Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar and Daily Aliyah. As
always, you can Order The Daily Aliyah
https://mosaicapress.com/product/the-daily-aliyah/ and receive your hard
copy of these daily practical and relevant Torah thoughts (all proceeds go
to Daily Giving), or join this Whatsapp group
https://chat.whatsapp.com/G35Ne4mpYsm3RLPDPnPSKC to receive one per day.
I hope you find this meaningful...
Parashat Bemidbar relays five censuses of the Jewish people: per tribe, per
flag, members of Levi who were at least one month old, the firstborn of
every family, and the count of the Leviim ages thirty to fifty. However,
the very first census contains unique instructions, directing a count
“according to the number of names” (1:2). Why would we be counting names
when we’re counting people?
Rabbi Yochanan Zweig explains that counting can be used to combine
individuals as a group, and it can be used to give each group member their
own identity, such that each person counts and matters. One way to
acknowledge a person’s uniqueness is to use their individual name,
transforming even a mechanical count into a recognition of a distinct
character. This census is intended to capture both the group totals as well
as everyone’s distinct contribution to the whole. With the Torah as our
exemplar, we should focus on the individuality of those around us and
celebrate being counted with them.
Shlomo Ressler
Quotation of the week:
"Be a voice, not an echo." — Albert Einstein
Welcome to the short, practical Lelamed Weekly Dvar and Daily Aliyah. As
always, you can Order The Daily Aliyah
<https://mosaicapress.com/product/the-daily-aliyah/> and receive your hard
copy of these daily practical and relevant Torah thoughts (all proceeds go
to Daily Giving), or join this Whatsapp group
<https://chat.whatsapp.com/G35Ne4mpYsm3RLPDPnPSKC> to receive one per day.
I hope you find this meaningful...
_______________________________________________
Parashat Bemidbar relays five censuses of the Jewish people: per tribe, per
flag, members of Levi who were at least one month old, the firstborn of
every family, and the count of the Leviim ages thirty to fifty. However,
the very first census contains unique instructions, directing a count
“according to the number of names” (1:2). Why would we be counting names
when we’re counting people?
Rabbi Yochanan Zweig explains that counting can be used to combine
individuals as a group, and it can be used to give each group member their
own identity, such that each person counts and matters. One way to
acknowledge a person’s uniqueness is to use their individual name,
transforming even a mechanical count into a recognition of a distinct
character. This census is intended to capture both the group totals as well
as everyone’s distinct contribution to the whole. With the Torah as our
exemplar, we should focus on the individuality of those around us and
celebrate being counted with them.
Shlomo Ressler
_____________________________________________
Quotation of the week:
"Be a voice, not an echo." — Albert Einstein