Transcript
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[Music]
everybody I'm glad you come as I I think
I've told you before since most of my
teaching most of everybody's teaching is
via zoom there's a special pleasure for
me to be able to talk to some real human
beings in person it actually makes it
much easier to communicate so even
though it might be a little bit of an
inconvenience to you all I do appreciate
your your coming outs and I'm not sure
if you encountered any transportation
problems I had to get off a bus because
there were some demonstrations and then
a cab had to go to a lot of circuitous
routes I'm not sure what's going on but
in usual I am you know we are among all
the other wonderful things of yours line
we are also the city of demonstrations
things will often happen that'll be a
little inconvenient but this is included
in what our harkaman called safar halika
the reward of getting to a place getting
to a mitzvah is also considered to be
part of the merit of the Mitzvah itself
we are in the period of time that is
called the three weeks beginning with
the 17th of Tammuz and ending with the
ninth of of this is a period of 21 days
it also goes by the term Baynham it's a
rim which literally means between the
narrow places like in English we have an
expression between a rock and a hard
place
and that is this is a period of time
that is bracketed on the 17th of Tammuz
well it all depends you connect you can
connect it to the tower and then you can
connect it to the Corbin base and Mick -
in terms of the Torah the 17th of Tammuz
was actually the day that moshe rabbeinu
came down from mount sinai it is the
40th day from Schmauss and that is the
day where he saw the golden calf and he
smashed the lukas that happened on the
17th of Tammuz the ninth of us was the
day after the spies came back the spies
came back on the 8th of us they gave
their devastating reports that night
which is the night of the ninth of of
the Jewish people cried they lacked
faith and God decreed that they would
die in the desert
and only their children would enter so
that's the 9th of out so the 17th of
Tammuz is connected to the faith of the
Marah glim and the 9 and I'm sorry the
faith of the AYGO the golden calf and
the 9th above is connected to the fate
of the moraga limb but in later times
particularly during the Second Temple
the 17th of Tammuz was when the Romans
broke into Jerusalem after a siege that
had lasted several years and three weeks
later they burnt the base on Macduff and
the ninth of us so this period is called
Benham it's arrium and it's a time that
we think about how we rebuild the base
of McNish and the way we rebuild the
base and make dutch is not so much by
doing something external on the Temple
Mount
that's kind of the job of Messiah until
Messiah comes our job is not to engage
in physical construction of the temple
but our job is to construct a temple of
our heart and our soul as the Pacific
says when the Jewish people were
commanded about the Michigan feel so li
mikdash make for God a sanctuary the
shikhandi becomes so I will dwell in
them meaning the real Michigan of God
the tabernacle of God the sanctuary of
Hashem is not in a building the
sanctuary of Hashem is in our heart and
in our soul and the temple gets
destroyed when we are no longer worthy
of having a Shem in our heart and the
sanctuary gets restored when we become
people who are capable of having God in
our hearts and that is how we rebuild
the base on McNish so therefore this is
a period of time that is not just
connected to morning it is connected to
introspection and thoughts about how do
you repoter you build a temple a
sanctuary for our College Bartow in our
heart I'm sure you've heard it's
beautiful song as well the very
beautiful phrase Belvoir v Michigan
ethnic
in my heart I will build a Michigan a
sanctuary a dwelling place for Hashem
that is the avodah of a Jew in many many
ways to make our heart in our soul a
dwelling place for God and when that
happens when there's enough of a
critical mass of people who do that
Aveda do that service then the Third
Temple comes down from heaven and it
establishes with finality that God is
here by the way you Shalom is going to
be renamed at the end of the book of
your Cesco it's very very interesting so
it says the name of Jerusalem shall be
when the third temple is rebuilt Hashem
Shama God is there and because I'll
actually say the word Shama without
vowels could be vocalized Hashem Shama
God is its name the very city is going
to be identified with God Michelle I'm
has many many names I think there's
something like 30 or 40 different names
in enough for Jerusalem but the final
name that it's going to get in Hashem
Shama the UK vodka the tetragrammaton
Hashem is there and that is what it
means in building the mikdash what is
the there there there is not just the
Temple Mount that there is in our heart
and in our soul so that's what we think
about so let me just mention very very
quickly I'm only going to talk about one
of these three but I'm going to mention
three associations that Reposado the
great specificity of southwark of lublin
makes about the three weeks and then
I'll develop at greater length one of
those three the other two I'll leave for
maybe next week he points out the
following he points out number one that
when you build a structure the very
first thing you have to do when you
build something is clean the building
site of any debris or any garbage but
you have to get rid of the garbage get
rid of the debris before you can dig a
foundation and
destructon edifice so two of southwark
says before you can make your heart and
soul a sanctuary for god you have to get
rid of the garbage that clogs up your
building site and what is that garbage
that garbage are the three negative
attributes that Pirkei avos discusses I
think you've mentioned this last week
and that is kina jealousy Tyva
