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Good evening Good evening everyone. I
hope uh you're all well. I hope you
enjoyed uh Lag BaOmer.
Uh
obviously uh for the vast majority of us
who might have gone to Meron this year,
if you're in Israel, uh this year we
kind of had to stay at home.
Uh but one has to remember
that uh the spiritual connection that we
have with the great spirit and holiness
of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai does not
depend on physical proximity,
but rather in all spiritual matters, it
is the spiritual connection uh which
transcends
uh differences, uh distances, it
transcends geography,
and therefore I hope that all of us will
be able or were able to link with that
koach of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai that we
will hopefully talk about tonight.
Uh even though it's uh at least in
Israel, it's uh not Lag BaOmer anymore,
but uh we're uh you know, just like all
the holidays, have something called an
Isru Chag, the day after the holiday,
there is still a certain aura.
I think we are in Isru Lag BaOmer and
it's worthwhile to talk about Lag BaOmer
a little bit.
Um all of us know uh that Sefirat HaOmer
has two distinct aspects, which on one
level are almost contradictory.
On one hand, the Torah mandates that we
count a number of days within Pesach and
Shavuot,
and this is in anticipation of Matan
Torah,
and I think I've already spoken uh more
than once of the idea that Pesach
represents freedom, liberation from
slavery, Torah represents or Shavuot
represents submission to God,
and on some level we sometimes think
that submission is the opposite of
freedom,
uh but by having a uh period of
transition between Pesach and Shavuot,
the Torah is linking the two holidays.
In fact, Ramban basically says that the
counting of the Omer is regarded as a
Chol HaMoed that is joining two
different festivals, which in fact
become one.
Pesach, the holiday of freedom, Shavuot,
the holiday of commitment, because there
is a recognition that without submission
to the will of God, I am in fact a
slave. I'm a slave to my desires, to my
emotions, to my ever-shifting moods. So
freedom without Torah is simply animal
liberation,
and that is why our sages tell us
that the korban that was brought on
Pesach was Omer, which was a barley
offering, and barley was commonly fed to
animals in those days.
Uh on Shavuot, the grain offering was
wheat, which was human food, and the
idea is the transition from freedom to
Torah is the transition from animal
liberation to human dignity.
So on one level therefore, the whole
counting is to link freedom and
responsibility, which is a major issue
even l'havdil in secular politics today,
where people often say freedom is the
only goal, and it's important to
understand that as important as freedom
is, freedom cannot be an ultimate
purpose. You cannot say the purpose of
my life is to be free, because that
immediately raises a question, free to
do what? Free to be what?
Uh Eric Fromm, certainly happened to be
Jewish, a disciple of Freud, but very
very far from religious, used to make
the point
that we make a grave mistake
when we define freedom as freedom from
something.
That's only a negative.
Freedom has to be freedom towards
something, and that is indeed what the
counting of the Omer is. It is a freedom
towards a goal, towards a purpose.
Again, I've mentioned before as well,
Tagore, the Indian poet's beautiful
metaphor, and he was not speaking about
Judaism at all, he was speaking about
life,
that a human soul is like a violin
string
that has beautiful music,
but only when it's tied down across the
bridge is that music able to be
expressed. A loose string on the table
will not be able to express anything,
and that is the paradox of life, that it
is only by connection and submission
to something greater than ourselves
do we achieve the true flourishing
and realization
of the human spirit.
Now, seen in that light alone, the
counting of the Omer ought to be a
joyous, happy period.
Quite logically, that's what it should
be. We're looking forward to the Sinai
revelation, to our mission statement, to
our purpose, to our contribution to
ourselves and to the world and to the
universe and the
So there is nothing intrinsic
to the counting of the Omer
that would render it a period of sadness
in any way.
And yet all of us know halachically that
over the course of time this also became
a period that was impressed with a
certain degree of mourning and
solemnity.
Uh so the halacha is that during the
Omer period, and it's a machlokes
exactly what is the Omer period here,
the counting of the Omer, remember, are
49 days. The mourning is observed for
only part of that time. Some people
start from the second day of Pesach and
they go up until Lag BaOmer, and after
Lag BaOmer they uh are no longer bound
by the mourning restriction
restrictions.
Other people start Rosh Chodesh Iyar and
they go until 3 days before Shavuot,
with Lag BaOmer being a hiatus,
and yet other people start after Rosh
Chodesh, they go until Erev Shavuot,
because they lose 2 days, and Lag BaOmer
is a hiatus. There are other variations
of minhagim as well, but those are the
most common three variations.
And what are you not allowed to do? We
don't get haircuts, we don't make
weddings,
uh and the minhag is we don't listen to
at least live music. If you want to
listen to a cappella or you want to
listen to recorded music, uh consult
your local Orthodox rabbi as to whether
that would be permitted. But no matter
how you describe it and no matter what
the exact days are,
this is a period of aveilus, a period of
mourning, a period of a certain sadness,
which on one level is inconsistent
with the preparation for Kabbalat
HaTorah, which is supposed to be joyous.
But we are told that during this period
of time,
the 24,000 students of Rabbi Akiva
died,
and there's a machlokes, did they die in
1 year? Did they die over several years?
