Transcript
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[Music]
oh
um okay hi everybody Shalom and thank
you for coming the weather is cold
outside
but learning should be a
a uh tonight sheer was dedicated for
praying for victory of our soldiers and
all the fronts of the war the lasting
Unity of and all of those whose Health
has been affected the safe return of all
of
thear
M whose yard side is the E ofat and
for and then finally um on the behalf of
arik daninsky we want to mention uh that
Elana and Simka divinsky have upcoming
birthdays next week on the 25th and 30th
of 25th that already passed but whatever
it
is uh you know there's a little bit of a
mocus do Jews believe in celebrating
birthdays a bit of mlus
R
kki uh took the position that birthdays
are not a Jewish thing because he says
the only place in the T where Y is
mentioned is by parro parro had a y and
he released prisoners so it's a thing on
the other hand among kasas in particular
I think the rebbi and rebbi and other
other rebies they do speak a lot that
the same way we celebrate the birthday
of the world the birthday of ad
which is
rash uh we celebrate it because we
recognize hasem is renewing his Bria so
two a person's birthday their Hebrew
birthday their Hebrew birthday is in
fact the day of their rashash the day
that they were created and their special
spiritual energy that's there now I know
you you have heard in Aro they do this a
lot that somebody is said on their
birthday they're supposed to they can
give
Bros and there there are a few I won't
say there's a lot of maras but there are
a few sources that you're given a
special on your birthday to give bras
but it's also brought down
on that when someone has a birthday they
should receive we should give to a
person on their birthday just like in
rash we wish
everybody TOA so this is just a long way
of saying we want to wish Elana and
Simka a happy birthday and hasem should
give them much much bras okay uh so
today we have a little bit of a double
header and I'm not entirely
sure uh which topic to speak about maybe
I'll be able to get both in on one hand
we have Paras
truma uh which is very very important
and on the other hand we have parim
which is the first of the four special
par that we're going to read until PES
uh both of these are worthy of a whole
at least a whole Shear uh or or not more
uh
in on their own but we'll try to maybe
combine combine the two let me first
start with the idea of pares truma uh
these are the Commandments regarding the
construction of the mishan and as the
ramban points out in his introduction in
his uh to the book of shos this is
really the third part of the book of
shos there are three pivotal experiences
with one negative turn in the book ofos
there is of course
and then there's Matan Torah and the
culmination of everything
is creates a mechanism where we bring
the into our hearts and into our souls
and
therefore which is the bringing of God
into Earth and again in the language of
the bat who of course actually got it
from wanted a
de wanted a residence a place to live in
this low holy world and the Mish or
theik later is certainly the tangible
representation of having
a because ultimately when you accept
God's Torah the ultimate is you make
yourself a mishan a Dwelling Place a
sanctuary for the sh so in many many
ways this is the these paros which by
the way how many Paras talk about the
mishan it's quite quite amazing we have
part of then you have part
of have five Paras devoted to the
mishkan this is the single most detailed
treatment of any area throughout the
entire T because the pivotal importance
of making this world a place an abode
for the sh is of very very Central
importance so I just want to point out
an important historical mlus
between Rashi and the ramban what the
particular order of things are obviously
in the Torah the Commandments about
constructing the mishan were given after
mat Torah
before the now granted we didn't get
around to building the
Mish until after the but
the the Commandment
about was given in the first 40 days
when Moshe is in har that's the simple
order of the narrative and this is the
sheet of the ramban remember the ran I
mentioned last week doesn't like to
apply the rule
of right that's a rule that says the t
is not always in chronological order
ramban he cannot dispense with that rule
because say it and sometimes you have to
say the Torah is not being chronological
but ran does not like it so the ramban
tries to understand all of the
narratives chronologically so according
to ramban mosha gets the before the but
we don't we didn't get around to
building it till yipper when he comes
down with the second L Etc uh and that's
simple that's Pat that's just looking at
the
narrative but Rashi actually has a
tremendous
Kish rashley actually says
that the whole commandment of the
mishkan was a consequence of
the meaning mosenu goes up for the 40
days and he gets the Mitzvah of the
Torah but not the mishkan not those
Mitzvah and then he comes down he breaks
the luos he goes back up gets the second
L on yum Kipper he comes down God
forgives am Israel and that's when he
tells them to build a mish
meaning according to
Rashi you have an amazing which you
might call
counterfactual hypothesis and that is
had there not been a sin of the golden
calf there wouldn't have been a mishkan
the mishkan only
exists because of
the meaning the tah would have taken a
different form meaning God had a plan a
well of course God had a plan a going
back to the Garden of Eden okay so
everything since then is Plan B but even
within Plan B there was a plan a and a
plan BB plan AB was Matan Torah would
