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[Music]
You see
your tomorrow
[Music]
Okay. Hi everybody. Good good to see
you. Thank you for coming and um our
dedications are the normal dedications
praying for the victory of our in all
the fronts of the war. Obviously, as you
know, new fronts are being opened up.
So, we're not out of the water yet. uh
for the lasting unity of the people of
Israel and for all of those whose health
has been affected by the war, the safe
return of all of the hostages.
uh aliat shama gto bat
mosha whose yard site was on
ba and for foyer rael bat
alter and as well as an anonymous
contribution was made for the of all of
our and all of our hassages to return
safe totally healthy to their
homes hashem's protection to for the
gulma in these
Well, just as a little bit of
biographical information, we read uh a
person whose yard was lagg bulmer was
also the yard site of the Ramar, the
great great Ashkanazi Posek, the Rev of
Krakco. Uh and it is said when the Ramar
was nifra at a young age. It's it's it's
mushed. As I get older and I look at the
age of some of the greatest greatest
gadol makes me realize how you know
meager our accomplishments might be. But
the Rama died uh I think at 48 before
the age of 50 for sure. And uh somebody
wanted to give a hespit since he died in
Lagba. He wanted to enumerate the 33
praises of the Rama. I think he only got
to 32. He couldn't think of a 33rd one.
So the hespet is a little incomplete. If
you look at the padum that were given at
the Ramas Leva, uh someone enumerates 32
mileas of the Raab. He somehow I don't
know it seems to me a creative madesh
could somehow divide two things into you
know one thing into two things but it's
only
32as okay um so what I want to talk
about today is actually a continuation
of last week last week was the mitzvah
counting of the omare we are still in
the counting of the omare so I want to
talk about the counting of the omare uh
the idea of counting the days between
pesak and and shuos uh I just want to
mention as a matter of
interesting that there's actually three
opinions among the commentators if the
mitzvah is the today or not. Most reonim
toos and monos and most reonim actually
say that the mitzvah account the omare
bisman today when there's no temple is
only a rabbitic law to commemorate what
was done when there was a temple because
the Torah says you start counting the
spir from the day you bring the omare
offering which is the second day of pes
we don't have an omr offering so
according to most opinions The counting
of the omare today is raan zer to
remember what was done when there was a
ba mikdash. The one opinion who takes a
stricter view is the opinion of the ram.
The ram actually says that the mitzvah
of counting the om period is
independent of bringing the corba omare.
So even when there's no B mikdash and we
don't bring the corb we are still m to
count minor tora. So this is a maklo
generally is today a Torah commandment
which is the Rambam's opinion or is
today a rabbitic
commandment. Now you might ask me well
ultimately what's the difference? You
got to do it. Even a rabbitic
commandment has to be done. So there
actually is a bit of a difference
whether you could fulfill the mitzvah of
spir in the twilight zone between
sunset and the stars coming out because
according to halaka the twilight zone is
a safet if it belongs to the preceding
day or it's already the new day. Now
normally when it comes to rabbitic laws
we are permitted to heir on the side of
leniency. When it comes to Torah laws we
have to be strict. Now in America in
particular, it's very very common that
Marv is davin before the stars are out.
In other words, it's not yet dark. They
dav after sunset and before the stars
coming out. So as a result, are you
allowed to count the omare that early
according toos and you could because
even though that period is a safk if
it's day or night on a rabbitic
commandment, you can give yourself the
benefit that it's night. Masha and Ken
according to the Rambam that counting
the Omr is doa you would not be allowed
to count the R until for sure it's night
and therefore you'd have to wait until
the stars come out and since we have
this mak that's why we encourage people
if they're dabing Marley to say spira uh
when it's when it's dark in order to be
yay the Rambam's opinion now those are
two op those are the two basic opinions
that sira is either draanan or sphira is
the oice. But there's a third opinion
that's very enigmatic and this third
opinion was uh by one of the great great
Mishon who's extremely important in the
history of Halak although he's not so
well known. This is Rabenu Yukim.