lust and Cabos seeking honor and glory
they take a person out of the world they
destroy a person's relationship with God
so if Southwark says the reason why we
have three weeks to think about the
Corbin Betemit - is because there are
three negative attributes we have to try
to uproot because that's cleaning the
building site the three weeks are
connected they correspond to kena Tyva
covet see that's rough so duck's point
one I'm not going to talk about that so
much tonight other than you know make
you aware of the three weeks I can
negate kena type of a covered one other
thing he says kind of a derivative
connection to this is we know that the
first temple was destroyed in biblical
times because of the worst a virus a
voter's our idol worship gilli Araya
sexual immorality
Severus dummy murder the second temple
was destroyed because of sin athena
hatred and polarization but going back
to the first temple for a moment of
tzedakah actually says voters are
regularized evil snowmen are the extreme
manifestations of King a type of a
couplet so even if I'm not a murderer
I'm not an idol worshipper I don't
engage in sexual misconduct but those
are only symptoms of the character flaws
of keynote I've ever covered how is that
so let's take murder a jealousy when
taken to an extreme can be so extreme
that you literally murder somebody in
fact most murders that are not related
to terrorism or the light actually arise
out of some type of family quarrel where
there's some extreme jealousy or a gang
member is jealous you have the jacket
that I
that the kid wants or you have the shoes
and as crazy as that sounds that can
create a fury which can result god
forbid in a murder
so murder is the extreme manifestation
of jealousy in which I so begrudge what
you have that I'll even take your life
type of lust obviously when it's
manifested in an extreme way to turn
into Gil Arroyo sexual impropriety
now the third Association is a little
less obvious and that is the Association
of Cub owed honor glory ego
gratification and idolatry and that's a
little less obvious but the Association
simply is that idols can be different
things there can be an idol that is a
statue you bow down to or you can make
an ideology your idol
whether it be communism or there'd be
any type of political system and you can
make yourself an idol when you devote
your life to your own self gratification
when your comforts becomes the most
important aspect of your existence then
in a sense that's a voters are because
literally what does elbow does are I
mean a far in worship the worship of
anything other than God doesn't have to
be a statue if I worship money if I
worship power if I worship status if I
worship science and I consider that to
be the most important thing in the world
that is a form of avodah Zarah so
ultimately avodah Zarah is connected at
least in an allegorical sense in the
symbolic sense voters service connected
with Cabos when I make myself the
measure of all things
so if sudden points out therefore we
shouldn't necessarily pat ourselves on
the back and say oh I'm not guilty of
avodah Zarah gilja riah's chouriço
stomach well maybe we're not guilty of
those actual bee
savior's but if there's those roots
clauses are connected to kena Tyva
covet then unfortunately right there's a
lot of talk about Cobra de beber but
about being an asymptomatic carrier
right so even if we're a symptomatic we
can very well have the disease that give
rise to Kenna type of a cover page
that's throughout Southern Observatory
weeks correlates to Kenna Tyva
covered and our job is to clean the
garbage remove the debris remove the
garbage the filth from the building site
so that our hearts and our souls can be
open to the godliness of the Shekinah
which rebuilds the base--emitter sh ii
association with the three weeks that
ruff Southwark makes which also i'm not
going to talk about a lot but i'm just
going to mention it there quickly
so the third one will be the subject is
that points out that we know when the
jewish people were taken out of
mitzrayim god did so with four terms of
redemption this is why cuz i'll we're
maitake at the Seder that you have four
cups of wine to celebrate the four
terminologies of redemption that God
uses in partials for era for Jose see I
will take you out the heat salty I will
save you the God out the I will redeem
you Villa cockney I will take you unto
me as a nation there is a fifth term I
will bring you to the land which is
connected to the Messianic Redemption
but in terms of myths Ryan we have these
for the show notes of gula and because
of those for the show notes of gamma cos
awareness a cane for cows ups rep so
that points out that the three weeks and
the well he says Shabazz Arbor Thomas
and the three weeks correspond to the
for the show notes of gula but going in
Reverse for example shippers Arbor
Thomas
should have been the culmination of the
exodus think about this because the
purpose of the exodus was that God would
give us the Torah what should have
happened on the 17th of Tammuz Moshe
urbane okay
we heard the Ten Commandments on
Shoeless but on the 17th of Thomas he's
coming down with the tablets that would
have been the conclusion or at least the
purpose of each see estimates ryeom and
that is why it's always the same day of
the week as the first day of pacer
as is Tish above as well and yet instead
of becoming a stage and redemption it
became a stage of exile syrup syrup
actually correlates Shiva Zorba Tamas
plus the four plus three equals
movements away in the negative sense
from the for the show note of Gokula
tisha ba of corresponds to the fifth
flushin of guna but again in Reverse
instead of bringing us to the land Tish
above is korban and gullets away so
rhapsodic says you can envision the 17th
of Tammuz plus the three weeks plus
tisha buff as almost the photographic
negatives of the four Lashon note of