But whether it was one time or several
times,
it was during the period of time between
Pesach and Shavuot,
and therefore we mourn the deaths of the
talmidim of Rabbi Akiva.
Now, one raises a question,
uh granted, 24,000 deaths is a very very
tragic event,
but unfortunately, in our long and
tragic history, we have experienced
worse. The Holocaust, 6 million Jews,
Crusades, pogroms, uh there was a larger
loss of life. So why is it that we're
making such a big deal
about the students of Rabbi Akiva?
And there's really two answers
uh that I think you can give to this
question. First, you have to understand
that this is not just the numbers game.
24,000 students of Rabbi Akiva were
basically
transmission
of Torah learning
to the next generation.
When they were killed and Rabbi Akiva
was left with only five disciples,
the whole existence of Torah in Am
Yisrael
was literally hanging on a thread.
This was indeed worse than the
Holocaust. Numerically, the Holocaust
was much much greater,
but
by that time in the world, we had some
yeshivas, we had people living in
different countries.
The absolute, God forbid, possible loss
of Torah
was much much greater in the aftermath
of the deaths of the students of Rabbi
Akiva, and if God forbid Torah learning
would have been destroyed from Am
Yisrael,
one does not even know what the
repercussions are. You know, the Chazal
tell us that the world was created so
that the Jewish people would keep the
Torah and learn the Torah.
If you don't have Torah learning,
then Rachmana l'itzlan, God forbid,
perhaps the entire universe would come
to an end.
So as a result, you really cannot just
compare numbers, you have to look at
what these 24,000 students represented.
But more significantly, I think the
reason why we focus on the 24,000
students is because Chazal gave us a
definitive reason for their death,
and therefore we have a particular
message to contemplate. When we think
about the other tragedies that have
befallen the Jewish people,
we're not prophets.
We don't have definitive teachings of
our rabbis
as to why something happened.
The Holocaust, people still debate
exactly what is the divine message.
So as a result, we can mourn, we can
grieve,
but we don't really know what it is
we're supposed to rectify and fix.
Masha ain't came
with respect to the talmidim of Rabbi
Akiva,
it's not so much that we are
commemorating or remembering a tragedy,
but rather by focusing on the reason
that is given for their deaths,
we are able to rectify and make positive
changes in our own lives, and thus the
contemplation of this tragedy
is especially meaningful and relevant
because we have the mafte'ach, we have
the key
that can enable us to make a tikkun, to
make a rectification.
And the key, of course, is a statement
in the Gemara Yevamot
that the students of Rabbi Akiva died
because they did not show proper kavod
zeh lazeh, they did not show proper
honor and respect
to each other.
And
what does that mean exactly?
Surely,
I wasn't there, I'm not that old, but
surely if we would be able to have a
video
of the students of Rabbi Akiva,
I think it would be safe to assume that
they weren't pushing each other out of
line, they weren't calling each other
idiots, they were not speaking lashon
hara about each other.
There is no doubt
that the students of Rabbi Akiva
followed
the rules as later codified in the
Shulchan Aruch.
They followed all of the laws bein adam
lechavero.
They were not acting in a disrespectful,
dismissive manner.
So, what do Chazal mean they did not
show kavod
for each other?
So, Rav Shimshon Raphael Hirsch offers a
very beautiful insight.
He says, "Kavod is not a matter of
behavior, it's a certain matter of
attitude.
The shoresh of kavod comes from kaved.
Kaved means heavy.
Having kavod for another person doesn't
mean being nice to them, and it doesn't
mean being polite to them, because I
could be nice and polite to somebody,
but functionally consider them my
inferior.
Kavod is I look at another person
and I see the godliness within them,
and I see that they are weighty, they
are significant,
they have gravitas,
that there is something worthwhile and
good and radiant and holy about them.
And that is the idea of kavod. And what
Chazal are telling me, telling us is
that although the students of Rabbi
Akiva undoubtedly behaved politely to
each other,
for whatever reason, perhaps because
they had such a great rebbe that they
thought they didn't need each other,
they just connected to Rabbi Akiva,
they did not view each other as being
worthy, they did not look at their
colleague and say, "You're a person of
heft, you're a person of gravitas,
you're a person of significance, you're
a person that is betzelem Elokim."
And because of this,
they were taken from the world. But here
is the thing,
they were not taken from the world as a
punishment for sin.
They were taken from the world because
if they were supposed to be the
transmitters of Torah to the next
generation,
if they did not have kavod for each
other,
if they did not see the goodness and the
godliness of each other,
they were not properly situated
to be the teachers of Torah for the next
generation,
and therefore they were taken away.
Because a teacher, above all,
must look at their fellow Jew,
whether it's their students or their
colleagues,
with a sense of kavod.
The Torah could not have been given to
Am Yisrael,
and it was not given to Am Yisrael
till we were on the level of ish echad
u'lev echad, one man, one heart.
And so too in every generation,
as we re-accept God's Torah,
and as we re-transmit God's Torah to
others,
we have to be on the level of ish echad
u'lev echad.
