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Emunah Is My Life - Rabbi David Ashear
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Emunah Is My Life Rabbi David Ashear Shlit"a Author of “Daily Emunah” series 21 tammuz 5786 #DavidAshear
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I'd like to welcome everyone to
tonight's show
from
Torah
I've got speaker
series leader
author of daily amuna series.
I've got a great sponsor in the show
called
Torah at 718-851-8651 or email
[email protected].
Tonight's show is sponsored by Mr.
Michael Exter in the name of us.
Um praying for I'm sure for the
year side also for for Rifka for
Miriam for Rachel for Sarah
for Miriam for Miriam for Sarah for
Shaindel
for
Shaindel
for Miriam Spritzer
for Sarah for Miriam for Sarah for
Arnold for Yael Barrel
for Chaim for for Yisrael.
I'm covered to call the show for
tonight's show on Amuna is my life.
>> Okay, thank you.
It's a great good for me to be here
tonight.
As I could have to the
show Torah spreading Torah
to thousands especially in the summer we
need it more than ever.
I shall give them the call out to
continue their about that the call that
I shall
So
as we know
the purpose of our lives
is to grow to become the of the that we
meant to become
and a great part
of this
experience we have in this world
is nisionot, is tests. We're tested in
life.
The Ramban says that Avraham Avinu's
greatness was because
he overcame the tests that Hashem gave
him.
And that determines the greatness of
every one of us.
Every single individual
is going to be tested many times in
their lives.
And your greatness is going to be
determined
by how you deal with the nisionot that
Hashem gives you.
Some types of nisionot
are determining
possibly your whole life's mission.
We find in the Torah
tremendous nisionot that really defined
people in their lives.
We find
that Korach was tested
when Hashem didn't give him the job that
he was craving.
When his cousin got the job.
This test was in the creation before the
world was even created. It says on the
sixth day of creation during Ben Hashem
Bashot,
Hashem already created the mouth of the
earth
that was ready and available to swallow
Korach
if he failed his test.
You see Hashem plans out nisionot
from
from thousands of years in advance.
It says that the G'ra writes Bil'am
Harasha
was tested.
The asked for a prophet like we
had Moshe Rabbenu.
And Bil'am when he was rebuked by that
donkey,
the Chazal tell us the donkey's mouth
was created Ben Hashem Bashot on the
sixth day of creation. That means Hashem
was planning this in this I own since
the beginning of time.
And similarly with Abraham Avinu, the
10th test
the test that made Abraham
that test of Akedah
already from Ben Hashem I showed
the ram that Abraham used in the Akedah
was created during Ben Hashem I showed.
So many of the tests
that people are given major tests
are already
in play from years before they're even
born.
And then we have
the daily tests of life, the simple
tests
the tests that make the person who they
are.
Am I going to look at that? Shouldn't
look at it? Should I look at it?
Am I going to say that lashon hara?
Am I going to cheat? Am I going to
steal?
All these nisyonaot
are being placed in front of a person on
a daily on an hourly basis.
And again, every one of them is planted
by Hashem
to make us who we need to become.
I once asked a question to myself.
I said
you know, if the purpose of life is to
overcome the challenges, the tests, to
do the mitzvot in the circumstances
Hashem puts you in, what about those
people who are unaffiliated?
What about those people who grew up grow
up in Kansas? They don't even know
anything about their Judaism.
What's their purpose?
And I thought and I said, you know, it's
impossible.
Every Jew, wherever they are on this
planet,
Hashem gives them the information they
need
in order
to be able to overcome the test they're
going to get. Everyone on their level.
And this past week, exactly a week ago,
I verified
that
answer that I gave,
I was uh last Monday night, I was on the
way back from a wedding,
and I was the host of the wedding sent
for me a Uber,
and I'm in the car,
and I had a have a Gemara shiur that I
teach nightly,
and I said, "I'm going to teach in the
car." In the back seat, I have my
flashlight, and I'm learning Gemara in
the back seat.
After the shiur is over,
the Uber driver asked me a question.
It was a funny question. He says,
"Uh could I ask you a question?" I said,
"Sure." He said,
"We never gave our daughter a bas
mitzvah.
Is that going to affect her when she
gets married?"
I said, "No, no, I don't think so. It's
okay.
It's okay." I said, "You're Jewish?"
He said, "Yeah." I said, "Are you
Orthodox?" He said, "No. My grandfather
was Orthodox, but us,
no, we're Reform."
I said, "Oh."
I said, "But you know, you could come
back." I started trying to give him
chizuk. You can
And he says, "Yeah, I'm trying to get
better. You know, I lost it all."
