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Good morning and welcome back to 10
minutes of meaning. Please help yourself
to coffee and donuts. Celebrate
a freilichen Shushan Purim Katan.
Wonderful to be able to have a multiple
opportunities to celebrate Purim and
Shushan Purim this year. Want to thank
our 10 minutes of meaning series sponsor
for the year Jeffrey Gelb in memory of
Meshulam ben Dov ben Shimon ben Baruch
ben David ben Avraham Cohen. And all of
our learning is dedicated for a speedy
complete and painless refuah shleimah
for Esther Teela bas Aryeh Leib ben
Avraham and Carmela Shaya ben Reza. We
are in the 19th perek of Mesillas
Yesharim. Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto has
been taking us through this formula,
through this march to become better
versions of ourselves.
Which will not happen because we wish
it. Piazzitzer Rebbe writes so
beautifully
Chomas HaTalmidim in Shaarei Avodah
writes the difference between a
resolution and a wish.
A wish is I wish tomorrow morning I'd
wake up and be 20 pounds lighter. I wish
that tomorrow morning I'd wake up and be
more patient. I wish tomorrow morning
I'd wake up and I'd know Shas by heart.
Those are wishes and the wishes bear
little real resemblance to reality. A
wish is a hope and a wish is a dream. A
wish is unlikely
and borderline impossible to happen. A
resolution is a plan. A resolution is a
determination. A resolution is a
decision.
I want to take care of my health and
wellness. I want to daven better. I want
to learn more. I want to improve my
middos.
I want to enrich my relationships.
Here's my plan. Here's my timeline. Here
are the metrics through which I will
measure it. Here's how I will become and
improve and be a better person. It's a
totally totally different totally
different type of thing. So Mesillas
Yesharim the Ramchal is telling us that
in order to be the better and best
versions of ourselves, we can't live off
of wishes. We're not going to wake up
and be transformed to those people or to
be living those lives. We have to make a
resolution. You got to have a plan. You
got to live with zehirus and zerizus and
nekius and prishus and so on and so
forth all the way leading up to
chasidus. Not a wish and a dream, but a
resolution and a plan. Chasidus has been
all about how to not be satisfied with
good but strive for great. How to not
get get away with the minimum, but how
to be a maximalist. How to try to do
above and beyond. To go above and beyond
today's daf yomi. Eilu d'varim she'ein
lahem shiur. These are the things that
there is no measure. You're not maxed
out. You're not capped out. Go for more.
Strive for more. Reach for higher. Don't
be satisfied with the lowest common
denominator. Don't set the bar low, but
strive, have ambition for great. So we
talked about that in the in the
character trait of yirah and now he's
moved over to the character trait of
ahavah. Mi zeh ohev es Hashem Yisbarach,
ohev me'itas, whoever loves God a true
love, an intimate love, whoever has a
real affection for Hashem, lo yaniach
avodas Hashem tamim sheba'olam im lo
ya'oness mamash. If you're in love, if
you long, if you crave, then you will
not abandon unless you have no choice.
Someone who loves their child will be
there, will take a bullet, will jump in
front of a car, will do anything in the
world. Someone who's in love
romantically with their spouse just
craves time together. Just wants to be
able to confide. And the only thing that
will separate them is when they have to
be apart. When they have to be working,
when they have responsibilities. Lo
yistareach l'ritzoso u'pitoach l'avodas
Hashem ad she'yavo ha'eikuv
im lo ya'eikuv godol she'einam ayu. It's
a sign of a struggling or dysfunctional
relationship if you
you know, when you see the other
person's name on the caller ID, does
your heart skip a beat? Are you so
excited you can't press answer fast
enough?
Can you not wait to hear what they have
to say and be able to confide in them?
When you see their name on the caller
ID,
do you go ugh?
Can I ignore again? How many times can I
ignore in a row before I'm called out?
Do I have a good excuse why I can't
answer? How quickly can I get off the
phone?