And those
who see divisiveness, those who foster
polarization,
and those who are even just indifferent
to the godliness of others,
cannot be the ones
who hold on and maintain and transmit
the heritage of Torah.
And this is why the students of Rabbi
Akiva died, and this is why we
contemplate their death
specifically during this period,
because this is part and parcel of our
hachanah
for matan Torah. And that explains why
it's not a contradiction, because
otherwise one could raise the question,
"I prepare for matan Torah, it's
supposed to be a time of simcha and joy,
and then you tell me I have to mourn the
deaths of the students of Rabbi Akiva,
which is sadness and tragedy." But the
answer is, it's part and parcel of the
same thing, because part of how I
prepare myself for matan Torah
is to try to work on achieving the level
of ish echad
u'lev echad. So, the issue of mourning
the students of Rabbi Akiva
is not a question of being sad,
it's a question of contemplating why
they died,
and resolving in whatever way I can
to overcome the failure
that caused their destruction.
Needless to say, and again, I think
we've spoken about it numerous times,
this sickness, this inability to see the
good in the other,
is a machalah, is a sickness that very
much still exists within us
to this very day.
It is ma'akev, it holds back the geulah,
it prevents the building of the Beit
Hamikdash.
It is a factor that is responsible for
so much suffering
in Am Yisrael and in the world.
And this is a wonderful period of time
when we can think about this. What can I
do as an individual? Yes, I am only one
person,
but as Helen Keller once remarked in a
similar context, "Yes, I am only one
person,
but I am one person.
And as a person,
I can do something
in my family,
in my community,
in my shul,
with my friends,
to reach out to others.
And one has to know, when I reach out to
others, a great mitzvah.
It's not that I am the repository of
wisdom and they are worthless and I'm
there to fill them up with my wisdom,
but it must be in the context of mutual
respect, in which I come to learn from
you and not only to teach you.
I come to benefit from what you have to
offer me,
as well as what I can potentially offer
you.
And when you have that mutuality of
respect,
then as Hamelech says, "As water
reflects the face that you show it." I
show the water a smiling face, I get a
smile.
So too, I see the godliness in you,
and you will see the godliness in me.
I am willing to learn from what you have
to offer, you will learn from what I
have to offer, and then we have achdus,
unity, then we have shleimus, then we
have togetherness.
And then we are ish echad u'lev echad,
and then we are ready for matan Torah.
So now we come,
or we're leaving Lag BaOmer.
Now, Lag BaOmer is either the end of the
mourning restrictions, or at least it's
a heiyetes, or a break.
So, some people will make weddings after
Lag BaOmer, some people will make
weddings only on Lag BaOmer,
and they will not make a make weddings
afterwards.
And I don't want to get too much into
the halacha, but Moshe Feinstein has a
very interesting teshuvah.
It's a worthwhile psak to be aware of.
Let's imagine that I start my Sefirat
HaOmer restrictions on Rosh Chodesh Iyar
and I go until 3 days before Shavuot,
and Lag BaOmer is a break for me, but I
do resume the restrictions after Lag
BaOmer,
and my friend starts from the second day
of Pesach and ends the mourning
restrictions on Lag BaOmer,
and he's getting married after Lag
BaOmer, he's getting married the 34th
day of the Omer, the 40th day of the
Omer. I'm invited to the wedding.
Now, for him and his kallah, there is no
prohibition because they have ended
their mourning restrictions.
Am I allowed to go to a wedding
that is not within the mourning period
of the chasan and the kallah,
but it is within my mourning period?
So, Rav Moshe is mechadesh a very, very
interesting psak.
Rav Moshe Feinstein actually writes
that there is no prohibition of going to
weddings during Sefirah.
The prohibition is to get married during
Sefirah. The prohibition is to make a
wedding, not to go to a wedding. And
therefore
as long as the wedding is permitted
for the chasan and the kallah, so we're
not talking about going to a
non-religious wedding, we're talking
about the chasan and the kallah kept the
Sefirah laws
up until Lag BaOmer,
and if the wedding is permitted for
them, I am allowed to attend as a guest
and even though I'll be listening to
music, but this is music that is part of
a mitzvah
and therefore it's permitted and Reb
Moshe even says, I would be allowed to
take a haircut and a shave if otherwise
I would look disrespectful
because the whole issur is the making of
the wedding or the getting married, it
is not going to the wedding itself. So
that's an important halakha for people
to be aware of that if your friend is
getting Well, of course, this year it'll
probably be a Zoom wedding so you you
have less of a problem, although you
still may have music,
but even if you were to attend the
wedding as a live guest
according to Reb Moshe, you would be
allowed to do so even if your um
aveilus even if your mourning
restrictions extend after Lag B'Omer.
But be it as it may,
Lag B'Omer all of a sudden becomes a
festive day, a joyous day, a break
in the aveilus of Sefirah.
Why is that so? What is the great
significance
of Lag B'Omer, the 33rd day of the Omer?
