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Dvar for Ekev (Deuteronomy 7:12-11:25)

SP
Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar
Thu, Aug 25, 2016 6:48 PM

This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar, courtesy of Rabbi Avi
Weiss...


Parshat Ekev introduced us to the popular phrase "Man does not live by
bread alone" (8:3). However, end of that verse is far less famous, although
the second part contains the true message. It reads, "Rather, by everything
that emanates from the mouth of G-d does man live." If the point is that
G-d's emanations are the source of our lives, why use bread as the subject,
when bread only becomes edible through the toils of man? Wouldn't fruits or
vegetables be better examples of G-d's influence on the world?

I heard Rabbi Shmuel Greenberg and saw Rav Hirsch explain that bread is
used as the subject because it exemplifies the toils of man, and that the
message here is that even when you toil for the bread you eat, don't forget
that Hashem (G-d) has toiled for everything that we have, and His goal is
not just to sustain us, but to help us live physically AND spiritually. We
should not only seek physical nourishment from the work of our hands, but
should seek spiritual nourishment from the word of our G-d.

Shlomo Ressler


Quotation of the Week:
"Challenges are what make life interesting and overcoming them is what
makes life meaningful."  - Joshua J. Marine

This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar, courtesy of Rabbi Avi Weiss... _______________________________________________ Parshat Ekev introduced us to the popular phrase "Man does not live by bread alone" (8:3). However, end of that verse is far less famous, although the second part contains the true message. It reads, "Rather, by everything that emanates from the mouth of G-d does man live." If the point is that G-d's emanations are the source of our lives, why use bread as the subject, when bread only becomes edible through the toils of man? Wouldn't fruits or vegetables be better examples of G-d's influence on the world? I heard Rabbi Shmuel Greenberg and saw Rav Hirsch explain that bread is used as the subject because it exemplifies the toils of man, and that the message here is that even when you toil for the bread you eat, don't forget that Hashem (G-d) has toiled for everything that we have, and His goal is not just to sustain us, but to help us live physically AND spiritually. We should not only seek physical nourishment from the work of our hands, but should seek spiritual nourishment from the word of our G-d. Shlomo Ressler _______________________________________________ Quotation of the Week: "Challenges are what make life interesting and overcoming them is what makes life meaningful." - Joshua J. Marine