Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
You
see your
tomorrow
[Music]
Okay. Well, thank you. Thank you. Thank
you for coming. I know it's a it's a
very busy time.
Uh as always, uh this year is dedicated
praying for the victory of Raayolim in
all fronts of the war. Uh the lasting
unity of Ami Israel and for all of those
whose health has been affected by the
war, the safe return bezem of all of the
hostages. A raffle.
No, no particular name is mentioned but
for all of the Israel
and Aliat Shama for Boro Ben Schlommo
Dinski whose site is on the 24th of Elo
and uh the dedication is given by his
brother Ari Dinsky this year should be
in Alias Shama for Borak Ben Schlommo.
Uh finally, Ibona has been distributing
for many many years to needy families
for the Khagim. This year again, they
will be distributing to widows, orphans,
and other people in financial distress.
Uh please contribute and uh try to
specify what the particular need is for
either through the link below or on the
Bonet website. And uh as Rabbi Poston
announced, this is the last scheduled
class until after the
who knows if there'll be an unscheduled
class that I don't know, but you never
know.
>> Things many many things can uh can
happen. Yeah, we have to leave every
possibility open. Uh okay. Uh that's it.
Uh you know, there's an old tradition.
I'm I'm two days late in telling you
this. I should have mentioned it maybe
last week that the last week of the year
which began Monday, Sunday night, Monday
can be a rectification for all of the
aos that you did that particular day of
the week. So that would mean that today
now it's already Wednesday.
So uh if you messed up your Wednesdays
now you do chuva and that rectifies all
of the Wednesdays. So Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday. Uh but you
get a second chance because Shabbat is
set to rectify the whole week. So the
chuan Shabbat will fix everything. So uh
you know it's it's common that people
have a lot of enthusiasm at the
beginning of an endeavor. That's why
Roshashana, you know, we have a lot lot
of enthusiasm, but by the end things
peter out. But in Judaism, it's really
the opposite. Schlommoik says in Cohelis
in Ecclesiastes
the end is more significant than the
beginning. Beginnings people begin with
bursts of enthusiasm. The question is do
you have staying power? So in a sense
this last week although we're ending the
year and we're entering a new year this
is the chance to kind of end the old
year in a very very positive way and
that in turn will be a great sus a great
merit uh for the new year of 5786
that should be a year of redemption a
year of health a year of Yeshua uh for
both Israel as a whole and for each
individ idual person that is in need.
And of course remember too when we pray
for redemption we are also praying for
the non-Jewish world as too the world
itself should be transformed. I don't
want to comment on current events but uh
obviously everyone has heard of Charlie
Kirk's assassination
and we can discussly
uh was he an idoltor because he was a
Christian and that's a well-known makus
among the commentators. what is the
halic status of Christianity uh under
the noite code and that is according to
mymonities according to the Rambam and
this is pre-reformation the I mean there
was no Protestant but there's only
Catholicism basically and the Coptic
church in Egypt according to the Rambam
Christianity is considered to be a form
of idolatry because it gives God a
physical image and it also posits a
duality or a multiplicity in the sense
of the trinity and therefore according
to the Rambam uh even an otherwise
righteous Christian could not qualify as
a Noahite because he subscribes to a
form of idolatry. I do want to point out
there are other opinions. There is the
opinion of Rabenu Tom who is Rashi's
grandson who of course lived in a very
Catholic country France and Rabeno Tom
posits that although Christianity may
obviously be a mistaken belief it may be
a false belief it is not an idolatrous
belief because of the belief in a single
supreme God and as a result according to
Rayutam it's very very possible for a
righteous Christian to get a share in
Maba because he is in compliance with
the Noah law. So this is a makus. It's
not my role or my ability to decide
among the different opinions, but that
is a major issue. But nevertheless,
whatever Charlie Kirk status is, and
it's up to God to decide, he was
certainly a a friend of Israel. You may
have seen his thing about keeping
Shabas, whatever interesting thing like
uh he says he keeps the Jewish Shabas.
Now, that already raises a certain
problem. Uh, but putting that aside, he
said, "Puts away the cell phone,
everything else." He says, "Uh, it's a
good a good thing to do." And then I saw
another one that was really funny. Well,
I'll tell you two things. It's it just
free association. One goes back to Bill
Bill Clinton. Uh, when Bill Clinton was
president, you know, already many years
ago. So, he was inshed in certain
scandals, Monica Lewinsky, certain
scandals in Kan Makoma la.
and he was meeting with some clergy when
he was running for his uh re-election.