Does your heart skip a beat?
Or does your stomach turn in knots? That
will tell you everything about the
relationship. Sometimes young people ask
me, "We're dating and how do I know and
how do I feel?" And I think that's an
amazing barometer. When you see the
other person on the caller ID, what does
your gut tell you? What's your reaction?
Does your heart skip a beat? Are you
excited to be able to answer?
You could be married. There are people
married 20, 30, 50 years. Still, the
other person calls them, so excited.
And there are other people that have
been married for 5 minutes and the other
person calls them
like a velt, how do I get out of this?
How can I press ignore? How many times
how quickly can I press ignore? So the
Ramchal is telling us the same is true
in our relationship with Hashem.
When we have an opportunity to spend
time with Hashem, we just concluded a
minyan. We're about to start the next
minyan. Does your heart skip a beat? I
love the words of the siddur. I can't
wait to talk and confide. I can't wait
to thank him and protest and ask him and
just open up my heart to him. Or do you
krechtz, ugh,
another minyan, another davening,
another siddur.
Another announcement.
Another announcement. Yeah, my stomach
turns in knots.
While your heart while your heart skips
many beats. But we love your
announcements, Yaya.
But that's the litmus test. That's the
metric to measure any relationship in
life and also our relationship with
Hashem. And just like the relationships
in life,
if we're krechtzing, if our stomach's
turning in knots instead of our heart
skipping a beat, we have to ask
ourselves why and what can we do about
it?
How can we improve and how can we invest
ourselves
and what outside support and therapy do
we need? What book can I read? How much
more time do I need to spend? And the
same is true in our relationship with
Hashem. It should be a love affair. It
should be romantic. We should crave that
time, that opportunity. We should feel
fulfilled by confiding. In eizo se'ah
midah adam nimdach ba'ah lo zocha
l'chasidus l'shaim shamayim u'l'shaim
elyon. This is a coveted virtue that the
early chasidim, the rishonim were
privileged to have. Kema'amar David
HaMelech alav hashalom David HaMelech
said in Tehillim,
and I think Avraham Fried made famous,
like the deer cries longingly at the
brook for water. The deer that's
parched, the deer that's thirsty, the
deer that's been running and playing all
day is so thirsty, so dehydrated, that
deer runs to the brook and can't wait to
lap up the water.
Tzama nafshi l'Elokim kema'amar David
HaMelech tzama nafshi l'Elokim. My soul
thirsts for you, Hashem. When will I
merit to come? When will I merit to
come? L'eimah nischaf avgan k'chol
nafshi l'chatzos Hashem.
Pasuk says,
when will I merit to come, to feel
close, to be in your courtyard.
Tzama nafshi k'chol nafshi k'chol
basari. The Rebbe
Chabad made famous that and again, tzama
nafshi k'chol nafshi k'chol basari.
Hashem, my soul thirsts for you.
All these descriptions of David HaMelech
are not I got to go to another minyan.
Do I have a good excuse? Still Corona.
The end of the spike, maybe it's better
I shouldn't.
Are we looking for ways out or are we
looking for ways in?
Do we count down to when we get to go or
do we count down to when it's over?
Stoliner Rebbe describes this romantic
love and this thirst. I'm dehydrated
spiritually. I'm so thirsty.
Please give me a drink, Hashem. Tzama
nafshi, my soul is thirsty for you. My
soul wants to know and feel, wants to be
on fire. Tzama nafshi.
K'ayol sarog al afikei mayim. Kenafshi
sarog l'Elokim. My soul sarog l'Elokim,
it's crying, it's yearning for you. I
can't wait to spend time with you.
Kol zeh mi'toch avodas ha'tshukah
she'yeish tshukah l'Yisbarach.
This is all tshukah. Tshukah is a
thirst. A thirst.
Our parshah deals discusses being
mevakesh Hashem in the olam ha'zeh. Our
parshah uses the loshon mevakesh Hashem.
