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Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar

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Dvar for Ki Tisa (Exodus 30:11-34:35)

SP
Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar
Wed, Mar 3, 2021 2:23 PM

Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. I hope you enjoy it
enough to forward it to someone else...


Our parsha begins by counting the people with a half-shekel donation per
eligible person as a way to elevate the people and achieve atonement for
their sins (30:12).  Rabbi Yochanan Zweig asks how the mere half-shekel
donation can be considered so significant that it elevates those that give
and forgives their sins (commentaries say that it is forgiveness for the
golden calf, one of the biggest sins committed)?

Rabbi Zweig offers a beautiful perspective: the giving of the half-shekel
converted the Jewish people from a “corporation,” with clear independent
leadership, to a partnership where everyone is an equal owner. With this
perspective we can appreciate that it’s not the amount that is significant
but the transformative gesture that is significant in that it makes
everyone equally responsible for each other and personally invested in each
other’s successes. Accepting equal responsibility for each other is a vital
step in becoming a unified people and an enduring nation.


Quotation of the week:
"Blaming puts other people in charge of your happiness. Accepting
responsibility empowers you to create your own."

Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar. I hope you enjoy it enough to forward it to someone else... _______________________________________________ Our parsha begins by counting the people with a half-shekel donation per eligible person as a way to elevate the people and achieve atonement for their sins (30:12). Rabbi Yochanan Zweig asks how the mere half-shekel donation can be considered so significant that it elevates those that give and forgives their sins (commentaries say that it is forgiveness for the golden calf, one of the biggest sins committed)? Rabbi Zweig offers a beautiful perspective: the giving of the half-shekel converted the Jewish people from a “corporation,” with clear independent leadership, to a partnership where everyone is an equal owner. With this perspective we can appreciate that it’s not the amount that is significant but the transformative gesture that is significant in that it makes everyone equally responsible for each other and personally invested in each other’s successes. Accepting equal responsibility for each other is a vital step in becoming a unified people and an enduring nation. _______________________________________________ Quotation of the week: "Blaming puts other people in charge of your happiness. Accepting responsibility empowers you to create your own."