Gokula culminating in the fifth lusha
they are like the opposite picture of
what should have been but of southwark
points out that in the opposite picture
there is also a movement towards
reclamation because if you look at our
journey away from God as a circle rather
than a linear movement when you move
along the circumference of a circle the
further you get from one point the
closer you are to that point coming from
the other side right I have a point on a
the circumference of a circle I move
away away away away away away away I'm
getting further and further and further
from that point but in the process of
getting further from that point I'm
getting closer to that point on the
other side
so in a paradoxical way gullet and
estrangement bring us closer together
they create yearning they create passion
they create desire to be connected and
that desire to be connected can even be
stronger than it is when we actually are
connected the old saying of absence
makes the heart grow fonder the great
Rutner the great receiver of high in
Berlin it was a very very colorful
person as well towards the end of his
life he made Albie I came to Eretz
Israel he retired so to speak from his
receiver in Brooklyn he came to Eretz
Israel he was asked at one point at one
point in his their life was there
anything he missed about what slots do
you miss anything about America so he
didn't say hog and gas or whatever it
would be I mean yeah you know how get us
there anyway what he said was the one
thing he missed about living in Israel
was that he no longer had the yearning
to come through a Rich's job because he
was here already he missed that yearning
that's a very interesting statement
because you might say well what sense
does that make he was yearning to have
something now he has it it's not the
same in some ways the yearning is a
stronger love than when you actually
have it and that website up says is why
the negative of galoot can have a very
strong propelling power to connect to
God and bring Redemption because it
creates yearning it creates a sense of
loss
it creates an absence in my heart and
that absence in my heart yearns to be
filled and commensurate with the
yearning comes the redemption and
therefore rhapsodic says even though it
seems at first glance that the 17th of
Tammuz the three weeks and teach above
our movements away from the four stages
of redemption coupled with the fifth
stage
in point of fact as you're moving away
you're actually getting closer and that
is the meaning of the famous statement
of our sages that the Messiah will be
born on Tisha buff it does not
necessarily mean that's the birthday of
the human being that will be mushy us is
unteachable about certainly cannot
understand it that way because the Rebbe
sir birthday was indecent but even even
without without Shabbat I mean the
morale says it doesn't necessarily refer
to a birthday but it means the Messianic
idea comes into the world through the
grieving and the morning of the 9th
above that shows Hashem how much we
yearn for the redemption right so that's
rough Southwark second point right so
the first point is the three weeks are
connect in a tie Vaclav out the second
point is the three week well should was
our baton was the three weeks our
reversals of the four of the show notes
of gula and Tish above is the fifth
LeSean of google app and even though
it's a reversal it actually brings you
to those stages of redemption now the
third point of rhapsodic which is the
main thing i want to talk about tonight
is that drove sadiq points out that
there's this interesting progression in
the half tourists that we read for the
three weeks starting last week two of
them are from the book of year me Yahoo
and the one before Kish above is from
the NA VI Shia and here obviously it all
talks about prophecies about the
destruction of the temple and the like
but if so that focuses on what you might
think is a relatively minor point he
focuses on the first words of each of
those sub tours the first words of last
week's of Torah which is the first of
the three weeks is d'Avray yirme'yahu
the words of your meal so the faculty
that is being described is Deeb or
speech staff timer this week we
is really chapter 2 of your mio shimu
devar hashem here the Word of God
shamea so we move from D Bor to shamea
and the third half Tyra which is the the
be the first chapter of the Isiah vio is
called hezonia Shia Obon emotes vision
so you're going from speech to hearing
to vision Rev subject suggests that
itself is a spiritual progression that
one has to understand you know we talked
about speak no evil hear no evil see no
evil I know that the English saying goes
in the other other direction but there
is a significance in this direction
because what it's suggesting is that
when I confront so to speak sins like
Lashon Hara so initially I have to
confront it externally meaning I simply
control my mouth I have negative
thoughts I think I have resentments I
have hatreds I have angers but I bite my
tongue and I keep quiet so stage one is
simply suppressing your speech and
directing it in proper ways and then you
progress to a higher level where not
only do you not speak negatively about
others but you also don't even listen
but even that is not the ultimate level
the ultimate idea of blush in Hara and
average Israel the images it's positive
is not so much I hate people but I
control myself but it's to redefine what
I see that I focus on the good I focus
on the positive meaning I'm not
struggling with controlling my tongue
anymore because I view the world in a
different way so initially a voter's a
sham generally it may starts with
suppression you want to do something and
you control yourself but eventually it
culminates in a Reaper ception of
reality in which you strive not to see
the negative you try not to see the bad
in people and alike and at that point
