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Charlie Harary - Shavuos: The Light of the Torah in Dark World
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We begin I just want to first, of
course, thank and and just give a shout
out for you can people can go to Zichron
Naftali.
It's an organization that I'm very
active and involved in
zichronnaftali.com
and sort of be
be generous there. Okay.
Like so many things in life, when we get
involved in something, as we said in
many times here before,
there's a concept I heard this once
first in the name of Reb David Foreman
called the lullaby effect.
You've heard this before, I'm sure. The
lullaby effect is if you ever ever sang
a lullaby to a child,
and you looked into it, you would
realize that it makes no sense. If you
imagine the purpose of a lullaby is to
soothe a child into going to sleep. And
if you ever heard the lyrics of a
lullaby, if we could do the most famous
one, it's Rock-a-bye Baby on
a treetop. Now, if your baby's going
like, why would you put me on a tree?
When the wind blows, the cradle will
rock. And the baby's like, wait, you're
putting me on a tree on a windy day?
Like, how does this work? And when the
bough breaks, the cradle will fall. And
down will come baby, cradle and all. And
the baby's like, are you even my mom?
Like, what is going on?
Like, who in the world like how high
were the people in California when they
wrote the lyrics
them to bed. And yet, nobody thinks
about the lyrics because as Reb David
Foreman said, lullabies have a way of
lulling us into not thinking about the
things that we say or that we do. And
this happens to all of us. And so, I
appreciate this was the beer tonight
just for a few minutes that we can talk
about maybe what is the most
really arguably one of the most
important nights of the year. As you
know, Reb Aron Yisrael's name is Reb
Moshe Leib. We had this conversation. A
lot of what we're talking about today is
going to be coming from him. If you hear
something you you like, it's his. If you
don't, it's cuz of my secular brain
trying to bring it out to the world.
And he said, and you see this all in all
this from too. So, so anybody wants to
look it up, just go look it up. But I
I'll trust them.
Shavuos is such an important night that
Shavuos night is actually the the that
there's a judgment that takes place.
We think the only day of judgement is
Rosh Hashanah. Ah,
there's another judgement that takes
place throughout our year. It takes
place on Shavuos. The judgement of
Shavuos is the judgement that takes
place about the Torah that we have
throughout the year.
Our Torah is decided on Shavuos.
And it's not just Torah as you would may
think like what I'm learning. It's our
connection to Torah. Our connection to
ruchniyus. When we're davening, he says,
"And you feel connected." There's an
allocation that comes throughout the
year. If you blow Rosh Hashanah, you
come halfway through Tishrei and go,
"Listen, I know the whole parnassa
thing, but could I?" Hashem is like,
"Listen, there are moments. I told you
about it."
I'm Hashem. I'm merciful, but you and I
know that it you know that it says that
your your mazzal is determined on Rosh
Hashanah.
I gave you warning. You should have came
when I was when the storehouse was open.
I'm telling you.
Shavuos night, Hashem is saying Torah.
It's not just what you learn. It's your
connection. You're sitting and davening
the whole year. You're sitting and
saying Tehillim the whole year. You want
your house full of Torah. You want your
kids to have Torah. You you're you're
thinking about the son who's not
connected and you're trying to see
whether he's going to connect. Your
daughter is dating and you want her to
find the RIGHT GUY. ALL OF WHAT WE'RE
THINKING about the whole year is somehow
connected to Torah. It's who we are. Ki
heim chayeinu v'orech yamenu.
Every second of our lives, if you're
really living a Jewish life, is somehow
somehow connected to that piece of Torah
that connects us to Hashem. It's
Shavuos.
And by the way, all of the material
world is built
God forbid from some other place, it's
coming through the connection of
ruchniyus.
So, the parnassa that's bracha.
So, that's the the family relationships
that's full.
So, that's the shidduchim. Everything
we're looking for is somehow connected
to Torah, which is connected to Shavuot,
which is connected to the night of
Shavuot.
It's a big deal.
We're walking into a Rosh Hashanah, so
to speak. It's And it's almost here.
We're 48 hours away.
And if you think about it,
what do we do on Shavuot?
Every Yom Tov has a
a designation. It has a distinctive
quality that is different for that Yom
Tov. Rosh Hashanah has the blowing of
the shofar. We're fasting on Yom Kippur.
We're sitting in the sukkah.
We're We're We're sitting at a seder and
matzah the whole Yom Tov of Pesach.
Shavuot is Shabbos.
It's just meals, except that you get to
have cheesecake.
Oh, and the first night,
we stay up all night, which by the way,
isn't even a mitzvah. It's a minhag.
And by the way, there's a lot of people
that don't do it. Maybe half the room.
There's a lot of people that are just
not showing up that much.
So,
then what is Shavuot?
Is it just a Yom Tov? And then where
does the judgment take place? And how
does it work?
I want to be here. I want to get judged.
I want to be connected to the Torah.
How am I getting that? What am I doing?
So, let's spend a little bit of time
with Hashem's help. Hopefully, put the
right words in.
Hopefully, give him nachas.
Let's spend a few minutes in trying to
understand what is going on in Shavuot
versus Hashem.
Based on Rabbi Leiby's Torah and the
other Torahs.
Shavuot has a major question, because if
you actually go into it, you will see
that Shavuot itself is a question.
In every other Yom Tov, we know when the
Yom Tov is. It says it in the book. We
know Pesach. It's written down. Sukkot
is written down. Rosh Hashanah is not
hard. It's Rosh Hashanah. It's the
beginning of the month.
When you go through the Torah, Hashem
lays out all the yom tovs and when they
are.
But not for Shavuos.
Shavuos is a count. It's 50 days after
we left we left we left Mitzrayim.
But here's the problem.
That the Gemara says there's even a
machlokes as to when we actually got the
Torah.
In the Gemara, there's a machlokes
between the Chachamim and Rebbe Yosi as
to when the Torah was given.
And according to the opinion of Rebbe
Yosi, actually what happened was during
this period of time, as Klal Yisrael was
preparing towards the end, Moshe
Rabbeinu on his own added a day. And so
in that first year when they got the
Torah, there are 50 full days, so to
speak, under Moshe Rabbeinu's addition
was really not Vav Sivan, it was Zayin
Sivan.
