Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Okay everybody and
uh as uh you probably know I was away
for a few weeks so I'm glad to be here
back.
Although I have to I'm going to England
for sure it's all again so I just came
and taking another trip but okay.
Uh anyway it's interesting I see the uh
the ad for the the British on the very
nice uh all all night session.
So I had mentioned that in the scholarly
literature uh it is actually shown
that the spread of the custom of staying
up all night Shavuot current coincided
with the introduction of coffee into
Europe meaning to say
as coffee spread from the Americas into
Europe the custom of staying up all
night also spread so it was connected to
that.
So coffee does play an important role
uh in Jewish tradition. Thank you. So
anyway I'm going to talk about Shavuot
tonight a little bit of a change from
our haftorah.
And we all obviously know if any of you
ask anybody what is the event that
Shavuot commemorates what is it that we
celebrate so obviously the answer that
we give is Matan Torah and the davening
says Matan Torahseinu.
So first as a preliminary matter we have
to define the term Matan Torah. What do
we mean that the Torah was given on
Shavuot? We certainly do not mean the
entire five books of Moses
because more than half of the Torah
consists of events that occurred after
Matan Torah the story of Korach the
story of the spies the
right we didn't get the story of the
golden calf
at Matan Torah. That would reduce
everything to a script that obviously
K'lal Yisrael was not given a script of
what they're going to be doing that
wouldn't make any sense.
So we have to redefine Torah so maybe
you'll say well Torah doesn't mean the
five books of Moses
those narratives didn't happen till they
happened but maybe Torah is a listing of
the 613 mitzvot.
But even that is not entirely true.
Number one Moshe got the 613 mitzvot
over a 40 day period he didn't get them
all on Shavuot.
And number two the Jewish people
got mitzvot over the 40 year period.
There are quite a few mitzvot that we
did not get until the 40th year in the
desert.
So we certainly neither Moshe nor Am
Yisrael got the whole Torah on Shavuot
and really what happened on Shavuot
b'pashtus is simply not simply the
Aseret Hadibrot the Ten Commandments
which are the foundation of the Torah
and God's divine revelation to Am
Yisrael to 3 million people and uh that
was the beginning of a process that took
40 years but that is what we celebrate.
Now the Maharal points out a very very
interesting observation and it's a
question that many people ask.
And that is on one hand we say we
celebrate Shavuot because of Matan Torah
but that's not the reason the Torah
itself gives. If you simply
look at the Chumash
why is there a holiday called described
exclusively
as an agricultural festival.
Uh Bikkurim for example so Pesach now
Pesach is described in both ways Pesach
is described both as Chodesh Ha'Aviv
the month of the ripening of the barley
and of course the day of Yetziat
Mitzrayim.
Uh Sukkot
is primarily described as Asif the
ingathering of produce from the field.
Shavuot is Bikkurim the first fruits it
is also the wheat harvest etc.
And in truth you know because um most
most of us Jews have become urban
creatures over the past uh millennia we
have relatively less sensitivity to the
agricultural nature of the Chagim. Here
in Eretz Yisrael I think maybe we have a
little bit more consciousness because
you know we do have
agricultural people and and the like but
one cannot uh really minimize the
importance
of agriculture as ways of expressing
gratitude to God with the cycles of
nature and the changing of the seasons
and the rainy season and the harvest
season and how important this was and
these were focal points of coming
together to give gratitude to Hashem.
But it's still a good question that why
does the Torah emphasize agriculture
exclusively? Why does it not mention the
phenomenally important events
of Matan Torah occurring on Shavuot?
So here is what the Maharal says.
Maharal says
that it's impossible for Hashem to say
be happy because of Matan Torah.
And the reason is because whether I
should be happy or not depends on how I
live my life.
Meaning if I live my life following the
Torah observing the Torah learning the
Torah
then it's a source of eternal joy and
pleasure.
But if I live my life in disregard of
the Torah
maybe I'm better off without it because
once there's a Torah and I don't live up
to it
there is accountability there is
responsibility.
Right that's why I got just ask somebody
if you have a non-Jew wants to convert
to Judaism.
So we often tell them you know before
you convert you know have your last uh
shrimp or oyster because uh you can
still enjoy it so to speak. Once you're
Jewish can't enjoy it anymore.
So the Maharal says God cannot command
be happy because of Matan Torah
because maybe I'm not going to be so
happy. So God can say all right listen
for the wheat harvest you can be happy
no matter what from not from religious
not religious the wheat harvest is
intrinsically a joyous occasion in an
agricultural society.
But Matan Torah it's not Hashem that
makes it a Yom Tov it's we that make it
a Yom Tov by the choices that we make in
our lives. So it's as if to say God is
saying I'm giving you a happy day
because it's a wheat harvest. Whether or
not it becomes an even happier day
because of Matan Torah that's up to you
that's not up to me as the Kadosh Baruch
Hu says. And this is why the Maharal
says the Torah does not emphasize Matan
Torah
as the reason for the holiday of
Shavuot.
Now another point about Shavuot that's
very interesting and again it's actually
an obvious point but it's worthy of
note.
Shavuot actually does not have a date in
the Torah.
Uh Shavuot is defined exclusively
as a the 50th day after you count the
Omer meaning you count the Omer for 49
days that 50th day is Shavuot. It
happens to be based on the present
configuration of the calendar
that that 50th day is always going to be
the sixth day of Sivan.
But that's not inevitable.
Under the present calendar the months
alternate 30 29 30 29 so Nisan is always
and Iyar is always 29 so the 50th day
getting into Sivan will be the sixth of
Sivan.