Rabenuham was a disciple of the rush and
uh although in our yeshiva curriculum we
typically don't mention Rabenuham but if
you learn and not just uh you will see
is extraordinarily important in the Bose
uh uh Rabenuim is constantly mentioned
and constantly quoted and says a very
strange thing that it's hard to figure
out. He says part of the counting of the
omare is a Torah law and part of the
counting of the omare is only a rabbitic
law. We know when we count the omr we
count both days and weeks. So for
example when it's the seventh day of the
omr or the 14th day of the omr we say
this is the 14th day of the omr which is
or the 14th day which is two weeks of
the omr. And it has to be done that way
because there's a mitzvah to count
days and there's a mitzvah to count
weeks. So says Rabenu the following
idea. The mitzvah to count
days is a Torah commandment even when
there's no BA mikdash. But the mitzvah
to count
weeks is obligatory under Torah only
when there's a ba mikdash and when
there's no bas mikdash the counting of
weeks is only mikdash. This is
Rabenuham's opinion. Now he doesn't
really give you any explanation for it
and it's very difficult to understand. I
can understand the general debate. Does
does the mitzvah of spir depend on the
corban or is it independent of the
corban. So if it depends on the corban
then everything is rabbitic today. If it
doesn't depend on the corban everything
is Torah today. So the Rambam says it's
not dependent on the corban. So
everything is Torah. And uh toos says it
is dependent on the corban so everything
is rabbitic. Okay, we got that. But
where are you going to get any type of
logic to say oh the days are independent
and therefore they're Torah laws. The
weeks are dependent and therefore it's
only rabbitic today. What's what's the
logic to differentiate between the days
and the weeks? So um the orame of mayor
Simra Cohen of Dinsk the great uh God
the RV of Dinsk offers a very very uh
nice explanation for Rabenu
Yurukham's somewhat enigmatic opinion
and he says the
following shuos the holiday of Shivuos
is both a
one-day and on some level it is a
7day I'm not referring to The golut of
two days that's a separate thing but but
in there's a one-day aspect of shabu and
there's a 7day strangely enough aspect
of shabu the one-day aspect of shuas is
of course the yumto the yumto of shabuos
is only one day what is the 7-day aspect
we know that on each of the shalos each
of the three pilgrimage festivals
pesuos
sukus every male this was on the male
had to make a pilgrimage
to and had to physically appear in the
courtyard of the basikt the Azor and
bring a
sacrifice and this was a burnt offering
and this is called an
olasia the burnt offering that is
brought when you are seen by God that's
the way it's described I come to the
azara the courtyard of the temple to be
seen by God and I'm not allowed to come
empty-handed I got to come with my
corba. Now the is the following. If you
didn't bring your let's take P for a
moment. If you didn't bring your the
first day of PES, you have seven six
more days to bring it. You don't bring
it on Shabas, but other than Shabas, you
can bring it for a total of seven days.
Seven days minus Shabas. Sukus, you
actually have one extra day. You
actually have the seven days of sukkot
anderatini itself does not have its own
pilgrimage offering but you can use it
as a makeup for the sukus pilgrimage
offering. So for pes you have seven days
to bring your lasy again excluding
shabas for sukos you have eight days for
your laser. What
about you might have thought logically,
well, you only have one day because
after one day it's no longer the but the
Gmorrah says that we compare since the
Torah juaposes the holidays together. We
compare Shuos to Pes just like Pes you
get seven days. Shuos you get seven
days. The Gomorrah asks the obvious
question. Why do you compare Shuos to
Pes? Maybe compare shos to sukus and
you'll have soar uses the famous
apherism like if you try to grab on to
too much you you'll get nothing at all
because here's the point if I compare it
to pes I get seven days if I compare it
to sukus I get eight days so either way
I get seven days I'm just not sure if I
get the extra day so I got to go with
what I'm certain and I'm certain I have
seven
So it actually turns out that Shivuos is
a holiday on some level for seven days
because you have the opportunity to
bring the
olia. Now even today where we don't have
the temple there is a little bit of a
zer to the 7-day aspect of particularly
uh initel where you may notice you may
remember and you'll you'll see it this
year that the at least is we don't
say for six days following meaning we
don't say
uh but we don't say it for another six
days why because it has a status of
somewhat of a festive uh time because
this was the time of the
olata. Now says the
mesh, the reason why the omare has to be
counted in both days and weeks is
because since the omare is a countdown
to the holiday of shuos, you have to do
your counting based on the units of the
holiday towards which you're counting.
So I count days because Shivuos is a
one-day holiday. I count weeks because
Shivuos is a week-long holiday. Meaning
the units of counting correspond to the
Yamiff.
Ahim's logic now becomes very very
clear. The one week aspect
of only existed when there was a Bikash
when you had one week for the las. So as
a result the to count weeks lapses when
you don't have a bas mikdash and we only
do that today because of a rabbitic law
to remember the mikdash mashen the one
day aspect of still exists today because
we have a and that is why the counting
of the omr is uh doa when it comes to
the days again it's a very very
brilliant uh beautiful explanation uh
for raenu yukim's opinion it also
explains explains an interesting
peculiarity of uh the Nus that manyard
have for the Omr. Let me contrast it
with Ashkanaz and
uh let's say I want to be sure I don't
count tonight's serious. So last last
night was uh what what time last night
was 37. Okay. So when we counted last
night 37. So the way we said it
was this is the 37th
day which is five weeks and two days.
And we then end it with either Om that's
another but we put the word omr at the
end of the sentence. That is the
standard or many not all they say it a
little differently. They
say I'm using last night's omare
account. This is the 37th day of the
omare which is five weeks and two days.