Which is why the Gemara says that
there's an agreement that it took place
on Shabbos. Because this year, by the
way, is the year that they first left.
You want to know the dates of the week?
Klal Yisrael left on a Thursday. They
got Right now, should we're looking at
Shavuos on a Friday or Shabbos? That was
the machlokes.
Which means there's an opinion. And if
you look through some of the Rishonim,
you'll see early on there's a question
as to why it's called Yom Matan Torah
Zman, because when was it? People are
talking about it. Chachamim are talking
about this and going, "Wait a second,
when was it?"
Now if you look around, you will find
something amazing.
Whenever we have a a safek when it comes
to holidays, we're always careful. We
know when Pesach is. It's written in the
book. But there was a time in which we
weren't sure when the new month was. So
till got the chutzpah to So we kept on
keeping two days. We're not messing with
yom tov. Two starim.
We're in the We're in the sukkah twice
in sukkos.
We're not We don't mess with yom tov.
There's too much at stake for us to say,
"Well, we're sure it's this." If you
grew up in the diaspora, we have this in
which we do things twice because God
forbid should we miss and keep and have
We miss the yom tov for the year, we
can't survive.
Wait, the most important day, the day of
the Torah, which not because later on we
couldn't get from the from from the base
into us, because in the actual story
there's a locus. How many Shavuos do we
keep? How many nights do we up we up all
night?
One.
Wait, in every other we're scared. We're
worried about Rosh Hashanah we have two
days Rosh Hashanah.
We have two days of everything.
We have one night.
We're so sure.
We're not taking a chance. We're okay
taking a chance. We're putting all our
money on black. No. And if we miss it,
we missed
Torah?
Why are we so confident
that it's one night? Why are we not up
two nights in a row? Cuz it's a little
hard?
What's going on with Shavuos?
Why?
And by the way, just while we're at
asking questions then I'm done asking
questions. Just one more.
Does it make sense to even stay up at
all?
Rabbi
You good?
Rabbi Ocean asked this question.
He says, "Staying up doesn't even make
sense." He says it a little bit more
Torah-dic.
If we had a big day, if let's assume
that we had a big final or a big event
or someone's getting married or someone
had a flight and you go to bed and you
go into the dinner room, what does your
parent say?
Let's stay up.
You know what they say?
Go to bed.
Tomorrow's a big day.
Hashem gave us the Torah at nates.
He gave us Torah at dawn.
If there was ever a night to eat quickly
and get a good night's sleep, it's
Shavuos night.
Why isn't Shavuos night he asks? We go,
we eat quickly, we all go to bed. We got
a good four or five hours in. We're all
up at the crack of dawn waiting in shul
for Mount Torah. We go out, we eat, we
end up in shul. By 2:30 we're like half
we're half not even paying attention. By
3:00 we're like drinking we're we're
popping corks. By By the time Mount
Torah comes, half the shul is out cold.
And they start saying all the all the
Ashkenazi but till they get to Mount
Torah and half the place is out. By the
time you get home, instead of coming
back after Mount Torah, a day like the
wedding, and you come home, and the
meal, and the learning, guys just sleep
until like 3:00 in the afternoon.
That's Yom Tov?
You hear?
Something's going on.
Something's happening.
And if we can figure out if we can
figure it out,
maybe we can figure out how the din may
be working.
And so that we can figure out what we
have to do in the next 48 hours to get
ourselves ready for this monumental
moment. So that when Hashem comes down
and allocates Torah, me and you in Mir
Hashem have a large portion.
So what is going on?
So many, many years ago I was in law
school.
And I went to law school at a time,
believe it or not, for those that are a
little bit younger in the room, I went
to law school at a time
before we actually had internet. Then,
believe it or not, the internet was in a
room called the computer room.
In the old days, that's how it worked.
There was a room where the computers
went. There was huge Before then there
was a wall where the phones went. For
those who are young here, I'm going to
get a little nuts. Before then there was
a well where the water came from.
And before then everything, as my kids
say, was just black and white.
But when I grew up and I was in school,
when I was in law school, we had a
computer room. And you went to the
computer room. And all the computers
were attached to the internet
and you printed there and you work
there. That's how it I don't know.
That's how it worked when I was in law
school.
It was funny cuz in my last year
the ethernet just came out. You remember
ethernet's a blue thick cord that you
see sometimes in now like data centers.
You used to fight for the few seats at
the edge of the lecture hall because
they had those big thick things.
Back then
lawyers especially when you had
professors I went to a a law school with
a lot of old school professors like men
with like Roman numerals after their
name. Like you know guys that literally
came off the Mayflower. Like real
American WASPs. Like the real names
their first names were like Walt and
Quincy. Like you know.
They spoke like orators when they
taught. They didn't speak English. You
understand? They spoke like Latinish
English.
So the theory was that if you're a
lawyer you're you're an attorney. They
didn't call you a lawyer. You're an
attorney.
You have to learn how to write.
And your writing has to be persuasive.
You're not a scribner.
You're an orator. You're a communicator.
So they one of my professors made us
take a class in creative writing.
So what are you going to do? I'm going
to fight with the professors. So we had
to sit through Again, I like If you're
like creative writing, God bless you.
Like go for creative writing. I'm saying
I as a kid struggled to even stand
behind the podium let alone sit in a
chair let alone deal with creative
writing. But we had That's what we did.
So we they they gave us all these books
and you have to read all these creative
writing type books and one book came our
way.
And this is like forget I'm I'm a softy.
I'm a softy like crazy.
I'm not good with like you know.
And this book like broke me.
The book I remember like it was
yesterday.
The book was about a a And the whole
point of the book was the power of
writing.
The book was about a young man during
around what I thought I think is around
the Revolutionary War time.
Around I think I don't know how long ago
it was, but it was a time in which they
didn't have guns. They had muskets. You
know those You remember those like They
didn't have helmets. They had like those
those four-corner You know those hats
they wore, those like triangle hats. You
know what I mean? The blue coats with
the the gold buttons. Anybody here know
American history? You know that the
white pants and like those like loafers.
