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Good morning Bokov. Welcome back to
living with Amuna.
So wonderful to see everyone
particularly those who drive from far
and those who are near. It's really a
meaningful people come in person to
learn to grow and to all improve and
work on our Amuna muscles. An enormous
thank you again to our anonymous donor
supporter of who supplied a copy of the
safer learning shila to all those who
come in person. So, if you did not
remember to take one last week or
weren't here last week, please take your
copy, write your name in it, underline
it, mark it up. Even if you're a guest
and visiting, even if you just came to
our cold to escape your cold and you
want to uh take a safer, please take
one. It's our pleasure. As always, we
want to begin with our attitude of
gratitude and express thanks to our
generous series sponsors. First of all,
Abby and Bella Morgan in memory of Rabbi
Dr. Brian Gabbot. In memory of Bella's
mother, our learning should be Dr. Ellen
Shan, Dr. to Ellen Chanzer. We're so
grateful for their generosity. Also, the
other Syrian anonymously in memory of
the 30 fallen soldiers and alumni of
Benet Davidid Makina and Yeshivan Ali
horrific hard to believe 30 this one
yeshiva lost 40 soldiers and alumni
October 7th and the war since this week
we're highlighting Sergeant Vir Lea
Hashem Yakum Demo 21 a Golani soldier
from Nitsan. He was killed on October
7th fighting kamas in the zikimich in a
selfless act of bravery rushed forward
to engage the terrorist which allowed
civilians to escape. There's footage
that shows him before he fell bravely
running towards the terrorist firing his
weapon. He survived by his parents Nava
and Nissan and his seven siblings. They
should find only comfort and strength.
This morning she is sponsored
anonymously in honor of a newest
granddaughter or Kayla Amuna. I think
that was me last week. Unless someone
else just had a granddaughter named
Kayla Amura. That'd be very hard to
believe. By Elaine Tractenberg, Andrea
and Alan Liberowitz on the 12th year
site 19th of Kash and Dr. Harold
Tractenberg our beloved member we miss
him. We're grateful to him and to Ela
for their role in our community bin who
was a beloved husband, father and
grandfather for Alisa and his learning
and enjoy his learning and for an
anonymous
stress and Amanda Melman in honor of the
upcoming wedding of
Maz. May they build a basel and continue
to be an example of what it means living
with Amuna. And our learning this
morning should be aus for Jacob is ben
sah elka. Okay we begin as we always do
with some amuna emails that have come
in. I feel so blessed to receive so
many. I read each and every one of them
and I hope the exercise of writing them
is valuable in growing amuna capturing
amuna. So please continue to do so even
if I'm unable to read them all. But
let's start with this week's this week's
sighting.
We studied
a couple weeks ago and last week we
spoke about
chapter Psalm 23. Hashem is my shepherd.
I shall not lack. What I want to not
lack, we learned is let me never be
lacking in knowing he's my shepherd. So
we saw the picture of the person wearing
the tank top with the number and the
said psalm number 23. That was their
that was their psalm. And then last week
we had another sighting on a license
plate. And here's the latest email. Dear
Rabbi Goldberg, since your past few
featured people seeing perk tuml
in various different places, I felt I
couldn't not share my experience from
this morning. I got on the subway for
work this morning like any other day.
Happy I found a seat next to a woman who
wouldn't have to stand. Except that
today a man entered the same subway car
as me, blasting and singing along to
music that was not from friendly, nor
was it appropriate for the children
sitting in the subway with their
parents. And if the music wasn't enough,
anyone who made eye contact with me got
an earful of words that were not very
friendly either. My immediate thoughts
were, "Wow, this is so not what I need
at 8:00 a.m." I was frustrated for
myself that this was the way my morning
was beginning, as well as for parents
that had to stand there covering their
children's ears to shield them from this
man. But as you always say, I was
>> where I was meant to be. My frustration
lapsed and I smiled when all of a
sudden, I looked at the lady sitting
next to me and lo and behold, through
the loudness and chaos of this morning
subway ride, she was sitting there
reciting tom in Spanish. And what peric
was she reading at the moment? Salmos
23.
Translation Psalm 23. At first, I just
thought it was a cute coincidence. Psalm
23 is recently be consistent theme in
this amunishir. But of course, the real
theme of the amunishir is there are no
coincidences. So I began to consider
what this moment could teach me. As my
day proceeded to become even more
hectic, I ended up having a crazy day of
delays and chaos. I witnessed a car
accident, but everyone's okay.
Throughout the entire day, I kept
thinking, "Wow, this has to be one of
the worst days ever." And it all started
with that horrible subway ride. Now that
I've had time to reflect, I think Hashem
may have been preemptively sending me
the small reminder that through all the
chaos, he will guide me and be with me.
