This short, practical Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App
Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy...
Parshat Haazinu is Moshe's last speech, delivered as a song because songs
reach deeper into our souls. In the beginning of the song (32:4), it says
"The Rock! - Perfect is his work, for all his paths are justice; a G-d of
faith without iniquity, righteous and fair is He". This statement is
loaded, saying that Hashem is perfect, just, fair, righteous, and without
iniquity. What's strange is that it begins with comparing G-d to a rock,
and then saying that G-d's work is perfect. What's the Torah trying to tell
us by mentioning a rock, and by using all those terms? The Chafetz Chaim
answers one question with a story about having faith: A man had an only son
that was sick, and spared no expense finding him a cure. One doctor finally
cured the boy, and told the father that the son got sick because of certain
meat that he ate. The father vowed to keep that meat away from his son.
Years passed, the father had to go away on a business trip, and he had his
family watch the boy. After he left, the boy was tempted by the smell of
the meat, ate some, and became deathly ill again. When the father returned,
he called the doctor and begged him to do all he could. Once again the
doctor was successful in healing the boy, and the father decided to never
leave his son again. A while later the father had a party (with meat), and
when the son walked in, the father quickly rushed him out. The guests all
watched in wonderment, but they didn't understand that it was for the son's
sake.
We are the guests, wondering why things are happening in our lives, but we
now know that G-d's work is just, fair, and perfect as a rock in every way.
But a rock is not perfect, you say? Well, it may not be perfect in shape or
color, but it's solid, consistent, and always grounded, which are the
qualities G-d shows us, and the very qualities we should emulate this
coming year. By this time next year, may we all be rock Jews, in every
sense of both words.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week:
"Be happy with what you have, while working for what you want."
This short, practical Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App
Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy...
_______________________________________________
Parshat Haazinu is Moshe's last speech, delivered as a song because songs
reach deeper into our souls. In the beginning of the song (32:4), it says
"The Rock! - Perfect is his work, for all his paths are justice; a G-d of
faith without iniquity, righteous and fair is He". This statement is
loaded, saying that Hashem is perfect, just, fair, righteous, and without
iniquity. What's strange is that it begins with comparing G-d to a rock,
and then saying that G-d's work is perfect. What's the Torah trying to tell
us by mentioning a rock, and by using all those terms? The Chafetz Chaim
answers one question with a story about having faith: A man had an only son
that was sick, and spared no expense finding him a cure. One doctor finally
cured the boy, and told the father that the son got sick because of certain
meat that he ate. The father vowed to keep that meat away from his son.
Years passed, the father had to go away on a business trip, and he had his
family watch the boy. After he left, the boy was tempted by the smell of
the meat, ate some, and became deathly ill again. When the father returned,
he called the doctor and begged him to do all he could. Once again the
doctor was successful in healing the boy, and the father decided to never
leave his son again. A while later the father had a party (with meat), and
when the son walked in, the father quickly rushed him out. The guests all
watched in wonderment, but they didn't understand that it was for the son's
sake.
We are the guests, wondering why things are happening in our lives, but we
now know that G-d's work is just, fair, and perfect as a rock in every way.
But a rock is not perfect, you say? Well, it may not be perfect in shape or
color, but it's solid, consistent, and always grounded, which are the
qualities G-d shows us, and the very qualities we should emulate this
coming year. By this time next year, may we all be rock Jews, in every
sense of both words.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week:
"Be happy with what you have, while working for what you want."