But at the time of the Beit Hamikdash
when Rosh Chodesh was determined not by
uh calendar it was determined by
witnesses who would come in any given
month could be 30
or 29. You didn't have to have an
alternating sequence. So the Gemara says
if both Nisan and Iyar would be 30
so the 50th day would be earlier in the
month of Sivan Shavuot could be as early
as the fifth of Sivan.
If both Nisan and Iyar are 29 days so
the 50th is later in Sivan because
you've begun Sivan earlier uh Shavuot
would be the seventh day of Sivan. It is
only when you have as we have today 130
and 129 whether it's Nisan 30 and Iyar
29 which is our calendar or
theoretically if it would be in reverse
Nisan 29 and Iyar 30 then you're going
to get the sixth of Sivan. So the date
of Shavuot is almost accidental that is
not inherent in the nature of the Yom
Tov. The only thing that is inherent in
the nature of the Yom Tov is it has to
be the 50th day
from the counting of the Omer. And the
Ramban explains that is because Shavuot
in a sense is not a separate Yom Tov at
all.
It is the 51st 52nd day
I don't know 51st day of
uh 51st day of Pesach meaning uh uh
uh and therefore
in fact the Ramban even says that Omer
the Omer period could be regarded as a
long Chol HaMoed.
So if you say for example you don't work
during Chol HaMoed you can take a pretty
long vacation although the job will not
be waiting for you
uh when you uh when you come back.
And the reason why it is one long
holiday is because Shavuot gives meaning
to Pesach. Pesach is the holiday of
freedom
and Shavuot is the holiday of submission
to Hashem. And the important lesson of
the linkage is that freedom has value
and purpose
only when it involves submitting
yourself to something higher. I
mentioned this idea before that freedom
cannot be the purpose of life. Freedom
does not give a person a purpose freedom
enables
the achievement
of a purpose that you've defined, but it
does not provide the content of that
purpose.
And therefore Hazal say that the Korban
Omer on Pesach is barley, which at least
before the invention of challenge was
primarily fed to animals.
Uh Shavuot the Korban in the Mikdash are
chittah, wheat, which was human
consumption. Because freedom without
Torah is animal liberation.
With Torah, it becomes human dignity.
Again, I forgive me for repeating, I
mentioned before
the beautiful metaphor of the Indian
poet Tagore,
who didn't know any Jews, but he wrote
about human existence generally,
that a human soul is like a violin
string
that is capable of beautiful, beautiful
music.
But, paradoxically,
the string can express its music only
when it's tied down across the bridge.
If you simply free it up, take a loose
string and put it on the table,
you cannot get a sound from it.
And therefore, pure freedom without
commitment
does not turn into anything beautiful.
It's just a wildness and a boredom and
an aimlessness,
uh which does not lead to anything. And
therefore, Shavuot is not simply a
separate hug. Shavuot is the culmination
of Pesach. And that is why in the in the
in the Mishna's language, the holiday of
Shavuot is called Atzeret. When it says
Atzeret in the Mishna, it does not mean
Shmini Atzeret.
Shmini Atzeret it goes by a different
name. It's called Yom Tov Acharon shel
Chag.
The word Atzeret in the Mishna always
means Shavuot.
And Atzeret has different translations,
but one of them is like latzor,
conclusion, the stopping point, the end
point. Latzor, and that is the idea that
Shavuot is the end point of Pesach. It
is the purpose of Pesach. Now, I
remember in the 1970s
when uh
there were a lot of campaigns to get
Jews out of the Soviet Union, the former
Soviet Union. So, in all of the
synagogues in the US, Orthodox,
Conservative, Reform, so they would put
up a big sign, and their motto was uh
what Moshe said to Pharaoh, let my It's
a mistranslation, but shalach ami, let
my people go was the line they always
had. But, you know, number one, that's
not an accurate translation. Anyway,
shalach ami means send my people. But,
they also left out the end of the verse.
Shalach ami v'ya'avduni.
Set Let's send my people forth so they
may worship me. Yetziat Mitzrayim was
not an end all, it was a means towards a
higher higher end. And that higher end
was avodat Hashem. The truth of the
matter is even in a purely secular
context, this is very, very true. The
true The true flourishing of a soul
only occurs when there's a discipline
and a commitment. I mean, think about
for example,
uh
a jazz musician, right? So, a talented
jazz musician can do a lot of
improvisations, called riffs, all sorts
of things. So, you have this uh
10-year-old kid who's really He really
admires how the musician can do all of
these things. So, he wants to So, when
he takes an instrument up, and his
parents say, "You got to practice scales
for 3 hours or whatever it is." The kid
says, "No, no, no, I just want to
you know, bang. I just want to play. I
want to be creative."
But, you have to know that the people
that can do the riffs and the
improvisations,
or the Picassos that that can do all
sorts of amazing things, had to go
through a period of time
where there was that submission to that
discipline. And when there's that
submission to the discipline, that can
open up avenues of creativity that would
otherwise not be there.
So, there's all the difference in the
world between the person who simply
bangs on the piano without going through
the uh ritual, so to speak, of doing
scales, and somebody who bangs on the
piano after they've done that. Because
at that point, there's there was a
discipline and a framework which allows
true creativity uh to to flourish. So,
that's kind of a general thought about
the relationship of Pesach and and and
Shavuot.
But, now I'm going to shatter a common
belief, so I hope you will not suffer
from that post-traumatic
uh stress. And that is there's a problem
here. The Magen Avraham, the great
commentator on the Shulchan Aruch,
actually proves that we didn't get the
10 Commandments on Shavuot. We got the
10 Commandments the day after Shavuot.
And the proof is the following proof.
