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My
[Music]
lord, it's from you my
[Music]
lord. It's all good, my lord.
Lord,
tonight's
lesson as our preparation for sh and
we're going to talk about receiving the
Torah with a muna. And this if receiving
the Torah, maybe our Noahide friends
think that that's not for this. It's
just as much for them as it is for our
Jewish brothers, sisters, and we'll soon
see how. Okay. So, we ask ourselves a
question. Well, if there's a tal if we
go back uh
3,348 years ago, 349 years ago when the
Torah was given a mountain si at this
time of the year, this was only seven
short weeks after the e to the exodus of
Egypt. In other words, seven weeks ago
when the Jewish people came to Mount Si
on the six of seven weeks prior they
were still slaves in Egypt. So 7 weeks
before when we received the Torah Mount
at Sinai that was the Exodus and uh even
8 weeks before they were still slaves in
Egypt. So now the Jewish people are
accepting a different type of servitude
and this is the servitude the yoke of
Torah and commandments rather than the
yoke of slavery under Pharaoh the yoke
of Torah and commandments under Hashem.
So you think would how would they be
willing to go from uh from servitude to
servitude? This had to be something very
special. And when they came to Mount Si
the seven weeks they knew they had to
perfect themselves. They had to rid
themselves of the the slave mentality.
How do you do that in seven weeks? But
they did. That's a omare that the 49
days of the omare correspond to 49
different character traits that we work
on every single day. These are mentioned
in ethics of the fathers. But the what
changed the game changer was three words
in Hebrew that we're going to learn
tonight. Three words in Hebrew that was
the gamecher and this triggered the
greatest sound and light show that
history ever saw. That was the
revelation of Hashem on Mount Si that 2
million people saw. So that's the
difference between our people and our
Torah and everyone else in history.
Everyone else in history has this one
prophet that he saw the light. If
everybody saw the light, not with us. We
have two million people and they passed
it down from father to son, from mother
to daughter, to rabbi to pupil, all the
way down generation after generation.
And it's not that long ago. In Judaism,
3,000 years is not that long. When we
consider my generation is only 110
generations since Mount Si. And we have
the generations documented all the way
back. And so my my children's generation
111, my grandchild 112, my
great-grandchildren only 113 generations
from Mount Si. So not long. So we ask
ourselves, okay, what is the holiday of
the holiday of commemorates the
receiving the Torah on uh Mount Si? When
Moses went up to Mount Si, he got the
written Torah from Hashem. Later he
spent 40 days and 40 nights with Hashem
learning the oral Torah. He had three
sessions, three 40-day and 40 night
sessions uh learning the oral Torah with
Hashem. And we ask ourselves, okay, our
sages say that on Shot, we receive the
Torah a new. Well, what do we need to
receive the Torah a new for? We ask
ourselves, we received it last year and
we've all been learning every day and
we've been observing the Torah's mitzvah
every day. So, what do we need to learn
it again for? What do we need to receive
the Torah again for? And this is what
our our lesson tonight is going to
answer us.
Uh have a key in the prophet Hosea Hosea
14. He
says you have to come back. You have to
return until you reach Hashem. Not
return to Hashem. Somebody says return
to Hashem somewhere else. But here he
says return until you reach Hashem. It's
a double meaning return. It means repent
but they use return when the soul comes
back to Hashem because the soul came
down to this world and left Hashem. So
our entire job here like we learned in
finding the lost princess is to make our
way back to uh to to the divine presence
find our way back to Hashem. And so how
do we do that? How do we do that?
Well have a
power a power that Hashem gives us to
keep us going. I'll give you an example.
There's not a
single balua that I know of and many
many have told me this also. Uh there
are many many
many people that have said that before
they got stronger in serving Hashem,
they had this Eureka moment where all of
a sudden they had the warmth of this
divine light and it filled them up and
it filled them up and they don't know
how to describe it. It was maybe a split
second. It seemed that it was a year,
but in a split second it came and it
left and then they've been yearning for
that ever since. But so many times when
they get these brick walls and and
people that as if they represent the
institutionalizer establishment Judaism
that just doesn't talk to their souls
and we call the highbrows. So who are
you? You upstart your newcomer and
newcomer. I who am I? I'm somebody
that's thirsty for Shem. I come to
Hashem. I'm I'm one. My soul was at
Mount Si. This is a thirst I remember
back at Mount Si. And Hashem told me
three words. And those three words, I've
been looking for Hashem ever since. So
what are those three words? Ani, Hashem,
Ela. Hashem told us the three words that
we find both in Exodus and in
Deuteronomy where the the ten
commandments written a part of and exos
in Exodus and part of
Deuteronomy. I am the Lord your God.
Those three words in Hebrew an I am
hem your God. I am the Lord your God.
I'm Hashem your God. These three words
are the mitzvah of amuna. These three
words are the very first three words of
the ten commandments. These three words
are common to both Jews and
noites. When I was with David, we were
driving on the car from London to uh
Manchester. It was a 4-hour drive and we
talked about everything I did for
getting it to end and all the things and
it slipped out of my mouth. I said,
"David, you know something? Uh I'm so
happy about the amunahides that attend
our sharim.