In other words, they move the word omare
instead of being at the end of the
phrase, they position it after the
yamim. Why would that be so? Again,
there's no particular reason why that
would be so. So, this is my own
speculation that the basis of this
is that the days are a Torah requirement
and the weeks are only a rabbitic
requirement. So we want to position the
word omare adjacent to the Torah count
and not to the rabbitic count. And
that's why we say this is the 37th day
of the omare because that's the Torah
mitzvah. And then we add on the rabbitic
edition which is 5 weeks and two days.
Okay. So that's a little bit of uh
technical I just wanted to share with
you. But now I want to focus on another
issue which was a mlo that existed for
hundreds and hundreds of years in the
time of the second temple and it still
exists today with the carites. When the
Torah gives us the mitzvah of counting
the omir the Torah says you shall
count the day after Shabas.
Start counting the day after
Shabas mean moas
hashabas. Now in the time of the second
temple there were two movements in
Judaism.
One movement are the prushim, the
Pharisees, which the Christian Bible
treats very poorly, but it happens to be
the Pharisees are what we call kazal.
The prushim, right? There are people.
But then there was a movement that was
quite large and powerful, politically
well-connected and wealthy called the
stukim, the
saddes. Stookim is simply because the
name of the founder of the movement was
a person saddok that happened to be his
name. And uh the Sadducees essentially
did not accept the authority of the oral
law and they interpreted the Torah in a
very literalistic manner. Now the
Sadducees as a movement became more or
less
extinct during the of the second temple
meaning essentially no sudukim or at
least a movement of sukim did not
survive. So the sukim as a movement were
kaput. However, much much later in the
uh 10th century in the
900s after the Talmud in the time of
Sajjagon, a movement that is somewhat
similar to the Sadducees was reinvented
and these are called the Kim the
Kites and Karites too today. They're
very insignificant movement. There are
kerites here in Israel. They have a
synagogue etc. uh they're very small. uh
but uh in Rafajon's time in in the
Rambam's time karites were very very big
and they posed a major major threat um
to Judaism and again so the Kites or the
Kraim and the Stukim are not the same
people they are not the same movement uh
they originated at different times but
they do represent the same philosophy of
kind of literalism as it were and uh
They take the position that if the Torah
says you start counting the omare the
day after shabas shabas means Saturday
and therefore the counting of the omare
will always start on the first Sunday
after pes actually this year it happens
to be that we're doing the same thing as
the kites because we started so this
year is a year I guess of a of shalom in
which we even were together with the
kites but normally the kaiites would
defer the counting of the omer till
Sunday till Saturday 9th Sunday after
Pes because the car or the stoukim the
carites have the same belief but in the
Gomorrah it discusses that stom so that
stukim interpreted shabas to be literal
Saturday
shabas kazal our sages have a tradition
that the word shabas in that puk does
not mean Saturday but it's a reference
to the yumtove of pesa that is called
Shabas and Mim. So Shabas is the day
after the Y of Pes i.e second day of Pes
and this was a controversy that lasted
really for hundreds and hundreds of
years. And if you learn the Mishna, you
learn the Gammorrah, you actually see
that the sages went to very very great
lengths to uproot and dispute this
belief. Apparently this belief was
widely accepted. Part of why it was
widely accepted is it created a
convenience for vacation days because if
you start counting the Omr on Saturday
night Sunday. So Shivuos is going to be
Shabas
Sunday will be Sunday. So you have
Shabas and Sunday is a two-day vacation.
Meaning normally Shabu is only a one-day
vacation. When you start counting the
Omr Shabas you get a two-day vacation.
So uh the saddesty position was very
popular among the working classes. Uh
but nevertheless the sages went to very
great lengths. So the question I want to
start discussing
is of course we believe what kazal say
kazal tell us that the word shabas in
that pk is referring to the yumto of
pes. But why did the Tyra use a word
that is potentially so
ambiguous? Why did it use a word whose
simple meaning is shabas and then we
interpret it doesn't mean shabas it
means
yumto. So here too I want to share with
you a a thought of the mesh. Very very
interesting thought. He points out,
let's look uh through the prism of for a
moment at the major difference between
Shabas and Yamt, right? We have Shabas,
we have Yamt. Both Shabas and Yamt,
you're not allowed to engage in Ma. But
what's the difference? So there are two
fundamental differences between Shabas
and Yamt. Difference number one is what
we call nephesh food preparation.
Shabas, the malos of Shabas are
absolute. You're not allowed to
desecrate Shabas for food preparation. I
mean that's obvious. One of the 39 m of
Shabas is called cooking. So unless
it's which is a matter of life and death
shabas there is no to
do for food
preparation without getting into all the
details
of even though you're not allowed to do
but you're allowed to do it for food
preparation and other types of ytiff
needs you're allowed to cook you're
allowed to carry if that becomes
necessary. So we'll call this as the
Torah calls it
the dispensation of neesh of food that
sustains the soul is permitted on yumto.
