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Yisro - 6th Portion
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Join me as we learnish for Friday paras
the sixth Torah reading. Yesterday we
learned in the fifth Torah reading we
heard the Torah tells us about the
preparations that the Jewish people made
for the giving of the Torah and how God
descends on Mount Si. the loud noises,
the thunder, the lightning, the sound of
the chauffeur, all in preparation for
the giving of the Torah. Verse 20,
chapter 19.
And God came down, descended on Mount Si
on the top of the mountain.
And God called to Mosha to come up to
the mountain
and Moshe ascended.
You would think that he literally came
down on the mountain.
Therefore, later on in verse chapter 20,
it says,
"I spoke to you from heaven."
This means
that God lowered himself. He bent down
that he moved the lower heavens with the
upper heavens
and he put them on top of the mountain
like a sheet or something that spread
out on the bed
and he put the god's throne on top of
them. This way you have both come true.
The fact that God spoke from heaven and
that God came down from heaven, meaning
that he put the heaven and earth
together, if you want to call it heaven
and the mountain all came together and
this is the way God came down on the
mountain. Over here we also see that
Moshe ascended the mountain which
teaches us as we know from here theus
explains the concept of the fusion of
the physical and spiritual or God. The
spiritual comes then on the mountain
which is physical. Mosha the physical
ascends the mountain which is spiritual.
This began, this began the era of of
making this world a dwelling place for
God. That we have now the ability to
take something physical and make it
spiritual. This all began with God's
descent on Mount Si.
Verse 21.
God said to Moshe,
"Go down and warn the people
that the people not to break towards not
gazing alashem that they should not
break the ranks to move towards the ga
to gaze at God
to try to see
because lest many of them will perish."
That means if they try to break the
ranks to be able to come towards the
mountain to see what God is. Let's see
in how he explains
warn them not to go up on the mountain.
Why would they want to go up on the
mountain?
They should not break the ranks from
where they are.
What would be their desire leaders to
see and they'll try to come closer to
the mountain?
Why does he say this in a in a
terminology that many will fall? Even if
it's only a few that may break the ranks
because even if one person falls that is
considered as many.
What does the word mean to break ranks?
The word means to destroy to eradicate.
So like for example when you want to
destroy a building it's called
so like disconnecting disar dislodging
one stones from another. So too when
people are together and one breaks ranks
from them it's also using this
terminology they're destroying the
situation.
Verse 22,
even the priests who come near to God,
they also should be sanctified,
lest God cause a breach among them. What
this means
at this point, at this point, the are
they were the firstborns
that at this point they were the ones
that were going to be serving in the
holy temple. It was only later when they
sinned with the golden calf that that
was taken away from them that privilege
to bring the sacrifices.
They should not think, "Oh, well, we're
important. We're going to be bringing
sacrifices. So therefore, we can go up."
Tell them they're not allowed to go
either.
They should be prepared.
Stay where they are and not come close.
That means not to break forward what
they were doing because
God forbid something they should be
killed and because of that that will
break a uh cause a breach amongst them.
Verse 23
and God's Moshe replied to God.
The people cannot ascend Mount Si
because you have already warned us
saying
make a boundary around the mountain and
sanctify it. Verse 23, Moshe was
responding to God. I don't have to warn
them any longer.
I don't have to warn them anymore.
already warned from previously for the
past three days
to have any permission to go on.
God said, "Yet God said to him,
go descend and warn them again,
but this time you shall ascend an aram
with you
and the priests and the firstborn who
we're talking about before will be on a
lower level.
But the people should not break, should
not come to ascend to God,
lest he cause a breach amongst them.
Yes, you already warned them, but now go
warn them a second time
because you warn a person before the
event happens and then you warn them
again at the actual event again. So to
make sure that right now when the
prohibition goes into action, warn them
that this is when you're not allowed to
go up.
even those that are going with you.