And he realized this was a a shemian
slip, not a sliad slip. Amunahides
because what's an amunahide noahides? So
many people tell people don't like the
word noahides. My friend Yishi Fleer as
a broadcaster on on Fox News and Israel
national news is a
uh famous spokesman for for Israel and
Israel advocacy. And he says that though
his his friends that they prefer to be
called uh uh Abrahamic the Abrahamic
nations Abrahamic nations okay people
have that but I think amunahites why
amunites because amuna is the common
denominator between all of humanity
because all of humanity this governs
us. So what are these three words? Why
are these three words magical for all of
humanity? Well, the fas first rebur he
says at paras something amazing. He said
when the children of Israel heard those
three words, you got to remember we said
as they're coming out of Egypt, they're
slaves and now they're receiving the
Torah. They don't know what to expect
from the Torah. What's inside the Torah?
And this is what created such invoked
such divine compassion because the
nations of the world wanted to know
what's inside there. And when the French
heard that they can't commit adultery,
no, we don't want the Torah. And when
the Americans heard that they that they
can't chisel, they want the Torah. And
when the Romanians heard they can't lie,
they don't want the Torah. And when the
Ishmaelites heard that they can't
murder, no, we don't want the Torah.
Come on, get out of here. And the
Israelite nation, the Jewish people,
they said,
"Nasma, we will hear and we will do." In
other words, the army, you don't your
commander gives you a a a command and
say, "Oh, sir, what is the logic of that
command?" You don't say logic in battle.
you do it. If you got a complaint that
after it's all done, after you fulfill
the command, then you can appeal it. But
no, this is what the Jewish people said
on Mount Si is we will do what you tell
us to do, Hashem, we will do and then
we'll look for the logic. When we look
for the logic of it after we do it and
if we can understand the logic because
we can't understand the logic of most of
the mitzvah like King David tells us in
Psalm 119 mitzvah amuna that all the
mitzvah are basically amuna and just as
amuna is above nature and where nature
leaves off that's where human intellect
leaves off amuna is above human
intellect it's divine intellect it's
divine wisdom so these three
words tells us is that
when The two million people that heard
those three words on Mount Si, they
permeated their soul. And what he says
this embodied this penetrated amuna
penetrated their soul. What Hashem did,
Hashem put amuna in their souls. By
putting amuna in their souls, they could
receive Torah. Now we can understand
when our sages say that if we receive
Torah properly, it's if we received it
on on Mount Si. So what does it mean to
receive Torah properly? Not the Torah is
an intellectual exercise where I know
Gomorrah better than you or I know
religious law better than you. No,
that's not the first. If you think you
would be better than anyone, it means
you're super arrogant. You haven't
learned the first word of Torah. It
means when I feel my soul feels
connected to this divine light and I
have to share it with myself and share
it with all of humanity. And what is it?
Wherever and this is uh a metaphor but
we also read on which is the migill of
Ruth where Ruth says to Naomi that uh
wherever you go I go your nation is my
nation your laws are my laws your Torah
is my Torah this is the soul telling to
the divine presence Ruth is the soul and
naomi is a metaphor for the divine
presence from the word naim that's a
pleasantry and Ruth is the word comes
from that she sings songs of praise to
Hashem that's her great-grandson King
David songs of praise for Hashem so she
said where you go I'm going to go and
when the soul heard these three words
the soul said to the divine presence
where you go I'm going to go so then why
does the divine presence leave us
because if we're right with the divine
presence the game's over that's it
Hashem wants Hashem created us the Ramal
explains in the first chapter of Dar
Hashem Hashem created us with the bodies
of a animal and with the souls of an
angel. So when we combine our body and
soul together and fulfill the mitzvah of
the Torah, the commandments of Torah, we
are above the angels. But when the soul
is vanquished by the body and falls into
bodily lust, then it is below an animal.
Animals, they have basic instinct, basic
animals instinct. But when a human takes
the divine soul that's part of the human
and reduces it to materiality and to
lust and all different types of lust
whether it's lust for the other
sacrifice love of lust of eating lust of
money all different types of lust but
lust brings the soul down where it is
below the level of a behemma of a beast
and we can see anyone who is pursuing
lust rather than pursuing Hashem is
really when do anything lower than an
animal to fulfill the lust. That
explains why people understand the great
leaders of great great countries.
There's scandals leaders all over the
place scandals and and the World Bank
and the British government and and the
French government and the American
government that the president of the
United States and doing something in his
office. What are you doing? How long did
you work to become president of the
United States? And now you're playing
with the secretary in your office. I
don't want to be graphic. We're learning
Torah. But this is to show how lust even
it penetrates. So even the president of
United States or the prime minister of
Great Britain when they don't have the
laws of Torah, at least at least the
seven no commandments, the seven no mans
don't allow adultery. If they would pay
attention to seven no commandments, they
would have gotten into trouble. But here
they do. They're willing to throw their
whole lives away. So what does this
mean? When our souls
heard, I am the Lord your God. Our souls
had a double reaction. First of all,
they were overcome by this indescribable
love and this indescribable desire. And
that's what Hashem gave us. So that
we'll have the power even when Hashem is
in concealment that down in this lowly
world, we will search him. We'll yearn
for him. We'll search him. That's what
we're doing on a moon hour. We're all
trying together to get close to Hashem,
to strengthen and get close to Hashem.
No matter what we're doing, no matter
what we're learning, no matter what
holiday, no matter what phase of our
lives, but it all comes down to amuna.
And this is what King Solomon
said that all the rivers lead to the
sea. What's the sea? That's the sea of
ammuna. Sea of Amuna. We'll see that the
sea of Torah. And that's everything.
That's the the person's whole spiritual
and material existence. So
by clinging to Hashem, we yearn for him.