We have a book from the Tanaim. It's
from the time of the Mishna. Or you
actually It's earlier than the time of
the Mishna, called Seder Olam. This is
actually a very, very important
This uh was a work of Jewish chronology,
meaning this is the the sages of the
Mishna, Rabbi Yosi in particular, worked
out uh the different dates of many, many
events. In fact, many, many famous
teachings, the famous teaching that
Rivka was 3 years old is actually based
on Seder Olam. Much of Rashi's
chronological reconstructions in the
Chumash
are based on Seder Olam.
So, Seder Olam records a tradition
that the Jewish people left Mitzrayim on
a Thursday. There's no proof for that,
but that that was the tradition.
So, if we accept that as authoritative,
let's figure this out. They left on a
Thursday, so that means the first day of
Pesach was a Thursday.
Since you start uh
That That's correct. That presupposes
that
That's right. That works out exactly.
But, that means the first day of Sefirat
HaOmer
was a Friday.
Now, if the first day of Sefirat HaOmer
is a Friday and you count for 7 weeks,
the 49th day is a Thursday.
So, day 50 of the Omer
is a Friday.
But, we have another tradition, the
Torah was given on Shabbat.
So, the Magen Avraham asks,
Matan Torah did not occur
on the 6th of Sivan. That was day 50.
It occurred on the 7th of Sivan. That
was day 51.
So, this is the one place where Chutz
La'Aretz has it right.
Chutz La'Aretz has 2 days of Shavuot.
When were the 10 Commandments given?
They were given on the second day, which
of course doesn't exist
in the Torah. It doesn't mean
It's not a It's I mean, it's not a chag,
right? So, Magen Avraham asks a very
basic question.
We celebrate Matan Torah a day earlier
than we ought to be celebrating.
And if we ask the question therefore,
what happened on Shavuot?
The technical answer is nothing happened
on Shavuot.
The 10 Commandments happened the next
day.
So, what's going on, right?
Of course, in a way, that might answer
why the Torah doesn't say celebrate
Shavuot because of that, because it
wasn't. And yet, and yet, obviously,
we've incorporated that celebration.
So, here's the Magen Avraham's answer.
And uh
overall, this is fairly intricate.
There's a whole sugia in Maseches
Shabbat that goes through the chronology
of Matan Torah. It It's quite
complicated. But, the basic idea is the
following.
On Wednesday,
Hashem told Moshe
to take the tell the Jewish people
to separate and sanctify themselves
today and tomorrow, Wednesday and
Thursday,
and I will come on the third day.
The third day,
which would be Friday, and give them the
Torah. So, Hashem initially said 2 days
of preparation,
and I will come on the third day to give
them the Torah.
Moshe, in communicating that commandment
to the Jewish people,
deviated from God's words.
And Moshe added an extra day. Moshe
said, "Prepare yourselves for 3 days."
This is called Moshe Mosif Yom Echad
Mi'Dato.
And therefore, God acceded to Moshe
and pushed off Matan Torah
by a day.
So, it turns out I'll explain how this
works, but it turns out that according
to God's original plan, the Torah would
have been given on Friday,
which would have been day 50.
It is only because Moshe Rabbeinu was
Mosif Yom Echad Mi'Dato
that it got pushed off to day 51, which
was Shabbat.
So, says the Magen Avraham, we do not
celebrate Shavuot on the actual day that
Hashem gave the Torah.
We celebrate Shavuot on the day that
Hashem would have given the Torah had
his original plan
been carried out. This is the Magen
Avraham's answer.
Now, just to fill in a little bit of the
detail,
the Gemara in Shabbat actually tells us
there were three situations where Moshe
Rabbeinu added on or supplemented or
changed the words of Hashem.
And Hashem agreed to him after the fact.
The very first was this. He added a day
to the preparations of Matan
Torah.
The second instance
was that he decided to be celibate from
Matan Torah onwards.
He was never again with his wife. And
although this is not a model that we are
allowed to emulate, it's not for us to
follow, but for Moshe Rabbeinu, Hashem
said it was appropriate because he was
on permanent call. He was on 24/7
call for Nevuah.
Therefore, he had to be in a state of
readiness.
And the third case is the breaking of
the Luchot after the 40 days. On the
17th of Tammuz, he comes down.
He sees the Egel Hazahav.
He smashes the Luchot. Hashem didn't
tell him to do that.
But Hashem said, "Good idea."
So, these are three instances. Again,
I'll come back and explain them and
because how could Moshe deviate from
God? I mean, what's going on here? But
the Gemara does say these are three
instances of Moshe Rabbeinu Mosif
Yom Echad Mid'ato
Mosif Mid'ato Vi Hiskim Hakadosh Baruchu
Al Yado. And Hashem agreed to those
changes.
So, says the Magen
Avraham, "Since Hashem's original plan
was Wednesday and Thursday were the days
of preparation and the Torah would have
been given on Friday,
Moshe converted Friday into a day of
preparation pushing Matan Torah to
Shabbos. So, Shavuot is based on when
Hashem would have given the Torah, not
on when Hashem gave the Torah. This is
the Magen Avraham's answer." Now, the
problem is the Magen Avraham's answer is
in itself problematical because why
should the hypothetical
be more important than the actual? In
other words,
the Torah was actually given on Shabbos.
May Eizeh Tam She'eiyah.
So, why are you celebrating the day that
should have been Matan Torah? You want
to celebrate the day that actually is
Matan Torah.
So,
there are lengthy explanations here and
let me start off with a famous famous
Gemara that I'm I'm sure you've learned
or heard over the years. And this is the
Gemara of Tanur Shel Achnai. Tanur Shel
Achnai is in Bava Metzia, the fourth
perek, and literally it means the
earthenware oven that resembles a coiled
snake.