Now that he's telling you come up then
he says again and then he says the and
then he says the each one because each
one had a separate partition of where
they were allowed to go up. So there was
Moshe was one partition was another
partition. The was another partition.
Moshe came closer than
was closer than the
and the were closer than the people.
And the people should not come close at
all to get up to the mountain
even though there is
doesn't change from its uh
interpretation of explanation.
So to any word that has a in it and
right next to it it has a
many times it can change the terminology
you would change it like me or but in
this case would stay to its original
interpretation
Moshe went verse 25 Moshe went down to
the people alam and he warned gave them
the warning of them not coming close to
the to the mountain rash
And he said to them that morning
chapter 20 verse one we now begin the
ten commandments
and God spoke to Mo Moshe all these
words
and God spoke all these words saying
when the words elohim are used when the
god's name is used as elohim it's a
terminology of of severity as a judge
also
is a curse which is referring to the
judges
because there are mitzvah that are
mentioned in the Torah in many different
ways
that if a person would do them he
receives reward for it but when he
causes himself not to do it
he still does not get a punishment
because of it. So for example, he may
not give himself the ability if he does
the mitzvah, he'll get reward from it.
But then there are ways that he can
cause himself to be exempt from doing
the mitzvah. So
you would think
so too are the ten commandments that
they are not commandments. They're just
suggestions if you want to call it.
Therefore, God tells us
strict terminology is a judge that you
may you have to keep these things.
They're not merely suggestions. They are
commandments that you have to keep and
they have to keep in all ways and
therefore there's a reward for keeping
them and there's a punishment from
refraining of keeping them.
All these words mean that God said
he said all the ten commandments with
one saying at one shot
impossible for the human being to do
this. If so
then why does it say afterwards I am the
god?
The expression the simple individual
that means first God said them all at
one shot and then he separated and said
them as individual commandments. The
human condition cannot even fathom what
it means to say them all at once. But
therefore God said them all in separate
and separate commandments explaining the
detail of each of these commandments.
Lamer saying what does it mean saying
generally saying is that he should
repeat them to future generations.
Alav.
This is telling us that God that the
Jewish people would respond on yes. Yes.
Then what if it was a positive
commandment, they would say yes. If it
was a negative commandment, they would
say no. Meaning that they will not do
it. They responded responsibly to each
of the commandments.
The first one of the commandments is
commandment number one.
I am God that has taken you
who has brought you from Egypt
from a house of slavery.
What does it mean? I have taken you out
of Egypt. So first of all we should know
theidic interpretation for the word as
we know the word is the as an acronym of
the word
am within an encrypted that means that
God is telling every single Jew that
when you study Torah the ten commandment
which was symbolic of the 613
commandments 620 words of all the
commandments that are in it that when a
Jew studies
he thereby takes the essence of God
because the essence of God is in the
study of Torah. When we study of Torah,
we intellectually and connect with the
essence essentially connect with God.
But over here explains what does this
mean? Why does God begin by saying I
have taken you out of Egypt?
It is worthy that I have taken you out
of Egypt and it is important enough
that therefore you should be subservient
to me. Another explanation is
because in the when God was when they
God when the Jewish people were saw God
and it was revealed to them as they were
crossing the sea he looked like as is a
man as a warrior
but over here he looked like an elderly
nice merciful grandpa it says
that when the Jewish people saw that God
under like under his feet was like the
sapphire
that was the that was the brick that God
reminded them that he knew their
suffering that they went through
like the opening of the heaven once the
Jewish people were redeemed
meaning that God is telling the Jewish
people that God's relationship the way
the revelation of God is you see it in
different ways so because of that one
can say well
you might say well there's two energies
there's two factor faculties. There's
multiple gods because I saw God of many
different ways. One that was God in a
severe strict a warrior and then one
that was a nice elderly king. Therefore,
God comes along and says, "I am that
same God.