It's definitely that little wink from
Hashem this morning that gave me the
strength to still smile through my
subway ride back home, despite the fact
that it was a half an hour later than I
usually go home, colder and darker than
it's been last winter. So, thank you,
Rabbi Gor, for providing me with the
outlet to help me cultivate the most
beautiful outlook on life and has led me
to view every event in my life as an
opportunity to find Hashem leading me
through it. That was this week's
sighting of Salmos 23. So, keep your
eyes open whether you're here in person
or watching online because I want to
find out where it will come up next.
Where will Hashem wink and nod to all of
us in the Amunashir and show us that
Psalm 23? Rabbi Goldberg, thank you for
the ishirum. Thank you for the
compliments. I love listening to the sha
on my way to work as I did this morning.
Especially love listening to the stories
and sometimes wish I had one to send on
my own. Well, today I had one. I was
driving home this evening from work in
the Bell Parkway. As I was driving, I
noticed the screen on the dashboard of
the car flashing. Low tire pressure in
the front passenger tire. My original
thought was, I had a long day. Flat
tires usually go down slowly. I prefer
getting to Brooklyn going to a tire shop
I know of locally. After all, I wasn't
even feeling anything abnormal to drive.
Only three miles to go until my exit.
But the screen was telling me the
pressure was going down faster than I'd
expected. I decided I'd call my brother
and ask for a more objective opinion.
Despite him being on a train going home
from work himself, he answered with a
warning. He'll lose service any minute.
I quickly told him the story. He
suggested I get off the highway, take a
look at the tire myself. He suggested at
the very least I should drive home on
the streets, not the highway. I exited
and watched how the tire pressure went
down. 16 psi, 11, 8, 6, 5, and to one
within those five minutes. By the way,
been there, done that. I think y wrote
an article about it in Mishbah magazine.
Happened to us on the side of a road
during co in North Carolina driving a
sprinter van. I pulled over and looked
at the tire, which was completely flat.
I quickly Googled and searched for a
local tire shop. There just happened to
be a shop.3 miles away that was closing
at 7. It was 6:30 p.m. I drove rather
slowly to the shop, got my tire. Our
place was back on the road within 20
minutes. There are so many aspects of
Ashkah to this story. The car wasn't
even beeping to alarm me of the low
pressure. I could have easily gone on a
few more minutes without noticing it. If
I went with my initial thought of
driving, I would have been driving 50
miles an hour plus with a potentially
full flat tire that went at within
minutes, which could have been extremely
dangerous. Finally, the being a tire
shop two blocks away from the exit, I
was able to go minutes before closing.
What a hug from Hashem.
I am no stranger to moments of
questioning where is Hashem. But
sometimes it's the small things that
really aren't so small. Where we need to
realize we are where we're meant to be.
Perhaps it could be an inspiration for
the bigger, more challenging moments to
feel strengthened that it too is from
Hashem. I'm speaking to myself. Thank
you again for all the inspiration. Okay,
next email. I don't know. It's anonymous
who wrote it, but I love the heading of
it. Subject line, love you or hate you.
Hi, Rabbi Goldberg. Should I love you or
hate you? I was nervous it was from your
[laughter]
depending on the day. You never know.
Should I love you or hate you? I've been
pondering that question and by the end
of this note, perhaps the answer will
reveal itself.
Okay, you had me at hello. You see, I'm
a cynic. I tend to believe that people
are driven not by goodness, but by
something less pure. Yet you're living
with the minutia from a few weeks ago
has been echoing in my mind. You spoke
about people's reaction to others pain.
The woman who said she cried for the man
in such pain turning away from God and
the man who reached out wanting to
invite that lonely balash chuba for
shabas. I find myself drawn to the
stories where hardship meets fa faith
where things don't turn out perfectly
but amuna endures. I often roll my eyes
at the happy endings the aha moments
where everyone everything resolves
neatly and the refrain becomes God was
there for me. Of course we thank Hashem
when things end well. What about when
they don't? People who cling to faith
despite their suffering. That's the kind
of truth that moves me deeply. This week
you spoke about David's words.
Years ago when I worked on Wall Street,
my sister gave me a CD. Yes, a real CD.
Anyone not know what that is? Looks like
a donut. It's got a hole in the It spins
and you listen to music. It was music by
Dr. Rabbi Ellie Cranler. I remember
sitting at on his on the command bus,
hearing those very words sung for the
first time. The melody, the message. I
didn't even know what the translation
then, but appeared straight to my soul.