And again, the technical problem is not
that important to us, but imagine an
earthenware oven
and the way it was transported was it
was cut into rings, like these rings
here,
like hula hoops. And you would transport
the rings. And then when you wanted to
set up the oven, you would set up the
rings, put mud, dried mud between the
rings and you'd have an oven that would
retain heat. And when it was time to
move the oven, you'd get rid of the mud
and you transport the rings, right?
That's the way So, the reason why it's
called
a coiled snake is because the the rings
resemble like a snake that has its tail
in its mouth, the way snakes sometimes
do.
The technical Machlokes is this. We know
that earthenware vessels and metal
vessels, really all vessels, they could
be Mekabel Tumah. If a dead animal or a
dead human
touches the earthenware vessel from the
inside,
it becomes Tamei.
But we have another rule that when
something is broken or smashed,
it is no longer susceptible to Tumah.
So, the Machlokes is, do I regard these
rings as the equivalent of a broken
oven,
in which case it would not be Mekabel
Tumah,
or do I say it's not really broken, it's
made to be put together and separated.
It's not in a broken or defective
condition, so it would be Mekabel Tumah.
Again, a technical issue.
The Sages, the Chachamim, took the
position that it's Tamei. It can be
Mekabel Tumah.
And that was the majority vote of the
Sanhedrin.
But there was one great Rabbi
who refused to agree with that decision.
And that was Rabbi Eliezer ben Hurkanus.
And he he argued his position and they
didn't accept it.
And he refused to give in to the
majority.
So, the Gemara then says,
he tried to invoke a number of miracles
to convince them that he's right.
And he said, "If the Halacha's like me,
let the carob tree fly away."
And the carob tree blasted off like a
rocket.
And the Chachamim said, "We do not
listen to carob trees.
They do not have standing."
And then he said, "If the Halacha's like
me, let the river change its course and
move backwards."
And the river moved backwards. Hashem is
on his side.
And they said, "We don't really care
about rivers, either."
And then he said, "If the Halacha's like
me, let the walls of this Beit Midrash
collapse inward."
And the walls began to collapse inward.
And Rabbi Yehoshua said to the walls,
"Don't you dare."
And the walls didn't know who to listen
to.
So, it remained slanting. So again, this
was apparently an attempt
to justify the slanting walls of the
building and they attributed it to not
knowing what to do. But again, like a
broken record, the Chachamim said, "We
do not listen to walls."
So, he did three great miracles. So,
finally he pulls out the big guns and he
says, "If the Halacha's like me,
let there be a voice from heaven, from
God himself,
saying I'm right."
And a voice from Shamayim, a Bat Kol,
said, "Halacha k'Rabbi Eliezer."
Can't get better than that.
And you know what the Chachamim said?
"We don't care.
You, Hashem, mind your own business.
Stay out of this because you said in
your Torah, you said in your Torah, Lo
Bashamayim Hi. The Torah is not in
heaven. You gave it to us to decide how
to implement implement Halacha.
And therefore, even you have no
particular right to change the Halachic
process."
Now, when we talk about no one is above
the law, this is really a you know, we
talk about king and the kings, etc. This
even says Hashem, k'viyachol,
is bound
by the structures of the Torah.
The Torah is his law. In his law, he
indicates that there is no heavenly
input after Sinai. Meaning all Halachic
process has to be through human
endeavor. And therefore, God himself
cannot change the law.
In fact, technically technically,
if you want to know
why a Jew cannot be a Christian, why
can't they be a Jew and and believe in
in Yeshua? Now, there are a lot of
reasons, but the technical reason is
that any religious belief that says that
the Torah was superseded by later divine
revelations
is by definition false because God
himself has bound himself not to
supersede the commandments of the Torah.
So, a prophet cannot abrogate a
commandment even if he does all the
miracles
uh miracles in in the world. Okay.
I know Christians argue that Jesus
didn't do that. Okay, but I'm not going
to get into whether it was Jesus or Paul
who did it. That those are interesting
questions. Some say Paul is really the
inventor of the Christian religion much
more than Jesus was, but whatever it is,
uh any philosophy that abrogates the
Mitzvot is by definition not Jewishly
acceptable.
Now, we'll come back to this, but this
is Lo Bashamayim Hi. Now, this sounds
like a tremendous chutzpah, but the
Gemara then records that years later,
somebody asked Eliyahu Hanavi, who was
in Shamayim, right? Eliyahu Hanavi goes
back and forth
between earth and heaven. "What was
Hashem's reaction
when they said to Hashem, 'Stay out of
this. Lo Bashamayim Hi.'"
Did he want to destroy the world or
something?
They said Hashem laughed
and he said, "Nitzchuni Banai.
My children have bested me. They have
been victorious. I will stay out of this
fight. I will not get involved."
Now, the Gemara goes on. There's kind of
a sad ending to the story.
And that is because Rabbi Eliezer
refused to give in even after all of
this,
maybe because of this, he had all these
miracles on his side and the Bat Kol,
he was excommunicated by the Sanhedrin.
And Rabbi Akiva, his student, was chosen
to inform him of that.
And Rabbi Akiva comes to Rabbi Eliezer.
Rabbi Eliezer at that point is very old
and very sick. He's in bed.
And Rabbi Akiva stands, comes into the
room,
and stands at a distance of four amos
because you're not supposed to be in the
proximity of someone
who's been excommunicated.
And Rabbi Eliezer doesn't fully grasp
what's going on.
And he says, "What's wrong? Why don't
you come close to me?"