have rectified the sin of the tree of
asadas and kind of would have put us
back in ganen we messed that up
with according to
Raji the idea of bikash and mishkan
belong to plan BB they don't belong to
plan AB meaning had there not been the
sin of the ago there wouldn't have been
a mish and the sorno explains it in the
following way sorno says that although
it's true that the whole idea of mishkan
and ultimately B mikdash is to provide
an abod for the
sh had there not been a had we gone back
to the level ofish before the
sin the whole world would have been a
bikes there would be no need for a
designated area
hashem's would have been
everywhere your house would be a Bas of
mikdash the street would be a Bas of
mikdash the fact that God is saying I
will make my mom here but it's going to
be a specific place with specific people
and specific conditions although it's a
tremendous gift it does represent a
certain y a certain decline so according
to Rashi it's quite an amazing
proposition that had there not been
a there would not have been a mishkan at
all now that raises tremendous questions
now obviously Rashi is
invoking the Tora is not going in
chronological order that's obviously
rashi's assumption but okay but that's
not so bad I mean that's a claw that
kazal have given us but what's a little
problematical is how does this fit with
the Messianic Vision uh because it's
very very clear uh from Nim themselves
that when mashiah comes what is going to
happen is the building of the third Bas
of
mikdash that will never be destroyed I
mean that's fundamental
to the vision
of problem is that if Y mashia is the
ultimate Perfection and ton of the world
and if according to Rashi in a redeemed
World there would be no need for a basa
mikdash so why would we need the basa
mikdash when mashia
comes we should go back to the the
ultimate Tik of the whole world is the
meaning if according to rashi's
understanding the Mish bikash represents
kind of a withdrawal of God from making
his draa in the entire world then why
would that be a a characteristic and a
yearned for a characteristic in your
mashia so I think that's a little bit of
a difficulty in
rashi's like the ramban of course it's
very good like the ramban Bas on mikdash
mishkan is optimal it's not the second
level it's the optimal state of
situation like Rashi it's a little bit
of a something to to think about okay so
that's one very important smus to keep
in mind uh let me remind you that this
is the second place where Rashi is
changing chronological sequence last
week we looked at the building of the
altar before Matan Tor when mosha
sprinkled the blood where according to
the Kish it is after the Ten
Commandments Rashi based on the and
chabas moves it before so if you were to
write the book of shamos in the order of
rashi's chronology you would have two
major changes there you would move the
events at the end of mishpatim the
building of the altar to before the Ten
Commandments and you would move the
mishan Commandments after the major
editorial work Rashi is
invoking in two discreet discreet
separate places and these are not even
logically connected these are two
separate kavo editorial revisions or
reconstructions of the chronology ofish
um I don't think in any other KES there
is uh such an extensive surgery so to
speak it's
in that whole pieces are ripped out and
put in different places based
on so that's hor number one uh the issue
of the chronology and the the function
of a Mishka
number two is that m rabenu is commanded
he's not going to do it till after yam
Kipper in vak but he's commanded to call
upon the Jewish people to donate for the
building of a mishun and it gives an
inventory of all sorts of precious
materials zah gold K silver
and now based on the order we seem to be
going from the highest to the lower Z
gold silver
going down but the very last items that
are mentioned is the
aam the anx
stones the aim and the stones that fill
the Coen godel's
breastplate and they are mentioned last
now keep in mind that the AUM in
particular the stones that the Coen
godal war in his breastplate uh many of
them are precious stones it includes Yos
includes diamond
rubies emeralds sapphires which are even
worth more than gold so
thees asks aasha we're going from higher
to lower but the last item we mention is
the most valuable of all why would the
aim be mentioned last if we're going
from higher to lower we should have
said so the gives a few answers one
answer is well yes it's true that the
aim are more valuable but they were not
used in the construction of the mishkan
they were used in the garments of the
Coen so obviously what is actually used
in the mishkan is more kados and
therefore we first go through the list
of what is used in the mishkan and then
we mention what the Coen wears now
that's one answer um a second answer
that's given is there is a kazal that's
say that the a not says theim were
actually given by the Nim the heads of
the
tribes contributed these
Jewels now it is said there's a certain
pun it says in the the
gave
the now what does the word n mean N
means the heads of the tribes but n also
refers to clouds Nim is a biblical term
for clouds and it mentions that the Nim
got these jewels in the morning clouds
that brought down their
man there were Jewels
there meaning to say that the jewels
that the Nim gave were something that
came to them without
efforts and without
sacrifice as opposed
to the gold and the silver that the
Jewish people
gave which came as compensation for the
slavery they went through in MIT they
took from MIT so the says the most
important thing that God
values is your effort and your struggle
in serving him and therefore those who