Tears streamed down my face and I didn't
even understand why. I was embarrassed
as people looked at me strangely, but I
embraced the tears welcoming the emotion
since I am since I often felt numb. And
here I felt deeply. Listening to your
shar now, I finally grasped what those
words truly mean. I do live with fear of
Hashem. How could I not? After a
lifetime filled with challenges, grief,
and weighty moments that test the human
spirit. I'm not exaggerating. My story
would make you cry. But for the purpose
of this email, I made a decision. I
choose to love you. Perhaps next week
I'll feel differently. [clears throat]
No offense,
none taken.
I love you for reminding me of Gamkeas.
I love you for reminding me that good
people still exist. I love you for
honoring the authenticity of those whose
stories don't have a perfect ending. And
most of all, I love you for being
engaging. Normally, the idea of
listening to a shar makes me shudder.
Truly, I've been dis grown disenchanted.
Yet, you somehow have managed to hold my
attention even though I walk and listen
headphones in trying to internalize the
message. Believe in Hashem. So, thank
you for keeping me listening, for
rekindling a small dose of amuna. Here's
to the next
living with amuna. I can't wait. So,
it's nice at least for today to feel
loved. All right. At least for today to
feel loved. Uh uh.
Okay.
Oh, there's so many more. You're so good
and powerful. The bicycle. We've got
Torah to learn.
This is a powerful painful one. Dear by
Goldberg, your podcast number 363 was
the week I was sitting Shiva for my
beloved husband. Because of all the
wonderful supportive friends who were
flooding our house, I had not listened
to the podcast for the week. That is
until my daughter excitedly contacted me
telling me I had to find time to listen
and I understood immediately. My
husband's trademark in learning and
domining was to write in small print
with a mechanical pencil meticulous
notes in the margins of all of his farm.
You remember last week when I told you
the great gift and I encouraged you,
don't leave it here. Don't give it back
to me. Take it and make it your own.
The opening of says the Torah belongs to
God, but when you underline it and
highlight it and write in it and mark it
up and put the English translations over
it, you make it your own. Break the
binding. Make it fall apart. Fill it up
with your notes. That's what I spoke
about last week. So she writes, "My
husband, who she just lost and was
sitting sha for, his trademark in
learning and dominance was to write
small print. When his sitter began to
show signs of age, because of all the
notations, he realized he could not
simply buy a new sitter, he got boxing
tape to patch up the well-used one,
which now is a treasured legacy for the
children and grandchildren. Knowing
there's no such thing as a coincidence,
I found it wonderful that you would
discuss this particular thing on the
week of his Levia. I'm enclosing a few
pictures of his sitter, which were very
beautiful, and we wish her and her
family only nama strength and comfort
through the terrible loss. I want to
tell you the wink and nod she doesn't
even know.
I sometimes find myself speaking. I
don't know why I'm talking about that.
Like last week, why did I go on that
rant about marking up your safer?
It's not the most important thing in the
world to me. I don't know if I've ever
thought about it before. I certainly
didn't sit down and work on the shar and
say this week I'm going to talk about
the importance of writing in the margins
and underlining your safer and making it
your own. I don't know. It just came to
me. So, it's equally a wink and nod from
Hashem to me. It's equally a hug from
above to me when sometimes you just find
yourself thinking about talking about
things. You're not sure why. And you
later find out when someone takes the
time to write you that email and it is a
very beautiful thing. Okay, one more and
then we dive in. I was laughing so hard
I decided I must send you an email. My
family has a unique position of being
totally bicycle dependent. We live in a
city in the north, says Israel, where
Barasham, they have excellent bicycle
infrastructure, but not so great public
transportation.
After we moved, we decided instead of
stretching ourselves to buy a car, we
got me an electric bicycle.
My husband is a biking enthusiast, has
always gotten around by bicycle. I
absolutely love my bike and get
everywhere with around the city with it.
I have three children, five years
through six months, and they come along
with me. I have enough room on my bike
for four kids. Wow. Superwoman. Anyway,
my husband was home for a short visit
during round four of Muin, which we can
pause right there. Just astounding,
mind-boggling, and just said passively,
"These are our our heroes." She just
says passively, "My husband was home for
a short visit during his fourth round of
Miluin." Just extraordinary.
Sorry. Sorry.
Yeah.
Uh,
and the bike was working just fine. The
morning after he headed back to his
base, my bike died. Not a flat tire,
which also happened to me twice, but
something with the motor. I called him
right away, no answer, called my
brother-in-law, who answered, "You're
doomed." And hopped into a cab with my
three kids for a doctor appointment
across the city where we were going to
be late. Once I got through to my
husband, he listened to the symptoms and
agreed with our brother-in-law was
probably the gears in the motor. He
express shifted gears to arrive the next
week when he was supposed to come home
again. I managed without a bike for that
week. It was tough, but okay.