So
I'm going to give you three reasons,
interestingly enough,
uh two of the reasons uh have their
source in our religious tradition
and one of the reasons was the secular
Zionist take on Lag B'Omer, which is
very very interesting. Lag B'Omer uh
became kind of a festive day in the
secular Israeli Zionist calendar
for reasons that are a little different
than our mesorah, which is very very
interesting, kind of a redefinition of
Lag B'Omer.
In fact, um with apologies to Charles
Dickens, who wrote A Tale of Two Cities,
you could actually describe Lag B'Omer
as a tale of two Shimons.
And again, I I don't want to take credit
for that. Those are very brilliant uh
essay written by Rebbi Yehuda
Oppenheimer
and I've also seen this in some other
sources as well.
The religious take on Lag B'Omer
is it is the day
that the great Tanna, Rebbi Shimon bar
Yochai, Rashbi,
died, departed from the world.
And uh the question is obvious, of
course, uh why would you celebrate the
day that he departed from the world?
Normally the death of a great tzaddik is
a tragedy, is something sad.
So the tradition is that on the day that
Rebbi Shimon bar Yochai departed from
the world,
he revealed the great mystical secrets
which are the foundation of the Zohar
and that was the day that great holiness
and great insight and great wisdom
came into the world
and as a result we celebrate
what Reb Shimon bar Yochai gave us. Now,
that is the source of the celebrations
in Meron.
Uh Meron in a normal year has close to a
quarter million
uh Jews who go to Meron to pray at the
grave of Rebbi Shimon bar Yochai
and that's basically it's called Hilula
d'Rashbi. Hilula means the celebration
of Rashbi, Rebbi Shimon bar Yochai, and
it's based on the idea that Reb Shimon
bar Yochai died on Lag B'Omer and
revealed the teachings of the Zohar.
Now, to be totally intellectually
honest, I have to tell you
that it's not entirely clear that
there's a basis for this idea.
What is the source
that Rashbi died on Lag B'Omer? It is
not in Chazal, it's not in the Gemara,
it's not in the Medrash. The source are
the writings of the Ari. Actually, the
Ari zal did not write anything, but the
Ari's writings are the writings of his
disciple,
Reb Chaim Vital,
and in one of the most important uh
writings of the Ari called the Pri Etz
Chaim,
which discusses the holidays Kabbalistic
teachings about Shabbos and Yom Tov,
it mentions that the Ari zal used to go
to Meron on Lag B'Omer and pray by the
kever of Reb Shimon bar Yochai. Again,
the Ari zal lived in Tzfat and if you
know the geography, you'll know that um
you can walk from Tzfat to the old city
of Tzfat to Meron in around an hour
hike, you know, go down the mountain, go
up the mountain, you're in Meron
and the reason why he celebrated is
because Yom
shemeis
bo,
Rebbi Shimon bar Yochai,
because it was the day that Rebbi Shimon
bar Yochai died. That is the source of
the tradition
that Lag B'Omer is the yahrtzeit of
Rebbi Shimon bar Yochai. But the reason
why that's problematical is in the
earliest manuscript editions
of the Pri Etz Chaim before printing,
it does not say Yom shemeis bo, Rebbi
Shimon bar Yochai,
it says Yom simchat.
In other words, shemeis is three
letters, shin, mem, samach.
But the original word seems to have been
simchat, which is four letters, shin,
mem,
ches, samach, the day of the rejoicing
of Reb Shimon bar Yochai. Now, that's a
little bit of an ambiguous phrase, but
that just might mean the day that he
revealed the Zohar and not that he died
that day.
In later editions, the ches got dropped.
So what was originally vocalized as
simchat
became shemeis.
So the question becomes
uh is shemeis an interpretation of
simchat
or does it or is it a mistake? So the
truth of the matter is
uh you can debate and people are
debating whether the Ari zal's position
was that Reb Shimon bar Yochai actually
died or did not die on Lag B'Omer.
Nevertheless,
it is more or less mekabel in Am Yisrael
that this is the yahrtzeit of Rebbi
Shimon bar Yochai and we rejoice because
it was a time of great great simcha.
Uh and that is the celebrations of
Meron, which I say in a in a normal year
can attract a quarter million people of
all types, Chassidim, Misnagdim, many
many Sefardim, many Chilonim, many
secular Jews who are not religious also
come to participate in the simcha and
be'ezrat Hashem next year we should be
zocheh, those who are able to do it who
want to do it should be able to go there
in in in person.
Now,
in 1948 and even before 1948, the
Israeli Zionists
wanted to find another meaning in Lag
B'Omer, which again is historically very
specious,
and they connected it to another Shimon
who was a great student
or at least a follower of Rebbi Akiva
and that is Shimon ben Kosiba
who led a great revolt against the
Romans around 65 years
after the destruction of the Temple.
Rebbi Akiva named Shimon ben Kosiba
bar Kochba,
the son of a star,
because the Mashiach is described as a
star that comes out of heaven
and Rebbi Akiva actually believed
that bar Kochba
was Mashiach
and Rebbi Akiva lent his tremendous
stature
to the bar Kochba revolt
and bar Kochba initially was quite
successful. Bar Kochba recaptured from
the Romans
more than 900 villages and settlements.
And there is archaeological evidence
that under the guidance of Rebbi Akiva,
they began to lay the foundations
of a third Temple
in Jerusalem.
