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Yisro - 4th Portion
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Join as we learnish for Wednesday
parishes Israel chapter 19 verse1.
Yesterday we learned about Israel giving
the advice to Moshe. Moshe implementing
the advice. Once the advice was well
implemented, Yro returned home to
convert the rest of his family. We now
rewind as we saw in the beginning of the
Torah reading that was after the day of
the uh giving of the Torah. We now go
back to the Jewish people standing at
the foot of Mount Si to receive the
Torah. Chapter 19 verse one.
We are now at the third month in the
year 2448. The first day of the month of
Sivan where the Jewish people third
month from the month of Nissan
triumph of the Jewish people's exodus of
Egypt
on this day. They came to the Sinai
desert.
What does it mean this day?
It was actually the day of
really it should have said on that day.
Why does it say this day?
to teach us as the Jewish people come to
Mount Si and they're awaiting the giving
of the Torah. So too, every single one
of us when we study Torah, we should
look at always look at it as this is
something new and exciting, not
something that has happened thousands of
years ago. Verse two,
they traveled. They left
and they came to the desert
and they camped in the desert there
and the Jewish people encamped facing
the mountain.
Why does it have to repeat itself and
tell us where they left and how they
came?
Didn't the Torah just tell us that they
were resting in
them? know that if they were previously
encamped in and now they're in Sina
desert that means they left
to compare and to show that they're
leaving of was just like they're coming
to Mount Si
just like when they came to Mount Si the
Sinai desert it was with absolute
repentance
even though so too when they left though
they did a sin testing God with the
question and the quest of the man and
the quail they repented on their sins.
And the Jewish people rested. If you
look at the words,
it is a singular term telling us what
does it mean?
They were like with one people with one
heart.
But at any other time that they encamped
there was with argument and animosity
facing the mountain
to the east of it.
Anytime you're going to find the word
negot which means facing
means that their face was to east
because the east side is always called
the p side that you're facing and their
back was towards the west.
Verse three
verse Moshe. Now this is the second of
Moshe went up to God of Hashem and God
came to them and onto the mountain and
said from the mountain saying
so you should tell the house of Jacob
and you should relate to the Israelites
on the second on the second day
anytime Moshe went up the mountain was
early morning as it says that Mosh got
up early in the Morning.
This same terminology.
And according to this order,
why does he split up to the house of
Jacob and to the people of Israel? The
house of Jacob. These are the women.
You have to tell it to them in a softer
way.
And then tell the word is a different
type of terminology to tell the Jewish
people. More of a strict and severe
terminology.
You'll tell them the punishments and the
details and the intricacies.
You'll have to tell that to the males to
the men.
And the reason why you have the
terminology
because it's telling them severe words
which are strong and which are severe
like which are veins or things which are
bitter. It's a type of vegetable which
is very bitter. Meaning that you're
telling them strong words and
punishments that come with it as well.
Verse
four,
you have seen
what I have done to Egypt,
and I've carried you swiftly on the
eagle's wings
and I brought them to you and I brought
you to me. What does he mean over here?
This is not something of a tradition
that you've gotten from previous
generations.
And it's not something that I'm sending
you in a letter that I have to uh tell
somebody else. And it's not through
witnesses. Am I telling you a testimony?
You yourself seen it. It's a firsthand
event.
For all the terrible things that they've
done and for the enslavement that have
happened to you.
You saw the terrible action that the
Egyptians did before I dealt with them
to punish them and therefore the only
reason why I punished them was only to
show how much I love you because I love
you.
Therefore I
says and I brought you to me that's when
I brought you to Ram says
the Jewish people were scattered all
over in the land of Gan.
And for one moment they all gathered
together to come to Ramsees to leave
Egypt
explains what this means
that I took them that I made you travel
that the Torah is talking that in a way
that God made us travel in a very
respectful way. Uses this nice
terminology talking about a God taking
the Jewish people out of Egypt.
What does it mean on the wings of an
eagle?
Like an eagle that carries its little
birds on its wings. What's the
difference between the eagle and all
other birds?
All other birds carry their little
chicks between their legs
because they because they fly lower than
all the other birds. So they're
concerned about a bird that comes higher
than them is going to snatch the bird
from them. So therefore the way they
protect them is carrying them between
the legs.
But the eagle is not afraid only because
of only from humans.
Maybe they'll shoot an arrow and try to
shoot it down. Why
the eagle flies the highest? It's not
concerned about any bird that may come
higher than them and snatch their
chicks. They're worried about the arrows
that might hit them. Like
So too he puts them on their wings.
Therefore God says the same idea. I'm
sorry. The eagle says
rather let the arrow go into me and not
to my chicks and therefore he protects
them. So too, God says, "I did the same
thing
that God put himself in between the
Egyptian camp and the Jewish camp." And
the cloud of glory accepted all those
arrows and rocks that were being thrown
at the Jewish people that God
intercepted and accepted them to protect
the Jewish people. The aesthetum said,
"He brought them to me that they should
be able to serve me." Verse five.
And now
provided that you will viligently heed
my voice
and you will keep my covenant.
You shall be for me as a treasure
cherished
from all the nations of the world
for the entire world is mine.
If now you're going to accept upon
yourself, then
things are going to be sweet from now
onward.
Yes, we had a hard start off, but all
beginnings are difficult. And yes,
things were difficult, but from now
things will go smooth sailing.
I make a covenant with you that you will
keep the Torah. What does the word
sigula mean? A treasure. A treasure.
The treasure of kings,
special cherished vessels and important
and treasured stones, precious stones
say that the kings hide them in their
treasure chests.
So too you can be for me like a treasure
chest, a cherished people is from all
other nations of the world. They
shouldn't say that. What's the reason?
You're going to say, "Oh well, you know
why we're cherished?" because there's no
other nations.
And what else do I have?
What else can I do? What else can I
show? Meaning, you think I've gotten you
and I've taken you out of Egypt. There
are other nations in the world that
there can also be some type of treasure
and shown some type of love. I have the
whole nation. I'm able to choose from
any nation I want.
But still in all, all those are to me
like nothing. And I chose you, the
Jewish people, to me, my cherished
treasure amongst them.
Verse six,
and you shall be for me a kingdom of
nobles, the kadesh and a holy nation.
These are the words
that you should tell the Jewish people.
Verse six,
what does the word mean here? doesn't
mean priests like working in the holy
temple but nobles
like it says in the book of Samuel and
the children of David were they were
nobles
these are the words why did it say these
are the words
not more and not less
this concludes the fourth Torah reading
of parasra