It is not permitted on shabas. That is
difference number one. Difference number
two is the source of the holiness of
shabas and yamt. Shabas was sanctified
by god and as a result shabas is shabas.
Whether I know it's Shabas or I don't
know it's Shabas. Shabas is Shabas. Even
if, God forbid, God forbid, there would
not be a single Jew in the world, which
will never happen. But if there would
not be a single Jew in the world who
knew that today was Shabas, it would
still be Shabas. Shabas is sanctified by
God. And even though we engage in a
ritual called
kush, that does not mean we are
sanctifying the shabas. We are just
acknowledging that this is the day that
was sanctified by
God.
Yamtaf is actually a very very different
type of kaduca. Yamt very much depends
on x number of days from the
sanctification of the new moon. Pesak
for example is the 15th day from the
sanctification of the month of Nissan.
Rashashana happens to be the first day
of the sanctification of the month. And
the Gomorrah tells us that if the
Sanhedrin proclaimed the wrong day as
Roshesh because they were fooled, the
YPF is not counted astronomically from
the actual appearance of the new moon.
It is counted from the day that the
Sanhedrin
sanctified Roesh. If you remember,
there's actually a story in the Mishna
where Rebi Yahosua disagreed with the
calculations of the Sanhedrin about
Rashashana and his Yum Kipper, he
thought Rashashana was a day later and
his Yum Kipper was would be a day later.
Raban Gaml ordered him who was the head
of the Sanhedrin ordered him to come to
him with his staff and his money on Rabi
Yeshua as Yum Kipper. And Yeshua didn't
know what to do. How could I desecrate
the holy day of Yumkiper? And Rabbi Aka
told him, let even when they're wrong,
the holidays are based on that
establishment. Now, you might ask the
question, well, if that's the case, how
do Yamovven work today? Today, we don't
have a Sanhedrin that is taking
witnesses about a new moon. We're we're
working off a calendar. Why is there Yam
at all today? So you know what the
Ramban says? The Ramban says very
fascinatingly that towards the end of
the Sanhedrin's tenure around the 400s
theim knew that the Sanhedrin would be
disbanded soon. So they created the
Jewish calendar. They calculated all of
the
roes till the year
6000 because we know that Mashiach will
be there by then and we'll go back to
the old system. And they actually
verbally
proclaimed all these roach events. I
mean imagine a book of 200 pages and it
just gives you the dates of every ro
kodesh from the year 450 common era to
the year
6000. So that's what that's uh
5600* 12 numbers of 1500 year times 12.
all all of those things and they would
just read they would
say here this and in other words the
Rambana actually says that
every that we have is only because the
Sanhedrin sanctified the new moons ahead
of time and that is the meaning of the
statement that is often stated the
Jewish calendar
expires in the year 6000.
Now, from a mathematical standpoint,
that's a nonsensical statement because
the Jewish calendar is based on
calculations. So, the truth of the
matter is, what do you mean it expires?
If you were to ask me what day will
Roshes Nissan fall out based on the
calendar 10,000 years from now, not that
I know the answer, but I would be able
to figure it out. It doesn't expire.
It's a process that can be extrapolated
indefinitely.
So what does it mean the calendar
expires in the year 6000? It means that
their book that they read from this is
Roz stopped at the year 6000. Therefore
if counterfactually counterfactually
Mashiach would not come by the year 6000
there would be no obligation to keep
Yamim to because there would not be the
sanctification of baston shabas. We'd
have to keep not Yamf. In other words,
the holiness of
Yamiff depends on ami
Israel. The holiness of Shabas is
independent from Israel. And this is
reflected in the
differential. When it comes to Shabas,
we
say
hashabas. Blessed art you God who san
you God sanctify the shabas. When it
comes to yamto very exact we
sayim you sanctify Israel who is then
given the capacity to sanctify the times
byesh by proclaiming ro kodesh we have
that control now here is the
thing that's why when it's shabas you
have to know how exactly liturgy is when
it's both shabas and y the way the bra
is you don't
say no no no
no you sanctify shabas you then sanctify
is who has the power to sanctify the
yumpt through the process of kesh so
biker So far there are two major
distinctions between Shabas and Yumpt.