gave out of their Blood Sweat and
Tears even even if they gave
quantitatively
less or qualitatively less are more
valued by Hashem right it's the old
story The the Oni who gives let's say $1
$5
fora might be a much more esteemed
contribution than the millionaire who
gives a
$1,000 because it's harder for the on
it's harder for the h hasem looks at
your struggle we'll come back to this as
as this actually connects very nicely to
the half she that we'll talk about and
therefore the says instead of being
mentioned first because it was the most
valuable it's actually mentioned last
because it came in the clouds there was
no work there was no effort hem looks at
your work hasem looks at your effort
this is an important for us uh and also
for our children uh sometimes we may
have a situation where someone is not as
successful as someone else in a class or
whatever it is and they feel bad they
feel they're a failure but they have to
know if in hashem's eyes they're working
and doing the best they can that effort
counts for a lot again we'll actually
come back to this shortly so that's the
second answer the gives uh the third
answer he gives is also interesting he
says that the Nim did not give their
donation till they saw what everybody
else brought and then they had the
attitude we will fill
in which makes sense in some way let's
see what they but he says if a person
truly wants to serve God they are
proactive they are not reactive they
don't just wait to see what everybody
else does they almost can't restrain
themselves therefore there was AAR a
little bit in their n Diva slave in the
generosity of their Spirit right so
these are three answers of the
why the which were by far the most
valuable component are mentioned are
mentioned last now there is another very
famous word a very very famous word you
probably have heard it uh many times
whenever someone is approaching you fora
they might invoke this for it that
is when the Commandment is
given uh that MOS is so it
says they shall take for me a
donation they shall take for me a
donation now obviously the problem is
they're being asked to give it should
have
said they are giving they should give
from each froma why does it say they
should take from each from a f a very
famous question and the famous answer
that is given is ah a Jew has to feel
that when you give
Sak you're not giving you're actually
taking you're getting
more then you're giving up that's the
attitude towards Rus generally yeah to
serve God involves
sacrifices there are things we give up
in general we don't eat where we want to
eat we don't go where we want to go we
don't do what we want to
do so we're giving up but a has to feel
that the gift that Hashem has given you
by your relationship with aades is by
far not even a sacrifice didn't like the
famous
phrase it's hard to be a Jew he felt
which is you know it's yish expression
but he said that was negative that
conveys to Children yes we're from but
it's a burden and it's
hard says that could drive a person off
the
say well why should it be why should I
live a hard
life but you have to stress the joy and
the that what you get is much more than
what you give they tell a
story uh when was alive pich
so so there was a bucker who got engaged
to a a girl a Kala so he brought his
kala to meet this this may be totally
apocryphal I don't even know if it's
true but I I'll tell it over anyway
because it's a
the story makes a good point so whether
it's true or not it's another another M
so the girl told ra he says my only goal
in life is that my should sit and learn
Torah he says I will take every
sacrifice I will have one dress I will
sleep outside if we have to I will live
on bread and water I will starve I will
deprive myself of every pleasure in the
world so that my husband will learn
Torah
so the story goes after the K left the
room ra said break up the break up don't
marry her because if her attitude is
that your commitment to Torah is painful
it's a burden it creates SAR but she's
going to be a
martyr how long can you be a martyr you
can be a martyr for a day you be a
martyr for a
week then you go crazy
you can't marry somebody who looks at
this life as a burdensome life of pain
and suffering but she's going to do it
for
God the only staying power that keeps
people going is they see the pleasure
and they see the goodness in it and
therefore sh said you got to feel or she
has to feel how much she's gaining from
this not how much he's giving up again
we can all we can be a martyr for a
while but you know you can't be a Marty
your whole life and that's not uh that's
not the way we live
wants and therefore going back uh to
this idea when you give for
ores or serve God any generally it's not
what you're giving it's what you're
taking a very very famous word for so in
this
connection they tell
AA with the famous
harz who was known as the alter the old
man of
naric now there are three altars in the
musim movement these are all tant one
way or the other there's the altar of
Kellum who is
rant's primary talet and the alar of
slatka who became very very famous in
slatka the greata ofka and then there's
the alar of naric who is the most
extreme in some ways a very could very
psychologically complex individual uh
just to give one example for 2
years uh he locked himself in his house
literally the walls were bricked shut he
could he couldn't leave his house for
two years he just wanted to concentrate
in hasem and there were two holes in the
wall one from Mil food one for FL food
and people because he didn't even know
what they were giving him to eat and uh
he would eat food on the holes he was
called of the holes because there were