And Rabbi Akiva had to tell him, and the
way he said it was this. He said,
"It appears that your colleagues have
separated themselves from you."
He didn't say, "You're excommunicated."
They have separated themselves from you.
And Rabbi Eliezer started crying. He was
sobbing
because he said he's now become like a
Sefer Torah
that's tightly wound which there's so
much Torah there that's never going to
be read and never going to be learned
because he was essentially
disabled from being a teacher.
And what made it even more tragic is
that Rabbi Eliezer's wife
was the sister of Rabban Gamliel, the
head of the Sanhedrin that
excommunicated
So, he was excommunicated by his
brother-in-law.
So, the Gemara recounts some interesting
thing.
Rabbi Eliezer's wife never let her
husband say Tachanun. Whenever it was
time to say the Tachanun prayer,
she always interrupted him.
Why is that? Because Tachanun is the
time when you express your private
anguish and suffering to the Almighty.
And she was afraid
if he would express to Hashem
the depth of his pain,
Hashem would punish Rabban Gamliel,
her brother.
So, she always interrupted him when it
was time for Tachanun.
Again, this this raises a point that's
actually very very significant, but it's
not the main point I want to talk about.
And that is, well, wait a second. If
Rabban Gamliel was justified in what he
did
because he needed to preserve unity,
then why would he be punished? I mean,
what what is the idea here? And if he
wasn't justified, he'll get punished
anyway.
So, here you have to understand
something, and this is a very sobering
truth, and it's a disheartening truth,
but it's a truth.
It is a spiritual law of nature
that when we cause pain and suffering to
people,
it will come back to bite us even when
it is justifiable.
The fact that something is justified
does not immunize yourself from the
consequences.
An example would be in the physical
world. Let's imagine, God forbid, a
young baby, a baby fell into a fire.
And you jump into the fire to rescue the
baby.
Did you do the right thing? Yes. You're
a hero, you're a tzaddik, you're
righteous.
God will reward you.
But does that mean you're not going to
be burnt? Now, in rare cases, God does
an extreme miracle,
but by and large,
you know, you can't say, "How could the
fire harm me? I was doing a good thing."
The answer is, yeah, but it's kind of
inevitable. When you play with fire, you
get burnt.
When you hurt people and you destroy
people,
even when it's justified, there is what
is called a moral trace that comes back
to haunt you. Now, particularly when
you're dealing with a righteous tzaddik
like Rabbi Eliezer. So, she did not want
her husband to express his pain to God.
But one day she made a mistake.
She thought it was Rosh Chodesh. Rosh
Chodesh, she didn't bother to watch him
because you don't say Tachanun on Rosh
Chodesh.
But what happened was, she
miscalculated. It was not Rosh Chodesh.
And she saw him saying Tachanun,
and she said to him, "You have killed my
brother today."
At that very moment,
an emissary came to inform her
that her brother was niftar.
So, that's that's the end of the end of
the story. Now, as a little aside,
the Vilna Gaon uh
addresses a maybe a peripheral point,
but an interesting one.
He focuses on why did Rabbi Eliezer
choose those three particular miracles?
Right? The first miracle was the carob
tree.
The second miracle was the water that
changed its course.
And the third miracle were the walls of
the Beit Hamedrash collapsing. What do
those three particular miracles
represent?
So, here's what the Vilna Gaon says.
Rabbi Eliezer initially tried to
convince the Chachamim with logic and
argument. He was not successful.
So, after he lost that, his second
strategy is to demonstrate that he has
certain qualities of character
that he ought to be listened to because
he has the things that a great talmid
chacham needs to have.
And the Vilna Gaon says there are three
qualities
a great talmid chacham must have to be
great in Torah.
Quality number one
is tafkid b'muat. That means you are
satisfied with very little in terms of
materialism. You don't need a lot of
money, you don't need a lot of creature
comforts, you don't need uh fancy food,
etc., that many pleasures. You live a
very simple life.
Because if you're overly involved in the
material world, then your mind cannot be
focused on the Torah.
So, he wanted to demonstrate that he
lived a life of austerity and
simplicity.
And that is exemplified by the charuvim.
The carob is a very simple food.
I don't know if you had this when I was
uh
a child on Tu Bishvat in in the States,
they used to give us this dried carob
called bokser.
I don't know what the Is bokser Yiddish
or I don't know what language Arabic? I
don't know even what language it is.
Uh
I don't know what they call But the
bokser was uh
just like eating wood. I mean, it was
actually drier than wood. Like so so
absolutely, you know, you couldn't
You would break your teeth quite
literally. Uh But bokser or charuv, the
carob,
is used in the Gamara as a sign of
simplicity. There was a very great
Tanna, Rabbi Chanina ben Dosa, who was a
great miracle worker.
And Hashem said about Rabbi Chanina ben
Dosa, "Kol ha'olam kulo nizon bishvus
Chanina beni."
The whole world gets its parnassa
in the merit of Chanina, my son.
But Chanina beni
day low b'kav charuvim
me'erev Shabbat l'erev Shabbat.
And all he takes from the world is a
measure of carobs
from erev Shabbat to the next erev
Shabbat.
So, the charuv is simplicity,
austerity. So, Rabbi Eliezer is saying,
"Listen, I'm a person that is palish
me'olam hazeh. The carob tree will
testify."
Right? So, that's the first miracle to
establish his tafkid b'muat.
The second quality you need is humility.
Torah is compared to water, and there
many reasons, but one of the reasons is,
just as water goes from high ground
to low ground,
the Torah leaves the arrogant
and goes to the humble.
So, he's demonstrating he's calling upon
the water
to show that he's like water.