But Hadrian
retaliated with overwhelming force.
Almost half I mean this is quite
astounding. Historians are still
wondering why is Hadrian so concerned
about a backwater rebellion
in the province of Judea?
But Hadrian sent, this is just
astounding,
50% almost 50% of the entire army of the
whole Roman Empire
to squash this rebellion.
And it was devastating. In terms of
numbers, in fact, this was the fall of
Betar.
In terms of numbers,
the numbers of Jews that were murdered
in Betar
were much greater
than even the number that were killed in
the aftermath of the Churban Beis
Hamikdash. And by the way, our tradition
has it that the fall of Betar also
occurred on the 9th of Av.
65 years apart. From the year 60, 70 is
the Churban and 65 years later is 135,
the fall of Betar.
But more than the loss of life,
all of those stories that we read about
the Roman persecution of Judaism, you're
not allowed to teach Torah, Rebbi Akiva
is tortured to death,
his flesh is being flayed by iron combs,
all of that was not in the aftermath of
the Churban Beis Hamikdash. After the
Churban Beis Hamikdash,
as devastating as that was,
Jews were still allowed to learn Torah
and keep mitzvos.
But after the Churban of Betar,
Hadrian abolished Torah teaching,
mitzvah observance.
Jews were banished from Jerusalem for
over 200 years. The city was turned into
Aelia Capitolina, a city that was a
shrine to Jupiter
and only once a year
Jews were allowed to come to Jerusalem,
circle the walls from the outside on the
9th of Av.
And that is why it became an ancient
custom that some observe even today.
Then on the 9th of Av, you walk around
the walls of Jerusalem either on ground
level or
some people go on top of the walls,
although you cannot go all the way
around
across the ramparts. But that is an
ancient minhag Yerushalayim
that dates from the time of Hadrian
in the aftermath of Bar Kokhba.
The secular Zionist movement
saw Bar Kokhba as heroic.
Saw Bar Saw Bar Kokhba kind of an
anachronistic flashback
as someone who was no longer the galus
Jew
who submitted to the
but the Jew that was heroic, the Jew
that was willing to fight back, the Jew
that waged war against the enemy.
Now, how they got that connected to Lag
BaOmer is historically very specious,
but they wanted to connect Lag BaOmer to
the story of Rabbi Shimon Bar Kokhba.
Now, the truth of the matter is the Bar
Kokhba revolt is still
a very controversial part of Jewish
history.
Do we look at it as heroic?
Do we look at it as an example of
courage and strength?
Or do we look at it as a foolish mistake
with tragic consequences?
But be it as it may,
I think it's a beautiful encapsulation
of kind of the major divides in Israeli
society.
A tale of two Shimons.
Shimon bar Yochai,
the epitome of spirituality,
Torah learning, holiness,
and Shimon bar Kokhba,
militarism, heroism,
might is right.
And
perhaps the fact that Lag BaOmer
represents these two ideas
maybe is a reminder that each side needs
to appreciate
what the other has to offer.
The Bar Kokhba aspect must appreciate
the spirituality of Shimon bar Yochai.
And as I mentioned I think in connection
with Yom Ha'atzmaut,
the factor that celebrates Rav Shimon
bar Yochai
must also appreciate
those who build up the land of Israel,
the state of Israel
in a physical way,
whether it's by military service,
whether it's by cultivating the land,
whether it's by building the
infrastructure
that enables Torah
to flourish and the Jewish people
to have a homeland to go back to.
So, in a sense, one could actually say
that this tale of two Shimons
might be the key. If we could integrate
the two Shimons and appreciate both of
them,
we will have achieved much that Lag
BaOmer is supposed to teach us and
elevate us.
But I had mentioned there are three
ideas of Lag BaOmer. So, one is the
religious connection to Rav Shimon bar
Yochai.
The other is the
made-up historical connection to Bar
Kokhba because as I say, uh even if you
celebrate Bar Kokhba, there's no
particular reason why it would be Lag
BaOmer, but that was the kind of the day
that was
uh chosen
by the Zionist movement and that is
indeed the teaching in the typical
Israeli public school. If you go to a
mamlachti school,
where they do teach about the holidays
in a non-halakhic way, Lag BaOmer will
be described as the festival
commemorating the courage of the Bar
Kokhba revolt. That is how it is taught
in a secular school.
But there is a third teaching
uh that is very very significant, which
is perhaps the best known,
and that is Lag BaOmer
was the cessation
of the tragic deaths of the students of
Rabbi Akiva. Meaning they were dying
and Lag BaOmer they stopped dying.
Now, obviously it doesn't mean they
stopped dying because everybody was
gone. If that would be the case, that
would not be any celebration.
But apparently there were some students
who didn't die. Meaning to say it
stopped at a certain point.
And Lag BaOmer was the cessation
of the magefa.
Now, whether it resumed after Lag BaOmer
or whether it permanently stopped, that
would depend on the different customs.
Those who stop mourning after Lag BaOmer
say Lag BaOmer was the end of the
magefa.