That's how they fought wars.
Formations.
So, the story was of this young man who
was on a farm.
And he got called into battle.
And he had a young wife
and three little boys.
And the way the author begins, it's like
heart-wrenching.
The day comes that he gets his letter
and his wife breaks down and they have a
farm and they're alone on the farm and
they've got three little boys, Timothy,
John.
And the day that they walk him off to
battle, that he walk on a dirt road
before they get to the main road before
he gets picked up.
And the imagery of this young woman
with a baby on her hip and two on each
one on each leg.
Goodbye, Daddy.
When you coming home?
Daddy doesn't know.
And the wife was heartbroken.
And what she would do
cuz she had to navigate her life.
And so
she didn't know how to run a farm or how
to handle the boys.
She didn't know how to deal with the
neighbors.
She didn't know what was going on in
battle.
And so what this young wife would do was
she would be writing letters every night
to her husband on the battlefield.
And her husband
Yeah, if you want.
Could they not hear me in the back?
Can you hear me in the back?
You can?
Microphone or no? Yes. Yes, okay.
You can hear me but with the microphone.
Until we get this. So, what they would
do what we would do is she would be
writing him letters
all the time
as a way to connect to her husband, as a
way to get the guidance that she needed.
And her husband, who was a prolific
writer, which is why the book was in
creative writing,
would write her long letters back
about his experiences, what he was
seeing, how to deal with the neighbors,
how to deal with the farm.
And this would go on for weeks and that
as the kids missed their dad, she would
go to bed and she would take out the
letters that he wrote for the boys
and she would read them daddy's letters
and they would calm down and then at
night she would sit down at her wooden
table with the apple cider and she'd be
heartbroken and the way she would deal
with the missing of her husband
would be through the letters.
And then
one day
We're good?
And then one day
she hears people she hears footsteps on
the dirt path.
It's early in the morning and she is
sure that it's her husband coming home
from battle.
And she wakes up her boys and they run
downstairs.
And as they go downstairs to open the
door to see their husband, they see
two soldiers
with a folded flag in their hands.
A folded flag means
Thank you.
Perfect.
A folded flag means
Daddy's not coming home.
And she collapses.
And she's unconsolable.
And as they give her the flag
and she's heartbroken on the floor
they take something else that's out.
Meanwhile, I have to like write an essay
on this. I'm like in tears.
And they put on the table a
leather-bound book.
And as they're walking out, one of the
kids says to the guys, "What is this?"
cuz the mom was not in a place.
And he tells the boys, "Tell your mom
that your dad was injured in battle
and he was taken to a military hospital.
And he knew when he got to the hospital
he was never going home.
And so when he got there, he asked for
as much ink, cuz that's how they used to
write, and as much paper as they could
afford and the army
feeling for this man supplied as much
paper as he would write.
And day and night, they said, "Day and
night, the candles would burn to the
bottom. He would just be writing."
He would write stories. He would write
advice. He would write for the boys when
they were getting at married at marital
advice 20 years later. He would write
his wife again and again and explain and
write and write and write and write
knowing he would never see her and
wanting to pour everything he had out on
the piece of paper to give to her and
write and write and write and the end of
the last page with the pen literally
just falling off because that was when
he couldn't write anymore and his last
wish before he left was that we should
not give this to his wife in a way that
was disrespectful and he begged us they
said to find something that was leather
bound that we can put the letters in so
when you hand it to her it's handed to
her with respect and on the table is
this leather bound book of your father's
letters.
And as the wife came back
to her senses, she looked at that table
and realized
that her husband is gone
and the only way back to him is through
that book.
And she would read the book at night and
she'd read it to their boys
and they would go to bed with that book
and wake up with that book and as she's
going through her day and as it gets
hard and as she can't function and as
she can't imagine the world not being
black, what she'd look to every day was
the book, another page, another time.
The stained the the tear stained pages
she'd read again and she'd read again
and every time she'd read it, which is
the point of the class, he put in more
imagery and more secrets and more ideas
and more and the point was when you
write, your writing lasts forever beyond
you and the point was when you write
sentences, make sure your sentences are
filled with ideas even beyond the
surface.
And all I'm thinking the whole time is
this poor wife.
And that's how the story ends.
What is Shavuot?
What are we trying to accomplish in
Shavuot?
So we think that Shavuot
is the day in which we got the Torah. If
you ask somebody what is Shavuot,
they'll tell you Shavuot is the moment
in which a long long time ago Cloudius
all got the Torah. Here's the problem.
If that were the case, we would keep
Shavuos twice. What is Shavuos?
Okay, I'm back. Oh, you lost the thing?
I got it.
What is Shavuos?
So, let's pull back for a second.
Klaal Yisroel comes out of Mitzrayim.
Shavuos is the end of a journey.
Shavuos didn't come out of nowhere.
Shavuos is the end of a story that we've
been telling for almost 50 days.
Klaal Yisroel comes out of Mitzrayim.
And when Klaal Yisroel is in Mitzrayim
for 210 years, it's radio silence. And
when Hashem shows up in Mitzrayim,
remember, and we did this before,
Hashem did not bring the makos into
Mitzrayim in order to save the Jewish
people. Why would Hashem bring the makos
to save the Jewish people? You think the
Kodesh Boruchu, and we tell the story to
our children as if Paroh comes over and
won't let the Jews out. Moshe asks,
Hashem says, "Hi Paroh, can you please
let the Jews out?" And Paroh goes, "No."
And Moshe goes back to Hashem as if
there's Paroh and there's Hashem, and
they're two battling each other. And
Paroh Moshe goes, "I'm so sorry. He said
no." And Hashem said, "No?
You got to be kidding me. What a
chutzpah. Dumb."
"Uh?"
"Sorry. Svarde. Uh? Kick. Boom. Punch.
What? And then at the end, finally, by
makos bechoros, Paroh goes, 'Okay.' And
Hashem says, 'Ha, [gasps]
it's about I was going to go 50. He got
lucky at 10. Let's get out of here.'
