Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar (and future Daily
Aliya). This week's Dvar is especially relevant for daily learning. Please
consider forwarding this to others, and I hope you enjoy... Shabbat Shalom.
Dvar for Beshalach 5th Aliya
As the Jews navigate through the desert rife with complaints for the lack
of water and then food, G-d advises Moshe that He will provide bread
[manna] from heaven (16:4) and that people will receive only what is needed
for a given day. G-d instructs that people must gather “d’var yom b’yomo,”
which means to collect only their daily allotment, but literally means “the
daily thing on its day.” What is the daily “thing” that G-d alludes to? Why
would G-d not simply use the word for food (ochel)?
Rabbi Yochanan Zweig suggests that the point of the manna was not just to
provide sustenance for the people but to build a daily connection between
G-d and His newly unified people. This explains why people were instructed
to take only what they needed for that day, so that the next day could
offer yet another opportunity for connection with G-d as our provider.
Essentially then, the “thing” isn’t necessarily food at all; it is our
daily connection to G-d. We can now understand that G-d is showing us that
eating (and living in the broader sense) is devoid of meaning if not used
as an opportunity for daily connection.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the week:
"We don't have to agree on anything to be kind to one another."
Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar (and future Daily
Aliya). This week's Dvar is especially relevant for daily learning. Please
consider forwarding this to others, and I hope you enjoy... Shabbat Shalom.
_______________________________________________
Dvar for Beshalach 5th Aliya
As the Jews navigate through the desert rife with complaints for the lack
of water and then food, G-d advises Moshe that He will provide bread
[manna] from heaven (16:4) and that people will receive only what is needed
for a given day. G-d instructs that people must gather “d’var yom b’yomo,”
which means to collect only their daily allotment, but literally means “the
daily thing on its day.” What is the daily “thing” that G-d alludes to? Why
would G-d not simply use the word for food (ochel)?
Rabbi Yochanan Zweig suggests that the point of the manna was not just to
provide sustenance for the people but to build a daily connection between
G-d and His newly unified people. This explains why people were instructed
to take only what they needed for that day, so that the next day could
offer yet another opportunity for connection with G-d as our provider.
Essentially then, the “thing” isn’t necessarily food at all; it is our
daily connection to G-d. We can now understand that G-d is showing us that
eating (and living in the broader sense) is devoid of meaning if not used
as an opportunity for daily connection.
Shlomo Ressler
_____________________________________________
Quotation of the week:
"We don't have to agree on anything to be kind to one another."