We love him. Serve him with enthusiasm.
The whole time out on the field, whoever
is enthusiastic from day and night,
whoever we get a moment of enthusiasm
and then it's uh home drum, we're back
at routine. So what it means when we
don't feel enthusiasm, we don't feel
love. What happens? Okay, particular
time your love goes up sometimes right
before Shabbat. Shabbat comes in, you
feel this love of Hashem and and you
want to be together with divine presence
and the middle of week and a drag. So
what do you do? So this as he says like
this he says when we feel this
tremendous love we serve Hashem with all
our heart we cling to him but when the
love leaves us now we go into our second
mode of service of Hashem now we serve
Hashem as loyal servants that serve
their master it doesn't matter when the
king's servant he feels like it he
doesn't feel like it he has to serve the
sh serve the king his tea he has to
shine the king's shoes he has to do what
he needs to do if they're not he's in
big trouble
So this by nullifying, how do we do
this? How can we serve Hashem with
willingness when we don't feel love?
Because we nullify our own will to do
Hashem's will. So how can we nullify our
will on that down? We know that the
heart works with expansion and
contraction. The lungs work with
expansion and contraction. The soul does
the same thing. We have expansion. When
we love Hashem, we serve him
enthusiastic. And then we have
contraction. Contraction and cabal is
called the sinsum. That's we don't see
the light track to where Hashem seems to
to be hiding from us. Hashem is
concealed. Then put aside maybe I would
have wanted I would have wanted animal
laser would have wanted to do AB and C.
But no, that goes aside even though I
don't feel the love I nullify myself
divine will. What does Hashem want me to
do? Ask myself what does Hashem want me
to do? Feel like it not feel like it?
Get up and you have to make a living.
You get up in the morning when the army
you got to guard your post. You got you
got to be on your your your battle
station. You like it or you don't like
it. Nobody's asking if you like it. This
is what you have to do. This is our job
in the world. So when we nullify our own
will, we can do Hashem's will. When we
do Hashem's will, we feel the love. But
how can we nullify our own will? One
word, amuna. By knowing that we have
hem, those three words, I'm the Lord
your God. And know that that's a fact.
Then we know we have a higher power. And
people say, "I don't understand Hashem."
Thank goodness you don't understand
Hashem. Because if you could understand
Hashem, that means that Hashem would be
on your intellectual level. So, who
needs a creator and almighty that's on
my intellectual level? Oh, wow. Wow.
Hashem, thank you, Hashem, that you're
not on my intellectual. Okay. So, King
David says in Psalm 56, he says, "This
is maybe the source that the fat is took
from." In Psalm 56, King David
says and then he
says is the divine name of stern
judgment. King David says in Psalm 56,
if Hashem at Rashi is explaining that
King David is talking to Midatin to the
measure of stern judgment and he says to
Hashem, if you punish me stern judgment,
you give me a rough time. It's basic
training. I know basic training is for
the best. It's advanced training that's
even tougher. Okay, Hashem, if if I'm if
I'm in training and you're giving me a
rough time, I know it's you and you're a
loving father. So, I'm going to serve
you with
love. But you act with me with divine
compassion. That's easy. It's easy to
serve you with love. So, either way,
King David had both these mindsets also.
He had the mindset of amuna. And this is
what Rabbiudin in the midish. Rudan, he
was a Atana Rabbi a mid he's explaining
what King David says that King David
says whether the times are good good
time Charlie where the times are
difficult that we're going to serve
Hashem we're going to sing to Hashem and
this is what King David was telling us
and for that you need amuna all over
your body not only your brain all over
your body so even we don't feel in your
heart okay don't feel in your heart some
people tell me oh I'm a good person in
my heart wow my friend you are really
putting a lot of pressure on your heart
because uh we'll we'll see how whether
you are a Jew and obliged to do 613
mitzvot and they have the the Jewish
anatomy of the soul or you are an
amunahide noahhide and you have seven
mitzvot and also the noahhide spiritual
body split up into seven parts. I
explained it in divine direction that
people had a difficulty to understand.
Imagine the difference between a diesel
engine and a combustion a benzene
engine. That's the same thing. Same
thing. The difference between a noahide
soul and a Jewish soul is the same
difference between a diesel engine, a
benzene engine. Neither one is better
than the other, but they have different
jobs. They have different jobs. You'll
find a diesel engine in in a tractor and
uh you won't find it in a nice race car
that benzene has to it needs to go fast
and needs to go quickly. But see the
power is different. They have different
jobs and just like the two different
types of engines. We have two different
types of spiritual engines. So a person
doesn't have to be insulted that they're
this or the seven the 613 and even
though even the six we as we wrote in
amuna and the noahide the seven are
really about 33 35 they're more than the
actual seven okay so Moses had this
amuna in his whole body where do we
learn this from Exodus 17:12
uh it's at night and the Israelites are
fighting a mollik and Moses is raising
his hands when he raises hands that the
children of Israel are overcoming their
army. When Moses gets tired, they
lowered his hands. Then they lose. So
what's the raising the hand? Lower the
hands. Finally, Aaron and Hur uh Moses'
nephew, they had to put boulders under
each of Moses's arm so that his arms
wouldn't be tired and he could maintain
his hands outstretched the heavens. The
Torah
says and Moses's hands were amuna. That
that sounds cryptic. What does the Torah
mean? When Moses's hands were amuna, it
mean Rashi explains right there that his
hands were extended in prayer. From
this, King David learns that amuna and
prayer are synonymous. Well, see, the
prayer. Why? Because a person can't pray
with at the least bit of intent if he
doesn't have a if he or she doesn't have
a muna. Okay? So the kidic masters uh
uh they explain that when a person
is
pursuing they have an
expression that his or her legs are legs
of amuna. When you walk to the
synagogue you walk to help a person you
help a little old lady off the street
your legs are amuna because your legs
are doing Hashem's commandments. looks
an amuna. So you have it in your arms
and your legs. The Arizal tells us that
by raising our hands when we wash them,
we invoke amuna in our hands and they're
different. Now the saferim, who is Rebel
Curry, he's the same one that composed
the the Yadid Neph, the beautiful sonnet
that we only sing on Shabbat but during
the week. He wrote a book called
Sepheredim. Uh the book of
uh what's the best word in English for
those that have awesome fear of Hashem.