And I'm telling him about tests and life
and this
And he says, "Oh, you reminded me.
I once had a very big test in life."
I said, "Really? What was your test?"
He said, "I'll tell you."
He said it was in 2002.
I had just bought tickets to the US Open
finals.
That's a tennis uh
tennis finals. He says it was Pete
Sampras against Andre Agassi. I couldn't
wait for that match-up.
And then my wife tells me,
"You bought the tickets?" I said, "Yeah,
I can't wait."
She says,
"It's on the holiday.
You can't go on the holiday."
He tells me, I think it was Passover.
I said, "No, no, it wasn't Passover.
I think it was Rosh Hashanah." He says,
"Yeah, yeah, yeah, Rosh Hashanah."
And he said,
"My wife said, 'How could you go to a
game on the holiday?'"
Now, this guy drives on Shabbat. He
keeps nothing.
But to them,
go to a game on the holiday?
And I was back and forth. I said, "How
could I not go? I can't. I need the
game. Uh."
And right before the holiday,
I sold the tickets.
And I passed the test.
I said, "Wow.
Unbelievable. Look what you have inside
of you."
I tried to give him a little hizuk.
But what I see from here is everybody on
their level is tested in one way or
another.
Hashem knows exactly what he's doing,
obviously.
And nobody's created for nothing.
Very often,
people tell me,
"You know, I'm praying so hard for
something,
and I don't see does Hashem he's not
helping me. He's not He's not He's not
giving me what I'm asking for. Does he
not value my tefillot?"
I want to share with you
a very important Orach Chaim.
The Orach Chaim Hakadosh writes,
he says the way that Hashem deals with
us many times is when he wants to give
someone a blessing a better heart
the way he does it is he puts in front
of the person
a mitzvah opportunity a heroic deed
opportunity
whose segulah
is the very gift
that they are seeking.
Every mitzvah has in it besides for its
eternal rewards the side benefits of the
mitzvot
and Hashem will place in front of a
person a challenge a mitzvah
and we may be saying Hashem how come
you're not helping me? He's I'm helping
you. I gave you the chance you're not
taking it.
The Orach Chaim says this by Abraham
Avinu.
Abraham Avinu
it says
in the Gemara Bava Kamma
that anyone who prays for his friend
for something that he needs
he's going to be answered first. Famous
Gemara. What's the source?
Cuz Abraham prayed for Avimelech and his
family ki atzar atzar Hashem Hashem
plugged them up.
And then Hashem told Avimelech give this
to Abraham and he's going to pray for
you.
And Abraham prayed for them to have
children
and Abraham was answered first.
So the Orach Chaim asks
didn't the angels come to Abraham
6 months before that and tell Abraham
ka'et chaya u'Sarah ben at this time
next year you're going to have a child?
What do you mean Abraham got it because
he prayed for Avimelech?
Says the Orach Chaim
that was the way that Hashem was going
to fulfill his promise. He put in front
of Abraham an opportunity to do
something whose segulah
is the very gift that he wants.
And this is a rule in life.
The nisayon that you're being given
right now, the nisayon that you may be
saying, "Why are you doing this to me,
Hashem? It's so hard."
That may be the ticket to what you've
been asking him for for all these years.
It's right there.
A woman told me,
she said she was having a very hard time
with her son in shidduchim.
And at that time, she was She had a very
big nisayon.
She said, "I overcame the nisayon, and
the next day
a shadchan called and suggested the girl
that my son married."
And then,
about four or five years later, when her
daughter was struggling in shidduchim,
she said,
"We had an issue with other people. It
was a very big dispute, and I went out
with my husband one night for a walk to
talk about it.
What are we going to do with this
dispute?
And while we were walking and talking,
I said, 'You know what?
Let's be mevater. Let's just give in.'
And my husband said, 'It's so hard.'
Okay, let's do it. And we decided to
give in.
She said, 'Less than a minute later,
a rabbi walks right by us and says, "Hi,
how are you?
Oh, I think I have a good guy for your
daughter."
And that was the guy
who married our daughter.
You see,
we need a lot of things.
How does Hashem bless us?
He gives it right in front of you. You
got to overcome the test. You got to
overcome the challenge.
Sarah Imeinu
the Kli Yakar says, what was her zechut?
Sarah went for decades without a child.
The pasuk says
when Sarah gave Hagar to Avraham, she
said, "Ulay ibaneh mimena." Maybe
in the zechut of me giving my
maidservant to Avraham maybe through her
I will be built up. What does that mean?