He was meeting with some clergy in Ohio,
priests, rabbis, bishops, all sorts of
people. So, there's a rabbi went over to
him, kind of a courageous rabbi. And the
rabbi said, "Mr. President, I believe
you have an obligation to do chuva." And
then he proceeded to try to explain what
chuva is. And Bill Clinton interrupted
him and said, "You don't have to
explain. And I just want to know are you
referring to Ruff Soliv Extruba
or Ruff Cook?
So, you know, that was that was very
fascinating. And then with with Charlie
Kirk, some guy in the audience got up
and just said, "Hey, you know, the
tomouth says that uh Jews rule the world
and the goyam just serve the the Jews.
You know, uh are you you're just a
who serves the Jews?" So Charlie Kirk
said, "Uh, do you mean the Bavi or the
usual
and do you know how many pages are in
each? Do you know the difference between
uh Tanakh? I mean it's really Tanakh and
Tman. Huh? Do you know any of that?
Okay, whatever. Okay. So it's
interesting what people pick up over the
time. Uh but be it as it may, Roshashana
is a day of judgment for the whole
world, not just the Jews. And gula and
mashiach is for the whole world not just
for the Jews. And then rashashana when
we pray may God put your reverence put
your fear put your
on all of your creations.
May everything that you created
recognize that the God of Israel is the
melik over the whole world. So there is
something universal in our aspirations.
Not that everybody becomes Jewish. Not
everybody's supposed to go Jewish. There
is a legitimation in the Noahide pathway
uh in which a righteous Noahide gets a
share in the world to come. So the goal
here is not that everybody becomes
Jewish. In fact, it's brought down that
once Mashiach comes, the conversion gate
gets closed. You can't jump on the train
once Mashiach comes. Uh so the goal is
not make everybody Jewish. But the goal
is that everybody should acknowledge
Hashem and worship Hashem and in
accordance with whatever system God is
dictating, whether it's the 613 mitzvos
of the Jew or the seven Noah seven Noah
laws. Uh be it as it may, uh Rashashana
is coming up. It's a very very big big
deal. And obviously the central mitzvah
of Roshashana is the blowing of the
chauffeur, right? That's the central
mitzvah. Interestingly enough, women are
technically exempt from the mitzvah of
hearing the chauffeur. Quite amazing. Uh
and that's because it's part of the
normal rule that positive commandments
that are time bound
women are exempt. And even though that
rule itself has many many many
exceptions, chauffeur is not one of the
exceptions. So technically a woman does
not have to hear chauffeur and
rashashana.
But what woman of any religious
sensibility
would ever miss chauffeur and
rashashana?
If they come to sh they come to sha and
if not there'll be separate chauffeur
blowings arranged because it is
understood that besides the mitzvah of
chauffeur a technical mitzvah that women
are exempt from there is a certain
spiritual power to the chauffeur that
everybody needs to be connected to man
woman child so I want to talk a little
bit about this mitzvah of teat chauffar
Uh now one interesting little point
which I'm not really going to develop. I
just want to call to your attention. Uh
when you look at the sukim in the Torah
about rash shana the word chauffeur is
not mentioned at all. And indeed the
gammorra has to discuss how do you know
it's a chauffeur? One puk says yom trua
a day of trua
and another puk says
trua a remembrance of trua. Now the word
trua
is a word that can mean several things.
It can mean shouting.
It can mean singing.
It can mean friendship. And indeed all
of those meanings apply. And the Talmud
says, "How do you know that it means you
blow the chauffear?" And the answer is
we learn it out of yo, the jubilee year
every 50 years on yum kipper. The Torah
says,
chauffar.
So in the case of yovale
it which we don't need observe today uh
for various reasons it does mention
chauffear together with trua. So the
Talmud has an interpretation that truer
sha similarity of words just as the
mention of trua in connection with yo
encompasses chauffar so too rashashana
so it is an interesting point I'm not
sure what to make of it that the
chauffar which is kind of the star of
rashashana
the big big miss rashana is not even
mentioned in rashashana it is only
alluded to in the word trua and we only
know it picks up chauffeur through the
gazer sha the similarity of wording uh
to the context of of yo but be it as it
may it is well established of course
that we blow a chauffeur what is the
definition of a chauffear a chauffeur is
basically the hollowed out the hollowed
out horn of an animal it does not have
to be a ram
uh many say it has to be a kosher animal
but It could be uh it could be an
antelope. Those big chopros that people
have or from deer or from antelope. But
there is only one animal that is
disqualified from whose horn is
disqualified from being a chauffear and
that is the horn of a cow or a bull or a
calf. And here the tomud says the reason
that is so is because that is
reminiscent of the sin of the golden
calf.
And uh on rash shana when we plead for
mercy we don't use our sin.
It's kind of I mean God knows the sin.
It's not like reminding God but it's
kind of an arrogance to use your vehicle
of sin as a way of asking for atonement.