The same one that took you out of
Egypt." And the same one that was on the
mountain, the same one that was on here,
the same one you see there, it's all the
same entity. Now the thing is
because they had so many sounds that
they were hearing at the time as it says
in the verse
they were seeing the sounds
the sounds were coming from all four
sides of the world
but it's from the heaven and the earth
I see so many sounds there must be
multiple gods god forbid therefore he
says I am one
so why does he say your god not
meaning multiple gods
This is to give the Moshe an ability to
say defense on the Jewish people and
define the merit for the Jewish people
that when it comes with the sin of the
golden camp,
you didn't tell it to them.
You didn't say to the Jewish people, you
should not have. You said to you, maybe
you were only talking to me. And the
very fact that they had another god,
maybe they felt they were exempt. So
this gave Moshe defense when he was
defending the Jewish people, this gave
him some type of opening to be able to
defend the Jewish people
from the house of slaves.
meaning it doesn't mean from a house
that belonged to slaves from the house
of Pharaoh that you were enslaved in
or you want can explain that you were
the house of slaves that the Jewish
people were slaves to other slaves
meaning that you were considered so low
and um and you were made to feel as if
you were the slave of slaves.
Therefore, what God is telling us that
he took us out of the house of slaves
from Pharaoh the king of Egypt. Meaning
that who was the house of slaves? That
was the hand of Pharaoh.
Teaching us that they were not just
slaves to just ordinary slaves. They
were slaves to Pharaoh. And God got rid
of Pharaoh and took the Jewish people
out of Egypt. Verse
three,
you should not possess any other idols,
any other people's gods as long as I
exist, wherever I may be.
What does this mean?
Why does it say
many different types of right afterwards
it's going to tell us again the
different types of prohibitions? Because
later on it says you should not make for
yourself.
How do I know that he only is not
allowed to make it for himself? What
about somebody else that made for him?
How do I know he's not allowed to own
it? Therefore, the verse says shouldn't
have it. Not only shouldn't have it even
if somebody else made it. What does it
mean? Others
that truthfully that not even a god.
That means other people make them as a
god. Other people consider them
made them as a god upon them.
You can't explain it. That means other
gods besides me.
That's uh disgusting. It's embarrassing
to God to start compare God
to say, "Oh, the idols are compared at
the same level of God. Other gods like
me." What do you mean? There's no other
gods like God. Other people look at them
as God.
Another explanation.
That means that they become different.
They become foreign to the people who
serve them
meaning that they yell to them. They cry
to them but they don't answer them.
It's like somebody else and somebody
doesn't recognize him. They consider
them as gods but those gods don't answer
them. Don't listen to them. Don't pay
any attention to them. What does it mean
on my face?
As long as I'm around being that goddess
for eternity. So therefore means
forever.
One may say well the ten commands were
only told to the people of that
generation. Therefore, God says, "As
long as I'm around,
for
you should not make for yourself a
sculpture
or any image that's in the or likeness
of anything that's in the heaven
that's in the heaven above
or earth below
or in the water beneath the earth. Even
if you don't intend to worship it, you
still can't make it
because it's chiseled out.
Anything that's in the heaven like the
sun, the moon, the stars, the galaxies,
and things of that nature. Five,
you should not bow down to them of them.
You should not serve them because I am
God your God.
A zealous God.
For those
For those who hate me, I remember a
premeditated sins of their fathers and
of their descendants up to the third and
fourth generation.
What does this mean?
He's zealous God.
That means that he gets ready that he's
willing. He's zealous to be able to
punish those people who does something
wrong.
And God does not is not a pacifist and
will not allow it to go by for people
and he does not forgive those that sin
with idolatry.
Anytime the terminology is used and
pyramid means that he's gets angered.
He's zealously he pays attention to be
able to make sure that these people get
their right judgment
to those that hate him.
When the children continue what their
fathers did, then God remembers already
what their father's sins and then the
children add on to what their fathers,
then the children get paid back the
punishment based on what their father
sins as well.