you're no longer struggling with hearing
evil or seeing evil or speaking evil
because you simply don't see it to begin
with
therefore ozone is the most important
thing now as you know or should know the
Shabbat before the ninth of I was in
fact called Shabbat a zone because of
this of Torah it is the Shabbat of
vision and this farm also say because we
should actually try to visualize what a
world of the base hamikdash and mushiya
would be like we try to bring ourselves
to that type of visualization but that
also means we have to visualize each
other in good and positive ways so it
turns out therefore that this is yet a
third progression in the three weeks
moving from controlling your speech to
controlling the inputs that come into
your ears
and finally redefining your perception
of reality in positive ways now it's
interesting although I'm off sync by a
week that if we look at the first stage
of the three weeks which was last week's
of Torah but it's going to be this
week's part just strangely enough as
controlling speech the idea of speech is
very very important in the parsha of
this week and I'll talk about this in
two different ways but first let me
quote a famous pisaq in proverbs Shalom
Juan Ella the wisest of all people
compiled a book of wisdom as to how you
live your life and the like that's
called Mitch light and one of the famous
verses in Mitch lay is how mothers waha
Khayyam be at Ellucian
life and death are in the hands of the
tongue
your tongue your mouth your speech can
kill you and your speech can keep you
alive
now the mega-rich gives a very practical
example of how this actually works
the medics gives a very interesting
story the Midrash tells us that all the
limbs of the body were fighting among
themselves again obviously it's novel
Oracle Midrash in which the legs were
saying we're the most important part of
the body because without us you're not
able to go anywhere and the hands said
we're the most important part of the
body because without us you can't do
anything and the eyes said without us
you know you can't see where you're
going so all of the different limbs
where our limbs or organs were arguing
who is most important so finally the
tongue says I don't know how the other
organs you're talking without a tongue
but the tongue says I'm the most
important so they laugh at the tongue
and they say who are you you don't even
have a backbone you can't even stand up
you know you're just lying down what's
so great about you so the tongue says
I'll show you so anyway this person
whose organs are arguing is a servant of
the king and the King doesn't feel well
so the tongue causes the person to say
Oh for a dog like you I'll bring you
dogs milk to help you so the King says
off with this head
how dare he talk to me this way so all
of the limbs say to the tongue what are
you doing you're getting us killed and
the tongue says I'll take care of it and
the tongue then has the guy say that was
amputated sorry he says oh I was
speaking my native language where the
word dog whatever it was actually means
hero lion Superman that's what I meant I
was using the language that I grew up
with and the King says oh that's what
you're meant bro that's fine you're
you're a faithful servant so the tongue
says to his you know companions you see
I could get you killed and I can get you
saved life and death is in the hands of
the tongue this is an actual metric that
gives this give the story but we have to
understand of course that life and death
is not just physical life and physical
death life and death refers to the
impact of our speech on others we can
use our speech to give people strength
encouragement supports when they're
going through difficulties and we can
use our speech to destroy people to
humiliate them to cut them down you know
you can die in a lot of ways and it's
not just through a knife through your
heart a person can die when their spirit
is broken a person can die or does that
mean in the sense even though he's alive
when they no longer have hope when they
think that nobody cares
and with the well-placed word with the
even are very simple you know five five
seconds and how are you doing whatever
it would be you can change a person's
life we have to recognize the power of
speech to give comforts and strength and
encouragement and the power of speech to
destroy you know rough palm great great
receive a great Sadiq respond once
recounted a story about this he said
there was a man that he know and the man
was a simple a simple person it was
neither Thomas Holcomb in any way was a
religious Jew and the person was in the
hospital so we're pon wrote him like a
card like a tool I'm tired you know hope
you get better
that minute didn't even remember doing
it so like 20 years later the person
died eventually and rapine went to the
Lavanya and that the funeral the widow
like holds up the widow spoke or
somebody spoke and says you see not my
husband you know got this card from the
great Russia Shiva enough pom and that
kept him alive for 20 years he felt so
loved and so close shove and so
important Rippon didn't even remember
writing this this was a a two line card
it was a considerate thing to do but
this was not a big thing that registered
in his memory and yet for this simple
Jew it's made the difference I mean the
wife actually said this kept him alive
for 20 years
amazing what our words can do by the way
this also illustrates a very important
axiom in life after - after 120 years
when God is going to show us the
significance of our actions both the
good in the band we might be very very
surprised what was the most significant
things we did with our lives you know
we're gonna think that was this
accomplishments that accomplishment etc
it may often be things that you
literally didn't even think we're
important and they were the things that
get us into GaN Eden if we're lucky if
we're fortunate sometimes they're
