eglon. Eglon. Who
remembers this? Take a second and think.
Who was Eglon? I'm looking in the
comments to see if anyone writes it. I'm
really interested because on my Shabbat
table, there were four girls that were
in seminary that just finished seminary.
And we asked who was Eglun? And no one
could really remember who he was. People
like, "Oh, I sort of remember. If they
went to middle school with me, they
would have remembered the way my rabbi
described it." But something tells me
that there are many in this fellowship.
Yes. Yes. Yes. Graham. Correct. Fat
king. That's right. You wanted to be the
first to write it. Two big words. That
is the two words. No, not the father of
Ruth. Um, but yes, exactly. The king of
Moab. Right. So, Eglon, he emerged.
Eglon was the king of Moab and he was an
enemy of Israel during the times of the
judges.
Eglone was not simply a passive king. He
led coalitions. He seized territory. He
subjugated Israel. He was very much an
enemy of the Jewish people and he
oppressed the Jewish people horribly for
18 years. Then Hashem raised up a
deliverer, Ehood Benger Gera. Ehood, who
was the You remember who Ehood was? He
was the the lefthanded judge from the
tribe of Benjamin and he had a uh you
know his right hand was like crippled
and uh he was not a very um scaryl
looking man. Anyways, he devised a
daring plan. He made a double-edged
sword and hid it under his clothes and
he went to meet Eglon to deliver him a
tribute. Then he says right and said to
him, "I have a a secret matter for you,
O king." And he said, "Silence and all
those who stood around him left." And
then comes the verse that connects us to
the story. And Ehood came to him and he
was sitting alone in his cool upper
chamber. And Ehoud said, "I have a word
of God for you." And Eglon stood up from
his seat. And at that point, Eglon
assassinated
uh I'm sorry, Ehood assassinated Eglon,
which played out in such a gross way
that I remember learning it in grade
school as if it was yesterday. And I'm
just going to tell you guys, even though
I was planning on not, but he was this
morbidly, morbidly obese king. And when
he stuck the knife into Eglone's
stomach, the his stomach subsumed it and
out came the fecal matter. And so Eud
ran from the from the room and said,
"The king is in the restroom." And his
his servants waited hours and hours for
him because they definitely smelled what
was going on in there. And and he was
able to flee and and leave in time. But
the point is that a glun following after
his ancestor Balak performed a
meritorious act which just like that of
Balak would not go unrewarded. The sages
teach us this in in Ruth Rabba. It's
actually in numerous places. But come
and see how great is the power of a
single righteous act done for its own
sake. For if Eglon, king of Moab, who
did only one good deed, that he rose
from his seat when Ehood said to him, "I
have a word of God for you," merited
that Ruth descended from him. Friends,
think about that. Eglon, a king who
oppressed Israel for 18 years, who ruled
through violence and fear and murder,
did one respectful act. And when he
hears the words, "I have a word of God
for you," he stood up. And because of
that single act of cavode of honor for
God's name, he merited that Ruth would
come from his descendants. Ruth, the
righteous convert. Ruth is the very
embodiment of loving kindness. She
leaves her home, her nation, her comfort
to join Israel. I always think of you as
an entire fellowship of Ruth's on some
level, one or another. I I just always
feel like that, right? She says, "Your
people will be my people. your God, my
God. That was Ruth. And from Ruth comes
David, the sweet singer of Israel and
ultimately Messiach. So Balac, who
wanted nothing more than Israel's
destruction, ends up being the ancestor
of Israel's eternal kingship. How wild
is that? Why does Hashem arrange the
world like this?
Why does he allow the spark of Mashiach
to emerge from Moav, a nation conceived
in immorality and steeped in hostility
towards Israel? Moav, where did the word
moave come from? Meav from the father.
When Lut's daughters seduced him in an
act of incest. Incest being one of the
three sins that you should ra prefer to
die than commit. One of the most
egregious sins. And she named her father
after that very act. Moava from the
father,
right? Which by the way, I mean, you can
understand deep down her desire, her
intention, both of his daughters
intentions was they thought they were
the last people on earth. They thought
they were propagating all of humanity.
So they had holy intentions and they did
the worst of things. And then then um
Balak had the worst of intention. He did
the holiest of things. be why does it
have to be that the world is arranged
like that? Because the Torah shares a
profound truth in a thousand different
ways that the highest lights fall into
the lowest places.
And then when we bring them up, when we
bring them up from those low places, the
light is even more beautiful than it was
to begin with. Sometimes the greatest
light is hidden in the deepest darkness.
Sometimes it's precisely from the place
that seems the most broken, the most
impure. Sometimes it's from that great
darkness that the seeds of redemption
are planted. Moav was darkness. Yet from
that darkness came Ruth. From Ruth came
David. And from David will come the
Messiah that we're waiting for
imminently any moment. So what does this
mean for you and me? I think it means a
lot for us. But one of the things that
spoke the most to me is that we really
need to remember that even our imperfect
efforts have eternal value. It means
that even when our prayers feel weak and
distracted or mixed with doubt, they
still rise before Hashem in ways that we
can't even imagine. Because if Balak's
sacrifices brought with evil intentions
could generate spiritual merit that
ultimately contributed to the coming of
Messiah, how much more so are the
prayers of people like you and me who
are striving for holiness, striving for
truth, striving to bring light to a dark
world. How much more powerful are the
tears that we shed for Israel, for our
families, and for our healing? Right?
Your your smallest act of kindness can
bring tremendous light. Your whispered
prayer in the middle of the night, your
effort to choose patience when you want
to rage, all of it matters. None of it
goes unrewarded. Sometimes we look at
ourselves and we see our flaws and we
see our impatience and our fears and our
ego, our moments of doubt and we think,
you know, who am I? What difference do
my actions really make? But Balak
teaches us teaches us otherwise because
if Hashem can transform the hatred of a
Moabitete king into the spark of
Mashiach, then he can certainly
transform our sincere efforts into
boundless light. So I want to bless all
of you, all of us. May Hashem bless us
to see the hidden light within our own
struggles and transform even our
smallest deeds into sparks of
redemption. May our prayers and words
create ripples of goodness far beyond
what we can imagine. And may we merit to
witness the coming of Msiach soon in our
days. Amen.
[Music]