It's not
uh they they're worried that they don't
fulfill every single iota of a mitzvah.
So in he writes which commandments
correspond to which parts of the body.
Their commandments correspond to the
hand, to the feet, to the blood, to
every single part of the body. Okay? So,
we learn that we have 613 commandments
in the Torah. Guess what? There's 613
parts of the body. There are
248 positive commandments that
correspond to the 248 limbs. There are
365 negative commandments that
correspond to the
365 tendons. So we take the 248, the 36,
the 248 and the 365, we come out to 613.
Now it's very interesting. There's 300
and 630 parts of the body. So now the
Noah, they have a legit legitimate
question. Wait, what about us? We're
chopped liver. We have seven mv. Ah, but
Rabbi Yitzkab Ginsburg, he's a kabad
rabbi. He's one of the greatest
Ashkanazi kabolis alive. He keeps a very
low profile but uh his teachings are
really fantastic. He writes that the
spiritual anatomy of a noahide he takes
the seven mitzvot the seven noahhide
commandments and corresponds them to the
seven noahhide mitzvot. I did the same
thing. I disagree. But I what was happen
when I checked what I thought compared
to what he taught. Then uh I put mine
aside and say we'll take his but this is
would be a whole hour just to explain
this. You can see the Jewish soul is
split up. It's not only 613 physical
parts of the body, but it's
613 spiritual parts of the body. The
Noahide soul is different. The Noahide
soul corresponds to the major parts of
the body. Let's go the whole body. We
say the whole body very quickly. The
Noahide soul because the
head, right arm, left arm, torso, the
reproductive apparatus, right leg and
left leg. That's it. like with the feet
the hands the arms could hands and the
feet this is the this is the noahhide
spiritual anatomy so the lights of a
noahhide soul they correspond to these
parts of the body and these are the
seven noahhide mitzvot said that there
is add but I want to go into that
because that's not our part but what I
want to say tonight that receiving the
Torah is just as important for noahide
as is for Jew people tell you that why
is it just as important
Because a noahhide is depends
on we said wait a second that's not
accurate. The first noahhide mitzvah is
not to do idol worship. Oh thank you.
Thank you sir. That's the second
commandment in the ten commandments. But
how do you not do idol worship and
spirituality there's no void. You tell a
person don't do this. Okay I don't want
you to eat. I don't want you to drink.
What am I supposed to do? Starve when
you take that noahide soul tell it to
starve. No way. So we see that that
negative commandment is really the
positive commandment
of that Hashem is much the God of all of
you creator the God and creator for an
amunahide
anahide okay for as he is for for the
Jewish people. So don't feel like you're
a secondass citizen. And and sometimes
it just just this trip a person came up
to me and person was very interested in
converting and I said what do you need
the headache for any have a great life
living the life of the seven no
commandments okay there was in
Manchester I said what do you need you
know something what have I told you you
won't be able to attend Manchester City
games you can't won't be able to see the
Manchester United the Red Devils no more
cheeseburgers no you have excited They
don't know how to get wig about getting
the death penalty for going with your
peep finger open a light bulb. It's a
death penalty. You're like, "Oh,
really?" He said, "I didn't know that."
I said, "Sure." Find out. People get
they they they look at you're not a
secondass citizen. You're a first class
citizen. You're premier of humanity. And
that's why boashm we see in our lessons
we talk about amuna and the cherished
beloved appreciated members of our group
hashem I think our group is is almost
half and half now but uh be don't don't
have a wonderful life as a
no okay so king David now comes now that
we learned that okay no too they have
their spiritual anatomy but uh there's
something very important because it's so
important I mean so Many knowhives that
they're down on themselves. They feel
down. They say I'm not accepted. My old
society and my new society not accepted.
Well, come here. Come to want to come to
our group. Join our group. You'll be
certainly accepted and with open arms.
We accept everyone. Every single one.
Bashem. We have our own jobs to do. But
uh we everyone is certainly welcome. All
cherish brothers and sisters. Your sons
and daughters of Hashem. You are
welcome. Okay. You're welcome. That's
all. just no seven no mitzvah no
idolatry. No idolatry means yes amuna.
Yes amuna. Yes am this the first mitzvah
for all of humanity. So King David tells
us in Psalm 119 we said that amuna is
synonymous to prayer. Amuna is
synony now tells us in Psalm
119 that all your mitzvot are amuna.