"Water, testify how humble I am." Now,
of course, you may say this sounds very
odd. A humble person does a miracle to
say how humble I am. "I am so humble, I
will make the water change its course."
One thinks that's the opposite of
humility. That's kind of boasting,
showing off. Like you're showing off how
humble you are.
Uh how can that work? But the truth of
the matter is, on a deeper level, that's
not a contradiction. Because uh humility
does not mean denying your worth. For
example, Moshe Rabbenu is described as
the most humble person. Now, if you
would have asked Moshe Rabbenu a shaila,
what
Let's say he would have said, "Oh, don't
ask me that. That 5-year-old is so much
smarter than me. Uh he's better than me.
He'll give you the better answer." That
wouldn't have been modesty, that would
have been insanity.
Obviously, Moshe Rabbenu understood what
he was.
But humility basically says that
whatever talents you have were given to
you by God,
they are not a basis to look down at
other people.
And therefore, a genuinely modest
person, when the occasion warrants, can
make a statement, "I am modest." Because
Rabbi Eliezer needs to present the
argument, "Listen, you guys, I'm not
fighting you because of egotism.
I'm not fighting you because I'm too
proud to give up my position.
I have testimony from the water
that my motivations are for the glory of
God and not because of my
self-aggrandizement."
So, yes, if a person simply makes a
point in a crowd, "I'm modest," that's a
bal ga'avah statement. But if it's
necessary to advance his cause,
then sometimes a person can say, "I call
upon God to testify I am not acting as a
result of my ego."
The third quality
is diligence, hasmadah. You could be
modest and simple, but if you don't
spend the time in learning, you're not
going to be great in Torah. So, that is,
he's calling upon the walls of the Beit
Hamedrash to testify
that he was always there.
So, the Vilna Gaon says the three basic
miracles are to demonstrate the
qualities of his tafkid b'muat,
the quality of uh anavah,
and the quality of hasmadah, of
diligence. But that didn't work because
after all, ultimately, halacha is not
based on personality. Uh Nary a okay,
you have all these wonderful qualities,
but if you haven't convinced us
logically of your position, we're not
going to accept it. So, now, let's go to
the most important part of the story,
which is the fourth thing. After the
three miracles fail,
lo bashamayim
How do you understand this? This is a
real real real difficult statement
because we don't have prophecy today,
and we haven't had prophecy for a long
time. So, when we try to discern the
will of God, we have to use logic,
precedent, analysis,
text, analogies. Right? We go through
the process of human reasoning, which is
roughly similar to any type of legal
system.
But ultimately,
what is it that you're trying to do when
you use your logic and your reasoning?
You're trying to figure out what God
wants you to do in a given case. And
since we don't have prophecy, which is a
direct answer to that question, we have
to try to figure it out by indirection.
But, if God tells you what he wants,
how can you dismiss that as irrelevant?
I mean, let me give you a
a trivial example. Let's imagine But,
didn't he give us 313 menorah
principles? Yes, he did. But, he But, he
But, he's telling you what he wants.
He's telling you what he wants.
So, let me give you an example. Let's
imagine
children in a family are debating. They
want to give their parents a birthday
gift. Right? So, they're sitting around
a table and somebody says, "Oh, Yael
likes this." And then, "Oh, Yael really
likes this." And mom walks by
and mom says, "Well, since you're
talking about it,
what I really would like is this." They
say, "Mom, keep out of it. We We are We
are discussing what you want and and
what you say you want is not relevant to
our discussion."
So, here we have a debate about what the
ratzon Hashem is.
And Hashem tells me his ratzon, and I
say, "Lo bashamayim hi."
Right? So, this is a a question that the
Drashos haRan discusses.
And he mentions another question as
well, which is somewhat related. That is
throughout Shas, throughout the whole
Talmud,
and even going on to present times, we
have numerous innumerable machlokes in
Halacha.
Different opinions, and the different
opinions are often mutually exclusive.
Beit Shammai Beit Hillel. One says
kosher, one says treif, one says pasul,
one says valid, one says chayev, you're
obligated to pay, one says patur.
Right? There are opposite opposite
answers.
So, which is right? So, even though in
the Halacha we go by one opinion,
but the Gemara says they're both right.
Eilu v'eilu
divrei Elokim chayim.
These and those
are the words
of the eternal God.
But, what does that mean? God gave the
Oral Law to Moshe b'Sinai.
So, God said either yes or God said no.
And if God said yes, the one that says
no is wrong. And if God said no, the one
that said yes is wrong. And you're
telling me they're both right. How can
they be both right if they go in
opposite directions?
It's like the old story about uh a two
people had a machlokes, and they went to
a rav for adjudication. And the rav
hears one side of the story and says,
"You're right."
And then, the rav hears the other side
of the story and says, "You're right."
And then, the rav the rebbetzin says,
"How can they both be right?" He says,
"You're right, also."
Everybody's right? What did Hashem say?
So, here's what the Drashos haRan says.
The Drashos haRan says
that when Hashem gave the written and
the Oral Torah to Moshe Rabbeinu,
he did not give it with a specific
Halachic ruling on every conceivable
situation.
He gave principles, the 13 principles.
He gave principles from which it was
left to the sages in every generation
to apply those principles to the
ever-changing mosaic
of life.
The Torah is unchanging and eternal,
but life changes all the time.
So, for example,
when we have something like, you know,
even today, the new questions.
Uh not so new anymore, but surrogate
motherhood, aim pundak la.
Cloning, nuclear war.
150 years ago, electricity.
And we have a Halachic scholar that
tries to figure out
how Halacha addresses it.