Those who continue say Lag BaOmer was an
interruption in the magefa,
but unfortunately it did continue
afterwards.
So, I want to explore a little bit
what would be the spiritual significance
of the magefa
stopping
on Lag BaOmer.
Why Lag BaOmer?
So, here I need to draw a little bit on
some Kabbalistic teaching.
We know that one of the central
teachings of Kabbalah
is that God interacts with the universe
on all of its many many levels
through the medium that is called the 10
Sefirot. Sefirot
are not separate entities, but they are
various channels and pipelines
through which God interacts with the
universe.
And they represent different aspects
writes
that the Sefirot can be analogized
to different colored glasses. If you
have a blue glass, a red glass, a green
glass,
so you pour water in a red glass, then
the water looks red from the outside.
But it's the same water, but it's
perceived in a different way because
there's a different manifestation. So,
Sefirot
are by all means not a
denial of the unity of God. It is a
unity of God,
but perceptually there are going to be
different manifestations.
Now, obviously we're going to cover this
in a very simplistic way,
but uh you'll see how it connects to the
Omer.
So, the 10 Sefirot are divided into two
groups. You have the
first three Sefirot,
which are called the mukhin. Mukhin are
the brains of God.
They are the mental operations of of of
the uh of Hakadosh Baruch Hu.
And then you have the behavioral
manifestations,
which are called the midot.
So, the first three Sefirot
go by the name keter,
crown,
chokhmah, wisdom,
binah, understanding,
and they refer so to speak to the
internal deliberations within God
as to what he wants to do in the world.
The analogy to human thought processes
are
keter
refers to will.
In other words, a person If a person
wants to create something,
so the very first stage in his creating
something is the will to create. That
will is a very mysterious. That will is
hidden. It emerges from the
subconscious.
A will, a desire.
Then there's chokhmah.
That is the first flash of what I want
to do. I want to build a house.
Then there's binah,
which is the development of the house.
You think about the blueprint, what it
will look like.
Keter is will.
Chokhmah is the initial flash of an
idea.
Binah is the development of the idea.
In the Kabbalah of the Ari, chokhmah is
a male attribute, just like the sperm,
the little seed that comes out.
Binah, which is the development
of an idea,
is the feminine aspect. Just as a woman
takes the sperm and when it fertilizes
her egg in her body, it gets developed
into a fetus, into an ultimate human
being.
So, that's called the mukhin. That
refers to God's deliberative states.
But then there's an expression of those
states in behavior and emotion.
And the Just to enumerate them, the
lower seven Sefirot
chesed,
loving kindness,
gevurah,
inner strength,
tiferet, beauty,
netzach, eternity, victory, endurance,
hod, glory,
yesod, foundation,
and the last is malchut, kingship.
Now,
we'll come back to this in a moment to
give a little more flesh on the bones,
but keep in mind that the mekubalim
related
every single week
of counting of the Omer
to a particular sefirah of the lower
seven Sefirot.
So, the first week of the Omer, which of
course is the week of Pesach itself,
is said to be the week of loving
kindness.
The second week of the Omer is said to
be the gevurah, the the the week of
strength. The third week is tiferet.
I Every week is connected one of the
Sefirot.
Now, let's think about this a little
bit.
The way to understand the seven lower
Sefirot
is to understand
that they comprise two triads
with a final receptacle of the net
result of those triads.
Let's take Hesed, Gevurah, Tiferet,
which are called the Gimel Be Shanas,
the first three of these spheres, the
lower seven spheres.
Hesed
is kindness, compassion, giving.
On one hand, all of us turn to God,
and we want God to shower us, to give us
mercy, to give us rachamim, to give us
love.
So, Hesed is a wonderful thing. That is
the essence of what God is. God is
essentially Hesed.
And that is why it is number one.
But Hesed can have a destructive force.
Too much Hesed, the light of God could
be so strong
that we could be shattered and destroyed
by an abundance of God's light.
And therefore, the middah of Hesed
has to be counterbalanced with restraint
and withholding.
Otherwise, we get blinded. Otherwise, we
get shattered. Otherwise, we get
obliterated.
And therefore, just as you have thesis,
antithesis, and synthesis,
so too you have Hesed,
which has to be balanced with restraint
and withdrawal.
And in human relationships, it's the
very same thing.
On one hand,
you know, I have Hesed. I'm kind,
compassionate.
But I also have to have towards my
children
discipline, restraint, and boundaries.
Too much Hesed,
I become burnt out.
Too much Hesed,
my kids lose their teeth from all of the
chocolate.
So, Hesed has to be balanced with
withdrawal and constraint, both in terms
of my own burn out
and in terms of what my own children or
students or spouse needs in life.
So, the middah of Hesed is the impulse
of giving.
And the middah of Gevurah is the impulse
of withdrawal.
And all of life is this balance. When do
I give? When do I hold back?
Too much Hesed is destructive. Too much
Gevurah is cruel.
And therefore,
Hesed and Gevurah need to be balanced
with a mediating principle.
And the mediating principle is Tiferet,
number three.
Tiferet is beauty. Beauty is the proper
balance and reconciliation
between Hesed and Gevurah,
both as reflected in human behavior
and ultimately as reflected in God's
interaction with the universe.
