This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this beautiful Dvar Torah from Rabbi
Avi Weiss...
From a literal perspective, the names of Parshiot are nothing more than the
first major word of the part of the Torah that is read during the week. It
can, however, be argued that deep meaning actually lies within the names
themselves. This week's Parsha, Acharei Mot, literally means "after
death", and next week's Parsha, Kedoshim that means "holiness", are fine
examples of this phenomenon.
Imagine walking into a dark room for the first time. Not knowing one's way
or one’s place, one trips over the furniture, unaware of which way to
turn. However, after days and weeks and months and years, when one walks
into that very same dark room, although the darkness still exists, with
time we learn how to negotiate the furniture and we can make our way. This
week's Parsha reminds us that after life ends (Acharei Mot), there can
always be Kedoshim - a sense of continuum that is expressed through
holiness. How so? The challenge of death is to keep the person who has
died alive in spirit. Indeed the Talmud says, there are some people who
are actually living yet are not really alive - they're only going through
the motions. On the flip side, there are others who, although physically
dead, continue to live through the teachings they left behind and through
those whom they have touched in life. The goal is to live a life of
character, purpose and meaning, and let those that have passed live through
our actions.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week:
"To live doesn't mean you're alive."
This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this beautiful Dvar Torah from Rabbi
Avi Weiss...
_______________________________________________
>From a literal perspective, the names of Parshiot are nothing more than the
first major word of the part of the Torah that is read during the week. It
can, however, be argued that deep meaning actually lies within the names
themselves. This week's Parsha, Acharei Mot, literally means "after
death", and next week's Parsha, Kedoshim that means "holiness", are fine
examples of this phenomenon.
Imagine walking into a dark room for the first time. Not knowing one's way
or one’s place, one trips over the furniture, unaware of which way to
turn. However, after days and weeks and months and years, when one walks
into that very same dark room, although the darkness still exists, with
time we learn how to negotiate the furniture and we can make our way. This
week's Parsha reminds us that after life ends (Acharei Mot), there can
always be Kedoshim - a sense of continuum that is expressed through
holiness. How so? The challenge of death is to keep the person who has
died alive in spirit. Indeed the Talmud says, there are some people who
are actually living yet are not really alive - they're only going through
the motions. On the flip side, there are others who, although physically
dead, continue to live through the teachings they left behind and through
those whom they have touched in life. The goal is to live a life of
character, purpose and meaning, and let those that have passed live through
our actions.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week:
"To live doesn't mean you're alive."