Unfortunately, when he got home, opened
the motor, he found the issue wasn't the
gears. He didn't know what to do. So, he
started calling around for a bike place
that had time to work on it ASAP. We
found someone close by. Even offered to
grab it from us as he passed by on the
way home. That was Wednesday. Here we
are Friday morning. He still hasn't
started working on the bike, and my
husband will be away again for his last
two days on Miluim this round Monday and
Tuesday. So, as I'm listening to your
show this morning while cooking, I
paused to fetch and fret to my husband
about the bike and then I stopped. How
ridiculous is that? I'm not supposed to
have my bike right now. It's where it's
supposed to be.
Why should I be fretting? I have no
control over the situation and bothering
my husband about it won't get the
mechanic to work any faster. Hashem will
hear us about it very soon. I'm sure I'm
allowed to say that about something
mundane like a bike, especially if I'm
already I'm always hearing about
flights. Thank you for the wonderful
kachabas. Someone from the north of
Israel. You got to love that somebody
whose husband is on his fourth, fifth
round of miluim is worried instead about
the bicycle and getting around, but also
has the attitude and the clarity to be
able to say, "My bike is where it's
meant to be." And this is what we've
been learning. This is what I'm
encouraging. This is what I'm personally
working on all the time when we start to
worry, get anxious, get angry, get
resentful, get envious of others, to
take that deep breath, to ground and
center ourselves. And to remember we and
our things and our solutions and our
future spouse, they are all where they
are meant to be. And when we are meant
to have them, we will. We have to keep
reinforcing and keep remembering.
Nothing is random. Nothing is
coincidence. Nothing is chance. It's all
from above. Hashem wrote the play. We're
just actors on the stage. And yes, we
have free will. And yes, it's up to us
to express initiative. But once we do,
then the rest of the scene plays itself
out. And that let go and let God.
Surrender. And the serenity that comes
with it by realizing I'll get the bike
when I'm supposed to. The package will
be delivered when it's supposed to. I'll
meet that person when I'm supposed to.
The answer will come when it's meant to
come. And then we can let go. And then
everything falls into place from a
bicycle to muim to travel in an airplane
and to everything in between. It is all
orchestrated from above. And when that
happens, we can become I shared with you
last week the great expression I saw
from the Reba. I want to blow it up and
put it in our incredible cafe with the
other inspirational quotes we're going
to be putting there. The baba,
I got a couple emails about it, too. Got
to put it on sweatshirt and bumper
stickers. Don't be a worrier,
be a warrior. Channel the energy of
being a worrier instead into being a
warrior. Whatever you're worried about,
go be a warrior to make it happen.
Whatever the case may be, for amil
for the Jewish people and the challenges
we face for yourself, for your family.
Don't be a worrier, be a warrior. Take
that same energy and channel it into a
positive action and outcome. We are on
page
126 in your very own. Please mark it up
and underline. There are plenty more
copies. Give them out. Anyone who needs
please come and take. Write your name in
and keep. Please bring it back. We're in
the bottom of the right hand column.
This chapter that we're looking from the
is all about very counterintuitively the
value of davening for amuna. Ah, what
I'm missing is amun and hashem. I'm
supposed to ask Hashem to have more
faith in him. The answer is yes.
Absolutely. Even success in faith, even
the ability to see and feel him depends
on our ding
depends on our talking to him.
The great brings the following.
We have
we say it on Friday nights. When do we
say it? Right before and that is called
who wrote.
Tradition has it that this beautiful
paragraph we forgot to post it in the
WhatsApp group Miami boy choir we didn't
couldn't find a good version.
This beautiful song was written not by
Miami boy choir. It was written by the
great Tana bin Hakana.
The great Tana wrote it. It has 42
words. 42 words. The initials of which
form the secret 42 letter of the name of
Hashem. The six initials of each of its
seven verses form divine names. The
cabalist teach that it should be divided
into phrases of two words each. But our
translation article writes follows the
division indicated by a simple reading
of the phrase. So you're familiar with
if you look before
on Friday night you have and there's
these mystical acronym rashos on the
side of the way it's divided let me read
that to you again the great Tana the
great second century third century Tana
wrote it contains 42 words the initials
of the 42 words
form the secret 42let name of Hashem I
guess if arts girl published it it's not
such a secret anymore
The six initials of each of its seven
verses form divine names. It should be
divided into phrases of two words each.
And the art scroll translation follows
the divine division indicated by a
simple reading of the phrase. So
what do these words mean? Just turning
the air conditioning off since it is
freezing cold outside. I don't know why
it's blowing in here.
Sorry, one second.