We don't want too much rain.
It'll flood us.
We certainly don't want too much
drought.
There's a certain balance that needs to
be achieved. But the balance that is
achieved on the divine level
is a function of being connected to the
balance we achieve
as individuals and as a nation.
God is our shadow, says David Hamelech.
Just as the shadow goes wherever you go,
so too Hashem responds
to how we behave.
So, Chagat, Hesed, Gevurah, Tiferet,
is the first triad
that represents two opposite forces
that need to be reconciled and balanced,
both on the divine level through our
prayers, our mitzvahs, our good deeds,
our ahavat Yisrael,
and in our human behavior.
But then there is a second triad that
represents a different type of conflict.
Even if I as an individual have properly
balanced the giving impulse
and the containment impulse,
I have the Hesed and the Gevurah that
are balanced by Tiferet,
there is another problem that I face.
Often,
even a person who has properly balanced
these spiritual imperatives
will be defeated by factors external to
themselves.
This may be the lack of support from
their family, bad friends, a negative
environment,
economic pressures.
Life often defeats us. The vicissitudes
of life
may be overwhelming.
Netzach
is the capacity
to achieve victory, endurance, and
eternity
over the external experiences and people
in your life
who can defeat you and drag you down.
That is the quality of Netzach.
And Netzach is so necessary because it's
not enough
to have the right perceptions and the
right ideas.
We also need the strength and the
resilience and the courage
not to be crushed
by those factors outside of our own
personalities.
But
just as too much Hesed can be
destructive and it needs to be balanced
with Gevurah,
too much Netzach
can be destructive.
Because as you cultivate and intensify
your ability not to be affected by
others,
the great danger is you become a
steamroller,
ignoring other people in favor of your
dreams.
Imagine, for example,
that you've decided
you want to get up every morning at 4:00
and learn Torah for 3 hours before
davening.
But if you're a single person, you have
a roommate.
And you wake up loudly, and you prepare
yourself, and your roommate says to you,
"Gee, I really would like to sleep a
little longer." And you say, "How dare
you interfere
with what I'm doing? I'm doing
mitzvahs."
But you understand
that to ignore other people
is not an act of righteousness.
It's an act of callous disregard
for kavod habriyos.
So, the same way Hesed
needs Gevurah,
Netzach needs to be balanced with
another quality,
which is called Hod.
Hod is
radiance, seeing the good of the other,
stepping back, understanding that the
other person also has legitimate needs
and a legitimate viewpoint.
So, Netzach is the idea, "I will do what
I need to do no matter what." Hod is the
idea of stepping back and seeing the
other.
But you understand the problem.
Too much Netzach, you're a steamroller.
Too much Hod, you abandon your dreams
and your aspirations
in favor of just deferring to other
people.
So, the same way Hesed and Gevurah
have to be balanced with a mediating
principle called Tiferet, beauty,
Netzach and Hod
have to be balanced with a mediating
principle
called Yesod.
Yesod is the balance between not being
discouraged, not being broken, not being
crushed
by the views of others,
but it allows you to balance being
receptive
to what they stand for.
So, in the seven spheres, we have two
triads, Hesed, Gevurah, Tiferet,
which is the giving and the containment
impulse.
And then we have uh not being crushed by
others, but being deferential to others,
which is the Netzach, Hod, Yesod.
And once again, these work on the divine
level, they work on the human level. And
the divine level is influenced by the
human level.
And when all of these things are
balanced, coordinated in the proper way,
we now have the seventh sphere,
which is Malchus, God's kingship is
fully revealed in the world with all the
proper colors,
in all the proper proportions.
There is balance.
There is harmony.
There is symmetry.
Things are working the way they are
supposed to be working. A world of
kindness with appropriate boundaries.
A world of courage with appropriate
deference and respect for the needs of
others. This reveals the Malchus of
Hashem. That is why the Zohar says that
Malchus is an empty vessel because
Malchus is nothing more than the conduit
through which all of these balancings
flow
because it happens automatically when
things are in the proper proportion,
God's name is glorified.
Obviously, there's a lot more to talk
about here, but let me just point out
that the Kabbalists identify
a great personality from the Torah or
from the Tanakh
who exemplifies in his life
the highest
of each of these seven spheres.
So, the week of Hesed
is the week of Avraham Avinu,
who lived a life devoted to loving
kindness.
The week of Gevurah
is the week of Yitzchak,
who exemplified inner strength and
conviction.
The week of Tiferet, beauty, is Yaakov
Avinu, who harmonized the middot of
Avraham and Yitzchak.
Netzach, not being crushed by the
vicissitudes and challenges of life, is
Moshe Rabbenu,
who led an unruly nation
and stayed the course, no matter what.
Aharon,
who is the lover of peace, the pursuer
of peace,
represents Hod, seeing the glory of the
other.
So, you'll notice that four and five is
Moshe and Aharon. Number six is Yosef,
who is said to combine the Netzach and
the Hod.