Says the Kli Yakar.
Sarah Imeinu saw
Avraham, he kept the Torah before it was
given. He has a mitzvah to have
children, but I'm the one who's blocking
him.
I don't have a womb.
How could I hold my husband back from
this precious mitzvah?
She said, "Maybe in the zechut if I give
him
another woman to have a child with
maybe that zechut I'll be answered."
She could have given Avraham
Hagar as a pilegesh.
But she said
"My husband is a prince. It's not
befitting for him to have a pilegesh."
So, she gave her husband a rival wife.
You know what that means to a woman?
She longs for the attention of her
husband.
And she said, "Maybe this is the mesirut
nefesh that I need in order that my
husband in order that I should merit to
have a child."
And heroically she gave Hagar to
Avraham.
And that's when her name was changed
from Sarai to Sarah. He says the yud is
masculine, the heh is feminine.
That was her nisayon.
Everybody has nisyonos.
Everyone has challenges, sometimes very
big.
And when we're crying, "Why are you
doing this to me, Hashem? Why do you
make it so hard?"
Hashem said, "If you only knew.
You're asking me so long for that. Here
it is. I'm giving it to you.
Don't blow it. Don't cry and say, "Why
are you doing this to me?"
You have to embrace the nisayon and know
what a zechut you have.
>> [snorts]
>> Because it's a zechut
to have a nisayon.
I saw a phenomenal idea
this past week
Parashat Pinchas. Amazing.
As we know,
because of the heroic act of Pinchas,
the act of zealotry,
Hashem gave him brit shalom.
He was given the eternal kehuna,
undisputable. You're a kohen.
And as we know from Chazal,
Pinchas was the only one in his family
who wasn't a kohen. He watched all his
relatives get terumah and do the avodah.
He's the only one. Because when Aharon
was inaugurated, it was only him and his
sons.
And Pinchas was already born.
So, he was out of the loop. And he's
longing, "When am I going to become a
kohen?"
Came along this opportunity
where he sees a chillul Hashem
when Zimri ben Salu takes Cozbi into the
tent and they're committing aveira.
Pinchas had at that moment a tremendous
nisayon. He would have had to risk his
life
to do that act of kana'im pog'im bo.
He had to be purely l'shem shamayim. He
had to kill
a man who is considered one of the
gedolei hador. He was 250 years old.
And Pinchas got up.
If he's not leshem shamayim, it's an act
of murder.
And he overcame that nisayon, and he got
brit shalom. He got the brit kehuna.
The rabbis point out
there was somebody else in the world at
that time who was yearning for kehuna.
Who was that?
Moshe Rabbenu.
Moshe Rabbenu was a kohen initially.
But because he kept
denying Hashem when Hashem told him to
be the leader by the snake, go and take
the Jews out of Eretz Yisrael, he kept
saying, "No, it's not for me. I'm a
nobody."
He went a little too far.
And Hashem said, "That's too much.
I'm taking the kehuna away from you."
And ever since then, Moshe felt so bad.
He's lacking in a way of serving Hashem.
Why did he yearn to go into Eretz
Yisrael so much?
Cuz he wanted to serve Hashem every way
possible.
And now,
he's missing out on serving Hashem from
the from the kehuna standpoint.
And now, that day,
in front of everybody,
there was a mitzvah opportunity.
Whose segula was kohen, as we see from
the reward. Kana'im pog'im bo, at that
time, was going to give a kohen.
And it was available to anyone.
And Moshe Rabbenu, that av ban shall kol
Yisrael, who taught them everything they
knew,
Rashi tells us he forgot the halacha.
He forgot the law of kana'im pog'im bo.
And because he forgot and Pinchas
remembered, Moshe said, "It's yours. You
get to go do it."
How could it be Moshe forgets a halacha?
Because Moshe
"What you did, it says asar Hashem, it
made an imprint. You argued with Hashem
too much. You're not going to get this
opportunity to become a kohen."
You need to have a merit
to be zocheh to have a test to overcome.
So, when we are tested in life, and we
say, "Why, Hashem? Why are you doing
this to me?" Hashem, you know what kind
of gift I'm giving you? You know what
kind of merits you need for this?
The last thing we should be doing is
crying and asking Hashem, "Why?"
You should say to Hashem, "Thank you.
Thank you for giving me this very hard
nisayon. I know underneath this is a
wonderful gift and an elevation that's
going to help me in this world and the
next."
The greatest gift you can get in this
world
is when Hashem helps you
become greater in Torah and mitzvot.
