Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
The great Kamina Rebba
tells us an incredible thing. Even
though he was such a great and righteous
man, the only thing that truly kept him
sane and connected
throughout all of his tribulations in
life was the fact that he had just a
simple amuna, a simple faith in God. And
that's what carried him through all of
his tribulations. And that is really
what is our main test in this world is
in the moment
still staying focused, not getting
upset, not getting angry, not getting
upset with other people, but rather
realizing that everything is part of a
gigantic divine plan.
So there's a story told by the Beneshai
Rab from Baghdad that there was a
certain young man in the local yeshiva.
One night as he was walking through
Baghdad late in the night he noticed
that there was a door front door open
belonging to a very wealthy widow
and he was suddenly grabbed by a desire
to go and steal. He was extremely poor.
She was extremely rich. Doesn't it make
sense? Robin Hood. You rob from the
poor. From the rich and you give to the
poor. So he went in there and he started
very quietly and stealthily helping
himself to all of this wealthy woman's
jewelry, her money, everything that he
could find. And what did he do? He got
to a certain point. He was about to
leave. And then suddenly he said to
himself, "What's going on? What am I
doing? This is so wrong. I sit and I
learn Torah.
The Torah tells us
don't steal or take
don't rob others. How could I be doing
such a thing?" And now Hashem loves the
He loves has a particular
special protection for the widows, for
the orphans. How could I do such a
thing? What a terrible crime. You know
what? If God intends me to give to get
this money, I'm gonna get in in a
permitted way. And with that, he took
his stash. He put it down on a table,
closed the door, and he left.
Unbeknownst to him,
this poor widow, she wasn't poor, but
she was a widow. This lady was upstairs.
She was frozen, terrified because she
heard that there was a robber downstairs
and who knows what's going to be and
maybe he's going to come upstairs at any
moment and she just hid hid herself in
the room under her covers praying to God
that he wouldn't come in in the morning.
Finally, she plucked up the courage. She
went downstairs.
She realized to her amazement a very
strange thing that there was all of her
jewelries, all of her wealth was right
there on the table. But she said to
herself, "This cannot go on. I'm a young
woman.
I may be a widow, but I cannot go on
like this. I need to have a man. I need
to have a husband. I need to I need to
have somebody to protect me."
So she said, "I'm going to the local
yeshiva. I'm going to find a god-fearing
good man." She went to the yeshiva. She
found the head of the yeshiva, the
rashiva, and she said to him, "Please,
can you help me out?"
She told him basically what happened.
She said, "Do you have somebody
suitable, suitable young man
and preferably good-looking who could
maybe, you know, he could maybe uh be a
good husband and could be there to take
care of me and he will not have to worry
his entire life. He'll be able to sit
and learn the Torah. He won't have to
worry about penny. Can you think of
somebody?"
The rabbi thought for a moment, he said,
"I've got the perfect map for you." And
of course, it was none other than the
thief in the middle of the night from
previous night from the previous
evening. And lo and behold, they met.
They met again.
They fell in love. They got married. And
lo and behold, he ended up getting all
of the wealth and the wife and
everything all put together.
Just have to realize that God has a
plan. This was Bam's problem. That Bum
came to curse the Jewish people. And
despite being told by God directly,
"Do not curse them. Anybody who curses
them will be cursed."
It wasn't enough for Bum. Why not? Bam
spoke to God.
Bam had miracles that happened to him.
His own donkey spoke to him. A miracle.
He saw angels that were there to prevent
him from doing this this wrong thing,
this evil. Why did he not just take the
message?
And the answer is because he was missing
this fundamental in his life that God is
in control of everything.
And if you're meant to get something,
you'll get it. And if you're not meant
to get something, you won't get it. And
if you meant to get something and you
take it in the forbidden way, you didn't
do yourself any favors because you
really are destined to get it in a
permitted way.
And when we look at our hero in this
week's par and all the actually spanning
three par three par in the Torah, we
have Pinas who in this week's para in
Mat
he takes it he takes it to war against
the Midionites. He goes out to fight
against them.