The expression that the Talmud uses has
entered modern Hebrew a kagar
nasa sanor
uh which basically means a prosecutor is
not the best defense attorney. The
prosecutor sees everything wrong with
you. He's not going to be the one that's
going to look for your defense. So, we
don't use the chauffeur of the cow uh or
the bull or the calf to seek God's
mercy. But every other thing is okay.
The minog of Ashkanazim
is we do use a ram's horn. A ram is a
male sheep. And that's simply because
that also brings the positive
association with aasitzk the sacrifice
of where after hashem called off the
there was a ram and therefore this calls
to mind theat
but that's not meaning to say if you
didn't have a ram's horn an antelope is
okay different types of goat horns are
going to be okay uh the only thing that
is excluded
Truth is a non-cooser animal like a
buffalo not a buffalo whatever a
non-coosher animal rhinoceros
uh some say it actually is kosher so we
don't make it is you take it but you
don't make a brea because it's a mlo but
the only one that's absolutely puzzle is
the horn of a of a cow now chauffeur has
many many many different associations
there's a famous passage
that's reprinted in many makurim from
that there are like 10 different
associations that chauffeur has. It's
connected to the aasitzk.
It's connected to the giving of the
Torah when a chauffeur was blown. It's
connected to mashiach. It is connected
to the engathering of the exiles. It's
connected to the resurrection of the
dead. It is a wakeup call as the Rambam
says to call us to repentance. It is the
summons to judgment
that God is now about to judge us like
just like you ring a bell. So there are
many many different associations. But
let me just me oh it's also a symbol of
coronation.
Rashashana we coronate God is king. And
this gives rise to a very interesting
discussion and that is is the dominant
emotion of chauffeurblowing
supposed to be joyous
or is it supposed to be dread, fear,
trepidation,
trembling.
Now again for most of us unfortunately
we're not always on the madrega or we
feel much of anything in either
direction you know we just go through a
mitzvah but ideally
is the chauffeur supposed to frighten me
or is the chauffeur supposed to be
joyous so it's interesting that
according to the Ariza
the chauffeur is the summons to divine
judgment
this is the call that God is deciding
who will live and who will die,
who will prosper, and who will fail. And
as a result, the dominant emotion,
again, I don't want to call it fear
necessarily, but it's a trepidation.
It's a trembling. It is a serious
awefilled moment
as we contemplate
divine judgment. And divine judgment is
a reality. We don't always want to think
about it but but look in this past year
at so many tragedies that have happened
and remember that they were decreed
under Rajashana of Yum and Yum Kipper of
last year
the year of October 7
which was only a few weeks after that
Roshashana.
So when we were in Shat Roshashana,
we didn't imagine
um October 7. We didn't imagine what
would happen in two or 3 weeks.
And yet that is when it was decreed.
So this is a serious issue. Yadin,
we have to seek mercy. We have to do
chuva. That's the Arizal's idea.
Trepidation.
That is the dominant emotion of tea.
The vilnogon
says the opposite.
The vil nagon says the dominant emotion
of teat chauffar
is the boundless joy and privilege
of proclaiming Hashem
as our king.
It's the trumpet
of coronation.
Now, of course, you may ask the obvious
question.
What does it mean that Roshashana
is the coronation of God as king? I
mean, God is our king whether we like it
or not. So the vil nagon offers
a very beautiful interpretation
that there are two words for a monarch.
One is the word moshelle
and one is the word mel.
A moshel is whoever has power over me
whether I accept him or not. A dictator
is a moshel.
A mel
is someone that is freely accepted
by his people. So says the vil naggoen
god is our moshel whether we like it or
not but every roshashana
we reproclaim that he's our melik
we accept it with love with happiness
with joy and according to the v nagam
chauffur is not the summons to judgment
that gives you fear and trepidation
but chauffeur is the joyous coronation
of the king so that's interesting that
category and the truth of the matter is
this is one of those ideas
which are not binary. It's not an
eitheror. You have both ideas in the
same time. And in fact, if you look at
the verses right before the blowing of
the chauffear, the Baltoa
recites certain verses that we respond
to. So you'll notice that uh the first
verse is
I call out to God from the narrow
confining desperate places
that suggests the trepidation and the
but then one of the is again from
I rejoice over your Torah as if I found
a great treasure. I mean, look at the
verses. You'll see they are literally a
mix of trepidation pukim
and pukim of excitement and and and
happiness and joy that we proclaim
hashem as king. Now,
actually wants to say he has a
compromised position. He differentiates
between the blowing of the chauffeur
before musaf which is the first blowing
of the chauffeur and then the blowing of
the chauffear in the repetition. These
are two separate sets of chauffeur
blowings. Uh the first is called teio
the blowing of the chauffeur when you
sit down. Although our custom is we
stand up, but technically since it's not
connected to an amida,
you're allowed to sit in the ones before
musf. So that's called teio dev.