just two holes in his house he didn't
leave his house for two years he
couldn't leave his house for two years
so the r of narc at the time was the
great great God
the who was considered to be the premier
po of the generation this is like the
1870s and people went to the and they
said
this guy is crazy let's tear down the
house what a guy can just lock himself
in a house and the Al I'm sorry the said
listen I don't understand rev either but
he's a very big sadic uh leave him alone
he has his he has
his after two years he finally decided
it was time I think this is shortly
after he lost his wife he became was a
widower after uh two years he decided he
had
solitary
confinement he was released the house
was torn down and he then started 15
yeshivas throughout Russia you get a lot
of energy pent up energy in in two years
unbelievable and during the dark years
of
Stalin when yish kite in Russia was
almost totally
exterminated the three forces that
managed to keep up a little
Spark in the darkness of stalinist
Russia where kabat kabat had had a big
force uh breast had a smaller but bre of
and theic in the nonas were the three
forces that remained starp in spite of
Siberia in spite of death sentences no
matter what they kept on going and going
and the altar of naric his his idea was
amuna and Muna and Muna no matter what
that if something is good you do you try
to do it even if it looks like
99.999% uh failure and the like so they
say Amisa that the auor
of ran
liman who became Riva in France and he
would come to the United States to
collect money uh for his Yeshiva but
there was a certain problem with him
money disgusted him uh he couldn't look
at money money was goshas money was the
timeus time of the
so whenever someone gave him money put
money in his pocket he vomited
involuntarily so he always had to have
someone travel with him to take a check
or whatever it would be he could not be
Cil money so a story about this is he
once showed up at Kennedy Air wasn't
whatever used to be called idle whatever
Idol was his original name but he showed
up at what is now Kennedy
Airport and um like the middle of the
night from Meritus real uh from
France and there was a talmid of his who
was picking up his daughter or something
and the talid noticed rev liman so he
went over to rev liin and said oh can I
give the Riva a
right so so said yes that' be very nice
so he's in the car and like a half an
hour into the
trip the Tom was embarrassed by say Reby
I'm just a little
curious uh what would you have done
if I wouldn't have been at the airport
like what would have happened did you
have money for CF Fair s Lian says no I
don't I don't carry money so what would
have happened if I wouldn't have been
here he says but you were here right in
other words he says hasem is going to
work it out for me very extreme very
very extreme idea of again the was
actually critical of it the K said you
gotta be more reasonable in making your
plans but naric was this
unconditional so The Story Goes that
back in Europe when the altar of naric
was still alive the stories I told you
he wasn't alive then when the altar of
naric was still alive so the story goes
there was a cson there was a miser in a
town who never gave stuck he was from
but he never gave he gave very little he
was wealthy and gave very little Stu so
none of the yeshivas could ever get
anything out out of him but the alra of
naric managed to get quite a lot so
people wanted to know what's your secret
what do you say to the person how do you
crack his facade so he said like he said
I'll tell you the difference and this
might also be apocryphal but that but I
could actually believe it knowing a
little bit about the alar of nar's
Personality he says I'll tell you the
difference between you and me you russer
sh as you go in and you admire his
upholstery you admire his couches and
his chair and his tables and you wipe
your feet very very carefully and you
sit you know tight together you
shouldn't you know get your wet coat on
his
sofa and you show him that you're Mak
what he has you're in awe of what he has
and then you ask him to give up some of
that to
you people don't want to give up
something that's precious to them and
your whole message is this is
precious say I different he says I walk
in I don't wipe my feet I track mud into
the house again I I'm not I I sit on the
I sit on the couch with my wet coat I
put my shoes on the table I convey to
the person your stuff is
nothing but I got a deal for you I can
turn your junk into something real real
valuable if you use it for
Torah then it becomes worthy and
beautiful and valuable so the alterate
Artic says I'm not asking him to give me
anything I'm offering him the best
investments so he says people always
want to take they don't want to give so
the difference is I convince the person
that he's taking something from me
you're asking him to give something
right this is M they tell from the alter
of the work
again I'm not advocating this as either
a Hally appropriate response or even a
financially appropriate response I'm not
sure how many donors are going to give
if you walk in with that particular
attitude but as I say had it been any
other God old besides the alar of naric
I I just wouldn't have believed the
story here there might actually be
perhaps a possibility that it was true
the alter vtic was very very extreme uh
in that in that way but be it as it may
it illustrates the idea
that what you give for kadha is not
giving up something it's actually taking
taking something um this
idea
that it's not what you uh it's not what
you're giving up you're really taking
let me give you another story that