That very same Pimas
who was technically a nothing,
he wasn't a Cohen because he missed out
on being a Cohen. The the the the way it
worked is that Auron and his sons
specifically
and any future children that they would
have would have would be Kohanim. But
Pinos was already bored at that point.
Which means he wasn't a Cohen. He wasn't
a lab a ley. He was a nobody.
What we would call today he was a loser.
He was just a common regular person.
Hopefully that's not a loser.
But he was not the he was not one of the
greats. Imagine how he felt. And yet the
rabbis tell us that when he did this
act, this courageous act and he stood up
risking his life in order to intervene
in the immoral act that was being done
between the prince of the tribe of
Shimon and Cosby Matsur which wasn't
actually her real name tells us but the
midenite princess he stood up and he
took action and he risked his life and
he came through and because of that God
gave him
edit Shalom. He gave him the priesthood
because the kohanim the priests are
there in order to make peace in order to
breathe the proliferators of peace in
the world. That's why the kohanim are
there. And he got that covenant.
Think about it.
Had he been a Cohen before, he would
never have been able to do that because
a Cohen that kills somebody becomes
impure and loses his rights in certain
ways to be a coin was only because he
did the act of zealousness because he
before he became a coin
and he was destined for that greatness.
That was our rabbis tell us
that which was fitting to him. He got
the reward that was fitting for him all
along.
And that's what we need to remember
ourselves.
No matter what we're doing, we just need
to do that which is right. We need to
stand up for that which is right. And
that's all. And that's what we have to
remember.
I want to share with you another amazing
idea I just learned recently.
They say that Rabisha Ben Khan, one of
the great sages
speaking to
the Roman princess,
and she had many questions for the
rabbi. One of the questions he said is,
"It seems to me that your God is, and
I'm putting in parentheses, nothing more
than a carpenter."
As it says,
Hashem cordens off the water in his high
places.
He's a carpenter.
If he's a carpenter, I guess that's all
that he does. He just makes things and
he leaves them. Says, "I want a
spindle."
I don't know how old she was. I want a
spindle. Yeah. Not just what they used
to use in order to go and and weave back
in the days when actually people used to
weave. I'm sure you can remember your
grandmothers, your great aunts sitting
there with balls of wool and weaving
away and making all kinds of that and
and one of the things they had is they
were weaving as a spindle called in
Hebrew a plaque
and he said that's what you want fine
and he prayed for her
and she caught a disease called saras
leprosy badly translated as leprosy but
it could be in this case it actually was
because what would happen is the law was
in Rome that anybody that had leprosy
would have to sit. I presume more
particularly the women who caught
leprosy would have to sit in the shook
in the marketplace. They'd have to sit
and they would weave.
So Kanya knew that she would therefore
she would be given a spindle. She would
be given she would be given a plaque in
order to do what she needed to do. Now
she had to ras and she was sitting there
in the marketplace
amongst the lowest of the low amongst
the porpus amongst the people. How
terrible that was for her.
And a day later
was walking past the market and he saw
her there. He saw her weaving and he
turned to her and he said, "So tell me
what do you think of the spindle that
God gave you? It's nice, isn't it? Was
his implication in a very, very
sarcastic tone. IT'S NICE SPINDLE HE
GAVE YOU. NO. Isn't it great? Isn't this
isn't this what you wanted? And she
said, she said, "No,
why couldn't he just take it back?" And
he said to her, "That's not very nice.
You asked him for it and he gave it to
you and you now you're asking him to
take it back."
So it's a very very strange story of
course for us to understand we're
dealing with an extremely extremely
righteous holy person rais
what's going on and how can he deal with
things in such a way and pray for her to
become sick.
So fortunately for us the benesai once
again comes to save us and he explains
over there in this commentary
that really
understood exactly what she meant
insidiously in her question. What she
was really saying is God just created
the world and he left it. He created
he's like a carpenter. He made something
and he left it. And he cannot intervene
in our lives in any way. And certainly
he doesn't have providence like you Jews
claim in our individual lives.
And he can't even give me even a simple
little little thing, a tiny little
spindle.
I said, "Really?