One is the hra for food preparation and
the other is the sanctification of
Shabas comes from God. The
sanctification of Yumpt comes from Ami
Israel acting through their Sanhedrin as
they sanctify the new moon. And even
today it's based on that because the
last Sanhedrin sanctified the new moons
in advance based on the keshbon
uh that were created at that time. Now
says in
these two distinctions between Shabas
and Yam depend on a third distinction
and this third distinction will explain
the other two and that is Yamt gets
created only because of the unique
relationship that God has with the
Jewish people. There wouldn't be a
pesak if there wouldn't have been
aasim. There wouldn't have been a
shvuos if there wouldn't have been a
matan tora. There wouldn't have been a
sukos had there not been the clouds of
glory that surrounded us. Yumpt exists
only because of us. Yumaf exists only
because of God's relationship to us as
opposed to
Shabas. Shabas commemorates something
although only Jews keep Shabas. That's
very true. But Shabas commemorates
something that in a sense is independent
of the existence of the Jewish people.
Shabas commemorates the fact that
Hashem made the world in six days and
rested. So says
the since Yamt comes into existence only
because of
us, it bends to our needs. We have food
preparation needs. Yumpt bends to us.
Yam is bel to us and we are given the
kawak to sanctify this man because yamt
comes from us. And by the way, that
that's why the is very clear that the
hra to cook on yum is only for a Jew,
not for a non-Jew. You're not allowed to
cook for a non-Jew. In fact, according
to the not even supposed to invite a
non-jok, that's a separate Shila. Uh we
have some we look for that. We have
intermarried couples and the like, but
that only goes to the invitation aspect
which is a rabbitic extension. the
actual cooking for a nonjam for sure
that is absolutely absolutely user. Now
since shabas does not depend on
us it does not yield to us. It does not
bend to our needs nor do we control the
holiness of shabas. So you see uh so far
the structure very nice structure. We
start with two
differences between Shabas and Yam. One
is food preparation and the other is who
establishes the holiness. And those two
differences are based on the third idea
that Yumpt comes into existence only
because of us. And that's why we kind of
control Yam in ways that we don't
control Shabas because Shabas has
nothing to do with us. And that's why
it's called a gift. By the way, Shabas
is called a precious gift that God gave
us. What is the nature of a gift?
Something that you get out of the blue.
You didn't earn it. You don't deserve
it. You get a gift. Right? Shabas is a
gift. Okay? So now it says
the although it's true that the arise
out of Hashem's unique relationship to
Israel, but of all of the
yim pes is the most like Shabas.
Because if Shabas represents a gift that
we didn't earn and we didn't deserve and
it doesn't emanate from our relationship
with
God. Pesak is somewhat similar because
remember that Pesak represented a
redemption that we didn't earn. We
should have been in Mitraim 400 years.
Hashem had to redeem us after 210 years
because we would have hit level 50 and
we would have disappeared. And indeed as
it was four-fifths of the Jewish people
in fact
disappeared. So it was a redemption we
weren't ready for. It was a redemption
we didn't earn. It was a redemption that
was given to us as a
matana. So that's why it's called
shabas. It's called shabas because it is
the most shabistic unlike shuos which we
earned by counting of the omare by
preparing ourselves by purifying
ourselves. Unlike sukus which is the
aftermath of yum kipper and the chuva
process for the sin of the golden calf
pesak was a gift was a freebie and
because it was a freebie it
partakes of the nature of
shabas I would like to add to the mesh I
don't think he says this that this might
explain an interesting thing if I were
to ask you where does the Torah tell me
You're allowed to cook. you're allowed
to do food preparation on yum like you
know where where is this law
of uh the answer is uh it is
in dealing with pes meaning the Torah
doesn't
mention for
pes it mentions it for I'm sorry for shu
and sukus it mentions it only for pes
and we learn out the other holidays from
pes
Why does it mention it for because
here's the
thing might be the one where you would
think you don't have
a because it's not something that we
earned and therefore it's not something
we would control. So the terra had to
tell me
even has the status of and the other
that might be I think a good explanation
for this. Okay. So this is the mesh
uh beautiful
explanation why pesak is referred to as
shabas. But now I want to take this one
step further.
The safer writes and this is a very
well-known theme that the and we said
this more than once the purpose of
counting of the omare is to link
connect the holiday of
freedom with the holiday of Torah to
make it one long holiday in order to
underscore the idea that freedom is
worthwhile only when it's linked to
submission to Hashem.
Meaning don't celebrate freedom as a
separate value. Freedom is worthwhile
when it connects to serving God. And
that's why kazal say the grain offering
of pesak was barley. Omar is barley
which is animal f. The grain offering of
shuas is wheat which is human
consumption. Because when you go from
pesak to shvas, you're actually going
from animal to
human. So here's the question. If that
is so, and this is an idea that is
universally stated, that the counting of
the Omar links freedom and submission to
God, why don't we start counting the
Omr from day
one? We ought to start counting the Omar
from the first day of PES.
Why do it from day two? Why is
it? So the himself asks the question and
the says well listen on the day that we
celebrate the Exodus we don't want to
bring in other holidays. We want to just
focus 100%. This is a
clim. We don't try to mix one joy with
another joy. We want to focus totally.