illustrates this and maybe in a
different K but it's a it makes a a
similar strong point the p
schlomo
kahanan a very very great man in fact I
I still have this very very vivid memory
when I was in ninth grade at nerys in
Baltimore 1968 the pich was nifter in
1968 and you know I heard of him but I I
didn't know a lot about him uh he was a
very close friend of my Russia I mean I
was not in the R I was in high school I
was just in ninth grade but the pun was
nifter the whole Yeshiva was including
the high school was gathered together to
hear HPM of the
p and the
rash gave a hin in
yish uh I really didn't know yish that
well anyways I was kind of falling
asleep nodding away at the hpit but all
of a sudden I remember this and I've
never seen it I've never seen it i'
never saw it before and I never saw it
since all of a sudden he clapped and he
said every person must sit on the ground
sit on the ground in
Aus I I I literally never saw that
before I haven't seen it since and it
kind of woke me up I was you know all a
sudden you know sit on the ground you
know we sat on the ground that pun of
now you know in Lithuania before the war
before World War II there were 800
R
Lithuania and even to be a re of a
village you had to know that was the
basic idea like used to say when people
would
callor you say was so he said I know he
says to get a job in the smallest
Village in Europe you had to
know now you
know this was the basic require
so you had 800 rabam in
Lithuania you know how many were killed
in the Holocaust
799 of the ranam of Lithuania were
killed in the Holocaust the only
Survivor was the pavich panovich was a
city in Lithuania and he came to
erisel and the pavich of was obsessed
because he thought over and over and
over again why did God spare me what
suus do I have to be alive and the pun
was
obsessed with building Torah in any
possible way besides the great Yesa
panovich one of the largest yeshivas in
the world though I don't want to talk
about it's torn apart by makus already
for many years and my own personal she
would have been had the pich been alive
he would have closed the Yesa because he
was such a man of of Shalom but be it is
right p which certainly was one of the
great Yas in the world he built
hospitals he built uh uh homes for Yim
for Orphans after the war
bakov built built built built he was a
legendary
fundraiser and uh he often said that
this was his greatest sacrifice for
clausel where all of the SAR and the Kim
he could have
written had he been able to stay in
Yeshiva and not go all over the world
World raising money for all of the mice
dice that he did so he was a legendary
fundraiser you know the SAT rabby what
say uh after the moon launch uh in the
again right not 67 or whatever it is uh
he said people were debating can there
be life on other
planets so he says I don't know the
science satar rebbi said but I know for
sure there is no life in other planets
because the Punit RV would have been
there collecting money if the pun did
not go to Mars there's nothing there
that's what the S said so the P was
legendary and the reason why I mean
again I mean we could write even a
secular book why was the pun r a
successful fundraiser because the answer
is he not only was a god Borah but he
was very approachable he had a common
touch he was funny he could relate to
every type of Jew whether you were
learned ignorant from or not from you
felt he was your best friends he was
just able to connect to people on every
every level and that's why he was so
successful even from a secular
standpoint he was so successful because
everybody was able to connect him so The
Story Goes that in the
1950s he traveled to Chicago from Mar he
was already elderly he was already you
know the last decade of his life he
traveled to Chicago and in those days
they didn't have the Jet flight so Eric
just fell to Chicago took like 20 hours
maybe it wasn't even direct but he came
to Chicago to collect
money and he comes to a and the same
night that he comes to the sh to collect
money there's a m from a much smaller
Yesa n Yesa as a matter of fact in
b as soon as the n m saw the P come in
he turned white because this is not
going to be a good night for me because
the punov is going to get
everything and I'm going to get nothing
who's going to give me I I can't give a
presentation like him so at first he was
very upset but then he said to you know
okay tonight will not be a fundraising
night for me tonight I'll be here to
listen to the pich so he sits down in
the seat and he says okay I'm here to
learn I'm here to be inspired I'm here
for the I'm not here for the money
tonight tonight I'm off so the P does is
usual type of draa inspirational full of
Torah full of Stories full of humor full
of warmth and the crowd is so excited
and uh energized and they want to give
money they want to be
M and then at the end of his dressure
the P says Rabbi
Sai I see that here there's a wonderful
wonderful
shal of a beautiful Yeshiva in
B it's so I want to ask you all the
money that you would give to me I'm
asking you to give to him
tonight so suffice it to say that the
nard M got much more money than he ever
collected on a single night because he
got all the money that would have gone
to the pun
ofure so he goes to the rav afterwards
and he says you know Reby I'm very very
very grateful this can support our
Yeshiva for a month but you traveled all
the way from Chicago you're not so
healthy you're elderly you put in a lot
of effort to collect money for all of
your
maistas how could you just give it
up and the pun up said what do you mean
give it up we work for the same team he
says if this money could support I'll