This opening line means
we beg you with the strength of your
right hand's greatness, unite the
bundled sinsaw.
We beg you with your strength,
the great strength of your right hand.
untie the bundled sins. That is a very
esoteric, ambiguous. What does that
mean? No wonder I'm raising the
temperature in another room. That's why.
Okay,
there you go. Sorry.
From the mouth of the of God above, no
evil goes out.
All strict justice is are actually
filled with kindness in their inner
core.
We live in a world where from our
limited finite perspective, we sometimes
experience things as strict justice. Why
did that why did that diagnosis come in?
Why that news? Why that event? Why this
crisis? Why that result? Why that
outcome? It feels like painful strict
justice. But inside every act or
experience of justice is a loving
kindness from Hashem.
but we turn to Hashem and we say we know
all that you do is by definition good.
We know that. We know that. But we want
it to also feel good. As we shared last
week that the Reb taught,
let it be not only a good year but a
year that's good and sweet. By
definition, if it's good, if it's from
you, it's good. But good can be bitter
or good can be sweet. And we ask for and
we want and long for a good that is
sweet because
we don't have the strength. We don't
have the strength to endure the
show us
just show us and shower us with love and
kindness.
Let it be not only something which is
kind by definition and good by default
but let us see it let us experience it
in that way too
and that's the meaning
all things that come from your might and
your strength
and their inner essence they're coming
from the right the right is always
I mentioned last week the reason we give
preference and precedence to the right
over the left is over din the left side
is din the right side is that's why the
k and the kapata and the bees and even
the shirt they they button right over
left the right hand over the left hand
everything is right over left
over.
So even though your right hand it's
everything coming through your power
we know underneath it all is loving
kindness and even though from our
perspective it feels like and looks like
din justice
hidden and embedded and inside of it is
loving kindness which is all good.
Unbundle and untie the loving kindness
and the goodness. Let us see it. Let it
be visible. Don't make us have to search
for it and find it. Don't make us have
to wait for it for it to one day come.
Untie it and unbundle it. Let us see it.
Let us find it.
Even to the eyes, even to the naked eye,
even to the mere mortal, let us see it
and experience it. In other words, our
lives are by definition good. Everything
that comes from Hashem is by definition
good. But there's a good which is
painful and there's a good which is
pleasant. So we ask Hashem, we turn to
Hashem and we say, "Let all the good not
only be definitionally good, but let it
be experientially good. Let us see the
good. Unbundle, untie. Let us see, let
us feel, let us access, let us know the
good even within the Let us see the
kindness even within that which feels
like justice. We have uh once a month we
meet a kadesh club. It's a club nobody
wants to ever be part of. But those who
are in their period of mourning and
nobody's ever kicked out of the group.
There are people who stay long beyond a
year, people who come on again when they
have a year at site. We get together, we
learn a piece of Torah connected to
grief, mourning, loss. And then we open
it up for people to share and to emote
and to be among others who going through
a difficult time. So in a recent meeting
of our kadesh group, one of the people
shared about the loss of her brother and
how painful it was, but how much good
has come since then. She's not grateful
for it. She wishes she could undo it and
have him back. Of course, she's not
grateful he's gone, but she's able to
look back and reflect on all the lessons
she's learned and all the ways she's
grown and all the manners in which she
has stepped up since she lost her
brother. And I was wowed because many
people they stew in their grief and
their sense of mourning and woe is me
and why and where are you unable to see
or find any good. But there is good.
There is good. It's not a good again
that we welcome or want. We long for and
we ask give us a good without needing to
get there through what feels like bad or
painful. But under that den is a how
lucky and fortunate we are we can find
it and name it and see it and be
grateful for it. But the real is to not
have to have the laced in but to have it
be just revealed and exposed and direct.
The codeb comes from the great
also
Mosherenu Mosher Abenu who also had a
tough and difficult life. Mosher Abenu
true he grew up in a palace but he was
on the run fleeing for his life to
Midyan. He came back and he became a
spokesperson for this encouraable
infuriating Jewish people who failed him
time and again. He didn't get to see his
dream realized of going into the land of
Israel. His leadership role and the
sacrifice he made in fulfilling it
impacted negatively his marriage but
also in a sense cost him his children
because many here don't even know Mosha
Rabenu's children's names. Can you name
the children of Moshe?
The name the children of Moshe who did
not succeed him. They did not take over
the Rabenu status, the Rabenu role.
[clears throat]
There's a lot that Moshe and all he
wanted to was to see his dream
fulfilled, escort the Jewish people into
the land of Israel. And he davened. How
many times did he den? Not once, not
twice, not 50, and not a hundred. How
many times did
the beginning of
515 times?