insignificant small things that are not
insignificant at all
they really make the difference I heard
a story years and years ago about a
woman that came to happened in Israel I
don't know I don't know if all the
details are true but this is the story
the way it was reported a woman seemed a
little agitated she went into a hotel
she wanted to get a room at a high floor
no top floor of the hotel they told her
the room is not available for six hours
so she sat in the lobby for six hours by
herself after the 6 hours were up she
got her room on the top floor and she
proceeded to jump off and commit suicide
and it was pointed out that for the six
hours that she sat in the lobby
not a single person spoke to her now
again I mean most of us probably do
behave that way I mean I wouldn't okay I
certainly wouldn't go over to a woman
and then but it would be a man I
wouldn't necessarily go over to somebody
either so I'm not putting myself on any
pedestal but the question we have to ask
ourselves this
if even one person would have gone over
her and said how are you doing
would she perhaps not have taken her
life it's just she did I think there's a
plain off-broadway play based on the
short story about the guy that was about
to commit suicide and all of a sudden he
gets a phone call he's kind of
meticulous an OCD person so he picks up
the play says I want to take the call
before I kill myself and it turned out
to be a wrong number and the guy says
please don't bother me I'm about to take
my life and like you know the woman at
the other end just talked him out of it
what are you doing you know it's the
wrong number but there must be a reason
and that little contact can really make
a difference in a person's life so when
we say how love is I am Beato
Michonne it's not simply a matter of
physical life and death although
sometimes it is but it's a matter of
using your speech to build up rather
than destroy that's such a wonderful
thing that's why it is said that the
coffee time was actually a very
talkative person somebody after the
puppet time wrote about Lashon Hara so
there were rabbis who wanted to check
him out they would send surreptitious
people to spend Shabbos with the kibbutz
Khayyam and see if he gossips and one of
the people who went gave a report that
at first he was very very surprised The
Hobbit time had a son-in-law who never
spoke only Torah never spoke a word but
the hobbits time is sitting there
talking and joking and telling stories
and the person is I'm wondering why is a
happy time the big big sada care the SAR
law seems to be much more righteous and
meticulous about speech but then he
realized that the son-in-law strategy
was simply not taught how many times
away there was much more difficult to
talk and use your speech but only in
positive and constructive ways that's
much more difficult it's always easier
it's not so easy to keep quiet either
but it is easier relatively speaking
simply keep quiet than it is to use
speech in positive and good ways without
crossing the line so what is the
connection between speech and the parsha
that we're going to read about so
there's really two connections the
beginning of the parsha talks about the
concept of making a net there now this
is very very unusual a net air is a vow
a person has the power to say that you
know this Apple is forbidden to me
through a vow and if he transgresses as
well he is committing a sin the Torah
says Moyock tell devar oh if you make a
vow or an oath you are not allowed to
transgress it and then there are various
rules if a wife makes a vow the husband
can annul it if it's within the day that
he heard it if a daughter makes about
the house below the age of 12 and a half
the father couldn't know that etc but be
it as it may if you think about it a vow
there's an extraordinary concept because
normally we would think only God should
have the authority to declare what is
forbidden and what is permitted
you know God said you're not allowed to
eat Hazzard County Pig and so if I eat
Pig I'm committing a sin but if I say
I'm not allowed to eat this Apple this
Apple now huh logically becomes a piece
of hazard if I eat this Apple
it is a spiritually detrimental as
eating some ham how can that be who
gives me the power to make something
forbidden isn't that the power of God so
you see from the whole parsha of neder
the whole halakhah of oaths and vows
that God embodied human beings with a
power that their speech creates
realities their speech
creates spiritual realities it's not
just words people say sticks and stones
may break my bones we heard his children
but names will never hurt me very very
not true if anything the sticks and the
stones that break your bones at least if
you're young but as I said most of the
time the bones heal okay but their hurt
and the pain of the name can stay with
you forever
and the parsha of neder is a very
concrete illustration of how words
become spiritual realities in the world
my word can transform an apple or a
piece of chocolates into Kaiser and
availa
I have that power those are the powers
of my words so that's something to think
about that the whole parsha of vows and
oaths underscore the power of speech by
the way going back to this idea of
sticks and stones may break my bones I
remember hearing an interview with
Richard Nixon after he left the
presidency in disgrace after Watergate
and he was being interviewed about all
the different challenges he faced in his
life and of course obviously he went
through quite a lot I mean the country
went through quite a lot oh but he had
ups and downs and victories and defeats
and he had a very colorful controversial
life although insofar as we Jews are
concerned you know we don't consider
that and we mix him did a lot of good
for for Israel but you know there were
obviously moral moral problems but I was
fascinated that Nixon kept on talking
about insults that he suffered in sixth