Wait a second. What do you mean your
majesty? Oh, your
mitzvah. What does it mean that when I
have to give in order to keep my new
baby donkey alive by by my my donkey, my
female donkey, she gave she gave birth
to her first fer donkey f. And we can't
sacrifice a donkey. So if I have to give
in lie of that donkey a lamb to the holy
temple. Okay, that's called pamo. We we
redeem we redeem the firstborn donkey
with a sheep. Hey, wait a second. What's
that got to do with amuna? That is
everything to do with amuna. It is so
illogical. We say our firstborn, it's
like bringing the first fruit. But why a
dunkey and not a camel? What do we have
to do with camel? You don't have to
bring your firstborn camel and change
that for sheep. You don't have to bring
your firstborn horse. You don't have to
bring your firstborn uh your firstborn
the the litter. You got the champion
dogs. You raising champion dogs and and
and you you you make a living
breeding poodles and you breed poodles
and your pups are world champions and
you get $5,000 a poodle. So you think
logic would say logic would say, "Wait a
second. If I got to be a firstborn
donkey, then I take my firstborn poodle
and can't sacrifice a dog in the base of
Mida. Oh, I'm going to buy a lamb, nice
suffen lamb from Midlands and bring it
to the holy temple. No, no, you don't
need to. You don't need Well, then why a
donkey? Why a donkey? Why is it crooked
later? We don't ask that. It's a muna.
Everything we go one by one, every le
amuna, it is above nature. Even the
mitzvot that we think we understand, you
should not murder. That comes along a
holy war and we have to go to war. go to
go there's animations idolattors in in
the land of Israel and idolattors in the
land of Israel we don't want Hashem
doesn't want us learning from them and
the Torah says wipe them out so we don't
ask question oh but amnesty
international would say that is not
humane we must foster humanitarian aid
to the idolattors no way no way what do
they do they take their kids and they
burn them in a fire they have human
sacrifices and we're not going to give
we're not going to give humanitarian aid
to people human sacrifices and kick them
out of the land of Israel out you
go when we go all the one by one one by
one so this again reiterated we said the
same thing throughout our our sages
theamer who was the he he's our hungari
kept he kept uh loyal loyal Judaism
alive in in Hungary when in the 17th
century when 18th century when There was
so much enlightenment and emancipation.
It was enlightenment and dark. And he
this is the
sufferer says that the moment Israel
accepted the Torah. They received the
muna. In other words, he was accepting
the Torah, they accepted the Torah on
faith. They accept without knowing what
was in it. So they received the Muna.
And so therefore tells us that
nobody can properly serve the Torah
without amuna. So properly observe the
Torah. So where did he get that from? He
learned that from Hashem. That's why
Hashem said something on Mount
Si. I am the Lord your God. Hashem gave
us an intravenous injection of amuna
with those three words. Hashem put it
into our jugular right into the vein.
Intravenous. Because Hashem knew that if
we didn't have amuna, wow, we'd be long
gone. What's happened since? S since
slavery in Egypt. and we've suffered the
the Greeks and we've suffered the Romans
and we've suffered the Babylonians and
suffered exile and destruction of the
first temple and destruction of the
second temple and the crusades and the
crusades. They they murdered half a
European jury way before the Holocaust.
And what they did kicked the Jews out of
England and moved Richard the
Lionhearted. What they Richard the
Lionhearted he killed 60% of the UK's
Judia. There were there were Jews back
then in England and in 11th century
Richard the Lionhearted with this cross
and representing the the the church of
England. He killed more than half of
England's Jews. the ones in that did
they they left they went across English
Channel they went to France they fled to
France they fled to Spain well they had
it okay there for another 250 years ah
they thought they could breathe but in
1249 the French burned the Talmud and
they were chasing the Jews and in 1492
the Jews were expelled from Spain and
anyone that didn't agree to be a
Catholic would be burned at the stake
that's with the Spanish Inquisition and
many were many of our our our South
American friends. They are from the
Anusim, the ones that under duress. They
sec secret secretly remain Jews. But
through the years, they've lost their
identity. But many that are coming back
now, we're from the times of Spanish
Inquisition when their families were
forced into the underground. Okay? So,
we couldn't have withtood all that.
Holder, we're not finished. That's 1492.
What's been 1492? How about the pgrams
and and Holocaust? the the decrees of
1648 and
1649ki in Ukraine
Ukraine half a Ukrainian jewelry and a
third of European jewelry were killed in
1648 and
1649 way this isnitki and we see the
Ukrainian government where I have no
pity for them everywhere you go in
Ukraine there's a town called Nitzki
there's Kalnitzki square in Oman in Oman
where Rabbi Nman is buried there's
Kalnitzki square big statue statue of
Klnitzki and he is the Kasak that is
responsible for the death of hundreds of
thousands of Jews. Ginte who slaughtered
33,000 Jews in Oman. Ginte was one of
the it was a a continue this was later.
This was uh 80 years afterward uh right
before Rebman was right before Rabbi
Nakman was born and we have the pogm
after Paul Grom and and and and then
this is turns into Holocaust and if the
Holocaust Holocaust and then look what
happened in Russia. Okay, maybe the
Russians didn't kill they killed plenty
of Jews and the Stallics out in in
Siberia, but uh Russians killed souls.
They killed souls. They wouldn't allow
them to keep Torah. So if we didn't have
amuna, why the quick long run in history
is that we didn't have amuna, we would
not have the power. It's amuna that lets
us get here today. So now if we want to
immerse oursel in Torah and observe
commandments then we have to permeate
our whole bodies with amuna. Have to be
amuna in our head amuna in our toes.