And the blowing in mus is teaos,
the standing tea because it's connected
to an amid. Many blow even in the silent
amida and the repetition. Most Ashkanazm
only blow in the in the repetition. Now
just a little more information about
this. You'll notice that when we blow in
the repetition of the Amida, so we blow
at three critical points because the
Musaf of Roshashana has three special
blessings. One is called Malios,
kingship.
The other is called zikronos,
remembrance.
The third is called chauffaros blowing
the chauffar. And each of these braos
has an identical format. We recite 10
biblical verses in malios. The 10
biblical verses are about God as king.
And the way the 10 verses are broken up,
three Torah verses,
three kuim verses, all from
three nim. So it's not to it's to
and the 10th verse is Torah
and inos it's about Hashem as mel
in Zronos
10 verses again 10 verses it's about God
remembering the good deeds of our
forefathers
and in chauffaros 10 verses it's about
the different uses of chauffeur
matantora mashiach in gathering ing of
the exiles, resurrection of the dead. So
at the end of Malios,
we blow the chauffear.
At the end of zonos,
we blow the chauffear. At the end of
chauffaros, we blow the chauffear. Those
are called teio
deaf
salvic wants to say on this issue is the
dominant emotion one of joy. one of
trepidation. He wants to differentiate
between the mushab and the muhammad. He
wants to say the blowing before musf is
one of trepidation and fear in musf.
It's about coronating and glorifying God
and doing so with simha. By the way, you
may ask I mentioned there are two
chauffeur blowings. The one before musf
is called mushaf the sitting. The one
after the one during musaf is called mu
the standing but then you'll remember we
blow again after musf
uh I still remember when I was in the
ninth grade I was at ner I was 14 years
old and you know I was not used to a
yeshiva ding yes rashetta ding is very
very very long we're talking about um
you know 3 or 4:00 I don't remember so
you know I was really really exhausted
it and finally it was beautiful dabing
but finally it was finished. So I said
hashem I can rest a little bit and then
they start blowing the chauffeur again.
I didn't I I don't know why I wasn't
aware of it from prior years but says I
thought we finished now they're so I was
really afraid they were going to start
the whole thing over again. Uh so the
truth of the matter is in so far as the
Gomorrah is concerned the Gmorrah does
not mention at all any type of blowing
after Musf. The Gomorrah just mentions
the Mushaf
and the Mumat and that was it. The
origin of blowing a after Musf is a much
later tradition that is not in the
Gomorrah and that is we have a minog
that we want to blow the chauffeur 100
times on Russashana.
Uh and that is to counteract
Cisra. Cisra was an evil general and his
mother cried 100 times waiting for her
son who was killed by Yael. And that
brings divine mercy. upon our enemies.
So we have to counteract the cries of
Cisra's mother with our cries. Now if
you count the mush and the muhammed I'm
not going to go into all the numbers
here. You wind up with 60. So when we
finish musaf we have blown the chauffeur
60 times. So if if we have a later min
to do a hundred times. So you got to do
40 more times. And that is the blowing
after after after musf cuz mush is 30
mad is 30 and then you have to do
another 40. Now if you follow the
and you also blew in the silence. So in
a sense that means the mush is 30 the is
60. So you only have 10 to blow after
musf. So kabad or whatever will have
very little to blow after musf. But if
you follow the normal Ashkanazak min of
only blowing in the repetition, you're
going to have to blow 40 after. So, and
that's how you get 100 coloss of
chauffeur. Of course, uh 100 is your
minimum if every single sound was
correct. I mean, as you know, you wind
up uh depending on how the Rav Pasins
and how the Baltto are blew, you might
wind up with 500 chauffeur sounds,
depending on how often things have to be
repeated. But if every sound is approp
you you'll have 100. So that's Raf
Salv's compromise uh between the and the
nagum that the mush is trembling the
muad is simra and joy at proclaiming
God's kingship but the truth of the
matter is even within the sound of the
chauffeur itself
there is a combination of joy and
trepidation
let's take the basic idea right the
basic sound of the chauffeur the showa
er sound has three variations but the
three variations have a very similar
structure. We start off with a tea.
A tea is a long unbroken sound.
You then have in the middle a broken
sound. Now the broken sound can take
three forms.
It could be a sharim cherua which is a
combination
of an elongated sab and a whimper. So
Iay
that's called trua. Or it could just be
theim
I or it could just be the trua a
whimper.
Okay. But the common denominator is that
after the tea there is a broken
soundarim
truaim
trua. And then after that broken sound
you once again go back to the tea.