grade on the playground and after all
he's been through resigning and disgrace
the presidency of the United States this
75 year old man is reminiscing
about the way people spoke to him in the
playground when he was 11 years old now
he would hope and you would think that
we would get over it but you know we
don't totally get over it
and it's a scary thing when you're a
person who controls the destiny of
Nations and the world and you're you
know a finger so to speak it's not the
nuclear button that's what happened to
you when you were in sixth grade is
going to have an impact on your thinking
and whether it's Nixon whether it's
Saddam Hussein whether it's a Dolf
hitler or a joseph stalin this is part
of the mix now you know don't get me
wrong obviously I'm not giving anybody a
free pass I'm not giving Hitler an
excuse because Hitler suffered a certain
measure of rejection there are plenty of
people who suffer rejection and they
become righteous good moral people and
this is free will and that Shem says we
have to go beyond the difficulties of
our childhood obviously obviously
obviously but nevertheless it is an
undeniable fact that those experiences
play into the mix of who we are no
matter how secure we think we become
about how accomplished we become there
is that child within us that is still
suffering the pain Oh even childhood
experiences and all of that is included
in a mother trial honey be out on the
show okay so one connection to speech is
that is the parsha of Neda but there's
another connection as well it's a little
less obvious later on Act it's a double
Parcher this week so it's pretty big in
the second of the parsha out which is
the last parsha in by midnight it's
there but this is the last time that
it's mentioned we revisit the ear
mcnutt's
now what is the ear Michael at the City
of Refuge right that the halacha is that
if somebody committed homicide somebody
killed another human being
in a non intentional manner it was an
accidental death so they're not put to
death but they are sent to a City of
Refuge there are designated cities in
which they are supposed to remain in
that city until the death of the Kohen
Gadol now that's a very indeterminate
sentence if the Kohen Gadol dies a day
later the murderer goes home after a day
if the Kohen Gadol stays alive for 50
years the murderer stays in the year
Mick left for 50 years
if the murderer dies before the Kohen
Gadol he is buried in the year Mick lot
and he is not excused to the family plot
till the Kohen Gadol dies very very
strange sentence fact is omission of
mentioned that the mothers of the Coen
gulls used to bring care packages they
used to bring food packages to the road
stem in the year Mick left so that the
road scum shouldn't pray that the Kohen
Gadol dies because they want to get out
so by the way just to understand this be
sure you understand that in order to be
high up to go to the air Mick lot it's
not you have to be negligent there has
to be a certain carelessness there has
to be something that secular law would
call manslaughter if something was a
true unavoidable accident you get no
punishment at all and you stay home so
essentially if there is intentional
homicide which we would call murder that
is a capital crime for which a person
could be executed if there is negligent
homicide like he went through a red
light
you didn't look you didn't look both
ways you went through a stop sign you
throw some heavy object off your message
without looking who's below so you're
not intentional so it's not a capital
crime but you are negligent and callous
and therefore you go to the ear make
lots as a
and if you step outside of the Year
McLouth to go Allah done the blood
avenger the relative can actually kill
you he's given permission to kill you if
you step outside of the air McNutt
acting to be accurate you have 2,000
hemos from the air MacLeod so you have
the city and then there's a zone around
the city that you're still protected but
if you take one step beyond the 2,000 a
most around the air make left you are
vulnerable to the guerrilla done now the
Gemara asks the following kasha if the
mothers of the Kohanim ghetto limb had
to bribe the road sim not to pray
against their sons the implication would
be that such a prayer might be effective
meaning what are the mothers afraid of
the mothers are afraid that the road
skin will pray that the Kohen Gadol will
die but why would such a prayer be
effective I simply pray somebody would
die why would God listen to my prayer so
listen to this there are two answers
that are given one in the Babylonian
Talmud and one in the Jerusalem Talmud
both the Bob way and the Rochelle me ask
the same question but they give
different answers the answer of the
Babylonian Talmud is that the reason the
prayers of the road skin would be
effective and that's why they have to be
bribed is because the Kohen Gadol is a
person who deserves punishment and that
makes him vulnerable to their prayers
why does the Kohen Gadol deserve
punishment which makes him vulnerable
because he should have prayed he liked
the calling goggle is the spiritual
leader of the generation ideally
although there were many corrupt : mt
dolan but ideally the Kohen Gadol is not
just a priest is the leader of the
generation he should have prayed that
there be no tragedies on his watch
and if he didn't pray enough to avert
those tragedies he deserves punishment
this is the bubbly and because he
deserves punishment he would be
vulnerable to the prayer of the road
skin which is why the mothers had to
ride them now let's think about this for
a moment how could the Kohen Gadol pray
it's one thing if this would have been a
natural disaster the Kohen Gadol should
pray there shouldn't be tsunamis there
shouldn't be forest fires there
shouldn't be earthquakes but here we're
dealing with volitional behaviors
granted it's not intentional homicide