If you have a nisayon that you overcome,
that catapults you into the next level,
enables you to grow higher and higher in
Torah, that's the best gift you can get.
Hashem gives everyone opportunities.
About a month ago,
I was in another city
for a shabbaton,
and I was eating lunch with a certain
family, and they had guests over.
And one of the guests tells me the
following story.
He said, "I believed my whole life
that there was nothing more important in
this world than money.
It's all about money.
And I studied very hard and I became a
lawyer.
And I worked six and a half days a week.
Six days I was non-stop night morning
and on Shabbat I was thinking about it
the whole day
and right when Shabbat finished I was
right back at it.
And when anyone would tell me about
Torah what's what I said, I don't have
time.
I have to make more money.
And he said one day someone came over to
him and said, you know,
we have a new
a new class. We're just starting now.
Maybe you want to join. No, I don't have
time. Just listen.
They told him it's called Kinyan
Masechet.
It's only 20 minutes a day.
What do you mean?
The rav
he gives a shiur
for 15 minutes on whatever he could
cover in the Gemara for 15 minutes.
Three lines, four lines, that's it. He
does it slow.
And then you review with a study partner
for 5 minutes and it's over. Then you go
back to work.
And then that night at some point on
your own time
you have to go over it in your mind two
times.
And you tell everybody, I did it.
He thought about it. He said, okay,
maybe I'll try.
He said, this time
baruch Hashem
I accepted.
And he started learning.
For the first time he said in 15 years
he opened the Gemara since high school.
And he said they were learning the
second perek. They started with the
second perek of Sukkah.
And they're doing the five lines and
this and he
he sees that some kind of WhatsApp chat
you have to type in that you did the
review. So everybody types in, did it,
did it, did it, did it." He he "I have
to do it." He Okay, "Did it."
And he's learning every day a little
every day every day.
And he sees he's grasping it, he's
understanding it, he's remembering it.
He said it was about 3 months into it, 4
months maybe.
And they were having a big gathering in
the city. It was a parlor meeting and
there were great Russia a great Russia
Shiva was there and all the rabbis and
they invited the layman to come.
And I came, I was sitting in the back
with my hood on. I'm a nobody in the
Torah world.
He said and the Russia Shiva gets up to
speak and he's talking about the Yeshiva
and he says, "We're learning Masachet
Sukkah."
And they're learning the second pedic.
And he says, "By the way,
we had a big kasha.
Maybe someone here knows the answer."
And he asked the kasha that he had.
And everyone in the room is silent, all
the rabbis.
And this guy in the back of the room who
did that piece 100 times,
he says,
"I think I know the answer."
He's talking.
How come no one's raising their hand?
The Russia Shiva said it, "Anyone have a
teretz?"
Nobody's talking.
He says, "Uh
He raises it. Yes?"
Everybody turns around.
Him?
He says, "Uh
well,
according to the second Iggeres Ha'Amri,
the Russia Shiva doesn't have a kasha
because this this this this
And he said,
"He's right."
Everybody couldn't believe it.
This guy knows the second Iggeres
Ha'Amri and blah blah.
He said, "I never had a feeling like
that in my life. No dollar value could
be put on that."
He said, "I got so much hisuk. And I
came back and I learned stronger and
stronger and stronger.
He said about a year into it the rav who
was giving the shiur had to leave and it
was down to about four or five people
and he asked me to take over the shiur.
I said me, who am I?
But I accepted and I started giving the
shiur.
He said today we have 18 people in the
shiur
and I'm so excited about it. I prepare
and I prac- and I donate mu- many a lot
of my money towards prizes for the
review. Whoever reviews tonight, we have
a raffle for a bottle of wine. Whoever
reviews and everybody's typing in did
it, did it, did it, did it.
And he said the Torah became my life.
The money is nonsense.
Hashem gave him an opportunity. You want
here.
20 minutes.
Oh, I don't have time. I don't have
You never know
what you could become
if you take, if you grab
the opportunities that Hashem gives you.
Let us be honest with ourselves.
Many times we get jealous
of other people's materialistic
possessions,
their homes, what they have. I I'm stuck
here. Everybody's having fun. Why don't
I have money? Where's my money? And
everybody on money.
When it all comes down to it,
when a person knows
his time is limited in this world,
money
is worthless.
There's nothing he would give anything
for another chance to have one more
one more
trade it all in.
My brother-in-law is a doctor.
He said he had a patient last year.
The patient
he said was worth in the hundreds of
millions of dollars.
But he had the worst life.
He was totally off the
and he married a Gentile
and he said his wife was so hard and so
bad to him.