Right? So the broken sound in the middle
whichever form it takes is bracketed by
the tea before and the tea after. The
zor says that the tea which is strong,
confident, unbroken
represents joy.
The trua
represents the broken heart over my sins
and the zakia at the end represents the
joy at receiving God's forgiveness.
So within the chauffeur itself within
the single sounding of the chauffeur you
have the combination of joy and and
trepidation
but joy has to be the as the balatana
writes generally not about chauffeur. He
says a person has to designate
a time every day
where they are heartbroken because of
their sins.
But afterwards they must revert to joy
and sima in the ravote.
There is room to be depressed and there
is room to be brokenhearted
but it is temporary and time bound and
the normal state of how you serve Hashem
should be with sima and that you see in
this in the chauffear the
brokenheartedness is in the middle but
it must be bracketed with the joy on
both sides. So here I want to share with
you uh really uh four thoughts about
chauffeur that are a little off the
beaten track. They're not the usual
thoughts but there are things that we
can incorporate in addition to sajjon
which really even the art moxer if you
look it does have the passage from that
gives you the 10 reasons for tea
chauffar and that's worthwhile to uh to
look at. The first thought is from
We know that on Roshashana,
why is Roshashana Roshashana? Because it
is the anniversary
of the creation.
We say the creation of the world, but
that's not quite true. It is the
creation of Adamishan.
Hashem began creating the world on the
25th of Elo. That was the date.
Roshashana is day six
from that point. And since uh the human
being was the purpose of creation, we do
not celebrate the creation of the world
on the 25th of Ella. Although some
people do make a point of it. We
celebrate the creation of the world the
day that Adam was created. So Rashashana
was the day that Adam was created. How
was Adam created?
Well, Hashem made a physical body from
the dirt, but he then breathed into him.
God breathed into Adam
the soul of life.
The alter the balatana makes a very
important point
that breath when I breathe into somebody
I give mouth-to-mouth resuscitation I am
giving my life's force into that person
unlike let's say the soul
of a cow or a goat or a dog or a horse
which was created by God's speech let
there be a dog let there be a course. So
the life came into being.
The soul of a human being
is not a created entity.
God did not say let there be a soul.
God breathed into
the physical body of Adam. God's own
breath.
This is the meaning of the statement
which needs a lot of definition.
that our nishamos
are an actual part of God.
Arnishamos are not created entities.
Our nishamos is the breath of God.
So Rahur says
when we hear the sound of the chauffeur,
the expulsion of air, the breathing out,
we are taken back. We are taken back
to a point 5,000 well this rashana 5,786
years ago
when God breathed
the soul of man back to man or into man.
It makes us think
of creation.
And look how refresh analyzes the sounds
of the chauffeur.
The tea
which as I said before
is a straight unwavering confident
powerful voice
reminds us that the soul that God gave
us was pure
unbroken
undamaged.
It was a wonderful, precious
part of God.
But after
that soul was breathed into us,
we broke it. We smashed it. That's the
chev I I sin
disintegrates the soul. It breaks it up.
It severs the connections with God.
So in the chauffeur, I see the tragedy.
so to speak, of human existence
in which we took something that was so
pure and beautiful
and we smashed it.
But then out of that smashing comes the
next sound of breaking, the trua.
The chua represents the broken heart
that turns to God in chuva
and the chuva repairs the damage.
So we get a tea after the chuva. So you
see the here the point here the tea
the beautiful unbroken soul
the disintegration of sin
the crying heart that seeks unification
with God
and the final tea is restoration
and indeed the final tea particularly in
the final set is longer than the first
tea that's tea gdola
Because asal said the place where the
baluva stands might be greater than the
saddic who never sinned and therefore
the tea after the trua is the tea of the
baluva
which can even be more powerful than the
one who never sins.
So this is the drama
of the human condition both in terms of
myself as an individual
and in terms of the world as a whole.
It reminds us of our potential.
It reminds us how often we have veered
off the path.
It reminds us of the capacity for repair
and the promise that things will be
restored
to something that was even better than
they were beforehand. This is a a
thought from from refers.
Now I want to then give you a second
again I really have four thoughts. They
overlap a little bit but they are also
distinct. The second thought I want to
share with you
is a remarkable insight from Rav Hutner
in which he also points out that the
blowing of the chauffeur is connected to
the creation of Adam when God breathed
into Adam the soul of life. But he
points out that it's going in a reverse
direction.
An rashashana 5,786
years ago no rashana
God breathed his breath into us.
Chauffur
I'm blowing it back to God.
Seen in this way
this is a very interesting way of
looking at it. A chauffeur
is a symbolic death experience.
You are giving your life
back to God.