Let's see." And he prayed for her and
because of the circumstances, it turned
out that she ended up now going from
riches to poverty. She was sitting out
there in the marketplace. I'm sure maybe
her father was coming and sending her
schwamas and different things to eat
during the day. Maybe the occasional
falaful. I don't know. But she was out
there IN THE MARKETPLACE WITH THE LOWEST
OF the low, a princess.
How could it be?
But this was his message to her. You
think God doesn't do anything? Well,
I'll show you according to your laws,
the Roman laws, that even you yourself
as a princess are not protected
and you according to your laws will end
up
behaving just like everybody else with
your little spindle that you asked for.
It could be, it's just my idea, could be
that was specifically a spindle
that she asked for because what you do
when you're weaving, you're creating
something. You're taking raw materials
and you're making it into a fabric.
You're making it into something.
So that's what she was really saying.
We're the ones that are doing things
here. You think God is doing things
here? We're the ones that make things.
We're the ones that weave things. That's
what we do. That's what we that's what
we're here for. And God has left things
alone.
And when he came to her and he passed
and said, "Do you like it?" And she
said, "What? He couldn't have done it in
a nicer way?" And he said to her, "Well,
you didn't believe he was in any way
interactive in your life. If you would
have asked him for something in a nice
way, if you would have asked him for a
treasure chest, he would have given it
to you. But you didn't ask for that
because you didn't believe. And now you
see that absolutely he's 100% in control
of everything.
You see, and even though the Gomorrah
ends there, but
the Beneshai adds and there is no
question that Rebua at that point once
she had learned the lesson, he prayed
for her. She got better. And then she
learned another lesson that when you
pray, God listens to you. When you talk
to God, he answers your prayers.
And the holier you are, the probably the
more he answers you. So that was maybe a
message for her as well.
So we see in this week's para
pinas
standing up for what is right, risking
his life in order to go and help the
Jewish people to save the Jewish people
not thinking about himself but thinking
about everybody else.
Have the daughters of Salaf
come to claim their portion of the land.
This is in paras. They came to claim
their portion of the land.
So you could look at it well obviously
because they wanted the land for
themselves and they felt that they were
going to miss be missing out.
And I know Kazal tell us it's because
they didn't want that land to be taken
away from its rightful owners from the
tribe of Manash. And therefore they
wanted to take hold of it worried that
maybe somehow it would get passed on to
somebody else. And indeed once they
received the portion of land which is
given to them then they actually ended
up marrying their cousins or their
uncles actually did end up staying in
the tribe of Manash as it was supposed
to all along.
Amazing thing. They stood up. They stood
up for what was right.
Mosher Raenu
in the only p in the entire Torah where
it says
Moshe Elashem.
EVERY OTHER Pretty
much says
there are certain exceptions.
Moshe
and God spoke to Moses saying over here
says
Elashem
and Moshe spoke to Hashem. Why is Moshe
speaking to Hashem?
Speech is a strong language. You know
why? Because Mosher Rabenu knew he was
about to leave this world and he was
concerned. How are the Jewish people
going to carry on without a leader? They
need a new leader. And then he asked
God, "Please, you must choose a man
who's going to lead the people who will
be there, who will be there to lead them
in all of their ways, in all of their
battles, in all of their m in all of
their matters. You they need A LEADER."
MOSHE STOOD up to speak to God in order
that the Jewish people would have a
leader because he didn't care about
himself. He cared about his fellow Jews.
And that's what we have to learn from
here. We need to realize that as long as
something is destined for us. As long as
we're doing what we need to do in order
in in that case, God is going to take
care of it. So may Hashem bless you,
bless all of us. Please God, we'll be
able to use each and every one of our
individual talents because Pinas could
have lived his life feeling he was a
failure, but instead he stood up to do
that which was he which he felt was
right and because of that he ended up
get getting that which was really
destined for him. May we all get all of
the good that is destined for us and
please God the ultimate good of the
coming of Mashiachu
speaking in our days. Amen.
>> Excellent. I don't know if the noise
from the door was coming. I felt like I
just hold it.