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Teaching Torah To The Nations

Teaching Torah To The Nations

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Teaching Torah Precepts To the Nations who love God and who love Israel

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    The Power of Change: Judah’s Journey from Callousness to Compassion
    The power of Judah's story lies in its deeply human message: our past mistakes need not define our future.
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  • I KINGS CHAPTER 21

    The sorry story of the murderous expropriation of Naboth's vineyard by King Ahab put the final seal on his fate and that of his dynasty. Many people permit themselves to believe in what they please while claiming themselves to be quite as moral, if not more so, than those who seek to uphold the law of God's Torah. Ahab first allowed himself to go after the gods of the other nations. Now we see how his willingness to violate what may seem to be the least serious of all of the Ten Commandments – coveting the property of others (Exodus 20:14) – drew him into a spiral of sin that led him to violate at least half of them.

    What could be wrong with gazing at something belonging to somebody else and merely wishing it was mine?

    In the words of Rambam: "The appetite for wealth brings one to desire the property of others, and this brings a person to robbery. If the owners refuse to sell their property even after being offered much money and put under heavy pressure, if they seek to prevent the covetous person from robbing them, it can bring him to actual bloodshed. Go out and learn from the story of Ahab and Naboth" (Laws of Robbery 1:11).

    The Torah law of kings does permit the king to expropriate the private property of his subjects for certain purposes (I Samuel 8:14), but most rabbinic opinions hold that Ahab had no legal right to take Naboth's vineyard, which is why he had to resort to framing Naboth in order to grab it.

    The text makes it seem that Ahab himself only sulked when Naboth refused to give over his ancestral portion to the king, while it was really the wicked Jezebel who egged Ahab into taking action to have Naboth killed in order to get the vineyard. Nevertheless, kings are not allowed to let their wives rule over them – that had been the cause of Solomon's undoing – and they certainly cannot be forgiven when they carry out crimes at their wives' behest. As a result of his covetousness (contrary to the Tenth Commandment), Ahab allowed false witnesses to stand up and accuse a righteous man of blasphemy and high treason (contrary to the Ninth Commandment). Through this false testimony, Naboth was murdered (contrary to the Sixth Commandment) and Ahab stole his vineyard (contrary to the Eighth Commandment. And by also killing Naboth's children (II Kings 9:26, cf. Likutey Moharan I, 69) it was as if Ahab had stolen his very wife (contrary to the Seventh Commandment). In this way Ahab violated all of the five commandments between man and man on the second of the Two Tablets.

    It is noteworthy how as Jezebel sets up the framing of Naboth she does so with the utmost piety, calling on the elders of Naboth's city to call a public fast (v 9) as an opportunity for soul-searching and the investigation of the sins of the people. She takes care to have Naboth framed not only for high treason against the king (for which, most conveniently, his property is by Torah law confiscated by the crown) but also for blasphemy!

    What is clear from this chapter is that the Ten Tribes had not merely fled the Torah in some simple sense so as to sink totally into some completely alien idolatry. With all their dalliance with the gods of the nations, they still saw themselves as following the Torah path: Torah observance and Torah violation were most subtly intermingled. Only through the clear vision and judgment of the true prophet is it possible to try to disentangle them and see things the way they really are.

    "Have you murdered and also inherited" Elijah asked Ahab (v 19) in words that could with justice be repeated to numerous "kings" and leaders of our own times. Elijah prophesies the bloody destruction of the house of Ahab and Jezebel – after which, in yet another twist to the story of this very complex, subtle character, we see that Ahab is truly chastised and repents, putting on sackcloth, fasting and going barefoot!

    CHAPTER 22

    "And they stopped for three years: there was no war between Aram and Israel" (v 1). It was symptomatic of the times that there was no longer such a thing as peace, but only a temporary cessation of war – very similar to the way things are today.

    Another of the surprises in our story is that Yehoshaphat king of Judah was actually in alliance with the idolatrous Ahab. Yehoshaphat was indeed married to Ahab's sister in an alliance forged by their respective parents, Asa king of Judah and Omri king of Israel. Whereas the earlier kings of Judah had tried to regain their hegemony over the rebellious Ten Tribes through force, the policy of Asa and Yehoshaphat was to stretch out the arm of friendship – what in modern terms is called "outreach". In certain respects the alliance of the Kingdom of Judah and that of Israel in the times of Ahab and Yehoshaphat bears comparison with the alliance between the secular Zionists who established the State of Israel and the mainstream of Torah observant Jews without whose support it would probably have collapsed long ago.