You are acknowledging
that God is deciding at this very moment
if your life should be renewed or God
forbid not renewed.
And you are declaring with perfect
faith, my life
is in your hands. You know, in the olden
days, you might remember this, the older
people might remember this, before
computers were widely uh used. So, when
you rented a car, let's say you rented a
car for a week and you were supposed to
return the car on Sunday, but you needed
to renew it for two days. So, there used
to be a I don't know why they ever had
to do this, but maybe it wasn't even
widely done, but I I remember it being
done. You had to physically there was
like a physical thing. You had to
physically
go go down to the place, the rental car
place. You had to physically hand over
the keys and then there was a new kenyon
that was made for the extra two days.
There had to be like a physical idea of
giving the old life or giving the old
car and taking it. R Hutner says
chauffeur is that way as well.
We are handing our life over to God
and asking him for a renewal of the
lease.
First of all, life is only a lease
anyway. We don't own we don't own our
lives, right? To remember that all all
life is a lease and the lease is given
in one-year increments. meaning to say
the lease expires
on Roshashana
but you ask God for a renewal of the
lease. So that's one idea, very striking
idea that the chauffeur is a form of
death. But but it's a little more than
that too because that may sound a little
scary, a little frightening, but there's
also something positive to that because
in Cabala a point is made
that every rashana
a new life force suffuses the world. The
old life force is withdrawn
and a new life force comes in. Now, that
doesn't automatically mean better,
might be worse, but it can mean better.
Meaning to say there's so much
potential. It's like you're turning in
the old car and you get a new car.
See, it's not just I'm asking for a
renewal of the same old car.
Rather, my hope would be that this
involves renewal. It's a new life.
Everything's up for new, right? So,
you're handing over your life to God is
both the recognition that my lease is
up. I need a renewal, but it's also
asking for renewal in all sorts of in
all sorts of positive ways. Right? So,
so again, uh we would summarize Raf
Hersh by looking at the kiat chauffar as
a description of the process of chuva
and healing.
Ref Hutner looks at it as a symbolic
giving your life back to God, a symbolic
death. Let me mention a third thought
from the um themes
and the fas
that I mentioned or actually on Mishna
that I mentioned earlier. Remember what
the Mishna says? The Mishna says that
every animal horn is kosher for the
chauffeur
except for the horn of a cow or a bull
because since that's reminiscent of
theel.
So a kateor the prosecutor
cannot be the sanor cannot be the
defense attorney. We don't seek mercy by
waving around
as something that is connected to our
sin. The Gomorrah by the way mentions
one other application of this principle.
Uh so remember this that this is why
when the Cohen the Cohen God has two
different uniforms
during the year he wears a uniform with
a lot of gold thread
on Yam Kipper he goes back and forth
between the gold uniform and the white a
white uniform of pure linen. And
whenever he goes into the holy of
holies, the keshakashim,
he takes off the gold garments
and he puts on the white garments.
And the reason that's so is once again
he's there to plead for mercy. So gold
is also a reminder of the sin of the
golden calf. So when he goes into the
keshak dashim, he only wears white.
Okay. So the two cases where the gammor
uses the rule of kagar nasar
case number one is we don't use the
chauffur of a cow or a bull and case
number two is the cohen gundle does not
go into the holy of holies wearing his
gold vestments he only goes in wearing
pure white linen. Uh, interestingly
enough, this is in part the source of
the min that people dress in white anam
kipper. Uh, many men wear a kit and
women too often. It's not it's not a per
se. Uh, but often will wear uh will wear
white and this is also the source of the
min that many people try to avoid gold
jewelry. Any kipper makus is that only
applied to yellow gold or even white
gold. There are different different
customs about how strict this is. But
again, it's connected to the idea that
yum kipper we seek God's mercy. So uh we
wear white because of purity as the
coloring daughter wore wore white. But
in addition, we don't want the gold
because of a katear
nasar. But I do want to emphasize that
although this is a minog and one should
respect the min of course it is not an
absolute the absolute only applied to
the coen guttle entering the keshak
dashim we are not the coen guttle and we
are not entering the keshak dashim so
technically we don't have this in fact
interesting enough kipper itself when
the coen guttle was not in the keshak
dashim he actually wore golden garments
by the way that itself raises a
fascinating question and that is h if
it's inappropriate to bring up reminders
of the ego when you're seeking divine
mercy then why does the coen gole wear
gold when he's not in the keshak
we should have had a rule that he wears
white the whole day
sokin
gives a really really interesting he
says when the cohen guttle is in the
keshak dashim there is literally nobody
who sees him. It's just him and God.
So when he's with God, all he should
seek is the mercy of the Jewish people.