515 times over and over and over and
over and over and over again. You know,
it leaves us confused because sometimes
we wonder, should we let it go because
Hashem was saying no? He closed that
door. He said, "That's not what's best
for you." Or did he want us to get up to
5:15?
Ask over and over and again and again.
He asked, "Please let me in. Let me see.
Let me feel. I'll be ameritus. I'll be
retired. I don't have to be active.
Yesua can succeed me, but let me realize
and fulfill my dream of entering the
land. It's what I live for. This is what
I was leading for 515 times." How do we
know 515? That's the gumatria
of
said
now. Why didn't Moshe, this relates to
what I wrote about last week and what I
spoke about, I'm waiting to get
permission for people to read their
emails. I cannot tell you the outpouring
of reaction and response we've spoken
about here and I wrote about last week
because I shared the letter I got before
Shana giving license and permission to
sometimes protest or feel angry at
Hashem
and I can't tell you how many people
reached out and said how much that meant
to them because that's where they are
and that's how they feel and they felt
like a lost cause they felt rejected and
they had no place one person wrote after
seven months they went back to shul
because they read the letter from the
person who wrote me and the response. So
far, they only made it to the kdish, not
into the davening. [laughter]
But I want to tell you that that's
that's also a big deal. That's a big
deal.
I know somebody who because of abuse he
experienced in his youth from a person
of Torah authority who has such trauma
and so many triggers related and now he
has a family and desperately wants his
children to not suffer from them and to
be able to live a richly Jewish life. So
he comes to shul because he wants them
to. And he told me, "I can't make it
past the lobby. When I enter past the
threshold and I come into the shul, my
body reacts. It shuts down. I can't
breathe. My test my chest tightens and
it's hard to even be there." We don't
know what that means. And there are many
more people who experience that than we
want to know or maybe than we would
believe. But they're not lost causes. In
many ways, as we've talked about, their
relationship with Hashem is more real
because it's more raw. It's authentic.
It's genuine. How many walk right past
that threshold, enter right in, and
haven't had a real conversation with
Hashem in many years or in all the years
of their life? They wrap those. They put
on the talis, they open the sitter, they
say the extraum, and yet they've never
had a real conversation. They're not in
a raw real relationship. So some of
those people, it's real. It's real. It's
real. And I hope I'll be able to share
some of their emails because they
touched me very deeply just like the
original letter writer did. So here the
great
he points out why didn't Moshe say if
Hashem said no, I can't enter Israel.
That's what's best for me. So I'll leave
it alone. Why did he come back and ask
again and again and over and over?
It was good for him.
It was the right thing for the Jewish
people. Moshe,
Moshe had unbelievable, unconditional,
unequivocal faith. Moshe had maybe the
most perfect faith. Moshe certainly
believed in Hashem and believed that
everything Hashem did and determined was
for his best and the Jewish people's
best. So, leave it. Drop it. Move on.
You asked. Hashem said no. Okay.
Nevertheless, Moshe said please. Pretty
please. Pretty please. With the cherry
on top. Pretty pretty pretty pretty
please. Can't I? Won't you? It's the
last time. I'll never ask you. Please.
Can I? 515 different ways. He muttered
and he bothered and he came after and he
drove Hashem crazy.
What was Moshe saying? What was Mosha?
Says
Mosha was saying, I know that the no is
the best and what's right for me and the
Jewish people. But can't you make a
right and best for me and the Jewish
people? That includes me going into the
land. If the answer is no, I accept it.
I surrender and I submit.
But I'm asking, can't you pivot and
adjust and make what's right for me also
with what feels good for me?
Nobody. I thought I was going to get a
hard time on that article or our this
concept of being able to and being
allowed to having a license to protest
or even be angry at God. I didn't get
any push back. I think we brought lots
of ry lots of evidence. Ara and Snomeov
Yona Yeryahu yesterday in the parashes
the holy the pzba talked about how Sarah
ended her life so to say she died in
protest to Hashem when she heard that
was sacrificed even though he wasn't in
protest to Hashem she this is in
November 1939 when two months earlier
his only son was murdered by the Nazis
as was his daughter-in-law and as was
his sister-in-law. He lost so much of
his family and the Reb gave this drush
on the Warsaw ghetto and he said Sarah's
life ended in protest to Hashem. I don't
want to live if you cause so much
suffering. Hashem, you must stop the
suffering. It's too much to bear. You're
a loving God. If the pett could say that
about Sara that sometimes we can protest
to Hashem. So Mosher Abenu did not just
take it. Mosher Raenu turned back to
Hashem and he said,"I get it and I know
with unconditional and unequivocal
faith. I know it's all from you and I
surrender. I submit. If this is the
answer, ultimately I'm all in. This is
what's right. But would you reconsider
changing what's right?" If you think
about it, that's what all davening is.