make up a number 20 people learning for
a
month why do I care if the 20 people are
in the pavitra Bas
medish or the Nara Bas medish what's the
difference the important point is people
can learn Torah because of this money
it's not my money it's not pich's money
it's the money to be madesh hasem by
enabling
T now suffice it to say that even among
Russia yeshivas this is an extremely
rare attitude
but the P said it's not about
institutions it's about the cause and
therefore he said we're on the same
team the money that goes to you is just
like the money that goes to me so for me
to give you the money is not I'm not
giving anything up we are
shim we are
Partners in Torah in the strengthening
of Torah the modern rashash sha who was
like
that uh was
re also a Chicago boy who uh became when
he became a great great man and who
suffered much suffered tremendously um
was from par from Parkinson yeah from
Parkinson's uh and still he continued to
persevere he was really a great
inspiration to so many people uh but he
also had this idea that whatever money
he collect eled belong to CL Israel and
he would give money to Lakewood people
and their Israel people I
thinked uh started a
policy that the rash sha could never
take money in his hand meaning it had to
be
somebody who would take the money for
him in order that the money shouldn't go
to every other every other cause but he
actually had the
Shea that's who cares Lakewood Nel who
cares hir doesn't make a difference
support of Torah is support of Torah
that's the only thing that that matters
an amazing amazing idea because the
truth is uh you know human you know even
even great people have elements of
humanity around them and uh people have
a proprietary interest in their
particular mosad that's human nature you
really can't deny it so much so for a
person to kind of go beyond that feeling
is a tremendously great spiritual
spiritual accomplishment so now let me
speak a little bit about the second
topic that's coming up actually it'll
actually overlap with with what we're
talking about
par
par now we know that in the month of
Adar we have four special Adar is of
course Friday and shabas shabas is
alar uh Friday is the 30th of of Shabbat
uh we have four additional Torah
readings and these are called the four
parot uh the first Torah reading roses
or the chabas before if RAR is during
the week it's the chabas before
roses if as in this
yeares shabas it's the chabas ofes
itself and this is the ma the extra
Torah reading we read actually the
beginning of Kisa which is the Mitzvah
of there's a Mitzvah to give a half shek
do not confuse it with a modern day half
sheo a half sheo then was a lot lot more
it was a certain weight of pure silver
and uh this is a Mitzvah that see the
fiscal year of the B
Mikes begins in the month of
Nissan and starting from rashes Nissan
all of the carbonos have to be purchased
from newly created funds like a tax an
annual tax you can't use old money in
the temple
treasury to buy the carbonos after
Nissan so as a result the mishna tells
us that they began collecting the half
shekele tax one month before Nissan
which
ises Adar and they would collect for a
month so by the time Nissan came around
they had enough to start buying new
carbonos andami people continued to pay
like like IRS or Oar people continue to
pay throughout the year there were even
back taxes and penalties it was a whole
IRS like system right so the half shekel
is essentially the public
financing of the carbonos the public
financing of the carbonos and and the
new money had to be collected at least
some of it by Roes Nissan so we started
collecting the half Shekel in
Adar
and to
commemorate what was done when there was
a Bas mikash or Mish in the desert we uh
read about the half
shees or the shabas before
that's the mitvah
but only when there's
a now you may recall
that we give some money before Milla
reading that is also
called so once again that's a that's
also a commemoration right so we
commemorate by reading about the mitv
and a of PM we commemorate by doing
something but obviously when we give
today we're just giving
sta but in the time of the B mes this
was not sta this was a tax in order to
uh Finance the carbonos that have to be
brought every day the carbon tamid the
daily offering the musaf right it had to
come from money there had to be money
going in there and and the like and if
any of you have an accounting background
and you learn the track dat schull the
whole track dat you'll actually see all
sorts of accounting rules what do you do
with surpluses that are carried over
from year to year because you can't use
the old money for new carbonos so what
do you do with the Surplus money what if
there's a shortfall because the price of
animals goes up what if there is a
surplus right so there actually are
accounting rules H accounting rules uh
dealing
with okay now the other three I'll just
mention I'm not going to talk about them
tonight uh then before porm we have
par where there's a ma about am
remembering amalik and that of course is
connected to ham being from amalik and
then we will read
Paras which is not about porm anymore
this is after porm but Paras is the
ritual of par aduma to become purified
and that's already a preparation when we
had to bring a Corb P we needed to be
purified so we already read
about and then the
finales
ises which are the laws of the Corban P
so
essentially is not connected directly to
it's just connected to the
mitah is connected
to Andes are connected to P that's kind
of the that's kind of the the breakdown
uh we'll talk about the other three when
we get uh to the other three but at
least the first one that we're going to