Amuna everywhere. What's amuna in my
whole body? Amuna is my gut reaction
that when I hear something it's not the
best, not opportune. It's okay. And this
is
what everything's for the best. So let's
ask ourselves. We're still in the
counting of the Omr. The right. We're
still in the counting of the Omr. We're
still in the 49 days between the the uh
first day of of the second day of
passover.
And you know what happened these days?
How come we don't have haircuts? Well,
the spartim do after Logba Omar because
the Gomorrah says that
Rebea's 24,000 students that died in his
time up to Logba Omar. But Ashkanazim
especially theim uh we have wait until
the Omar is completely over. So we have
no haircuts and uh no no weddings uh
until until after what went on there.
Rebaka lost his 24,000 students. Rebeeka
spent 40 years as a total ignoramis. Rea
was an out and he he couldn't read. He
couldn't read. He couldn't write. And
when he married Raal, he promised that
uh he would he would be a Torah scholar.
And in the beginning, he was very
difficult. 40 years he learned from time
he was 40 to 80. And then he became a
great reb. And during the time he was 40
until he was about 110. The next 30
years he amassed 24,000 students. They
all died. Why did they die? They died
because they properly didn't respect one
another. And been a big plague that a
terrible big plague. terrible plague
where they had a disease in their tongue
and the disease in the tongue went down
into their
intestines. The test king David
says that the Torah should be in my
intestines. So if the Torah is in my
intestines, I'm not going to talk. I'm
not going to think bad about anything.
So why not properly respect one another?
Oh, they were highbrows. I'm better than
you. I know more than you. They didn't
properly respect one
another. Well, Hashem knew. And this
what Hashem showed Moses in track page
29 the Gomorrah tells about it that the
Torah would stem from
Rabaka. But he wouldn't allow Torah to
come from these 24,000. They would the
24 they weren't worthy of it. In order
to have Torah you have to love what's
the main mitzvah. You love your neighbor
as yourself. You love your fellow human
as yourself. You can't do that without
amuna. If a person without amuna thinks,
well, maybe this color is better or this
nationality is better or this one is
better and this. No, with amuna, you
know, as we said before, this is the
third time tonight. We're all Hashem's
children and you love everyone. Everyone
is your neighbor. You love them like you
love
yourself. So, the Gura tells us
something very, very interesting. Okay,
so Rabbi students died. Now, Rabbi is
starting all over again. Rabbi Keva
starts all over again and he gets five
new students. He builds up five new
students the last 10 years of his life.
And these two students are the bullwark
of the lights of Torah. Rabbi Shimon
Bayai buried at Miron. He's the father
of the esoteric Torah brought down the
zor brought down rebi mayor Balines.
Rebi mayor one of the chief stages of
our our mission in Alanora. Rebudar Eli
is chiefly responsible for as we know it
today. Uh
Rabiosa Rabiosi he had such a fantastic
intellect. Most people couldn't
understand him. They say in the upper
world is like Rabiosi but down here
often times is more like Reb Yehuda and
then it was Rebazar Ben Shamore.
Rabbazar Ben Sham. He was the youngest
of the five students. But Rebel Azar ben
Shimal was also one of the 10 martyrs
like Rebaka. He was killed by the
Romans. And we read about this on
tishabove. So the Gammorate Khaga page
11a tells us an amazing fact. Does it
reba learned 22 years by Kamsu? We ask
ourselves a question most people don't
know how to answer this. Wait, Rebaka,
he's the father of the Ola Torah.
Rebaka, he made the six orders of the
Mishna. He created this
extraordinct tates. Rebecka created the
concept of trackctates that this
trackctate will be about Shabbat and
this trackctate will be about and this
trackctate will be about marriage and
this trackctate will be about divorce.
the trackctates of marriage and divorce.
We're going to put them into the order
of women sedhi. There's a whole six of
the mission that's about the laws that
govern women that people that think that
to chauvinistic didn't know anything
about Torah. There is a whole section
order of the Mishna that's about the
different holidays. What about yum
kipper? That's tract yum rashash shana
tract rashash shana shabbat and six
orders. I'm not going to teach the
subtitles be a special lesson itself.
The evolution of Torah. Rabbi aka he
created this framework. It was his
student Rebby Mayor Rebi Mayor Balines
that perfected the language because the
mission is written in very staccato
language like we used to write telegrams
back in my days we're in university that
the 10 you had 10 words for a certain
price and the 11th word would cost you
double uh very language then came along
Rabbi Mayor's student Rabi Judah the
prince Rabbi Yudani we call him Rebe and
he finally codified the Mishna all right
so reba got this framework from his two
great Rebes who all the light of Raban
and Ben Zachai. The Torah filtered down
by way of Reban and Zakai is two chief
students who were Rebei Elazar Ben
Horinus and Rishu Ben Khan. Rebea
learned by both of them. From them comes
all the
lawsu that Rebika spent 22 years. He
brings in one law. One law they know
of one law. Rabbi Nakamish Gamsu says
that if you can't make it to the mikvah
then you could put nine buckets of water
on your head and it's like like going to
the mikvah called tesa kabin and this is
gamsu that's the one law that we know
about. So why did reba leave his two
great rebes to spend 22 years by gamu it
just doesn't make sense doesn't make
sense. Not only that we open up the avot
rabbiatan. Avote rebinatan is one of the
minor trackctates of the tomwood. Avot
rabbinatan tells us a really moving
story. It tells a story about rebelzar
benhinus. He's on his deathbed. Now
rebel rabel benhorin. He was very strong
in his opinions and he opposed Rabbi
Yeshua to a point where the rabbis the
de rabbis exculated him. He was he was
he was a nidi and as he died they came
and they was about to die. So they came
to relieve to up to lift the ban of of
uh Nidui, the ban of him being banished
from the the public. And they came to do
it. He said, "Why did you do it?"