We're finite and we're mere mortals. I
don't think we've ever spoken this out.
So let's do it right now for a moment.
Hashem is infinite and he's all knowing
and allseeing. I'm your mortal and I'm
finite. Like there's someone I sometimes
get a ride with drive with who for some
reason has this aversion to using ways
or Google maps. Whenever we go, he says,
"I know how to go. I know the shortcut.
I know where to get on. I know the
express lanes." I say, "You can't see
around buildings. You can't see around
corners. You can't see five miles in
advance. You don't know where an
accident happened, where traffic built
up, or where the police are hiding. Why
in the world Why in the world would you
follow your limited intuition of how to
go instead of the satellite in the sky
that sees further and better, more
accurately, more precisely, and tells
you and knows exactly where to go? Why
in the world? And I struggle and I
debate and argue with him each and every
time. Each and every time.
One of my favorite stories.
Couple summers ago, my daughter had a
baby in New York and I was going with my
mother-in-law to go see and meet this
baby. Was at a hospital in the
Northshore and I was following ways and
it was taking me a different direction
she was used to. She kept critic she's
not as used to using ways. It's not a
criticism. Love her with all my heart.
And she said, "Why are you going this
way?" I said, "M, it's it's ways.
There's a satellite. It knows traffic.
It's telling us." So she protested by
saying ways is not from the
neighborhood. [laughter]
Ways doesn't know how to go. Ways is not
from our neighborhood.
Okay. There's a little generational
thing there. Ways is from every
neighborhood. Ways is from every ne ways
knows how to go. Ways knows how to go. I
I'm only slightly exaggerating. Every
time I turn the car on, I put on ways
almost from my house to shul. I'm
exaggerating on the circle, but I'm I'm
telling you the truth that if I'm off
the circle,
when you have to drive carpool,
whichever direction you're coming off
the circle to drive carpool, put on
ways. You don't know better where
traffic's built up, where an accident
happened, where police are hiding, where
a light is out. You don't know. Put it
on. It knows better. So, stop this ego
game. Stop. It takes three seconds. Put
it on and it's going to tell you again.
Now, I'm going to get emails. Google
maps is better than ways. Ways is better
than [laughter]
there's an age-old debate. whichever one
you want to use, but use something
relying on a satellite in the sky. Why
am I ranting about that? Because I have
a perspective on life. I have a
perspective on when I should get married
and if I should be healthy and how much
money I should make and what an outcome
from an election should be. That's my
perspective. Then there's a satellite in
the sky known as the Rebon Shalom, the
Almighty. He's not only from every
neighborhood, he created every
neighborhood. He runs every
neighborhood. He knows everything about
every neighborhood. He's in charge. He's
in control. And he has another
perspective about when I should get
married and if I should be healthy and
how much money I should make and if I
should have children and who should win
which election. And now there's a
conflict. His perspective, his
determination, his decision and mine.
He's infinite. I'm finite. He's
omnipotent. I'm limited. He's perfect.
And tells me I'm not. [laughter]
So who should surrender to whom? Who
should surrender to whom? Only because
we have such an amazing marriage can I
make these jokes. Who should surrender
to whom? Should I give in to God and do
it his way or should I really be busy
protesting, appealing, talking to him
and trying to force him to conform? Who
should conform?
Who should conform? Should I conform to
him or should he conform to me? Isn't it
logical and obvious to say he's
infinite, omnipotent? He's up in the sky
and all knowing. Everything he does is
good by definition and for the best. So
enough Goldberg. Stop doubling and
asking. Stop controlling and
manipulating. Let go and let God. He's
in charge and in control. Close the
sitter. Close the tahillum. Close the
conversation. Whatever happens,
passively accept it's coming from God.
That question bothered me when I was
younger. That question about not like
high school younger, post high school
younger. That question bothered me. Why
are we doing? What are we asking for?
Why am I trying to change God's mind
when if it's a choice between his mind
or my mind? We should go with his mind
every time.
Do you ever think about that question?
>> Has that question ever bothered you?
Does the question bother you now that
we've asked it?
Is this thing on? Is anybody listening?
>> Okay. Thank you.
>> Thank you. Right.
>> So the others
the all have the following. How do you
say to pray in Hebrew?
Hispel.
What form of the verb is his pal to dav.
To pray it's pale. It's the reflexive
form. What am I trying to change when I
dain? Am I trying to change God's mind?
No. I'm not trying to change God's mind.
What I'm trying to change is myself.
Why? Because the determination God had
for what's best and what's right and
what's good was for the me before I
dvened. But when I daven
and I change and I transform myself,
what I'm saying is it's a new me. So
let's come up with a new a new what's
best for me. So what you had determined
was best for me was true for the old me.