But the MS is although the safer says it
so who am I to argue in a sense it's a
weak reason because if the purpose of
the freedom is the Torah the Torah is
not another
holiday this is the purpose and in fact
of the four terms of redemption of the
four cups the fourth cup I will take you
on to reformationation is actually
referring to matan tora the dal kosus
themselves is referring to matan tora so
here so so we're back to square One,
what is the concept of deferring spher
to
dato? So let me share with you something
that of breast says in the kout Maran
and he actually says it in the name of
his great-grandfather of the baltov. So
this actually goes back to the balshto
himself which has nothing to do with
shvas nothing to do with but but it's a
general observation that I think will be
a very powerful answer to this question.
He raises the question which indeed
might bother many people. When you first
come to Judaism, let's say you're
bicha and you come to
Judaism, everything seems very
bright, you see excitement, you see
passion, you see
sweetness. Every shabas is wonderful
experience. Every davin you feel so
close to God. Learning is wonderful. In
fact, this is the old joke. I mean,
there are a lot of jokes of this genre
which are a little sad, but they happen
to be true. That's that is how do you
tell if somebody's a Baltua or from from
birth? Says, okay. Um, if you're if
you're crying during Davining, you're a
Baltua for sure. You know, uh, if you
take more than three minutes to bench,
you're a Baltouva for sure. You know,
the basic idea is people who have
passion in what they do, they must be
balua. Fact, there was a classic speech.
This is very very funny speech about a
man who was honored at the Lincoln
Square dinner for his work with Kira
Bhiken and he called his speech why I
hate poly trouba. It was really it was
it was actually a very affectionate
speech. But he said, "You know, I come
home Friday night. All I want to do is
get through the meal in 15 minutes and
go to sleep." And we're about to bench
and I'm ready. I'm ready to bench. I'm
going to hit the bed. Hit the bed in two
minutes. And this buba says, "Hi, you
didn't say to the para just you didn't
sing the all the siros here." You know,
he said that's why I hate bala because
they make me do all these things. So the
question is this, what's going
on? How come when I first come to Torah,
it is so beautiful and exciting and then
afterwards with the decades I lose my
gishmach. Now the simple answer you're
going to give me isn't going to work. I
mean the simple answer obviously is
habituation. Listen, the more I do
something over and over and over again I
it loses its impact. But the truth is
that doesn't really make sense with
mitzvah because if every mitzvah deepens
your connection with
Hashem, how could there be diminishing
returns? How could it be that the more I
learn and the more I do, the less I
feel? You can't just offer habituation
as the answer to this because this is a
spiritual
reality. A
kesher, right? I can look at a beginner
and I could I could be so envious of the
love that they bring to why can't I have
that? This is the the BMT raised the
question. So here's what the BMT said
quotes. Let's imagine a
baby that's learning to walk.
So first of all the process those of you
who have children I mean the process of
children learning to walk actually is a
wondrous wondrous process even crawling.
I remember to this day my son who is now
uh almost 40 I remember when he started
crawling forget about walking crawling
and it was so hard. He was really in
like pain. He was like
grunting and I'm thinking to myself why
are you working so hard? Stay in the
crib and play. What is What is making
you go on like this? Why are you doing
it? You're obviously not
comfortable. This is an amazing thing.
Hashem
hardwired human to want to achieve, to
want to learn, to want to grow, to keep
on
moving and not get
discouraged. And no matter how and
learning to walk is the same thing. No
matter how many times the kid is going
to fall
down, he's going to get up
again. Defeat is actually not part of
the natural human
condition. The natural human condition
is hope, is optimism of going on. Yeah,
we do learn defeat even in as young we
may pick it up even as young children,
but that's a learned response. That's
not the nature. And by the way,
happiness is the same thing. You know,
people ask the question, it's a good
question. Why are kids
happy? I mean, kids are are generally
happy. Like,
why why are kids happy? And part of the
answer is because that is the natural
way we are. We can become unhappy
because of experiences and
disappointments and the like. Now, you
don't need to you don't need a reason
why kids are happy. You actually need
reasons why we're unhappy. The natural
condition of a human being is happiness.
The natural condition of a human being
is resilience, not giving up. So
children learning to walk is quite an
amazing thing. But that's a little
digression from the Balchto's point. The
BMTO's point is when the kid begins to
walk, so he's unsteady. So the parents
are holding on to his shoulders, holding
on to his arms, and he takes a step,
then another step, and another step.
And then at some point the parents feel
the child is ready to do it on his own.
They let go. They're still there of
course to protect him. And as soon as
they let go, what is likely to happen is
plop plop plop. He's going to
fall. Of course, he'll get up again.