Because you didn't understand me. And he
said he said to all the rabbis that
participated in banishing him, banishing
him from the from the what we call nidi.
Again, uh I don't know the proper word
in English, but it's like a banishment.
You're not allowed to pray with the
public. uh you're not allowed to
participate and you can't be counted in
a minion all different things that
people should talk to you to be
distanced for distance from you it's
like a pariah person create the pariah
until the rabbis forgive him and uplift
the ban well the rabbis heard that reb
razer alazar benhorinus was dying and
they came to uplift one of the great
rabbis that was in that entourage was
Rebaka he came all to the rabbis he says
you know for what you're doing to me
this was aic argument and I didn't want
to accept it because he didn't accept
the majority opinion they put the ban on
him but now they uplifted it and he says
uh I don't think that any one of you is
going to live your lives fully and he
looked at a ka came in to he said why
didn't you come to learn with
me why didn't you come to be my my
understudy as you were once said I was
busy this he said, "Oh, he says,
Aka, you're going to have the worst
death of them
all. It looks
like it looks like the great the
greatest sage of all times, he and Rab
Yeshua, Ben Khan, and he's cursing Rabbi
Aka." And people understand that
particular Mishna as a curse, not a
curse. If you learn more, it's not a
curse.
Rabbi Elazar Ben Horinus he was on such
a high level that he had a taste they
say that a scholar a Torah scholar is
wiser than a prophet. He had this
inclination of prophecy and he knew he
understood why Rebaka had to leave him
because if Rebaka stayed in the realm of
academic Torah it wouldn't be strong
enough to keep the Torah going. Reba had
to go to Nakumish Gamsu. What do we
learn from Nakamish Gamsu? Nakamish Gamu
is the Rebe of Amuna for the entire
Talmudish Gamu goes through some really
excruciating trials and tribulations.
And what do you say to the the
trackctate about the fasting? It gives
all the stories of different
tribulations of Gamsu. Uh you could you
could see them in in three words of
amuna. You can see them are 13
principles of Muna. Uh we'll talk about
that when we get to 13 principles of
Muna. Bzat uh a little bit later after
we'll start
that. But we see Rebaka stayed by Gamu
to learn amuna. It's not easy. Rebaka
could learn the entire Talmud faster
than he could learn amuna to the extent
that amuna penetrates every limb on his
body. So he spent those 22 years. When
do we see that Rebaka really knew how
amuna and the same track tape it tells
the story of Rebaka is on a hill in the
Galilee and Rebeeka is walking with his
three possessions in life. He's got
three possessions in life. His
his mind mindset is serving Hashem. He
doesn't need money. Doesn't He had a
candle. What's a candle for? Candles he
can learn at night. And he had a
rooster. What's the rooster for? And
when he went to sleep late at night, the
rooster would wake him up before sun up,
before sun. So he go back to learning.
And he had a donkey. A donkey. That was
his that was his uh mercenes that took
him from place to place. That was his
transportation. Well, Rebecca is goes to
a town and Rebea is looking for a place
to lodge. She's looking for lodge for
the night. Every single door gets
slammed in his face. No, we've got no
room for you. No room for you. No room
for you. No room for you. Every door
that got slammed in his face, he said
what his teacher
told. And then he
said, that's an Aramaic that everything
Hashem does is all for the very best.
Here he's get frustrated. He's got no
place to sleep. It's cold out
night. Door slammed in his face. He's
got no choice. So he leaves town and he
looks for somewhere up in the hills
where he can find he finds find this
this hill and a amongst the trees a
little flat piece of piece of ground
where he could set himself sit down and
uh give his dunkey to rest and he lights
his candle. He lights his candle so he
could sit and learn. And he puts his
rooster right next to him so his rooster
will wake him up in the morning. Comes a
wind and blows out the candle. No more
candle.
Says that everything Hashem does for the
best. Once he goes to sleep, nothing to
he can't learn. So he's going to go to
sleep. And all of a sudden he hears a
squawking of his rooster and a fox ate
his rooster. Grabbed the rooster and so
he's got no more alarm clock. Well, says
the same
thing. This is also the best. Hey,
excuse me. Rebe you're losing all your
possessions in life. Hope it's all for
the best. He left for nothing. Okay. But
he's got his donkey. Okay. Put his
donkey f to sleep. And then a a Galilee
mountain lion comes and eats the donkey.
He's got no donkey. He's got no donkey.
The G mountain lion decided he wanted he
wanted a donkey for dinner. For dinner.
So they Rabbi Kea's Reba's uh uh Audi
for dinner. Okay. That's his donkey.
Rebea is left with nothing. and he says
everything is all for the best.
Rebeccave goes to sleep. In the morning
he wakes up and there's this eerie
eerie
feeling that
night Roman legion came into that
Galilee village and wiped out every
single last man, woman and child. Had
Rebaka been accept lodging, he would
have been among them. Okay. Now back on
the hill, if his candle would have been
lit, then they would have seen a candle.