For real?
The creator of humanity's got to play
ball with Paroh?
He was the one who hardened his heart.
He couldn't have softened his heart?
Yosef was able to get away with a bunch
of dreams. He couldn't have put dreams
in Paroh's head later? This is like a
big deal. Hashem couldn't bring kosher,
shut the lights off and he could have
walked right out. Hashem is playing
around with Paro for 10 macos because he
needs to save the Jewish people. Are you
kidding me?
Hashem wasn't doing this for Paro.
Hashem brought brought macos for us.
For 210 years we were sitting around
with nothing, with no connection to the
Kodesh Baruch Hu. And the Kodesh Baruch
Hu shows up and says, "I am hearing you
cry."
When you're sitting at a park and kids
are playing and it's like a Memorial
Day. So all the dads are babysitting.
Like as if when you take care of your
kids you're babysitting. All the dads
are babysitting, which means they're on
their phone watching the kids play far
away. When all the dads are multitasking
and one little kid is on that monkey bar
and slips and hits the floor and goes,
"Daddy!" One man, I don't care what kind
of business call he's on, comes flying.
You know why? Cuz when a kid screams,
you know who comes flying? His parents.
And Hashem says, "Listen to me, guys.
You're my kids.
Lo ayer de malach.
Lo ayer de seraf. Lo ayer de shaliach.
Bichvodo uvaatzmo. The king came down
off his throne. You know why? Cuz now
you know you're my children because only
parents come running for the kiddies. I
didn't send somebody for you. I came.
The 10 macos were for you to see I run
this world.
I run the world. He doesn't run the
world. They don't run the world. You can
be sitting in 2006 thinking that, you
know who runs the world? The doctors and
the defense and therapists and
everyone's running the world. Let me
tell you something. I run this world.
It's my world and you're my kids.
I came running and here's what we're
going to do. This isn't once. Every
single year you get back in that room
and you tell your kids.
Don't let the rabbi do it. The rabbi's
got other things to do. Not tonight.
Tonight you tell your children.
Hashem loves us like kids. He came for
your Your grandmother was in that room,
was in that land and the creator of the
world came down off his throne, on his
knees so to speak Has Veshalom, and
saved us in the mud, 49 levels down. You
know why? Because he loves us.
Yeah, you.
And we came out of the sea.
And call you so got it.
They
believed it. There's a Hashem in this
world. We believe it. And they say,
"Caleb and they who?"
He's mine. Caleb, he's mine. I can't
believe it, he's mine.
But then something happened.
Because if you're really paying
attention, you'd ask the following
question. You You I think we would say
and
we we ask this question. We say, "Wait a
second. If the entire goal of this is
isn't to save the Jewish people, we're
not just like a nation that was born to
save us?" Hashem saved us for one
reason. Moshe saw the burning bush on
Mount Sinai. He saved us for the Torah.
He saved us to be his nation. You got
him. You walked him through the
By the
way, Moshe
You know what you should do tomorrow
morning? You should give them the Torah.
There should never be a Omer. They
should take one day from Pesach, get the
bagels, get back to life, we're good.
Shabbat is over from cooking, let's get
rolling. It's the holiday.
Why should there be a break? You came
out, 10 plagues, you walked through a
sea, you believe in Hashem. The whole
goal was to have the Torah. From the sea
to Mount Sinai, it's a small little
walk. The Jews are spending They're
hiking around the desert, they're doing
nothing.
Someone has got to raise money for
production on the mountaintop. What was
going on during this whole period of
time? Why do we even have a Omer for?
This whole era, this whole 50 days seem
like it's totally irrelevant for. Why do
we have it for? So, if you look at what
the Jews did during this period of time,
really it's one consistent thing.
There was a war, there was stuff going
on, but there was one thing that
happened only during this period Well,
started during this period of time. What
was that?
>> [snorts]
>> They got hungry.
Shocker.
As much as mom can bring food, how much
food could she bring in the desert? How
much? I mean, how many shopping bags
could one woman take? That's how you
know you're Jewish, by the way. You
know, old days it was yarmulkes, but
everywhere hats. If you go to Great
Adventure during Chol Hamoed, you know
how you tell someone's Jewish? Not by
the hat, you know, not by the yarmulke.
You know how you tell they're Jewish? If
the woman next to him is carrying 40
bags,
Jewish. The guy could have a tattoo and
a who knows what. She's carrying bags,
you're Jewish.
You don't think the mommies were
carrying bags back then? What do you
think they were putting on those
donkeys?
But okay, how how much could she carry?
At some point, there's no food in the
house.
She turns to her husband
after a few days of coming out of the
Yam Suf,
and she says we have nothing to eat.
And he goes, "Don't worry."
Moshe Rabbeinu said,
"Tomorrow morning,
Hashem's going to give us mun from
shamaya." She looks at him maybe and
says, "Listen,
you know that I love you, and I
I'm so happy with the shidduch.
But you're not Moshe Rabbeinu. I mean,
you're wonderful. I mean, and I think
you learn beautifully, but Moshe
Rabbeinu, I mean, and you're strong, but
Nachshon, I don't think so. Listen, I'm
not Miriam. So, you think the Kadosh
Baruch Hu is up there with all the
millions of people that walked out of
Mitzrayim, men and women and children,
he's got a registry?
It's a celebrity religion. There's Moshe
at the front. We're happy to be part of
it. I'm happy you included us.
Now, the Kadosh Baruch Hu, by the way,
could have fed them by having wheat grow
from sand. That's more chashuv than
wheat growing from soil.
That's beyond Hashem's ability. He
couldn't have had a depot in the corner
of mun, a schmorgasbord the way we like
it so you can bring your plate back six
times?
He had to have it the the he had it, one
per per person. you save it for
tomorrow, it goes it goes bad?
Why?
Maybe you can say that the reason why is
cuz that woman woke up in the morning
and said, "You think the Kadosh Baruch
Hu knows we have four children?"
You know what the guy said back?
I don't know.
And I bet you his hands were trembling
on the way to that spot.
Which moved every day by what he did the
night before.