He had two daughters even worse.
But he refused to divorce cuz he didn't
want to give up all his money to them.
He had a hard life.
He said he wanted to just
take some time away, go out into the
ocean and just relax.
And he had someone building a yacht for
him
for 90 million dollars. A yacht for 90
million dollars.
And it took this person 5 years to build
the yacht.
And when it was almost done
the man got sick.
And he's in a hospital bed.
And my brother-in-law is his doctor.
And he had months to live.
When he passed away
he never stepped foot on that yacht.
But he told my brother-in-law
"I was so bad in life. I need merits
now. I'm leaving the world." He
understood.
He said, "I want to give all my money to
charity."
He wrote every last dollar to charity.
But after he passed away unfortunately
his wife and daughters contested saying
he was not sane when he said that.
And they won the case.
And none of his money went to charity.
What a person would give.
All the money is worthless.
When we know what's real in this world.
I once saw a clip.
There was a righteous gentile.
Who saved 1,100 Jews in the Holocaust.
His name was Schindler. I'm sure you all
heard of him.
And someone once showed me a clip. They
made a movie of him.
And what it looked like when the war was
over.
And they brought the 1,100 Jews that he
saved to surround them and say thank
you.
And a representative from the Jews went
over to him.
And gave him a ring.
And they said, this is a small token of
our appreciation.
And he says, it says on this ring an
inscription from our Talmud.
He who saves one life.
Is as if he saved an entire world.
Look at what you did. And they give him
the ring.
He looks around at all the lives that he
saved.
And he starts crying.
And he says.
I could have done more. I could have
done more. They said, no, no, look what
you did. He said, I wasted so much
money. I could have bought more lives.
What am I doing? I wasted my money on
nonsense.
Then he goes over to his limousine. And
he said, why did I keep this car? I
could have got 10 more Jews for this
car.
What's a car worth?
And then he takes off a pin
from his lapel. He said, "You see this
pin? It's gold. I could have got two
more lives."
What is this gold worth? It's garbage.
It's worthless.
The only thing that matters is our
deeds. What did you accomplish?
No one's going to care about your gold
when you left this world.
Sometimes we get into machlokes. We're
fighting with each other over the money.
How many people have had disputes? They
don't talk to each other. Families don't
sit with each other over money.
You know what it's going to be like in
the next world?
I once saw a mashal
used for something else, but I'll apply
it to this.
Imagine
you have two little children arguing
with each other. One is a prince. The
other's a commoner.
And the commoner, he takes the prince's
toy and he throws it on the floor.
Five-year-olds. And he said,
"See?
I broke your toy."
And the prince says,
"One day I'm going to become the king.
And when I become the king, I'm going to
get you for that."
40 years later,
he becomes the king.
The other guy, the day he becomes he
runs to him, "Your majesty, please
forgive me. Please forgive me."
"What are you talking about?" "Well,
remember when we were five, I broke your
toy? You said you're going to hurt me."
"Are you crazy? You think I care about a
toy car? I'm the king now."
You think anyone's going to care about a
dollar bill when you're up there, it's
garbage.
Oh, but you could have said sorry.
You could have given in.
That's worth something.
Don't blow your opportunities here.
We may look at people
who don't have so much money and we say,
"Ah,
what are they worth? They don't have any
money."
From the greatest people who ever lived,
it says about the Kitzur Shulchan
The Kitzur Shulchan was so poor, he
couldn't even afford a table to write
his sefer on. He was standing up writing
on something else. He didn't have a
table and chair.
Is there anyone wealthier than the
Kitzur Shulchan?
Whose sefarim are learned in every
yeshiva, if you zocheh to understand
what he's saying?
What has real value in this world?
Don't let the street tell you what's
valuable.
Don't listen to what people say, "Oh,
this guy, let's listen to him. He's got
all the money." You see, people put
importance on money. That must be it.
Don't be fooled
by the guy who doesn't know anything.
I saw once a maaseh in the midrash,
very interesting midrash.
It speaks about a Rav Kahana, it's not
the regular Rav Kahana from the Gemara.
Rav Kahana had a son.
His name was Salik.
And when Salik turned 5 years old,
Rav Kahana said to his Rebbetzin, "It's
time to send him out for Talmud Torah."
And the Rebbetzin said, "He's our only
son. I don't want him to leave."
He said, "There's no choice. We have to
send him."
And she said, "Anything else we could
do?" When they they hired a Melamed to
come to the house.
And he they taught this Salek every
single day
for maybe 20 years.
And he was a super genius in Torah.