However, at the same time, verse six,
but in contrast, God also shows kindness
for at least 2,000 200 2,000 generations
to those that love me and those that
observe my commandments. Six
that you see that God gives reward and
reward double the amount even for 2,000
generations.
So we see from here that God's reward
over punishment is one over 500
when it comes to doing paying
punishment. It's only one for four
generations
and this is for 2,000 generations even
later. So that means uh
500 times more the good over the bad.
Verse seven,
you shall not swear by God's name in
vain.
For God will not absolve anyone who
smears by his name in vain.
What does it mean?
for no reason and for in vain.
What is considered a oath in vain?
If somebody swears by God's name to
change something which is known for
example
if he sees a pillar of stone and he
everybody sees that it's stone and he
makes an oath and he says and swears and
he swears that it's gold
Evan or the same idea if something which
is wellknown he says that this is wood
and that is wood that this is stone and
stone like what are you making the oath
was worthless everybody sees it's wood
everybody sees it's a stone so what's
your oath about but you're saying by
god's name that this is a wood and this
is a stone. That's saying making an oath
in God's name in vain
because there's no reason for it because
it's self understood and self uh self
and obvious.
Verse eight,
the fourth commandment,
remember the shabas day and keep it
holy.
Later on we find that it also says the
word in the book of Deuteronomy
remember and to keep were said at once.
So too we have many other different
verses.
One who desecrates a world is while
liable of capital punishment
to bring different animals. So how is it
possible to do the both
the same thing? The question is that how
do we find that in certain places where
the Torah tells us to do certain things
but in other places it tells us to do an
opposite. For example, it says one who
desecrates the shabas is liable capital
of punishment. But at the same time,
it's also said that on chabas you have
to bring those two animals. It is not a
contradiction because they were both
given at the same time because
sacrifices are not part of the
prohibition. So too when the Torah says
do not we areas and then at the same
time it says you should have and those
situs are made of wool even of a garment
to the prohibition of marrying one's
wife's brother. At the same time there
is a liver right marriage.
This is what it means that within the
word that God says I hear two
commandments that while God tells me a
prohibition I also hear that there are
exceptions to that prohibition as well.
What does the mean it's an activity like
eat drink was crying.
What it means is that a person always
has to have in his mind consciously to
think about Shabas always even
throughout the rest of the week. Meaning
that if you find some good item during
the week,
make sure and put it aside to shabas and
say, "Look, I found something today. On
Monday, I'm going to make sure to put it
aside and keep it for Shabas." This way,
you constantly have Shabas on your mind.
Verse N,
six days a week you shall labor and
you'll do your work.
Does that mean on the six days a
person's able to finish all his work?
When Shabas comes, it should be as if
everything you had to do is all done and
you don't think about it any longer.
You're not thinking about, oh, I have to
finish this, I have to get to that, I
have to get to this. On Shabas, it's as
if everything has been complete. Verse
10.
And on the seventh day,
and you'll observe Shabas unto God your
God, no work shall be done,
your son, and your daughter, your
servant, and you may serve and your
animals
and the convert and the alien who is
living within your gates.
Even your children who you're
responsible for is also referring to the
ones that are over
you said the older ones already were
told by their own commandment because
they're part of
this is to tell us that the older ones
should make sure that the younger ones
follow as well.
That you cannot have the younger ones do
things for the older ones as well.
And this is what we learned in the track
of Shabas
that if a child wants to come and put
out a fire which is not a danger
we don't listen and we have to stop him
from doing that work.
You have a responsibility to educate the
young child and the young child is not
allowed to do any work for you or for
the older ones on chabas as well.
Verse
11.
Why are we observing the Shabas? Why
does it become part of the ten
commandments? And the Torah continues
verse 11.
For six days, God made the heavens and
the earth.
This earth, the sea, and everything
that's in it.
And he rested on the seventh day.
Therefore, God blessed the Shabas day
and he sanctified it.
verse 11.