And picked up the money, put it in the
house. 1 2 3 4 5
What?
Hashem doesn't know our names.
The next morning
1 2 3 4 What?
Your mother's coming from Shabbos. Now
you know Now she knows your mother's
coming. Was he tapping our phones? What
is he the government? What's going on?
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 My friend just had a baby.
What's going on?
You know what the Jewish people did
during this period of time?
You know what they did?
You know, in one place it's almost easy
to believe that the Kadosh Baruch Hu
exists.
Mon um Makos, split seas
big rabbonim, big tzaddikim
big stories
maiseh l'chacham about tzaddikim
tzaddikei elyon. You see a tzaddik and
you look at his face and you go, "Ah,
this man sits with the Kadosh Baruch
Hu." It's easy for me and you, the
regular folk
to look over to a religion in Judaism
and say, "I know how it works. There's
them and then we follow along." And by
the way, there is them and they're
holier and they work harder and I'm not
taking and I owe to away from the the
godliness of true tzaddikim and
chachamim that are our einei hador.
But we think it means that Hashem
doesn't see us.
He's not in my house.
He's not with me in my anxiety.
He's not on carpool. He's not in the
bank account.
He's not in my feelers cuz I can't even
keep my feelers straight for an entire
feeler.
How could Hashem be in this feeler? I
know that feeler and how could the
Kadosh Baruch Hu really care about this
feeler ascending to shamayim? Do you
know what the quality of this feeler is?
Guess what?
If you don't think you exist, you can't
have a relationship with somebody.
You can't look up to someone in the
front who doesn't know your name and
have a relationship because they don't
know you. You only know them.
You know why? Cuz the Kadosh Baruch Hu
says, "You know what? We began this
relationship with me you believing in
me. Now I want you to see that I believe
in you."
You know we're counting?
We're counting something very specific.
Because after K'lal Yisrael comes out of
the midbar and they go into Eretz
Yisrael, there's this interesting law
that takes place which is any new grain
can't be eaten until you bring a carbon
omer. Why? Cuz Hashem is telling you,
"It looks like it's your grain and it
looks like you're now being run by
nature and it looks like because you
hooked up this guy or did this deal,
this is who's your real bosses. But let
me tell you something, do not touch that
wheat cuz every day that you can't eat
that wheat and your kids say, 'Why?'
you're going to say, 'It looks like the
wheat came from us. It came from Hashem.
We're not touching it until the omer.'
And your child will say to you, 'The
omer, what is the omer? It's not even
the name of a carbon. It's not
descriptive. An omer is a measurement.'
And you're going to tell your child,
'The omer is our trigger word.' For
what?
It's for the amount of mun that we got.
Sefirat HaOmer
is the sphere of the man.
It's the sphere of the day in and the
day out of us waking up and saying, "How
could the creator of the world know my
name?
How in the world did I end up in a
religion where I am This doesn't make
sense.
What I'm so no I am so nothing.
There's no way. There's no way. There's
no way. It doesn't happen in a day.
There's no way. There's no way he knows
me.
Second day, there's no way he knows me.
Fifth day, there's no way he's on
carpool. Eighth day,
9 10, he doesn't know me. 11, wait, this
coincidence happened? Oh my gosh, it
can't be. It can't be. Not for me. No
way. Not for me.
Today I got a call from a person on the
way over here. I am telling you she
asked the question, I know the answer.
In the morning, I called her and he gave
me something. I'm like, "Why is he
telling this to me?" It was this girl
asking me the question. I'm like, "Do
you have any idea how Kodesh Baruch Hu
just like I should be so happy just used
me in the middle?"
She's like, "No way."
Yeah.
You see, we have this complex.
And the complex goes like this. If I
can't imagine loving millions of people,
then no way anybody could love millions
of people.
If I can't imagine how it's possible,
why would Hashem know my It doesn't make
sense to me,
so then it doesn't make sense.
Kodesh Baruch Hu goes, "Yeah, guess
what? You're finite. It's not going to
make sense to you. Let me tell you how
it works.
Omer,
I see you. I picked you.
You didn't pick me. I picked you. You
don't own me. I know you.
Again, and again, and again, and again,
20 25 30 40
Not once.
Not twice. To see a Kodesh Baruch Hu
runs the world, it's one night.
In one week already out of the sea to
see the Kodesh Baruch Hu knows my name.
It's 50 days. It's 7 * 7. It's the unit
* the unit.
I have to break my head into a world
that says, "He sees me."
He's building me.
Not only do I believe in him,
but I don't know why,
but he believes in me.
If you don't got that, it's not a
relationship.
If we only have one side and we think
that the Kodesh Baruch Hu doesn't see us
back, we're not in a relationship.
Which is why to so many people Judaism
doesn't taste good because in the back
of their head they think it's for
somebody else.
They think they're doing a religion
meant for those people and I'm doing it
because I don't want to upset the God on
top and ruining my own life.
Because how could it be?
Kodesh Baruch Hu is like, "That's not
what I'm doing here.
I'm building something with you.
I'm thinking about you."
That one-year-old boy in the cabin, his
dad, he doesn't even know what his dad
is doing. His dad is dying and writing a
letter to him at his marriage in 20
years because he didn't has no way of
understanding how a man on his deathbed
could be thinking about a one-year-old
and all his father is doing is worrying
about whether his son could survive
without a father. And he's writing and
he's writing and he's writing. The guy's
like, "The kid's not getting a book."
The kid is getting the neshama of his
father. Kid's not getting advice. He's
not getting wisdom. He's not getting
marriage advice. He's getting somebody's
heart and soul put into a book for him.
And he's thinking, "He doesn't even know
me. My dad didn't know me. He passed
away before I was even a kid. And his
father's going, are you crazy? I don't
know you.
I put my life into something for you.
I wish I can talk to you. I wish you can
see me. You can't. So, I'm going to give
you something. You think it's advice?
It's me.
You're going to read it to see how it
compares to other things? You're going
to do a page a day and then connect it
that you're good? You walk out like you
like you're free?
Are you kidding? Every word has 4,000
meanings cuz I read it and wrote it and
wrote it and wrote it and wrote it cuz I
wanted you to read it and I want you to
feel me inside.