He's not there to criticize. He's not
there to bring up sins. So when it's
just between him and God, get rid of
theel. Don't bring it up. But when he's
not in the keshak,
people see him.
So maybe when people see him, maybe it's
a good idea for them to be reminded of
the
so they'll do chauva.
You see uh this is reminiscent of a f of
an exchange of the satrebi. Now somebody
once had the know the satmere
was a great great god but he was very
very critical of almost everything. He
was critical of the state of Israel. He
was critical of uh yeshivos and
organizations that supported Zionism in
whatever way took money. So somebody
once said said to him big big he says
you know how come you know you're always
so negative I mean Arau was confronted
with Saddam and Amora
the most evil people in the world and
what was Arainu's attitude
he prayed to God he asked for mercy and
he bargained with the Almighty says
maybe there are 50 righteous people or
45 or 40 or 30 or 20 he only wanted the
good for these sinners.
So the person said to me, "What are you
going to tell me? You're going to tell
me that religious Jews who support
Israel are worse than Sudom and Amora?
If Sudom and Amora deserve mercy and
compassion and respect,
how can you be so negative?"
So the sarbi said,
"Aram was talking to God.
So when you talk to God, you only seek
mercy. You don't seek punishment.
But I have to talk to people and give
them muser based on what I think is
right. So I got to be critical. And then
he said, "And how do you know what I say
when I talk to God?"
Yeah. So when he talks to God, he prays
for the Zionists. He prays for the army.
He prays for the soldiers.
But visav what he feels he has. Again,
I'm not endorsing the sheets one way or
the other. I'm just saying.
But based on what he thought was right
or wrong, he felt he had an obligation
to communicate it. So Rav Zamman Saskkin
is making the very same point of why the
Cohen God wears gold on the outside even
though he only wears white on the
inside. Visav God, you only seek mercy
for the Jewish people. But sometimes
visav the Jewish people. You got to call
the spade a spade. You got to be honest.
You have to give uh Muser when it's
appropriate. Okay. But be it as it may,
the two situations where we wear uh
where we're concerned with Nazar, we
don't use the chauffear
of the cow
and the coangle does not wear gold
garments when he goes into the kadesh.
Now these two teachings
seem to be consistent,
nasar.
But in point of fact, they are actually
contradictory.
Because here's the problem. You see from
the Yamipper rule that the concern with
nasar only applies in the holy of
holies.
But on Roshashana when I blow chauffeur,
I'm not in the holy of holies. So why
are you applying the kate nasa rule to
the chauffeur of a cow which is outside
of the keshakim
if we see from yam kipper that this is
only a concern in the keshak.
So these says
we see from here a remarkable idea
that actually it's not just the Gmorrah
Kimat says it be but he's explaining the
Gmorrah
that the moment of teas chauffeur is so
elevated and holy
it is as if each and every one of us are
standing in the kodus
Meaning that which only the Coen guttle
could do only one day a year.
All of us are transposed
transported
to that level of intimacy
and holiness and therefore the kesh
shakadashim rules apply
in the moment of the kata.
So now
here's what these says.
Chauffur could be seen
as a prayer of the heart,
a cry of the heart,
but it's a cry
without words.
It's a nonverbal
prayer.
says the
when you're in the kodes,
you can only give God something that is
totally pure
and untainted.
That's why you don't use the chauffeur
of the cow
and that's why the coen guttle doesn't
bring in gold.
So says this fis
if the blowing of the chauffear is
being in the keshak
you can't pray with words
at that moment because our words are
also nasar
our words are often insincere
our words are often hypocritical our
words are often not expressing the truth
that's in our hearts
So during the year, God will accept it
one way or the other. But when you're in
the dashim,
you have to give God that which is pure,
that which is untainted.
And that comes from the innermost
essence, the kishkas, the innermost
essence of the Jew
that is pure and good, untainted by sin.
And that is why this says teas chauffear
is a prayer
but it is a wordless nonverbal prayer
that emanates
from that part of the Jew that remains
holy
no matter what everything else is. This
is whatus calls in Yiddish the pint
the spark of the Jew. the spark of the
Jew that remains holy. And this is the
source of chuva because if sin truly
destroyed
everything,
then there's nothing from which there
can be a reconstruction.
But the answer is there is something
within every Jewish soul. Every Jewish
soul
that doesn't get tainted,
doesn't get destroyed.
And from that the organism can be
reconstructed
and revived. So again the so far I've
mentioned three maybe kind of off the
beaten track interpretations
the pathway of chuva
rav hutner symbolic death giving your
life back to God
a prayer without words
as you stand in the keshaktashin
and you offer God that part of you that
is untainted,
unblenmished,
pure,
that sin didn't reach.