That's true. But he's going to fall. So
if the child could verbalize his or her
thoughts, the child might
wonder how come it was so easy a minute
ago and now it's gotten hard. Have I
regressed only, you know, only two and a
half years or whatever it is? I'm
regressing already. What's going on? Am
I losing it? And the answer is no. No,
you haven't regressed. Until now, you
were being held up by Aba and Neima. Now
you have to make it your own. Now you
have to learn on your own how to do it
and that's going to involve failing and
involve falling and the like. So says
the
balm says the bal when a person is very
far from God they haven't yet embraced a
full life of
Torah. God carries them to artificially
high levels. God carries you. when he
carries you, this looks beautiful and
that looks beautiful and that looks
great. And at some point, Hashem says,
"I've shown you what you're able to
become. Now I'm going to put you down.
Now I'm going to let go and I've shown
you what a life of Torah is. Now it's
your job to internalize it and make it
your own." So counterintuitively RAN
develops this when a person faces
obstacles in the
ravode it is not a sign of failure it is
not a sign of losing a level it is
actually a sign of divine
confidence that they're ready for the
next step of
internalizing what Hashem had shown them
artificially. You see, because
ultimately the only thing that matters
is not the artificial highs that God
gives you, but the achievements of
struggle in which slowly but surely you
climb the mountain. This is and again
this is not referring specifically
to but interestingly
enough the
balata applies a very similar thought
without using the balto mushel to the
relationship between pes
and pes similar to what we said from the
meshma represents a sudden intense
revelation of
godliness that was truly beyond our
capacity.
Remember, we are in the 49th level of
impurity. Had we stayed even another few
minutes, the time that it takes for
dough to rise, we would have been gone.
We should have been there longer, but we
had to be taken out early. Four-fifths
of the Jewish people died. The 1-5 were
considered to be naked of mitzvah. They
were idol worshippers. They didn't
practice Mila except for Levy. And
Hashem had to give us the mitzvah of
circumcision and the mitzvah of Corbin
Pesak. So we would have some zus to
leave. So we were in a very very
undeserving state. That's why the Torah
describes over and over again we
left. We left Mitzim in a hurry. You we
w when we leave in a hurry. What does
that mean? You're not ready for the trip
but you got to go
now. And yet as I'll say at the Red Sea,
the lowliest lowliest maidservants saw
greater holiness a greater revelation of
godliness than even the prophet yesco
who was zoka to see the divine throne of
god. So pesak represents the artificial
high of the person who receives gifts
from God beyond their
capacity. But God shows them a great
light. But then comes the omare in which
Hashem takes us off that high, puts us
on the ground and says, "I've shown you
what you're capable of
becoming. Now become it. Make it your
own. I'm letting go a little bit. And
just as father and mother are still
there to protect us, God is always
there. But he wants us to become
independent. And that's the difference.
Pesak is sudden
revelation. Shuos is a gradual
incremental process. The om every day
there's a special meter that we work on.
Last week we talked about the spheros,
the einations. There's a special media
that we work on because sudden
revelation just comes to you all at
once. But this internal spiritual growth
comes through a gradual process of of
avo. And that is why the counting of the
omare is the day after shabas because
it's the next day. It's the next step.
It's a new agenda. It's a new approach.
It is no longer the spirituality that is
handed to
you. It is the spirituality that you
earn through work and through effort.
Makaras a new day, a new beginning, a
new approach to recognize that we
struggle and we work on ourselves in all
of the different ways. And sometimes
spiritual progress is not going to be a
straight upward trajectory.
Sometimes it'll be two steps forward,
one step back, and sometimes it may even
be one step forward, and two steps
back, but you keep going. You don't give
up. You
persevere. Uh there's a t-shirt saying,
which although it's not of Jewish
origin, but like a lot of t-shirt
sayings, it expresses Jewish truths that
what you are is God's gift to you. What
you do with what you are is your gift
back to God.
P shows me what I am or at least what I
could
be. Is the
internalization of making that process
your own and that's why it's graduated.