That wife is looking at that book. She's
looking at a book that about how to run
a farm.
She's looking at a book of a husband
who's heartbroken to a million pieces.
I love you. I love you. I love you. I
love you. Every farm advice is love and
love and love and miss and love and love
and love. She's not reading a book on
how to farm.
The farm is just what's in front
of the neshama of her husband.
The Kadosh Baruch Hu is turning to us
and saying, are you kidding me? Do you
know what this is about? Are you paying
attention? You think you're in a
religion waiting on top? What are we
Greek that we wait around for some deity
in the sky to hook us up when we give
him the sacrifices that he wants? Is
that what we became?
Like we're running around with our own
lives and we know what's best for
ourselves. It's like a new thing like
the post Carl Rogers world of America.
The humanism of that what's so I don't
feel it. I just I I follow my truth.
We're serving ourselves and assuming
that my senses knows truth and we look
up to the deity and go, here's the deal.
I know what I want. I have it clear. If
you can give it to me, I'm cool. I'll do
whatever you do. They used to sacrifice
birds or whatever and I'll sacrifice
anything to you. Whatever. Deliver.
She's like, "What? Now we're Greeks?
You're putting your head down to get
stuff?"
Can you imagine the the the the the pain
of a father that comes home from battle
and the kid puts his head stuck down and
goes, "Can I have some money?"
She's like, "This isn't about stuff.
It's me and you. It doesn't make sense
to you. That's called belief.
Belief means you were chosen to be my
daughter.
And if it doesn't make sense to you,
then guess what? Dance about the fact
that it happened anyways. And it took
you should take you 50 days. And what
we're doing is every day you're climbing
and climbing and climbing and climbing
until 50 days. 7 * 7 a unit on a unit
you go, oh my gosh. The creator of the
universe is guiding
my life. How did I let this person
guide my life? I have the creator.
I have my dad, my my my mom. I have I
have my beloved in my life.
Then you get the book.
You don't get the book if it's like,
"Ugh.
What do I got to do to get to the deity?
Holy cow, this stuff?
I got to fast?
Oh, what do I have to wear? What do I
got to eat? That's crazy."
Hold on, let me do a little bit less to
see if he zaps me. So far, I'm I'm
pulling no zap. I still got some money.
Okay, I got a new sheetah.
She's like, "What?
I'm amazon.god now to you? You're
ordering?
This is an order catalog you're getting?
You know what's in that book?
My soul.
Kudsha Brikhu.
Kall Yisrael. Orayso. Zohar says,
"Khadu."
She's like, "Not Hashem. We don't know
Hashem Hashem. Kudsha Brikhu."
is in the Torah.
The Torah is not just a book of
information. It's not just a book of
stuff.
Stuff.
Cool story.
Moses on leadership. It's like a joke.
You know what Torah is? The Torah is an
interface.
As I believe he says, it's a cord
between the generator and the phone.
It's an interface.
It looks like it's stuff. You know what
it is?
It's the [snorts] Kadosh Baruch Hu
saying, "I love you. I love you. There's
no way you can connect to me directly.
So, here's what I'm going to do. I'm
going to write something. It's going to
look like a couple of things. It's just
a cover. Do not get stuck on the cover."
It's just this cover. You know what it's
really? It's me and you. There's no way
for you to get to me. Your mind can't
get to mine. So, what we're going to do
is we're going to make a cord from the
ultimate generator into you. And that
cord is called Torah. And when I give it
to you, you're going to look at it and
you're going to say, "Now I can live in
the world and connect to my father in
heaven. I can see what he says. I can
read words that are pregnant with his R.
I can follow what he wants. I can see a
scenario and ask myself, is that what
Hashem expects? I can get into his
thinking because what he's trying to do
is say,
"Any Tza."
If you get to Shavuot and it's annoying,
you didn't get to the Omer.
It's only annoying because I'm serving
myself.
And you're just my delivery man.
And I'm still Greek cuz the Greek world
is destroying us and I'm still stuck.
I'm just a Jewish Greek. Instead of
Zeus, I call it Hashem. It's the same
theology. I have my life deliver.
>> [snorts]
>> And Hashem says, "Uh-uh-uh-uh-uh."
It's not how it works.
Here's how it works.
I'm giving you something.
It's cuz I love you.
And it looks like it's information and
wisdom and rules. And if you spend your
life thinking that way, you're going to
do it if you're a good person and never
taste it.
It's going to be bland.
But if you did the work and you walked
out of Pesach and you went through the
Omer and you spent And if it's not the
Omer, you're almost there. It's right at
the right of it, so you can still do it.
If you spend a few minutes thinking to
yourself, I cannot believe that Hashem
picked me and he's giving me my himself
in a book. If you're sitting in a book
and you're looking at that book and
you're seeing Hashem glisten back at
you, that to him is coming alive. You're
not running through to check. You're
reading it. The Gemara is coming alive.
When you have that perspective, you
stand before Har Sinai and he says, "For
you, my love."
>> [snorts]
>> That's why
if you look at the Sefer HaChinuch and
his approach,
look at Rebbi Yitzchak and so many
others, they say, "You know why we don't
do two nights? Because just in case you
think the reason why we're doing it is
to commemorate, you're going to miss the
whole point of Shavuot. Shavuot isn't
commemorating anything. Who cares what
happened a long time ago? A long time
ago was just a Pesach. It's just an
opening to tell you what's happening
every second. Hashem didn't love your
great-grandparents and then left you.
Hashem comes every single year, 50 days
after you start counting to him. He
meets you on the way down. He meets you
at the mountaintop and goes, "Here,
honey, it's for you." Every single year.
Every single year the Kodesh Baruch Hu
is doing Matan Torah. We may not have a
physical mountain, but it's not
changing. So, that's why the Rabbis are
telling us, "You know why we're so
confident? Because it's not about the
date. The date isn't even written in the
Torah on purpose." The Torah is saying,
"There's no date. The date is 50 days.
Because if you're going 50 days and
you're climbing to me for 50 days, you
know what's going to happen when you get
to the top? I'm waiting for you.