read this week is
parim
parim now by parum we see a very
interesting Rule and that is the Tyra
makes the point everybody must give a
half
shek rich people cannot give more
poor people cannot give less there's an
absolute
requirement of
uniformity everybody gives the
same now there's a question on this I
understand the
idea poor people can't give less because
this is a minimal requirement that every
Jew must do so the same way we're not
going to tell a Jew hey you can wear
Fillin with only three part
you know filling is filling so you got
to give a half shekele if you have to
borrow borrow but this is your
obligation okay poor people don't get a
break got it I mean it may sound
hard-hearted but you know this is your
duty as a Jew to contribute to the basa
M or mishigan but what is this thing
about rich people can't give
more I never heard about that if yiva
has
tuition so most parents actually do not
pay full tuition at least in most Yas
but let's assume somebody is uh they
could pay full tuition but somebody says
you
knowem Hashem has blessed me and I know
that a lot of people don't pay tuition
so I'm willing to pay more than full
tuition is the ISA going to say sorry we
don't take more than full tuition you
can't give
more well I can't say I I I've had
experience with every in the world I
obviously haven't but I would have a
feeling that most yeshivas would not
turn down that offer what is the idea
rich people can't give more why not now
one simple answer you could give simple
answer is that the half shekel served a
a a a double function it served a
function to finance
coronos but it also served a function to
compute the size of the population
because you're not supposed to count
people by head you count to half shekels
and then you know how many people there
are in other words it was a population
device because it's an iron horor it's a
bad Omen to count people by head now
obviously if you're using the half
shekos to compute a population it's only
going to work if everybody gave the same
amount if one person gave 10 shekos one
person gave one Sho you're not going to
know how many people there are by
counting the coins
so one simple answer is
that it has to be that everybody gives
the same amount otherwise it could not
serve as a population counting
mechanism but the truth is that's not a
complete answer because even if that may
have been true in the desert it's not
true that every year they would compute
the
populations and yet every year
this is still
there so
theas offers the following
explanation he says when we talk about
people being rich and people being
poor rich and poor can be
measured in many different ways there is
rich in money and poor in money but rich
and poor can refer to the entire
diversity of talents and abilities and
potentialities that people have there
are are people that are rich in
wisdom or Charisma or leadership ability
or organizational
ability in architecture whatever it
would be and then there are people who
seem to be relatively relatively B
although L everybody has has their
talent but at least it may seem uh at
least superficially that they're
poor but as I mentioned
before God looked
at not what you've done
objectively God looks by how much of
your talent have you given to him so
when the tyus says the rich gives no
more than the poor what the t means to
be moram
is when it comes to connecting to
Hashem in the Bas
mikash a rich person and a poor person
are fundamentally equal in the eyes of
God because you are judged not by your
objective
attainments whether it's money or
whatever but by how much of your
potential have you given to God and
therefore the Torah is teaching a
lesson that if you do your
best you are
equally in stature to the person who
does much more but does his best
again that's a very big that's the idea
that it's your effort that matters you
know there's a a
from the r
in discusses the idea of Free
Will and the rambam makes a statement
that's very
surprising the rambam says each
person can be as righteous as mosha Rao
or as
evil as the example he gives is yav
benat the first king of the 10
tribes who caused people to he erected
golden calvs later
elah in the book of
Mal now I get there's something called
Free Will right you're not God does not
pre-ordained if you're going to be
righteous or evil that's your choice got
it but come on is it not a little
hyperbolic to say every one of us can be
as great as
mosha
mosha the Tyra says
beish there will never be a there never
has been and never will be a
prophet as great as Moser B in fact
that's one of the rambam's 13 principles
of Faith so how can the ramban who on
one hand says there will be no
Prophet as great as Moser
RAB then say every person to be as great
as mosha
Raben it's a contradiction within the
rambam
himself so so R
vman is mabar the rambam in the
following
way in the beginning of the book of
yahushua so it mentions that Moshe died
and he's called e Hashem
Moshe has given a title EV hasem the
servant of God this is a very rare title
that's used in
the why is he called
has so the r one of the great
commentators
onim says that this is to call to mind
the whatever a Slave
acquires belongs to his master a slave
finds a diamond ring and there's no
claimant it's not the slaves ring it's
the Masters now will the ever turn it
over maybe not but Hally it belongs to
the
master a slave keeps nothing for
himself everything belongs to the
master Moshe is called E
Hashem because every sing s Le ability
that he
had he gave over to
God that's the
radak so
says that's what the R means when he
says each of
us can be as great as
Moshe
mosha has kadosa I'll make up a