That's why Kabbalistically it's out of
chronological order. Yosef was first,
but in Kabbalah, Moshe is four, Aharon
is five,
and Yosef represents the synthesis,
culminating
in the seventh week, the last week of
the Omer,
the week of David Hamelech,
who represents Malchut of Hashem,
the ultimate expression
of God's kingdom on Earth.
So, now,
let's take this a little further.
I'm sure many of you have studied the
idea
that it's not only each week that is
connected to a Sefirah,
but because there are seven days in each
week,
each day is connected
to a Sefirah as well.
So, for example,
the first day of the Omer
is called Now, there's the second night
of Pesach.
It is called Hesed she be Hesed,
the day of kindness
that is situated in the week of
kindness. Hesed she be Hesed.
The second day of the Omer is called
Gevurah she be Hesed,
which means every Sefirah has all 10
Sefirot in it, or for our purposes, all
seven in it.
Meaning, just like there's a Hesed,
Gevurah, Tiferet, Netzach, Hod, Yesod,
Malchut, within Hesed, there is Hesed,
Gevurah, Tiferet, Netzach, Hod, Yesod,
Malchut.
And this can get very, very complicated,
because what exactly would the
difference be
between the second day of the Omer,
which is called the Hesed It's called
Gevurah of Hesed,
and the first day of the second week,
that is called the Hesed of Gevurah?
And although, you know, it's pretty late
in the Omer, there's some beautiful
calendars and sefarim, in English and in
Hebrew, that try to explain in a
practical one-sentence or two-sentence
way
what the unique configuration of day and
week is supposed to represent.
So, what is the Hesed of Gevurah? What
is the Gevurah of Hesed? What is Tiferet
of Yesod? All of these different things.
So, now, though,
let's ask ourselves, based on this kind
of linking,
linkage
between day and week,
what is Lag BaOmer
on those two coordinates?
So, last night,
when we counted Lag BaOmer,
we said,
Hayom shloshim
yom, right? Today is 33 days,
she heim she she heim arba shevuot,
they are four weeks,
ve chamisha yamim, and five days in the
Omer. Now, it's a little confusing. You
think when you cuz because since you
said four weeks, you think you're in the
fourth week, but you understand when you
finished four weeks,
you're actually in the fifth week.
So, Lag BaOmer
is the fifth day
of the fifth week in the Omer.
Now,
how would you describe that in terms of
Sefirot?
Hod. It is the day of glory
she be Hod
in the week of glory.
What is the middah of Hod, and who does
it correspond to?
The middah of Hod corresponds to Aharon.
And Hod she be Hod
is
a double dose of Aharon.
Hod is
the middah
of receptivity to the other.
Hod is seeing the goodness of the other.
Hod is letting the other person shine
instead of you trying to get the credit
narcissistically.
And this was the middah of Aharon,
because unlike Moshe Rabbenu, whose task
was to push the agenda, that was Moshe's
task, Netzach,
Aharon
was the ohev shalom,
rodeph shalom.
So,
this actually means
on Lag BaOmer,
the spiritual aura that comes down from
Shamayim
is the aura that enables me to be
mistabek, to attach myself
to the middah of Aharon Hakohen.
That is the koach of Lag BaOmer.
Now,
if the students of Rabbi Akiva died
because they did not see the kavod in
each other,
Lag BaOmer enabled them to transcend
their limitations.
And when they were liberated
from the spiritual affliction
that didn't enable them to see the kavod
of the other,
the plague went away as well.
Maybe it came back the next day, that's
a machlokes,
but be chol hapachot,
when you have the middah of Aharon,
if the mageifah comes because I don't
see your kavod, I don't see your worth,
and Lag BaOmer is a koach that gives me
the ability to see your worth,
if I tap into it,
I become liberated
from the mageifah.
So, that would be the spiritual
significance.
You know, this is a message
that once again can be very, very
relevant to this time.
We live in a time where the world is
facing a plague of sorts,
the coronavirus,
devastating, dangerous.
It's changed our lives in all sorts of
unpredictable ways. Even the people who,
baruch Hashem, didn't get sick,
but the quarantines, the economic
devastation,
the social isolation,
the disruption
of everyday life.
Unfortunately, unlike the deaths of
Rabbi Akiva, where we're given a
definitive reason, we don't have a
definitive reason here.
But if we do connect the idea, at least
as a possibility,
that just as in the days of Rabbi Akiva,
a mageifah comes to the world
because we don't show proper kavod to
each other,
then perhaps the hashpa'ah of Lag BaOmer
can help us as well.
That if we open our hearts to absorb the
middah of Aharon Hakohen,
lover of peace, pursuer of peace,
ohev es habriyot, one who loves God's
creatures,
and bring them to the Torah,
perhaps we, too,
can be liberated
from the mageifah
that is destroying us.
So, the message of Lag BaOmer
is very, very, very powerful.
Again, I hope and I pray that all of
Klal Yisrael
and all of the world
should see the refuah, should see the
yeshuah of Hashem
very, very soon.
And may all of this be a precursor to
the ultimate yeshuas Hashem
of Mashiach Tzidkenu,
Binyan Beit Hamikdash,
that we should be zocheh bimheira
veyameinu, amen. Thank you.