This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and please share this Dvar...
Parshat Bo continues with the plagues inflicted on the Egyptians, and the
exodus that followed. We find one interesting event that happened when
Paroh called in Moshe and Aaron to bargain with them, right after being
warned of the upcoming locust plague (10:8-11). After offering to allow
only the men to go, and being rejected, Paroh kicked Moshe and Aaron out of
the palace. The "Riva" wonders why they waited until they were kicked out
of the palace, when they could have left before it got to that point. The
Riva answers that had Moshe and Aaron left before being told to leave, they
would have shown a lack of respect for Paroh, thereby embarrassing him.
Since it was Paroh that had originally invited them, and since he was the
ruler of the land they were in, they showed him respect by not leaving
until he told them to, despite their embarrassment.
This amazing lesson in humility is even backed up by the events surrounding
it. Locust, the plague directly following the story, was started by Moshe
stretching his hands on the ground, symbolizing humility. We each have a
common, ongoing struggle throughout our lives - our ego. If we simply
stopped, thought, and realized about every time we felt cheated or angry,
we'd realize that it's our own ego that's letting us get angry or feel
cheated, and if we learned to set that ego aside, we could accomplish so
much more, comparable to the accomplishments of Moshe and Aaron. Our ego
will control our action and reactions, unless we learn to control it.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week (thanks to Kim):
"Live your life as an exclamation, not an explanation!"
This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and please share this Dvar...
_______________________________________________
Parshat Bo continues with the plagues inflicted on the Egyptians, and the
exodus that followed. We find one interesting event that happened when
Paroh called in Moshe and Aaron to bargain with them, right after being
warned of the upcoming locust plague (10:8-11). After offering to allow
only the men to go, and being rejected, Paroh kicked Moshe and Aaron out of
the palace. The "Riva" wonders why they waited until they were kicked out
of the palace, when they could have left before it got to that point. The
Riva answers that had Moshe and Aaron left before being told to leave, they
would have shown a lack of respect for Paroh, thereby embarrassing him.
Since it was Paroh that had originally invited them, and since he was the
ruler of the land they were in, they showed him respect by not leaving
until he told them to, despite their embarrassment.
This amazing lesson in humility is even backed up by the events surrounding
it. Locust, the plague directly following the story, was started by Moshe
stretching his hands on the ground, symbolizing humility. We each have a
common, ongoing struggle throughout our lives - our ego. If we simply
stopped, thought, and realized about every time we felt cheated or angry,
we'd realize that it's our own ego that's letting us get angry or feel
cheated, and if we learned to set that ego aside, we could accomplish so
much more, comparable to the accomplishments of Moshe and Aaron. Our ego
will control our action and reactions, unless we learn to control it.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week (thanks to Kim):
"Live your life as an exclamation, not an explanation!"