He knew everything.
And when he was 25 for the first time in
his life, he was going to go out into
the world.
And he went out one day.
And
it was a very hot day.
And he needed he wanted water.
So, he goes to the
water salesman.
Says, "Could I have a bottle of water?"
He said, "Sure. That'll be 100 ruble."
He said, "100 ruble?
I don't have any money."
"Sorry, no water."
He said, "But I'll tell you P'shat and
Tosafot. I'll tell you I'll tell you
that with the Gemara means of
He says,
"I don't care what P'shat and Tosafot
get.
You got to pay."
He says, "My father said that my Torah's
worth more than all the money in the
world.
I'll give you something much more
valuable."
He says, "Listen, sunny boy.
No money, no water. I don't care what
your father said."
He goes back home.
He says to his father,
"You told me Torah's more valuable than
anything. I can't even get a bottle of
water with it.
It seems to me that in the world, money
is what has value. I want to make
money."
He said, "You want to make money?
Okay.
I'll make you a deal.
I have a diamond upstairs. I was saving
it.
I'll let you go out and sell this
diamond.
I'll get half and you'll get half.
And with the half that you get, you can
go into business.
But on one condition, you have to sell
it the way I tell you to sell it.
Okay, what should I do?
He says, "First, you go to the costume
jewelry area
and see how much they'll give you for
it.
Tell them no.
Then I want you to go to the diamond
district.
See how much they'll give you for it.
And then tell them no.
And then I want you to go to the wealthy
neighborhood over there and only give it
to the highest bidder."
He said, "Okay."
He takes the diamond, magnificent
diamond.
He brings it to the first place.
The costume jewelry.
He says, "How much you going to give me
for this?" Look at it. Wow, very nice.
Uh, we'll give you $40 for it.
Uh, sorry, I can't.
He goes to the diamond district. They
look at the How much you going to give
me for this?
They look at it. They say, "Wow. Never
saw a diamond. We'll give you $40,000
for this."
$40,000. Wow.
I can't do it. I'm sorry.
Then he goes to the wealthy
neighborhood. They're They're looking at
it, taking off their glasses, putting on
their glasses. I'll give you 200,000.
I'll give you 300 I'll give you 400,000.
And he sells it for 400,000. He needed a
wagon to carry back the money. He brings
it back to his father. He says, "We're
rich."
His father said, "Tell me about your
experience."
He says, "Well, I went here. They gave
me 40. I went here.
He says, "Let me tell you something,
son. This was a learning experience for
you."
The first people you brought it to the
costume jewelry, they offered you only
$40 for something worth $400,000.
How could they do that?
You know why? Cuz they don't know value
in this world. They don't even know what
value means.
You're going to trust the water salesman
on what Torah's worth? The guy on the
street corner selling water. You care
what he says? I'm telling you, ask the
ones who know.
Torah is the most precious commodity in
this world. There's nothing greater.
And he got the lesson from his father,
and he went back to learning.
Don't let the people on the street teach
you
on what's important in this world. We
know what's important.
No money in this There's no dollar value
to even a second
of Torah and mitzvot.
If somebody has
blessed with wealth, with
physical wealth,
what makes them great? What they do with
that wealth.
Ashrei Yisrael, what people do
with their physical possessions,
they help Klal Yisrael, they give their
resources. That's value.
Somebody told me a story happened this
past Friday.
Rabbi David Sutton,
he said
that in Lakewood
this past Friday, as we know, across the
tri-state area, there were power
outages.
And he said,
"5:30 Friday afternoon,
a woman
from Lakewood says her power goes out,
and she was making a Sheva Brachot and
having 45 people for the meals in her
house. She was putting up many of them
to sleep, all from out of town,
and now they have no power."
She says, "Well, Hashem was
some way because that morning a neighbor
across the street told her, 'By the way,
we have a lot of we have a few ovens and
a big fridge. If you ever need an extra
oven or fridge space, I have.'"
She says, "Wow, I need."
And then
at 6:00,
they're saying, "Is the power going to
go back on? What are we going to do?"
She tells her husband, "Call this
neighbor. We'll call them the
Rabinowitzes. Call the Rabinowitzes and
see if they have access to the internet.
We don't have internet access in our
house. See if they could find out when
the power's supposed to go back on."
They call up the Rabinowitzes,
and Mr. Rabinowitz says to them, Rabbi
Rabinowitz, he says, "You're making your
simcha in this in that hall tonight,
right?"
They said, "No, we're making it in our
house."
"You're making it in your house
and you have no power?"
Listen to what happened after that.