There's something that's untainted. And
a person has to know this because
otherwise you get depressed, otherwise
you get hopeless.
I'm not sure if a if a study has been
written on this. I would be surprised if
there isn't a study on it about um the
psychological stress uh depression among
orthodox Jews during El and Yum no Ryan.
Um I I think in my experience it is
actually very significant problem. Uh
this is a very very depressing and
anxietyridden time for many many people
even if they don't want to admit it. I
mean I I will be honest. I will admit it
to you that it's a difficult it is a
difficult time for me. Uh but again but
you got to correct that by remembering
there is this essence that's good that's
righteous and combine that with divine
love and that gets you through it and
the dominant emotion as the balatana
said you have your broken heart for half
an hour a day. Yeah. Give yourself a
good cry and then face life with simka.
To me, it's amazing how the balatanya
was able to swerve back and forth like
you know cry with a broken heart for
half an hour and then be joyous like how
do you move? Now he says that's already
a concession because according to his
view you should feel both emotions
simultaneously.
He then says okay most people can't
handle it simultaneously but just do it
one after the other. Well, you know, one
after the other is pretty hard too, but
apparently he said that that was
manageable. Okay, a final thought about
the chauffeur blowing
is from the shame who was another great
the son of the abnor was one of the
gdoleador
and he points out the following you know
the sounds of the chauffeur tea
trua etc are not just for chauffeur
there's another place where they're used
actually a totally different context and
that is the katsotros
the silver trumpets. Mosher Rabenu made
silver trumpets and those trumpets were
blown on various occasions.
And the Sheamish says, well, listen, the
Tyra does not explicitly tell us the
meaning of the sounds for the chauffeur,
but it does give us the meaning of the
sounds in theotros.
So perhaps homalytical license will
allow us to import the meaning of the
sounds in the
and make a similar meaning for the
chauffeur. These are the silver trumpets
that existed that Mosher made that
existed when there was a B mikdash. By
the way, there's a whole big some say we
should reestablish them today. You may
be aware that there are people during
time of war. The Torah says the trumpets
shall be sounded. There are people who
maintain that this is a even today
and they've done it. You may have seen
on YouTube or whatever. Maybe you're at
the hotel. Maybe you saw it yourself.
Although I would have to say although
there's no logical connection, but
people who are into trumpets tend to be
in the Harabias as well. So, so, so the
trumpet blowing will normally not be in
the Kaiso Plaza. it'll normally be in
the Harbayas because for reasons I won't
go into these these types of innovations
tend to come together. Uh, okay. But be
it as it may, here is what the Torah
says.
When it's time to assemble the people to
come together to get ready to travel, we
blow a teaka.
So teaka is the message come together.
And when it's finally try time to
journey forward,
we blow the truest out.
Now this is by the is not by the
chauffear. But I think you see a very
interesting thing. Tea
is the sound that indicates coming
together with unity.
Trua is sallying forth, journeying
forth. And I think the sheamish even
adds the reason why trua
is the symbol or the sound for
journeying
is because a trua can be both a laughing
sound and a crying sound.
Right? Laughing and crying can often
sound the same. And in fact you can cry
until you laugh. You can laugh until
you're crying. And he says journeying
is a combination of trepidation and joy
because it's something new. You know,
we're leaving the old behind. We're
entering a new existence.
The new existence
may be filled with new opportunities,
new achievements,
but you're also leaving the familiar.
And there's a certain sadness even if
life was not so great. But you know the
hell that I know is better than the hell
I don't know. So the trua which
represents the ambivalence of laughing
and crying
is journey. So if we can legitimately
transpose
the uh message with to the chauffeur.
So the tea and the trua sound is
and journeying.
So what is the message? God is saying if
qual israel is to journey into the new
year
with exhilaration, hope and optimism,
we have to come together as a nation.
And we come together as a nation. We're
then ready to travel.
If we haven't come together as a nation,
we're not yet ready. You cannot blow the
trua with or the which is just a broken
sound. You cannot blow the trua without
the tea.
And that's the important message, right?
So these are like four maybe a little
bit off thebeaten track meanings of
chauffeur blowing rav the process of
chuva rav hutner symbolic death by
giving your life back to God. uh the
spasm a wordless nonverbal prayer coming
from the part of you that is pure and
untainted and finally the idea of unity
as a condition to traveling and
encountering the new challenges of life.
So uh as I say this is not to replace
this is just to kind of augment
all of the other associations. So
chauffeur is a very very rich
association
and may hashem bless all of you bless
all of bless all over the world with a
sha tova msuka a good and a sweet year
aim tova
>> and uh may we see a true true redemption
>> uh in the coming year
[Music]
You see your
tomorrow.
[Music]
Oh my