meaningless number moshe's kadha is a
billion my kadua is
one so of course Moshe is a billion I'm
just making up numbers Moses Kusha is a
billion times more than me but kame that
he gave God a 100% of what he
had I can give God 100% of what I have
and yeah I'm only giving him a one mosha
gave him a billion but the lesson of is
you are judged
not based on how much you've done in
life but how much of your potential have
you given to a and in that I can be like
mosha RAB indeed I can take my very very
very diminished talent I can give it to
hasem also you see that's the idea
of the and the Oni stand before God with
equality of dignity
if they do the best that they can with
what they were given now in
truth this can also work in a in a
different way and that is that also
means that if Hashem judges us not based
on our objective
accomplishment but how much of ourselves
we've given it might be that the Ani
gave more of himself than the aser and
whatever the talent
is let me give you a thought uh from the
myit is Moshe Ben
yose Tran he was a Dian he was actually
the b inat in the time
of is one of the great
great great POS he actually had his
relationship withar was not so good
actually was the r of and they had some
serious about fact a lot of the
controversy even today about T selling
the land to the go is rooted in
auso and theit and at some point Kyo
threatened the myit he was he was going
to excommunicate him so they had their
their difficulties but both of them are
great great great poim but the mid also
wrote a safer on Jewish
philosophy uh which has never been
translated although it's a very
interesting saer it's called
Bim so in the
the
introduction the brings a a gor the gar
talks about the son of R Yeshua bin
Ley had a death experience he
died and his Nish went up to
ganen and then he was revived or he was
brought back to
life and he was asked what did you see
in so he said
I saw a Topsy
Turvy upside down
World
Elon those who are big shots in this
world lamata were
inferior in that
world and those who were seemingly
insignificant in this world lamala they
were on top everything was in reverse
Le told him that's not a tosy chy world
that's a true world you saw the truth
this world is a Tosi Turvy world now
this is the gamar the mait raises the
question what do you mean big shots in
this world do you mean Rich powerful
politically well connected
well the kid shouldn't have been
surprised I mean why would you have a
hav or why would you think somebody is
just because they're wealthy or
politically well connected why should
that count meaning what is the surprise
if it's simply material attainments so
says to my
bit that's not what he meant by big
shots he meant people who seem to be
spiritually greater in this
world we in an inferior position up
there how is that so so the example that
he gives the numbers I don't remember
the exact numbers but I'll give you the
example in substance is let's imagine
you have two boys in
Yeshiva one boy is a
genius he is able to learn 100 blot of
gamarra a day which is a very remarkable
Pace he could finish Shas every
month and another boy
struggles to learn one do in a week
so let's imagine that the kid who can
learn 100 blood a day is so ahead of
everybody right my magnitudes he said
you know I don't have to do 100 I'll do
50 a day I'm still 50 times you know
ahead of
everybody so he does 50 blot a
day and the other kid is still
struggling with his one blot a
week so when you look at these two boys
one boy we see phenomenal
50 BL 50 blood 50 blood he finishes sh
every two months that means he makes a c
six times a
year
galic and the other boy we say listen he
has a good heart you know you know he's
just
struggling you know we feel sorry for
him
in all of a sudden things are
reversed the kid who learns 50 blood a
day only gave Hashem 50% of what he
could
do and the kid who did one block gave
Hashem 100% no but never 100% but much
higher that's what the son of was so
surprised to see that people whose rious
accomplishments are objectively so great
they're going to be
subordinate but the answer is
because Hashem doesn't judge you by what
you accomplish judges You by how much of
your
potential did you give to him you have a
greater potential whatever the
reason expects more from
you and therefore we're all judged on a
curve right so I know that teachers and
rebies always tell their students the
most important thing is your effort and
not uh but on the other hands in in this
world it's lip service because Lisa the
kid who won who gets a 50 gets a 50 no
matter how hard he works but in shamay
this is not a joke in shamay it's not a
fake this is Howes views us and this
says this is the ultimate lesson
of he who is rich in
talents and he who is relatively poorer
in talents you are equal in the eyes of
Hashem it all depends depends on how
much of
yourself you have given to him okay and
if one gives more more of himself even
though there's less being given that
counts much more so again um this is an
important message that we need to in
incorporate our into ourselves and
obviously 100% convey to our children
because it's a message to the aser and
it's a message to the Y the message to
the
is don't think just because you can do a
lot more than other people you can be
lazy and Sherk off you got
responsibilities and to the Y the
message is don't feel inferior don't
berate yourself know that Hashem
cherishes your efforts even if you think
they're not as successful as they might
be so may we incorporate these lessons
within our own lives and to our children
and our students may we convey them as
well so thank you
[Music]
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