At that moment, Rabbi and Mrs.
Rabinowitz instantly mobilized. They
were going away for Shabbos and insisted
that we take over their home.
"We're opening our doors," please they
urged, "come to us."
At first, we hesitated, hoping the power
would come back on.
But once we found out there was no
update on the outage, I walked over to
the Rabinowitz's home.
They were already opening their dining
room table for us.
Mrs. Rabinowitz greeted me warmly,
showing me where we could put the
children to sleep, pointing out the
cribs and pack and plays. She gave me a
tour of the kitchen, explaining the the
meat and the dairy and the parve setups.
She told me,
"The house is yours.
Feel free to take anything you want from
the refrigerator, the freezer, or the
pantry."
And we really did.
With 45 people, we ended up needing
everything from their seltzer maker to
extra plastic wear for the waiters. The
logistics were wild, but the teamwork
and achdut were incredible. We were
moving massive hot pots of chicken soup
across the street under serious
pressure, along with high chairs, paper
goods, tablecloths, and silk flowers.
The boys hold over everything, and my
daughters led the charge on cleaning up
afterward with a lot of help from
another great neighbor, the Stern
family.
All of the guests who were staying
nearby had no electricity where they
were sleeping, and the heat was
unbearable. So, 45 people crowded into
the Rabinowitz's home.
The entire Shabbat afternoon sitting on
couches, eating around the dinette, and
reading books together.
After Shabbat, we went to the other side
of town to thank the Rabinowitz's for
letting an army of people take over
their home.
But they refused to take any credit.
Instead, they told us that we brought so
much simcha and bracha into their home.
They were so excited about it.
Mrs. Rabinowitz then shared the
beautiful, emotional reason why.
She said, "That Shabbos was her father's
shloshim.
She had really wanted to host her
extended family in her in her home to
honor his memory.
But because another sister had a better
setup,
the family decided to go there instead.
She was so disappointed.
When our power went out and the
opportunity to host our simcha arose,
she felt it was a gift from Hashem.
She told us, when she walked into her
sister's house and saw a picture of her
father, she looked at it and said,
"Thank you, Tati.
This is going to be for your ilui
nishama."
She felt so grateful that we were using
her home.
What started out as a stressful blackout
became a beautiful tribute to her
father.
Imagine people
willing
to open their home with a minute's
notice and let 45 people come take over.
Well, that has value.
That's what's really valuable in this
world. You're using your home for chesed
to help others.
>> [clears throat]
>> I once heard a beautiful story.
There was once
two sisters
and
they were both religious, of course.
One married
a kollel yungerman
and the other married a wealthy
businessman.
And they lived different lives.
One was willing to be mosed nefesh for
Torah
and the other had the good life,
quote-unquote.
She said, "But what was so hard
is when we would meet up together at our
parents' house for Shabbats
and my sister would come over flaunting
her new earrings and her new bangles and
talking about the expensive vacations
they were going on and here we couldn't
even afford to go to a pizza store.
And
it took a toll on me.
I'm willing to be more said nefesh, but
it's just so hard. And she's talking
about this and that.
And it happened very often we met
together there.
She said one year
my husband comes over to me
and he said, "My dear wife, I have a
difficult request from you.
You're such an eshet chayil. You let me
learn.
But I learned how great it is
to be able to learn going into Shabbat.
I'm requesting of you
can I have
two hours before Mincha on Friday
afternoon
to go to shul early and learn.
I know what a hard time that is.
I know to bathe the children is hard. I
know to get the food I know it's hard.
I understand if you say no, but it would
be so precious to have those hours."
And she said, "My husband
there's nothing I wouldn't do for Torah.
Yes, I'll give it to you."
And
from that day on every Friday he would
go two hours before Mincha and it was so
hard for her.
And she was really more said nefesh to
bathe all the children herself and get
the house clean and do everything.
And she said, "Then came that day really
broke the straw that broke the camel's
back.
I It was so hard. It was Friday
afternoon. She barely made it to her
parents' house by candle lighting.
And her sister strolls in
talking about how all the maids bathe
her children.
And she said, "Look, my husband got me a
new diamond ring."
I said, "It's just too much. It's just
too much."
The following Friday,
I went to light the candles
and I saw my husband left me a letter.
I opened the letter.
Says, "To my dear wife,
I want to thank you
for all the mesirus nefesh that you have
given me.
I have very good news to share with you.
Today,
I am making a siyum
on Maseches Pesachim
just from the 2 hours
that you have given me every Friday.
And I learned it
very well, very strong.