Those who are seeking and searching,
those who are hungry. See there with the
Targum, how the Targum translates what
it means to be a mevakesh Hashem.
Hungry, thirsty. Kinyan ma she'amar
David HaMelech
k'chatan es nafshi. Nafshi b'sichas
laylah u'fuchi. Quotes many many psukim
that all describe for David HaMelech, he
was writing romantic cards to Hashem
all the time.
You know, last year one of our members
Zev Raiten lost his his father, a very
very special man.
And at the shivah, he showed his father
used to leave love notes for his mother.
They were married 20, 30, 40, 50 years.
Embarrassed newlyweds everywhere.
Put put the shana rishona people to
shame.
Married 40, 50 years, little love notes
every day she would find.
All over the house, left for her. Just
love it, just overflowing that love,
that affection. So that's what David
HaMelech, all of Sefer Tehillim is, is
love notes to Hashem. Can't get enough.
So the real question that the Ramchal is
challenging us, you want to be a chasid,
don't just check off I davened, I put on
my tefillin, I put on my tallis, check,
check, check. I hit my daf yomi, I put
my dollar in the pushka, check, check,
check. Done with God, finally I can go
on with my day.
Now I can go do the things I enjoy. I
could read the paper and go to work and
I could catch up on the thing that
No, it's got to be love and long to be
with Hashem. That's the connection. So
Hashem, it should be a relationship. And
all of the variables and contributing
factors, all of the measures and metrics
we use to evaluate all the other
relationships in life are what we should
use to evaluate and to improve our
relationship with Hashem. Is there
electricity? Is there romance? Do we
spend time? Do we communicate? Do we
long? Is our stomach in knots or does
our heart skip a beat? One more
sentence. U'venei Yisrael vadai
she'avah zo she'lo t'luyah b'davar
t'luyah b'davar. D'ein she'ohev es
Hashem Yisbarach she'me'itiv elav
mashlim u'matzliach oso l'chol avodaso
u'l'chol avodaso she'avah t'luyah
b'davar she'tivah k'neged ha'avodah
hazeh.
Kema'amar ki Hashem Elokecha Elokecha.
He says, you know, there are two types
of love one can have in the world. The
Rambam writes this in Hilchos Yesodei
HaTorah. The Rambam talks about there
are two types of love. Ahavas Hashem.
There's an ahavah t'luyah b'davar and
ahavah she'einah t'luyah b'davar.
We have a dependent love. A dependent
love is you do for me, so I love you for
what you do for me. You provide, you
give, you enable, and therefore my love,
my whole relationship is predicated and
it is about based on you do, you provide
for me, so I love you in return.
And you see this all the time when it
comes to politicians.
When you have an elected official, they
love the constituent and the
constituents love them, and there's an
enormous amount of superficial ahavat
tuluya b'dever going on. And the way you
know that is because if that congressman
serves one term and is voted out in the
next cycle,
all the love is lost. They don't love
him anymore, he doesn't love her
anymore, everyone forgets each other's
name and deletes them their contact from
their phone. It's an avah, there are
exceptions to the rule, there are
genuine real relationships, and they're
beautiful. I don't mean to
overgeneralize, but it's a world of
ahavat tuluya b'dever. You do for me, I
love for you.
But that's not what we strive for in our
relationship with Hashem. You provide,
you give, you donate, you support,
and therefore I love you in return. No,
it's an ahavah she'einah tuluya b'dever.
It's an ahavah, it's a love which is
from afar, from a distance. Even if I
receive nothing, I love and admire you
for who you are, what you stand for,
what you represent, what you teach, what
you bring and do in this world. We'll
talk more about this when we continue
b'ezrat Hashem next week.
Stay happy, stay healthy, stay holy. We
continue at 4:45 living with the moon at
9:00 tonight. Go behind the bema with
Elan Twig, incredible farmer keeping
shmita in Israel. Have a great day.