This Dvar introduces an interesting concept: Being kind is not just
the nice thing to do, it's what we are required to be. Having a divine
aspect to kindness can add a level of depth to our kindness, something
I hope you enjoy exploring and sharing ...
This week’s Parsha, Emor, discusses all the major holidays of the
Jewish calendar. Although these holidays are also mentioned elsewhere,
our Parsha adds detail, such as Shofar on Rosh Hashana, abstention on
Yom Kippur, lulav and Etrog on Sukkot. However, when discussing the
holiday of Shavuot, the Torah briefly discusses a seemingly unrelated
topic regarding leaving the corners of a field and droppings of one's
harvest for the poor (23:22). After this one Passuk, the Torah goes
back to describe the rest of the holidays. Why was this seemingly
random law of charity inserted into the discussion regarding the
holidays?
Rabbi Mordechai Kamenetzky explains that the Torah is declaring that
the commandments to be kind, giving and loving of others is just as
non-negotiable as the commandments to keep Shabbat, Pesach and Sukkot.
We have a divine duty to be kind, even if we would have been kind
anyway, and especially if we would have found justifications to the
contrary. This obligation is not always easy to adhere to, but even
more rewarding when we do.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the week:
“Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can
see." - Mark Twain
This Dvar introduces an interesting concept: Being kind is not just
the nice thing to do, it's what we are required to be. Having a divine
aspect to kindness can add a level of depth to our kindness, something
I hope you enjoy exploring and sharing ...
_______________________________________________
This week’s Parsha, Emor, discusses all the major holidays of the
Jewish calendar. Although these holidays are also mentioned elsewhere,
our Parsha adds detail, such as Shofar on Rosh Hashana, abstention on
Yom Kippur, lulav and Etrog on Sukkot. However, when discussing the
holiday of Shavuot, the Torah briefly discusses a seemingly unrelated
topic regarding leaving the corners of a field and droppings of one's
harvest for the poor (23:22). After this one Passuk, the Torah goes
back to describe the rest of the holidays. Why was this seemingly
random law of charity inserted into the discussion regarding the
holidays?
Rabbi Mordechai Kamenetzky explains that the Torah is declaring that
the commandments to be kind, giving and loving of others is just as
non-negotiable as the commandments to keep Shabbat, Pesach and Sukkot.
We have a divine duty to be kind, even if we would have been kind
anyway, and especially if we would have found justifications to the
contrary. This obligation is not always easy to adhere to, but even
more rewarding when we do.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the week:
“Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can
see." - Mark Twain