it's not murder but we're dealing with
careless people people who don't stop at
red lights people who go through stop
signs people who throw things off
they're mere peasant these are choices
that people make and do we not say how
call me they sure million everything is
in the hands of heaven except the
decisions to serve God in a proper way
so how can the culling is I think Tana
can I pray that you shouldn't sin can I
pray that you be a religious Jew many
would say no because whether you're a
religious Jew does not depend on God
whether you're a religious Jew it
depends on you so how can I pray that
God should make somebody else really
know I can pray then God should make me
religious too and the reason that so is
because Hashem responds to what I want
to be so if I want to be a show mitzvah
I can pray that God will give me the
strength but if you don't want to be a
shomer mitzvah how can I pray that God
should override your choices so how can
we say the calling girdle should have
prayed that people look both ways and
don't go through red lights and don't
throw things off the map essent these
are choices of irresponsibility that
people know
so what you see from the Bible says the
Kazon ish is an amazing thing that the
predicate of my assumption is incorrect
the power of prayer which is speech
speech going back to the reality speech
is so great that prayer can override the
fundamental principle of free will
yes I have made a world in which our
moral decisions are primarily volitional
everything is in the hands of heaven
except your action I am but the kayaker
Fela can override that never the cousin
it says contrary to my assumption that
you can be mitzpah well that a Shem
should inspire somebody to do chuhwa and
then deed that's what we commonly do
there are actually many prayers before
lips benching on Shabbos and the like
which are really praying that my
children should be righteous you know
you might say how can I pray that my
children should be righteous if that if
they don't want to be righteous that's
their decision God does not interfere
but through prayer you can do it so
that's an illustration of the power of
speech to override free will that the
coen goggle can pray people should be
more responsible
right so the Misrata bridge can pray
that more of us wear masks all the time
or whatever it would be even though
that's our decision but that's nickel a
lint Fela that people should be more
careful
and more conscious that's the answer of
the bubbly and that highlights the
co-ack of FEMA to override bellezza
which is an amazing thing the euro
Xiaomi asks the same question though
again what's the question why did the
mothers have to bribe the rote skin' not
to pray against the Kohen Gadol what did
the Kohen Gadol do that was wrong he's
not deserving and the Bob Lee's answer
is he is deserving of punishment because
he could afraid the you Xiaomi gives
another answer which is even more
can you show me says the Kohen Gadol did
nothing wrong but the power of prayer is
that even an undeserving person could be
caught in a prayer now it's hard to
understand that but the co-ack of prayer
is so much that if I pray that somebody
should die and I do so with sincerity
and with devotion that can result even
an innocent man being killed because God
built into the structure of the
spiritual universe that feel I believe
shall M as a in fact someone to say
that this is why the bribe worked
meaning
listen if I want the Kohen Gadol to die
because I want to get out giving me some
brownies is going to change that it's
not but it's gonna make my prayer a
little less devout me a little less
Kabana
against the Kohen Gadol because of the
brownies and that makes it less of a
love shall n now this is an interesting
again I can't fully explain it but it is
brought down in rhetoric and other
others Sir Francis say this that even an
evildoer if they truly pray to Hashem
with devotion God will give them kind of
a negative spiritual power and in fact
that's part of the difficulty that we
face with the Arab nations the B'nai
Ishmael the Arabs do have a connection
to praying to one God they pray five
times a day although their prayer
services are short we only pray five
times on Yom Kippur they do it every day
and part of why they are so dangerous is
they have a certain dark spiritual
energy that comes in part from FEMA now
I will be the first to admit that it's
hard for me to understand why God should
listen to H feel aa
to effect something that is immoral and
evil
yet to feel eyes kind of built into the
fabric of nature that it affects changes
so you see from the bubbly and the you
show me two differents perspectives on
the power of Tefila the bobbly indicates
that Fela can override the fundamental
principles of free will and the Usami
indicates that Fela can result even in
an evil being perpetrated if this
fellows beliefs on them you know it's
interesting there's a story in the
second condition and again it's hard to
know how literal we take these stories
about a ruin an abandoned building in a
town that was frequented by an offs us
an awesome monster kind of a demonic
monster that had seven heads and nobody
would even walk into that building
because the monster would kill them so a
bias suggested when a certain rabbi
comes to town this robbery was a great
Sadiq we should deny him lodging and
tell them the only place he could sleep
is that abandoned building without
telling him what's there and when he
sleeps in the building he'll take care
of them
Abhaya was brought to us he'll take care
of the monster so the rabbi shows up and
he needs to have a place to stay and
everybody says not available so finally
the rabbi sets himself up in this
abandoned building and the monster comes
and the monster tries to kill him the
monster has seven heads and the person
says eight Fela and every fella severs
one of the heads of the monster so after
