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Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar

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Dvar for Vayelech (Deuteronomy 31:1-31:30)

SP
Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar
Fri, Oct 4, 2019 5:19 PM

Welcome to the Weekly Dvar. In my years of reading my kids bedtime
stories I always wondered why they wanted me to read to them while
they rarely seemed tombe listening. This Dvar finally solves that
riddle. I hope you enjoy...


Parshat Vayelech includes the commandment to gather everyone every
seven years to hear the Torah being read. Men, women, converts and
children are invited (31:12). The Gemara explains that while adults
came to listen, learn and keep the Torah, the children were brought to
reward their parents for bringing them (Chagiga 3). If the children
weren’t there to learn, why would Moshe ask that they be brought, and
why would there be reward merely for bringing them?

The Ramban explains that bringing the children to the “Hakhel” Torah
reading is not for what they will learn, but for the experience of
being there with their family. When children see the effort we put
into learning the Torah, trying to become better people, or anything
else, the value they attribute to that effort is increased. Not only
does effort count, sometimes effort is everything.

Quotation of the week:
"We can not become what we want by remaining what we are.”

Welcome to the Weekly Dvar. In my years of reading my kids bedtime stories I always wondered why they wanted me to read to them while they rarely seemed tombe listening. This Dvar finally solves that riddle. I hope you enjoy... _______________________________________________ Parshat Vayelech includes the commandment to gather everyone every seven years to hear the Torah being read. Men, women, converts and children are invited (31:12). The Gemara explains that while adults came to listen, learn and keep the Torah, the children were brought to reward their parents for bringing them (Chagiga 3). If the children weren’t there to learn, why would Moshe ask that they be brought, and why would there be reward merely for bringing them? The Ramban explains that bringing the children to the “Hakhel” Torah reading is not for what they will learn, but for the experience of being there with their family. When children see the effort we put into learning the Torah, trying to become better people, or anything else, the value they attribute to that effort is increased. Not only does effort count, sometimes effort is everything. Quotation of the week: "We can not become what we want by remaining what we are.”