This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar...
Sukkot is a happy time. In fact, it's so happy that the Torah says it is.
It's called Zman Simchateynu (the time of our happiness). But it's even
more than that. The Torah commands us to be happy. So what's all this
happiness for? You have to eat in a shack and shake a fruit, palm branches,
and leaves. Why should we be happy, and why should we be commanded to be
happy?
Part of the answer lies in the reasons for what we do, and what they
symbolize. The Sukkah needs to be made so that it's temporary in nature, to
symbolize the way it was in the desert when the Jews left Egypt. But it
also symbolizes the way it is in this world. We're living in a temporary
world, with weak walls, a leaky ceiling, and decorations. And that's
exactly what's supposed to make us so happy. That leaky ceiling is the
connection we have with the real reality (heaven/G-d), and it's the light
from above that reflects from the decorations onto the walls, shining on
everything. This Sukkot, we should look around us and think about all the
temporary decorations in our lives, and how we can increase the number of
permanent decorations we prepare.
Especially right after Yom Kippur, when we (hopefully) committed to some
sort of spiritual improvement, Sukkot is the perfect opportunity to
exercise it. Whether we promised to give more charity, or even to just give
charity with a smile. Whether it was to learn one Jewish law every day, or
to perform one. The point of Sukkot is for us to be able to do something
right to start our year, to do it proudly and happily, and with flying
colors, decorations and enthusiasm, and to hopefully convey that happiness
to our students and to our children.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the Week:
"Govern your life and thoughts as if the whole world were to see the one,
and read the other." - Thomas Fuller
This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar...
_______________________________________________
Sukkot is a happy time. In fact, it's so happy that the Torah says it is.
It's called Zman Simchateynu (the time of our happiness). But it's even
more than that. The Torah commands us to be happy. So what's all this
happiness for? You have to eat in a shack and shake a fruit, palm branches,
and leaves. Why should we be happy, and why should we be commanded to be
happy?
Part of the answer lies in the reasons for what we do, and what they
symbolize. The Sukkah needs to be made so that it's temporary in nature, to
symbolize the way it was in the desert when the Jews left Egypt. But it
also symbolizes the way it is in this world. We're living in a temporary
world, with weak walls, a leaky ceiling, and decorations. And that's
exactly what's supposed to make us so happy. That leaky ceiling is the
connection we have with the real reality (heaven/G-d), and it's the light
from above that reflects from the decorations onto the walls, shining on
everything. This Sukkot, we should look around us and think about all the
temporary decorations in our lives, and how we can increase the number of
permanent decorations we prepare.
Especially right after Yom Kippur, when we (hopefully) committed to some
sort of spiritual improvement, Sukkot is the perfect opportunity to
exercise it. Whether we promised to give more charity, or even to just give
charity with a smile. Whether it was to learn one Jewish law every day, or
to perform one. The point of Sukkot is for us to be able to do something
right to start our year, to do it proudly and happily, and with flying
colors, decorations and enthusiasm, and to hopefully convey that happiness
to our students and to our children.
Shlomo Ressler
_______________________________________________
Quotation of the Week:
"Govern your life and thoughts as if the whole world were to see the one,
and read the other." - Thomas Fuller