You did it maybe to even get my
attention. Well, you got it. And here I
am. And now through the exercise in
humility and dependence and faith and
surrender, through the closeness I've
created with you, I am a new me. And now
that I'm a new me, how about you come
out with a new decision of what's best
for me? Person comes before a judge and
the judge says, "I look at your record.
I've examined all the evidence. I'm
locking you up. I'm putting you in this
program. I'm making you pay this fine.
You have to volunteer this service. And
the person then says, "Judge, may may I
approach the bench? Can I speak from my
heart and wins over favor with the judge
and convinces the judge that the person
who stands before him or her is not the
person who did all those things, is not
the person who all the evidence points
to the crime. They're a different
person. I see you've worked on yourself.
I three I see through the way that you
presented yourself, you're a new you.
So, you know what? It's true that that
was my decision. That was my judgment.
But I hear you and I hear that you're
different. And I see that you're
different and transformed. And therefore
and therefore tell you what, this is my
new determination. This is my new
decision. This is what I'm going to do
for you. Now, I was once in court
testifying for someone on behalf. where
that happened
the judge was sentencing and the judge
heard the argument I happen to speak on
that person's behalf but much more
importantly heard the person himself and
the judge said said I want you to know
Mr. So and so when I walked in this
morning, I had already made the
decision. I was going to sentence you to
such and such. But having heard you, I
believe you. I find you compelling and
persuasive and I hear the people who
spoke for you. Unfortunately, I've done
this several times for several people
and I've never seen that before. Usually
whatever the decision was before they
walked in the court was the sentencing
that was hand down handed down no matter
what was said. But here, he heard
something. He saw something and he said,
"I was going to put you in jail today
from this hearing, but instead I've
decided such and such." Every time we d
we're turning to Hashem, his pal, we're
not trying to change his mind. The act
and the process, the exercise of prayer
is to change ourselves. And to say to
make the argument, Hashem, well, you had
determined what you decided was best for
me. That was the old me. That was the
last me. But now through this
experience, through this process,
through this file, there's a new me. So
would you reconsider maybe what the new
me should get? That's what the is
saying. Not in so many words, but that's
what's underlying what the is saying
is saying Mosha is telling Shalom. If
you think I shouldn't go into the land
of Israel, that's best. That's right.
That's just it's good. It's good for me.
It's good for Kalish, but it's good for
the old me. Through 515 times of asking
you, I've changed myself 515 different
ways. Maybe epis now it is good for me
to go in. Maybe the new me epis it is
good for me to lead them in. And if the
answer is still no, I accept it. I
surrender to it. I submit to you.
Whatever you decide and whatever you
determine, but the whole process and
exercise of is I am a new me. If you've
ded and you haven't transformed, you
haven't den I'm not saying give it up.
We still do it. Not every davin is going
to be the highest level. Sometimes we
could din a whole month just for that
one breakthrough.
But had we not kept opening the sitter
the whole month, we never would have
gotten to that breakthrough. So you have
to keep ding no matter what. But the
level we're yearning and searching for
the one we want to be on the metric or
measure every time we close the sitter
about that feel is to ask ourselves. Am
I changed? Am I different? Have I been
transformed by what I just did? Did I
have a intimate rendev with the
almighty? Was it real? Was it raw? Was
it authentic? Did I talk to him? Did I
hear him talking to me? Am I changed? Am
I transformed by it? And if we want a
new determination, a new judgment, then
we have to become a new person. Because
if we're the old person, we're not just
going to bribe Hashem. He's not just
going to look the other way. And we
don't want him to. We don't want him to
because remember, he's a satellite in
the sky and we can only see what's right
in front of us. And if there's a choice
between the two, we'll always or should
always defer to him. So, we don't want
him to. The only time we really even
want him to is because we're different.
We're new. We're changed. We're
transformed. And that's what file is all
about. It's an exercise in amuna in
faith. Transforming ourselves. It is it
is introduced. The assumption the
presumption is you're in charge. You're
in control. It is by definition good.
And whatever you determine, whatever the
outcome, I surrender to you that it is
good. But Hashem maybe consider a new
outcome because I'm a new person. Maybe
we could change. Now, how does that work
when you dabbing for someone else? Maybe
they're still the same person. So why
should Hashem listen to you to help them
if they're still the same?
How should it help to dab him for
someone else? That's a good question
which maybe we'll pick up with next
time. We'll end here. We continue when
we turn the recording off. We continue
with live questions and answers for
those who come in person. So until next
time, stay happy, stay healthy, stay
holy. We'll pick up with next week.