This is what seemingly as if God wrote
it himself using the terminology that
God says that God is talking about
himself that God rested. What does it
mean that God rested?
This is that a person should learn for
himself how to do it. that if God who is
not a human being that doesn't need a
vacation doesn't need a rest but decided
to rest and writes about himself that he
rested
how much more so an individual a person
of flesh and blood who gets tired out by
working
that how much more so he should rest on
chabas
does it mean that he blessed and
sanctified it he put a holiness a
special sanctification until this day.
And two of the things we find, number
one, he blessed it with the we get a
double portion that we get the double
portion on the Friday.
He blessed it with the that there was no
mud that came down on Shabas. Meaning
that we see that the whole entire Shabas
God put an extra sanctity in it that one
should not deal with weekday items or
deal with things that have not shabistic
on on on those days on that day of
Shabas.
Interesting thing you'll note as the
Balurum points out that the fourth
commandment of Shabas is the seventh
verse of the ten commandments and also
begins with a Zion which for the seventh
day for observing of the Shabas. So you
see over here again as the well as well
as you also find seven people mentioned
when the Torah says
the seven people that the Torah mentions
you, your son, your daughter, your
servant, your maidervant, and the alien
amongst you. So the seven people,
seventh verse and the letter seven zer
begins the verse telling us the seven
points of rest and how on the seventh
day one should rest.
Also an interesting thing as the balutm
points out there are five words in the
verse
telling us that a person who observes
the shabas it's as if he observed all
the five books of the Torah. Now we're
into the fifth commandment as we know
the fifth commandment is the hybrid
between the five commandments that are
between man and God and the five
commandments between man and his fellow
because the fifth commandment is the
commandment of observing of honoring
your parents honoring your parents and
God as a partner in your creation. So by
honoring your parents, you're honoring
God, which creates the hybrid between
man and God, man and his fellow of the
commandments on both sides.
Honor your father or mother so that your
days will be lengthened on the earth
that God is giving to you.
If you're going to respect them, they'll
have long life. If not, God forbid,
they'll be shortened.
that the words of the Torah are written
in short and therefore you have to learn
from the positive that the opposite
applies as well
from the positive you know that if you
don't listen the negative and from the
negative you learn the positive
verse 13
you should not murder
you should not commit adultery
you should not I'm sorry you should not
steal or kidnap
You should not bear false witness
against your fellow man. 13.
When we talk about adultery, adultery is
talking about specifically a married
woman. As it says,
as we see it brought down in the book of
Leviticus when we talk about the word
is committing adultery is specifically
talking about by a married woman. So too
in the book of Ezekiel talks about when
a person commits adultery under her
husband, meaning that she is a married
woman and she's then taken somebody else
and she goes with a strange man.
When it talks about stealing here,
it's not talking about regular stealing,
but it's talking about kidnapping as
well as it says later on in the book of
Leviticus when it tells us about don't
steal. That's talking about
is that talking about money
or maybe this one's talking about
financial loss of stealing and later on
in Leviticus, it's talking about with
kidnapping.
How can you say this? We have to learn
out from the actual item of the concept
that's talking about
being that they're all in the same verse
and the one before it and the one after
it is talking about things that one is
liable of capital punishment which is
murder and adultery. Just like murder
and adultery are one's laws that if one
who abregates them is liable of capital
punishment, so to the middle one which
talks about stealings because stealing
money, one is not liable of capital
punishment. But kidnapping one is. So
therefore, when it says stealing here,
it's referring to kidnapping. Just like
murder refers to a capital punishment.
The stealing in this case, which is
kidnapping, is also something which is
liable to capital punishment.
Verse 14,
you shall not
You shall not desire your fellow man's
house.
You shall not desire your fellow man's
wife the nor his bondsman or his maid
servant his ax and his donkey
or anything that belongs to your fellow
man.
This concludes the sixth Torah reading
of parasra.