They'd know there's another Jew up on
the hill. And looking around, they would
have been happy to go and kill another
Jew. And had his rooster crowed
cockadoodle dude, they'd know that here
that the rooster where rooster our
people are. Where the roosters our
people are. And if the dunkey dunkeys,
you been in the Arab village in land of
Israel and have the dunkeys duns they
start nighing. When a roosters start
crying, dunkeys are hungry already at
3:30 in the morning, an hour before sun
up. They heard they're they're they're
hungry in their name. They would have
heard that they called him. So what did
Hashem do? Hashem sent the cure before
the sickness and all the things that
would have exposed Rabbika killed him.
This Rabbika but before he knew the
logic and when things seemed the worst,
he said this is all for the best. This
is the mindset of amuna. This is the
mindset that we need to learn Torah.
This is the mindset we need to remain to
remain if you and this to this day this
day there are people that get weak there
people they say how long can you see
we've got this war that's been going on
for uh a year and a half and and finally
say oh we got quiet more or less we
think there there's quiet okay no more
rockets from Gaza no more rockets from
Gaza now there's rockets from from Yemen
no rockets from Yemen now there's
something else always something. But if
everything is for the best, it's all for
the best. And a person puts himself in a
a muna mindset that it's all for the
best. David and I, we went to uh went to
this beautiful forest talking to Hashem.
I so busy talking to Hashem here. You
know, when a person goes, I did brought
a computer, got everything on the cell
phone. Well, somewhere out in this
beautiful Nottingham forest, uh, the
phone decided it would jump out of my
pocket. Where? I think we walked about
12 kilometers. Walk about 12 km. Now, go
find the the phone somewhere in a
forest. Okay, let's smile. It's for the
best. And it was he had a lovely five,
six days with no phone calls and no news
and no media and could concentrate just
on Torah. Everything is for the best and
came back to Israel. Okay, we got it
back. We got did not the same phone but
a new one and a miracle thought that
maybe the numbers lost. No, the phone
company range had been given on the SIM
card with a new number. Everything is
hunky dory and it's even better because
all the garbage I had on the old phone,
it's not on the new phone. I'm going to
even bother. Who needs they didn't need
all those applications anyway? It's all
for the best. Whatever shm does for the
best. But when it happens to you, it's
all for the best. It's all for the best.
So the cardiologist says you need this
procedure, you need that. It's all for
the best. Now for Hashem because Hashem
is a loving father. We learn the three
words of amuna. And three words amuna
says yes. If you haven't read three
words of muna take a look at it, read
it. Uh who is hashem? The shem. He runs
the world. The first principle of ma. He
alone did and will do everything. And
who is that? Shem that did do and will
do. That's my father in heaven. That
also Rebaka told us that's what Rebaka's
prayers were answered where the great
highbrows their prayers weren't answered
because Rebeeka was the first one to
ever say oh mo our father our king and
uh
Rebea he was he was the the father he
knew everything was all for the best. So
if we know that everything comes from
Hashem and Hashem is our father in
heaven and it's everything he does is
all for the best because he's our loving
father in heaven. What is there to worry
about? Absolutely nothing. Nothing at
all. That's amuna. So with this amuna,
my brain and my heart are free to accept
the light of Torah. And this is why
Rebecka became the father of the the
oral Torah because he is the bull work
of amuna. And he gave this amuna to his
five students. They are all tremendous
such a tremendous powers of amuna
especially rabish andai because amuna
brings us closer to Hashem. That is why
we need the renewed acceptance of Torah
because this year and convention for for
myself and the whole group if we look
back last year our Muna wasn't what it
was this year because we've covered a
lot of ground working ourselves ama and
contact with everyone and bashem we all
the time our goal is to get closer to
Hashem and that's the beauty of our
group we help each other encourage each
other we love each other getting closer
muna and this a little story and you can
see this is a story don't don't think
this is oh why you have to accept the
muna David was with me yseph was with me
and we're in Manchester and they invited
me to speak to a yeshiva and came into
yeshiva I looked at David we looked at
me I said what I said they're so sad
here the boys are sitting like this and
then I looked at their teachers the
rabbis they're sad do. They've got these
frowns on their face. I said, "Wait a
second. You tell me." And I said right
away to the rabbis. I said, "You don't
have a moon in the curriculum, do you?"
"No." I said, "Does anybody somebody
knows can tell me the 13 principal muna
raised their hand?" Nobody raised their
hand. So, these are boys in Yeshiva and
they don't know amuna. So, no wonder
they're not smiling. Maybe. And you know
why they're not smiling? Because the
rabbis don't know amuna. If the rabbi is
no ma the rabbi can't give if you ask
somebody uh to lend you 100 quid if you
don't have it you can't lend it rabbi
can't teach what he doesn't have. So he
said with very cheeky I don't care so
maybe I won't be invited back but that's
okay that's wonderful Michelle will be
here tomorrow anyway we're not going to
interested in going back to Manchester
going to Jerusalem.
So they say maybe maybe they'll put it
in the curriculum. I don't believe I
wish they did. I don't wish they did but
uh okay we did say what did you see if
the boys in yeshiva aren't learning
amuna what do everyone else is we all
have to we all have to and nobody's
going to change and nobody is going to
improve themselves and it might be
doubtful where they live a life of Torah
observance if they don't have amuna
because it's not enough to get through
life's difficulties without amuna so we
have to strengthen ourselves in amuna if
we don't strengthen ourselves in amuna
then we can't teach our children amuna
we can't teach our pupils amuna so if we
practice ourselves if we live it we can
give it and that will enable us this to
accept the yoke of Torah and have a
wonderful and a wonderful wonderful year
on
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