17 Lots
the monster is dead Brooke a Shem
everybody's happy but the rabbi goes
over to Baia afterwards and he said how
could you put me in this situation I
could have been killed
how could you assume I could get out of
it right - fela
my life was in danger I buyer said
I trusted you I knew you I know your
prayers are so powerful that nothing
would happen to you
that's what the gemara says but the
Marcia asks an interesting question
let's accept a bias points let's accept
that abaya was so confident that this
man was a great great sadiq that his
prayers would be answered okay let's
assume that but there's another problem
and that is the Gemara says that if you
get the benefit of a miracle in this
world because it's supernatural
it takes away from the reward of your
mitts votes in the world to come meaning
if I get good things in this world that
are physical or natural I get money I
get on or whatever it is that doesn't
take away from all of my BOB because I'm
just getting this world type of rewards
but if I am benefit from a supernatural
miracle it's like God is using something
outside of the world to protect me that
uses up my Olam haba so here's the point
even if a buyer was confident that this
person would merit a miracle so a buyer
doesn't have the problem of putting the
guy in danger but is it fair of a body
to take away part of this rabbi's Olam
haba so the Marshalls answer it's very
interesting the marshal says you lose
your own my BA if you benefit from a
miracle but when you benefit from your
prayers that is not called a miracle
because it is the natural power of
prayer to effect these changes therefore
it's not a miracle even though it is a
miracle but it's not considered a
miracle that takes away from allah baba
now listen up we understands that not
all prayers get answered the way we like
Hashem listens to all prayers and the
Shem gives us answers our prayers and
many many different
ways by giving us the strength to grow
from our situation but still prayer can
affect one jurist wondrous
transformations they tell a story of
this may be apocryphal because I don't
think the dates work out very well of
that when the gara Rebbe was smuggled
out of the warsaw ghetto so the story
goes again and I know see now that these
things are broadcast I always get
comments or criticisms if things are not
historically accurate I don't have the
same freedom I have to be inaccurate and
telling a story so I will say to the
audience that's this is probably not a
true story and historically I don't
think it happens but it's a very
interesting story so I'm going to say it
anyway and that is the story goes that
the gara Rebbe was brought to meet
Winston Churchill because he Winston
Churchill was told that the gara Rebbe
was a saint and Sadiq and Churchill
wanted to get some spiritual guidance
and this is during the Battle of Britain
this is when London is being bombed and
on night after night after night after
night and Churchill you know asked the
Rebbe you know what do we do to get
divine protection in this moment of
danger and the gara Rebbe said well I
can give you two answers do you want the
miraculous way or do you want the
ordinary way the normal way so a trick
you said will tell me both so the Rebbe
said the miraculous way is you get your
army your Navy and your Air Force
together and you defeat Germany that
would be a miracle the normal way is
take the sums and we tell them and the
regime saves you that's the normal way
things work
so he says beats Fela is the normal way
and the superiority of your army is
going to be a that's going to be the
America and therefore the idea that the
first stage in the three weeks is
working on the kulluk of dbar comes out
in this parsha both in the connection
Nidoran and in connection of tefillah
words up to Fela now there is again a
famous story the pun of a drug which is
true in which the pun of somebody once
asked upon a future of in Yiddish about
Dominique Favre us errant furnished
which is Yiddish
why does God not answer me for our bus
éireann furnished and the pun of it you
have said your words are exactly right
but you got to reap UNK shoe it air and
fruits missed it's not that God doesn't
answer you God answers no my Ehrenreich
nisht can be read two ways he doesn't
answer or errand for the answers no now
you might say oh why are you fooling
around with semantic games isn't it the
same thing it's not the same thing at
all
when you say God does not answer that
means he doesn't care he's indifferent
he's not paying attention my life
doesn't matter to him
that is sad that breaks my spirit that
makes me hopeless but when God says no
that's a totally different issue
he cares he's invested he's listening
and he makes a decision like a loving
parent would make that for whatever
reason we don't always understand the
reason this is not the right thing for
me
so God's saying no is very very
different than God not saying anything
and the part of it you have said God
always listens he may not give us what
we want but if he doesn't give us what
we want I can call Mick Jagger he gives
us what we need right you can't always
get what you want but you get what you
need and this is not a mockery I usually
would rely upon but it's a very very
beautiful sentiment in some
Jimmy answers prayers in many ways the
strength to go on the courage not to be
broken or defeated and even in the
middle of tragedy that's Hashem
answering your prayers the ability to
rebuild your life after the Holocaust as
tragic as the Holocaust was God gave you
an answer and really this is the story
of the Jewish people that out of the
ashes will become will come Redemption
and rebuilding and be as with the Shem
this is the period of time in which we
think about this we yearn for it and may
all of us be socha to experience the
redemption of our College Barco and I'm
Israel Ben hey Ravi ma no thank you
[Music]