So, some people understand the process,
well,
Hashem told Moshe something about
electricity,
but I don't know exactly what he said,
so I'm going to try to figure out what
Hashem told Moshe
through these various texts and
analogies.
The Ran says that is conceptually
incorrect.
Hashem didn't tell Moshe anything about
electricity.
Hashem gave Moshe the raw materials
from which it is our responsibility to
then see how those things would apply.
In other words, Torah she b'al peh is
not a static
body of information.
It is a fluid mechanism by which the
chachamim are authorized in every
generation. Now, I'm leaving open
tremendous definitional
questions. Number one, who are the
chachamim that are authorized to engage
in this process? And number two, what
exactly is the process? When is a
Halachic process legitimate and when it
is not? Suffice it to say, there are
certain processes and methodologies that
are considered to be non-Halachic.
Right? I mean, maybe I'm glossing over
the most important question here. But,
the key point I want to say for this for
purposes of this year is that Torah she
b'al peh is a dynamic, creative, and
interactive process. It is not simply
statically, in a static way,
transmitting information. Therefore, the
Ran says, this is why there can be
machlokes. Because people ask the
question, how could there be arguments?
What did God tell Moshe?
If you understand
that the chachamim are taking the same
principles,
but they are differing how to apply it,
then it's possible for both to be true
in the eyes of God. An example would be,
although I've never had such a
professor, but I I read about them.
Let's say you have a complicated
mathematical problem, a differential
calculus problem,
and you really have to work it out for
pages and pages and pages.
And your final answer happens to be
incorrect.
But, a professor might say,
"I'm going to give you full credit for
process.
You followed the process."
So, here's what the Ran says.
It is true
that Hashem has an answer to every
question.
But, Hashem doesn't give us the answer
to every question.
He gives us the process where we're
supposed to figure it out.
And even when we get it wrong,
it becomes right,
because that is his will.
And therefore, lo bashamayim hi
basically means this.
Yes,
mathematically and objectively, Rabbi
Eliezer is correct.
But, operationally,
the truth that you apply in this world
is the truth that the majority of the
chachamim
come up with. Meaning, there is
mathematical truth,
which is said to be objective reality,
and there is Halachic truth,
which is the culmination of a process to
which God gives divine imprimatur.
Now, you may say,
"That's kind of a crazy way to give a
you know, to convey a body of law. Why
didn't Hashem just give us the rules?
Why did he give us a Torah
that is so conducive to argument, to
ambiguity,
to lack of clarity?"
Now, one answer you might give is,
"Well, Hashem couldn't have given Moshe
the answer to all questions, because
people wouldn't understand. I mean,
electricity, you know, those things
didn't exist then. So, you have to leave
it open."
Well, he could have given Moshe
envelopes
saying, "Don't open before, you know,
1895" or whatever it is. And then, you'd
get the answer.
Right? If If you learn a page of Gemara,
you you understand how much the Gemara
is a work
of groping in the dark.
I mean, that's the beauty of it. In
which we really don't have the answers,
and we're looking, and we have different
opinions, and different ways of looking
at things.
And it didn't have to be given that way.
It could have been given in a very
straightforward way.
God gives you the rules.
And yet, Hashem didn't give us the Torah
the way Hashem gave us the Torah in a
way
that compels us
to be active creators of divine truth.
So, the moshel would be, let's imagine
you want to bake a cake
for your 4-year-old in Gan her birthday.
So, there are two ways you can make the
cake.
The easiest way is when she is asleep or
in Gan,
you either make the cake or you buy the
cake. Go to a bakery and buy the cake.
Beautiful cake.
However, a deeper way of showing your
love
is to make the cake with the child. Now,
objectively speaking,
a cake that you're going to make with a
4-year-old will probably not be as good.
Uh the kitchen will be a mess, there'll
be cocoa on the floor, and there'll be
uh sugar on the counter, and there'll be
eggshells in the batter, and uh it'll be
lumpy, and part of it will be
underbaked, and part of it will be
overbaked.
And you could have done a much, much
better job by yourself.
And the bakery could probably even do a
better job.
So,
why is it Why is there any value in my
making an inferior cake with my
daughter?
The answer is,
the love is not in the product. The love
is in the interaction and the
relationship.
And Hashem said,
"I don't want to give you a finished
cake.
I want to give you the raw materials,
and we bake the cake together."
Yeah, the cake that we bake together is
going to be lumpy,
and confusing,
and ambiguous, and unclear,
but it's the cake of relationship and
love.
And that is why
the true translation of Matan Torah
doesn't just mean God gave us the Torah,
it means God gave away the Torah. God
abdicated his final word
and that this is his higher will. His
higher will is
that we should be the one we meaning
through the Hakhamim again, I'm glossing
over who are the Hakhamim, but his
higher will
is that even when we get it wrong
he cherishes
our endeavors to understand divine
truth. Right? That's Matan Torah. Okay?
So, if you understand
that Matan Torah
is God deferring
to human interpretation
then when is the first time
that that happened?
That happened on Friday
which was the 50th day of the Omer
because it was Hashem's original plan
to give the Torah that day.
He didn't give the Torah that day
because Moshe interpreted God's words as
requiring an extra day.
So, it turns out that was Matan Torah.
Meaning
Matan Torah occurred not by an act of
commission
but it occurred by Hakadosh Baruchu
deferring
to the human input into the divine will.
So, Matan Torah
as an event
was a non-event. It was the non-event of
not giving the Torah on the original day
that was the greatest expression of what
Matan Torah represents. And that is why
we celebrate Shavuot not on the day that
Hashem gave the Ten Commandments
but on the day that Hashem deferred to
Moshe Rabbeinu by not giving the Ten
Commandments. Now again, whether you
should share this with your children,
I'm not sure because it it would
contradict everything everything they
learned in school.
