This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and please share this Dvar...
After the Jews made it across the sea, this week's Parsha (Beshalach)
introduces the Jews singing in joy. Moshe sang with the men (15:1), and
then Miriam sang with the women (15:21). Both of them sang, while the
people responded. However, when Miriam sang, the Passuk (verse) says that
she responded to "them" in masculine form. If she sang with the women, why
is the word in masculine form? Also, of all the verses that Miriam chose to
repeat of Moshe's song, she chose the verse "sing to G-d because He's
great; horse and wagon drowned in the sea." Why did she choose this
seemingly random verse?
To understand this, we must ask ourselves why the horses drowned, if only
their riders had sinned? Rav Chashin tells of a much deeper exchange
between Moshe and Miriam: After Moshe sang with the men, Miriam responded
to Moshe in the form of a metaphor by telling him that the horses were
punished just like the soldiers on their backs because they facilitated
those soldiers. By the same token, Miriam is telling Moshe that the women
deserve just as much credit as the men, regardless of their difference in
familial roles. Miriam's message couldn't be more true today: Helping
someone follow the Torah's laws is as important as personally following the
Torah's laws, and is in fact following those laws. If we all try our best
to follow the Torah's laws, and help others do the same, we'll all sing as
one, in harmony.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week:
"You will see in the world what you carry in your heart."
This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and please share this Dvar...
_______________________________________________
After the Jews made it across the sea, this week's Parsha (Beshalach)
introduces the Jews singing in joy. Moshe sang with the men (15:1), and
then Miriam sang with the women (15:21). Both of them sang, while the
people responded. However, when Miriam sang, the Passuk (verse) says that
she responded to "them" in masculine form. If she sang with the women, why
is the word in masculine form? Also, of all the verses that Miriam chose to
repeat of Moshe's song, she chose the verse "sing to G-d because He's
great; horse and wagon drowned in the sea." Why did she choose this
seemingly random verse?
To understand this, we must ask ourselves why the horses drowned, if only
their riders had sinned? Rav Chashin tells of a much deeper exchange
between Moshe and Miriam: After Moshe sang with the men, Miriam responded
to Moshe in the form of a metaphor by telling him that the horses were
punished just like the soldiers on their backs because they facilitated
those soldiers. By the same token, Miriam is telling Moshe that the women
deserve just as much credit as the men, regardless of their difference in
familial roles. Miriam's message couldn't be more true today: Helping
someone follow the Torah's laws is as important as personally following the
Torah's laws, and is in fact following those laws. If we all try our best
to follow the Torah's laws, and help others do the same, we'll all sing as
one, in harmony.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week:
"You will see in the world what you carry in your heart."