I'm going to hand you the letter of the
book cuz you're going to take it and
you're going to go home and you're going
to open up and you're going to be like,
"Holy cow."
Look at the story about Ravina. What is
in this story? It's probably I can't
imagine.
That's what he wants from us.
Now, imagine for a second, if you can,
you were that that that soldier and you
came to to come down and you walked into
that house and you peeked through the
window and you saw your wife sitting in
front of that table with the book, her
tears, and you see the kid in the corner
who's engrossed in the book cuz he can't
fall asleep without the stories from his
daddy. And then you see the guy in the
corner who's like, "Am I done yet? Am I
done yet? Mom, am I done yet? Am I done
yet?" How would you feel about your
children?
When you look at that one kid who's
engrossed in the book, you're like,
"How can I get How much more can I give
you? How much more can I connect to you?
Look at you trying. Look at you getting
absorbed in the book."
That, Rebbi says, is the judgment.
That's what Rebbi Yerucham is talking
about. Do you know why you're supposed
to go to bed before big performance? Cuz
that makes sense. But who's talking
about a performance?
If her husband was coming home in the
morning, she'd sleep?
If her father was coming home in the
morning from battle, he'd be sleeping
for the performance? What performance?
I'm halishing. I'm looking at my watch.
We have one night a year from from from
from from from from from Seder from
nightfall until until nights.
Is the Is that's the one time a year
where the Kodesh Baruch Hu is giving us
the Torah again, culminating in nights.
I'm going to bed?
Cuz I'm not a guy? Cuz no, I never went
to I never got up? Because I'm this cuz
I'm tired? Cuz it's hard for me? I got
to hang on the back and talk for 3
hours? Are you kidding me? I have a
cord. The cord is called Torah. I have
one night where I'm looking at a book
and Hashem comes down and goes, "Who
cares about my book?" And she sees a
family where the mom has not only a
physical menu, she has a spiritual menu.
She's like, "Tonight is Hashem's night.
You give it to our Torah. You give it to
our Torah. We're going to make it
awesome tonight." This little kid needs
to
The whole house is talking Torah. The
whole house is talking to Hashem. You
turn to the other house and they're
like, "Whatever, it's Friday night. I
want to go to bed."
It's not a question of like Hashem's on
top going, "Hmm, you're going I'm in my
vest?"
He's looking down and going, "Where do I
put my neshama?"
Which one of my kids am I halishing for?
The one who's halishing for me? Or the
one who can barely move back on? He's
ready for tomorrow morning. He's annoyed
that the first night I got to stay up
late cuz it's bedtime and he had a hard
week at work and he's exhausted trying
to make money that I give him. And so as
a result, he'd rather be sleeping.
Forget the judgment the way we look at
it like Hashem is a bit Hashem is coming
down. He's looking at the window going,
"Which one of my kids is absorbed in the
book that I put my life into, so to
speak?"
That's the That's an allocation. That's
a judgment.
He's a mother turn to her boys and say,
"Go. I got it." Or her husband. Or you
know what? He sees a family of women
that go, "We're reading Tehillim. Start.
Push yourself a little forward. A little
more. We could do it. Let's finish it.
Let's finish it."
I can only imagine what it must feel
like for the Kodesh Baruch Hu to look
down into a house, to a woman who's
working all week and her head is nodding
off in front of the Tehillim on on
Shavuot night.
Like,
I can only imagine what the Kodesh
Baruch Hu is looking down and going,
"Look at my daughter. Come here. Come
here. Malachim, look at my daughter.
Look at she can't even keep her eyes
open. Look what she's trying to do. It's
tonight. It's my night. Tehillim is
Torah. We have he says With Chaim says
all the time that Tehillim is Torah.
Torah.
It's not about my yahrzeit.
She's
Look at these people hawking before Yom
Tov trying to finish stuff and do things
and make the night exciting. Look at how
hard they're working so the night that I
come into the world, I look at my own
children of which I have so few left in
this world.
Look at them. Look at the honor that I'm
getting.
Look at these guys go. This is why
there's a big inyan to say Tikkun Liel
Shavuos. Cuz you're just going and
going. Look at these guys going. Usually
it's hard for them to learn. They're
pushing and it's pushing. It's 3:00 in
the morning.
It's 3:00 in the morning. That guy
doesn't want to go to sleep at 3:00 a.m.
Look at him trying to fight.
Rebbe says, "You know what Shavuos is?
Shavuos is the generator.
We are the, so to speak, the phone and
the Torah is the plug. Plug into Torah
and don't stop. As long as you can go,
go, go. Now I'm learning and I'm hawking
and I'm learning and I'm hawking and I'm
waiting and I'm learning. I'm learning.
I'm learning. I'm learning. We're
learning every second of Torah on
Shavuos night for men, women and
children. Nobody is off. If you can't go
the whole night, you go as long as you
can.
If you have to get up take care of kids,
okay.
Kodesh Baruch Hu is trying. He sees you.
He sees what you're doing.
He's pushing.
The goal of Shavuos night
is one thing. Orach Chaim Feinstein
says, "You want to know how you build a
kli? It's called ratzon." The goal of
Shavuos night is to turn to the Kodesh
Baruch Hu and say, "Ani rotzeh."
That's what I want in my life. And you
know what? It's been bland and it
shouldn't be bland.
Cuz I've been running my whole life
thinking that I'm in charge of my life
or I'm thinking worse that how I look is
who I am, which is why I'm so obsessed
with how I look and what I have cuz it's
become my identity.
And I forgotten that my identity is to
be your daughter.
I forgotten that how much money I make
is not a sign of my value even if I'm in
a community where it seems like that's
the case.
My value is that I'm your son and you
picked me and you gave me a book. And
when you look in the window, I want to
be the kid in the corner absorbed in the
pages and not the kid that's like, "Am I
done?"
Cuz I want you to look at me and see
that I understand what you're doing and
give me more of you this year, Hashem.
That's what it means to be in the
judgment.
Once a year,
Hashem gives us the Torah again.
And he looks to see who's out there.