It's not good to confuse them too much.
Uh but this is this is the emes. This is
the emes according to the Magen
Avraham's calculation Matan Torah as the
event of Matan Torah occurred on the
51st
day.
So, this is an important idea, the
dynamism of Torah. Now again, in in a
way it's it's revolutionary and a little
bit dangerous because obviously if you
take these ideas to an extreme, you can
make a case for all sorts of reforms and
all sorts of things which are not within
the Halakhic process.
So, one has to
understand exactly what is the Halakhic
process and that's not such a simple
question
because obviously within the Halakhic
process there is room for great
innovation and great creativity. And
there's no doubt that we are much more
cautious in many areas than we need to
be. But part of that is
you know
unfortunately religious Jews are often
defined by uh
anti-religious movements or
non-religious movements. Meaning if you
have movements to the left that are
advocating reforms outside of Halakha
the natural instinctual tendency of
people faithful to Halakha is to circle
the wagons
and say nothing ever changes.
On the other hand, the statement nothing
ever changes is not a true state it is
just not a true statement. It is not a
Halakhic true statement, but it it does
come from legitimate fears. I'm not I'm
not dismissing the fears that if you
open up uh certain uh opportunities,
then you know, the slippery slope so to
speak. Once you allow something out,
what's going to happen? And in our
generation perhaps that is a legitimate
fear. I you know, I'm not I mean I can
see I can see both sides of the
argument. But it is important to know
that Torah Shebaal Peh is a dynamic and
creative process based on the idea of
Hashem giving fundamental principles to
Moshe at Sinai and we take and those are
divine principles and we take those
principles and we apply them to the
ever-changing scenarios of life and
Hakadosh Baruchu does not give us a
final answer. He basically says he will
defer to the answer of the Hakhamim. In
fact, let me give you an interesting
maaseh
that illustrates this
really it's it's a non-rational maaseh,
but it's a very interesting maaseh. You
know, we have a whole category in
Halakha called treifah. What is treifah?
Uh colloquially whenever an animal is
not kosher, we say treifah, but but
that's not the technical term.
Technically a treifah is an animal that
has some type of defect in its internal
organs, a lung or a heart or a kidney or
a liver. So, even when it's shechted
properly, it's properly shechted. But
you then inspect it and you see various
defects
in the internal organs, so the animal
cannot be eaten. That is what is called
a treifah.
Most commonly these problems are found
in lungs
uh and and the like.
Now, Hazal have a tradition
that any animal that has one of these
treifos can normally not live more than
a year.
A treifah is an animal essentially in a
terminal condition.
And there's also some thought that if a
human being has those defects he is in
the same boat.
So, uh
in Europe there was a certain defect
that throughout Europe was considered to
be treifah
but in the city of Volozhin the Rav
paskened it was not a treifah.
So, there was a man in Volozhin that had
this lung condition
which in the rest of Europe was treifah
and in Volozhin was not treifah and he
wanted to go to a drier climate
for health reasons.
So, the Shaagas Aryeh who was the Rav of
Volozhin at the time said you cannot
leave Volozhin
because as long as you're in Volozhin
Hashem does not give you the din of a
treifah and therefore you can live.
As soon as you leave Volozhin you will
be subject to the Halakha that applies
in the rest of Europe you will be a
treifah and as a treifah you will not
survive a year. Therefore, he says it is
better for you to stay in Volozhin than
to leave Volozhin and go to a better
climate. Now, the man thought this was
ridiculous. I mean he has a medical
condition. I mean he'll either die or
won't die and he might as well go to a
better climate.
So, he dismissed this and he went to the
warm climate and he died within the
year. Which means essentially what the
lesson is that in some metaphysical way
Hashem changes the reality
to follow what the Halakhic
determination is.
And you recall another example which is
not quite as dramatic actually, but
another example
uh is uh when Rabban Gamliel's Sanhedrin
made a certain day Rosh Hashanah
and Rabbi Yehoshua thought that was a
mistake and he thought Rosh Hashanah was
a day later
and he was ordered by Rabban Gamliel to
come to him with his money and his staff
on the day that was his Yom Kippur, the
day after Yom Kippur, and he didn't know
what to do because how could he violate
Yom Kippur?
But Rabbi Akiva told him, "Listen,
even if you're right, your day is not
Yom Kippur.
Even if astronomically
Rosh Hashanah was a day later and Yom
Kippur was a day later, if the Sanhedrin
decided that it would be early, that is
how Hashem responds as well. So, Hashem
Hashem's will
is reflected in how the Hakhamim come
out. And that's why even if Rabbi
Eliezer was right in the story of Tanur
shel Akhnai he still turns out to be to
be wrong. So, be this may, I want to
wish everyone a Chag Sameach and a good
Yom Tov. May all of us be so happy to a
true Kabbalas haTorah with much much joy
and of course ki ish echad u'velev echad
to be like one person with one heart.
I did not understand why Moshe
um
came to the conclusion that that Matan
Torah was a day later. Yes, yes, I I
didn't actually that's a good point. I
didn't quite explain it. The reason why
he came to that conclusion
was he misinterpreted
when Hashem said they should separate a
day and another day
he understood that to mean it had to be
two full days, so you don't count the
day that he got the commands because
that was already a partial day.
So, Hashem meant today and tomorrow and
I'll give the Torah on the third day.
He understood it has to be two full days
and therefore this is the first day and
then two complete days. So, he
misinterpreted
the divine will and Hashem said, "If
that's how you see it, I'm going to go
along with it."
Okay, take care. Be well.
God