And it's all to your credit.
And as a thank you, as a hakaras hatov,
I want to give you a gift."
And he tells her as a gift,
"I am going to give you
Maseches Pesachim.
It's yours.
This Maseches, all of my toil and all of
my hard I'm giving it to you
because of your mesirus nefesh."
She puts down the letter with a tear in
her eye
and she says,
"Diamond ring and housekeepers
or Maseches Pesachim?
I'll take Maseches Pesachim any day.
No question."
And she got chizuk.
We constantly need chizuk.
We need to re-energize ourselves all the
time because the yetzer hara works
overtime. He makes us forget. He makes
us forget what we're doing in this
world. He gets us so wrapped up in this
world. And we see pictures now today.
Oh, look at them having such a good
time. What? I'm stuck over here and I
You're sitting in the Beis Midrash.
You're zocheh to learn a word of Torah.
You're zocheh to do another mitzvah, to
do another chesed. How fortunate you
are.
People are wasting their lives. Lo
aleinu, we pray for them.
But don't ever be jealous of nonsense.
Don't ever be jealous of things that
have no value.
Because when it all comes down to it,
this is the only thing that matters,
Torah and mitzvot.
Hashem's going to send nisyonos. Yes.
There's going to be difficult nisyonos.
People They They They ask questions all
the time. Why? Why can I have more
parnassah? Why can I have this? Why can
I have that?
Very good questions. But instead of
asking why,
you should be asking Hashem, what I do
to deserve this gift that you're giving
me?
I don't understand what I'm
accomplishing right now.
The Chazon Ish once said about a person,
he said, "Nobody knows the world is Half
the world is resting on his shoulders."
He looked like a regular baal habayis.
Nobody knows the nisyonos that people go
through.
Nobody knows the struggles. Only Hashem
does.
But every one of them has a hidden gem,
a hidden jewel inside,
both in this world and the next.
And this is our job.
Our job is to be happy with it.
We don't go, "Okay, Hashem. Okay, you
know, if Hashem wants me to do this,
I'll do it.
That's not the attitude. If Hashem wants
me to do it, I go, "Okay, I guess. If
Hashem wants, I'll do it."
If Hashem wants, I'll do it. So,
what else would I want to do? I want to
do what Hashem wants. Of course, I want
it.
For the littlest change of attitude,
if we would know the value of a little
attitude change, of being a little more
simcha,
about being a happier with our mission
in this world, cuz only Hashem knows
what everyone's mission is. Nobody else
knows.
If you would have his life right now,
you'd be wasting your time.
Your life would be pointless.
You have the exact life, the exact
circumstance, the exact wife, the exact
children you need.
Why can't my children be like them? Why
mine are so disrespectful? Theirs
You don't know what your job is.
Perhaps one moment of your patience with
your children is worth more than years
of this guy
with his angel children.
Nobody knows,
but Hashem knows.
And he wants us to embrace the lives
that he gives us.
He wants us to be happy, to wake up in
the morning happy to serve him, because
after all is said and done,
if you do your job
the way you're meant to do it,
you're going to be the same as the
HaDor in the next world. He did his job,
you did your job. You're not expected to
do anyone else's job other than yours.
But if you look around all day and say,
"It's not fair. What about him? What
about that? What about that?"
You're going to miss out.
You're going to miss out on the
greatness
you could have had
if you only
did your own job in Simcha.
So, as Hashem
we will all rise
to every
Hashem sends. Yes, we say
Hashem on.
But, if the
comes, perhaps
this is the area that's defining us.
This is the area that's going to make
you great. This is the area that's going
to give you the blessing you've been
yearning for for all these years.
Give in. Make shalom. Whatever it is.
It'll make you great.
And we will see when Hashem comes and
reveals himself, we're going to say,
"Wow, I can't believe it. I was crying.
That was what I I can't believe it."
Let's not wait for that moment.
Let's show our
now and embrace the lives that Hashem
gave us. As Hashem, if we do that, we'll
be
to the wonderful great day of
Hashem
and I mean I mean.
Same here again sure
blessing will be correct from an
inspiring Russia.
I would be
correct to Michael for sponsoring
tonight's share. We will miss us.
Franklin Shawl of a shalom
out of the yard site. I just want to
wish Layla
for Ruben and his Miriam and Rachel and
sorry and Rachel and sorry.
Ruben
and Spencer and Sarah and Sarah and
Ruben and Sarah and Ruben and Sarah
have a good sponsoring a share.
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Yisgadal v'yiskadash shmei rabba.
Olam d'voreh chirusei.