Who really cares? Who's prepping for a
wedding? You know how you know who gets
who's getting married? Cuz she's been
prepping for months.
The guy trying to get to the second
dance he can get home that night isn't
part of the party.
The closer you are to that bride and
groom, the more you're prepping. You
want to know who's marrying Hashem
Shavuos night? You can tell by what's
happening tonight, tomorrow.
How am I going to honor Hashem?
How am I going to make him be
proud of me when he looks through the
window two nights from now?
Cuz I want him to see me and give me
more. So, when I get up, I believe he
says, "You're 10 inches taller." So,
next year, I don't want to fight the
same fight. I want to get up and I want
to feel closer and then I want to go
Michael Hachai.
>> [snorts]
>> There's one more piece and then I'm
done.
One of the hardest parts about being a
Jew
is the way we got the Torah.
We live in a world of consumerism.
And the way a consumer works is, "Show
me.
Show me.
Interesting.
What else you got?
>> [snorts]
>> I'm just window shopping. I'm just
walking around to see.
I'm just taking it on a test drive."
When you live in a culture that's built
on humanism, which is a nicer way of
saying,
"We serve ourselves."
And in a culture that's built on
consumerism, which is, "Let me see
before I buy." You turn to the Torah and
you use the same mentality.
And the mentality is, if it's working
for me, I do it.
And if it's not, let's see.
Can you juggle for me, Hashem? Make me a
miracle. Give me a speech, and then
maybe
I'll do one of your commandments.
My grandmother and your grandmother, my
grandfather and your grandfather did not
think that way. You know what they did?
They walked to a mountaintop or they
were very clear with me today when he
said you walk to a mountaintop without
Torah, and they said na'aseh venishma. I
got it.
It's right, I'm in.
What do you mean? It's right,
I'm in.
And we are scared of that. Let's just be
straight.
Could there have been We're almost at
Let's just be real.
It's scary to do more than I'm doing.
So, here's what we do.
I'd love to.
Oh, would I love to.
You see, my friends, my family, my kids,
my work, my job, my background. I wish I
was born in this community. I don't even
have to do this. You see it?
To the right, they're a bunch of
fanatics. To the left, they're barely
religious. I figured out exactly what
Hashem wants from me.
In the back of our minds, you know, we
say to ourselves,
if you come near me and you do the thing
that I should do, I'm threatened by you.
Because I know
there's a rung on top of me called
action, mitzvahs, maasim tovim,
maybe things I shouldn't do. It's right
above me. It's not 10 steps above, it's
right above.
I should grab it.
And I'm scared.
I am scared to grab that rung.
You want to know what Shavuot night
stands for?
In my opinion, for the base number of I
leave this conversation today,
was a Jew
in her house, in his shul, in his moment
of quiet and saying, "I'm making it up.
I think I serve myself. I'm serving you.
I trust you."
I'm grabbing it.
Mekubal.
I'm scared, Hashem.
I don't have the strength for this.
They're all not going to talk to me.
I'm going to look like a weirdo.
I don't think I can do it.
Mekubal.
Naaseh.
Venishma.
My grandmother did it, I can do it. My
grandfather did it, I can do it. But
then he says, "You want to know what a
connection is? Number one, learning as
much as you can. Tikun Leil Shavuot,
Torah, Gemara, Kabbalah for real,
Tehillim. That's one. Plug in all night.
You want to know what a real big one
is?" He says,
"That Kabbalah that's in your head that
you're scared of."
Deep breath.
I'm in.
Tonight is the night. I'm committing.
My great-grandparents can do it. I got
the same genes.
I am sure that if you want me to do it,
Hashem, I will not I will not lose in
life.
A Kabbalah of Naaseh on Shavuot night?
Are you kidding?
Talk about Yiddishe Nachas.
Talk about the Kodesh Baruch Hu looking
down on a world that has made us Greeks,
humanists, and consumers.
And looking at that Jew through the
darkness.
Looking back up and saying,
"I got it.
You see me and I trust you.
I'm in."
That's our goal.
That's maybe the din.
How much are you in?
And the more you're in, and the more we
try, and the And by the way, you try the
hardest we can.
The hardest we can.
And the more we're trying, getting up a
drop earlier to go to the earlier minion
to hear that that safer Torah, walking
to shul a little bit earlier.
Staying a little bit closer to the
to the to the safer Torah. Saying to
ourselves a drop more in the morning so
I stay with kedusha.
The more we're doing on that one
glorious 6-7 hour period a year,
the more the creator of the world looks
down and goes, "Look, they got it. I
want the best for them. I got them. And
now they got me. Give them more cuz this
is what they're here for."
Olam chesed yibaneh, I'm trying to give
them. I just need for them to figure
this out.
My bracha to us
is that we do not walk around with the
insecurity
that is actually holding us back from
connecting to Hashem.
We don't let the forces around us that
have convinced us that Judaism is just a
version of another religion, but we
actually sit and realize that Hashem has
been talking to us since we were born
and saying, "I got you. I got you. Trust
me."
And on the night that he gave us his
book,
we realize that it is not a book.
It's an interface to him, and we get
absorbed for one night in the real
Torah. Not buying a book English book
off the shelf, but tomorrow.
Torah, the real stuff that he gave us,
and we're getting lost
and lost, and we're plugging in, and
we're being mekabel, and we get to matan
Torah in that morning, and when we hear
Anochi Hashem, we'll know in our hearts,
"Hashem, I've been trying.
I'm not perfect, but man,
I know Anochi Hashem. I believe in
Anochi Hashem."
And maybe when Hashem sees us doing that
and the klee that we build,
when he says Anochi Hashem, the the
level of what he gave the world then,
may he give it to us now for ourselves
and our families.
May we be zoche to see a time where
Hashem looks down at his people in a
dark world and sees a bunch of Jews
trying to find the light. And this shul
is when he reveals himself in each of
our shuls. May the revelation from the
Kodesh Boruch Hu be one that the whole
world hears. Together we should go from
our local shuls to the Beis Hamikdash
with Mashiach Tzidkeinu and may he
reveal himself quickly.