It's gradual and that's why it
is Shabas. And indeed this actually
explains based on the why it uses Shabas
because Shabas represents the gift that
we didn't
earn is the day after the next
level. In other words, it's very why it
has to use Shabas because that's the
whole point. Shabas is what God gives
you. You didn't earn it by the way. So
the balatana then uh uh concludes with a
very very beautiful passage from the
zohor interpreting a verse in shir
hashirim shirim is a book of the tanakh
of course it's one of the five mgillos
and uh according to both the book itself
and kazal's msor shirim was written by
schlomamelik and you know shim almost
didn't make it shim banned in Boston as
they say uh because Shira Shirim is is
frankly an erotic book. It describes a
passionate relationship of a man and a
woman. And if you read Shim very very
although it's still in very good taste
by the way one shouldn't compare it to I
mean even if you read Shir in the most
literal way it actually is a very sweet
book. It's not a coarse book at all but
it is somewhat explicit and therefore
there were sages who felt that Shirim
did not
belong in the Tanak. So who is who is
the great redeemer of Shirim? Who got it
in? None other than Rabbi AKA. Rabbi
Yak. So it's pretty late actually. So
Rabi Yaka made the argument to
the if all of the songs in the Tanakh
are holy, Shirim is the holiest of the
holy because it is a metaphor. It is an
allegory for the love that God has for
the Jewish people and the Jewish people
have for God. And all of the references
to the shepherd are really Hashem that
is our shepherd and protector. And the
references of the woman that is yearning
to be with the shepherd uh is a
reference to the Jewish people yearning
to be with God. And this is the standard
mahalak that is taken in the midrashim
of shirim which are a huge amount of
midrashim and in rashi's commentary and
there there are actually other mahok but
the the most common widespread learning
of shirim is that we look at it as a
love story between the Jewish people
and hashem is the male character in the
book and the Jewish people are the
female character in the
In fact, this can explain all sorts of
uh there's a scene in Shirim where the
woman has gone to sleep and her beloved
is knocking at the door and she says
cold
do the voice of my beloved is knocking
at the door and I say I'm asleep already
don't wake me up again say that's
referring to the Mashiach Hashem is
waiting to redeem us knocking at the
door and we're not interested at that
point, right? So, there's a lot of
pathos in in in all of that. So, in the
very beginning of the book, uh the woman
cries out to her beloved who's not there
or, you know, not visible and
says, "Pull me after
you so we can run together." It's
a so the zor says the
following refers to
pesa so we can run
together refer to
shuos this is the
zohar so the balatana says this is
exactly thehat when I pull you that
means you're like a sack of potatoes.
You're really passive, but I come and I
pull you. So with PES, it's we're not
really ready for redemption, but God is
pulling us out because we have to get
out of
there. But eventually, we get strong
enough that we run with our kadesh.
We're no longer being pulled. We've
internalized the madrega. So we are with
Hashem. We are walking. We're running
with Hashem. So that's exactly the trans
the the transition
here and therefore through the process
of the omare we run with
with you know there are many stories um
about the
vagon uh that uh the villagon whose
greatness in Torah was was beyond beyond
any type of understanding that angels
would come to him to offer him all sorts
of interpretations of things, the
secrets of the Torah, and he turned them
down. He says, "I don't want gifts. I
don't want freebies. I only want the
Torah that I achieve through my work,
through my effort, through my ya." He
turned things down. He have other
stories sometimes where they say that
it's unbelievable that sometimes, as you
would expect, it's very, very hard.
thoughts would come to him in Davin,
Torah thoughts would come to him in
Davin. So something like
um on one puk in the middle of Zavvening
like 150 explanations of the of a puk
came to
him 150 based on zor based on cababala
and he was
misspell that he should forget them
because he considered them to be tra no
good they came to middle of din he's
supposed to focus on ding you don't
focus on uh on even Torah and he forgot
all of them and then he tried to regain
gained them afterwards and you know he
worked worked very very hard and the
story goes they came back to him uh but
that was the idea he didn't want things
that were freebies he didn't want things
that came to him during uh etc
everything had to be based on his own ya
borra and in truth uh I mean obviously
we're not those are not our levels in
any way at all but in truth we have to
recognize that even in our own lives
these significant accomplishments
are what we've done with what Hashem
gave us. Right? We don't deserve credit
for what we are naturally. That's a gift
of Hashem. But what we do with our what
we do with our abilities, that's the
gift we give back to our so this is just
a again a concluding thought of the
period of the counting of the Omr and
Boss Hashem. May God help us to keep on
walking, to climb that mountain, not to
get discouraged, to learn from young
children who learn to walk and learn to
crawl that no matter how many times you
fall, you keep on going. And that is the
natural condition. You know, it's funny.
We have to talk about working on
ourselves to do that. Yeah, it's true
because we're so conditioned to giving
up. But in reality, it's not even a
matter of working. It's simply a matter
of this is how Hashem made us. And we
just have to try to recapture what
Hashem put into our natures of not
giving up, of being optimistic, of being
hopeful, of being happy, of appreciating
life. And then no matter how many times
we sometimes are not successful, keep on
going. Don't give up. I think last week
I mentioned that after Rabbi Akiba lost
the 24,000 students, he went back to
have five students. And you might think,
again, just repeating myself, what's the
what's the point of having five
students? You lost 24,000. And yet from
those five students and their successors
came the Mishna, came the Gammorrah,
came all of the Torah Sha, came the
Rashi, came the
Toshvos. Yeah. For five students can
come everything. So we have to also
recognize that on every level what we do
matters. What we do counts and if what
we do counts we have to make it count.
What do they say by sphere? They say
count every day and make every day
count. Right? That's a common it's a
buzz phrase they use for spir oh man. No
once again it's it happens to be true.
So wish you all well and maybe to
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You
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my
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birthday tomorrow.