    Another factor that has a contemporary ring is that the bone of contention between Israel and Aram (=Syria) was "Ramoth Gilead" (v 4) – none other than the Golan Heights!

    In the tradition of David his father, Yehoshaphat wanted to consult prophets before going out to war. When Ahab assembled four hundred of his own prophets, all of whom foretold victory using exactly the same words, Yehoshaphat felt extremely uneasy, but he was too polite to tell Ahab directly that he thought they were a bunch of false prophets: he merely asked if there was no true prophet present. Ahab's prophets remind one of the kinds of present day think tank experts and news commentators who act as soothsayers to the general public while the world falls apart all around us.

    The true prophet Michayahu son of Yimlah who was now called upon to prophesy has already appeared without being named in Chapter 20 vv 13, 28 and 35ff, where he previously prophesied to Ahab. In Ch 20 vv 42 he had prophesied that Ahab's soul would be taken in payment for his having freed Ben-Haddad king of Aram, and this was why Ahab hated him.

    In a prophecy of Ahab's coming death, Michayahu told of his vision of Israel "scattered on the mountains like a flock that has no shepherd" (v 17) – a vision that seems to apply until today!!! Michayah depicts the heavenly court in judgment over Ahab. The "spirit" that steps forward in v 21 offering to trick Ahab into going to war is said to have been the spirit of Naboth. The rabbis say that despite Ahab's idolatry, his fate was hanging in the balance because he was generous with his money and gave support to Torah scholars. What tipped the balance was his sin of taking Naboth's vineyard, which sealed Ahab's fate.

    Through the spirit of falsehood that spoke on the lips of his soothsaying prophets, Ahab was drawn out to war against Aram, in which an innocent archer (said to be Naaman, the king of Aram's commander-in-chief, II Kings ch 5) shot the arrow that killed him. Despite being mortally wounded Ahab ordered his chariot driver to prop his body up in the chariot so that the Israelites should not see that he was dying and loose heart, and Ahab was praised for this final act of heroism.
    I KINGS CHAPTER 21 The sorry story of the murderous expropriation of Naboth's vineyard by King Ahab put the final seal on his fate and that of his dynasty. Many people permit themselves to believe in what they please while claiming themselves to be quite as moral, if not more so, than those who seek to uphold the law of God's Torah. Ahab first allowed himself to go after the gods of the other nations. Now we see how his willingness to violate what may seem to be the least serious of all of the Ten Commandments – coveting the property of others (Exodus 20:14) – drew him into a spiral of sin that led him to violate at least half of them. What could be wrong with gazing at something belonging to somebody else and merely wishing it was mine? In the words of Rambam: "The appetite for wealth brings one to desire the property of others, and this brings a person to robbery. If the owners refuse to sell their property even after being offered much money and put under heavy pressure, if they seek to prevent the covetous person from robbing them, it can bring him to actual bloodshed. Go out and learn from the story of Ahab and Naboth" (Laws of Robbery 1:11). The Torah law of kings does permit the king to expropriate the private property of his subjects for certain purposes (I Samuel 8:14), but most rabbinic opinions hold that Ahab had no legal right to take Naboth's vineyard, which is why he had to resort to framing Naboth in order to grab it. The text makes it seem that Ahab himself only sulked when Naboth refused to give over his ancestral portion to the king, while it was really the wicked Jezebel who egged Ahab into taking action to have Naboth killed in order to get the vineyard. Nevertheless, kings are not allowed to let their wives rule over them – that had been the cause of Solomon's undoing – and they certainly cannot be forgiven when they carry out crimes at their wives' behest. As a result of his covetousness (contrary to the Tenth Commandment), Ahab allowed false witnesses to stand up and accuse a righteous man of blasphemy and high treason (contrary to the Ninth Commandment). Through this false testimony, Naboth was murdered (contrary to the Sixth Commandment) and Ahab stole his vineyard (contrary to the Eighth Commandment. And by also killing Naboth's children (II Kings 9:26, cf. Likutey Moharan I, 69) it was as if Ahab had stolen his very wife (contrary to the Seventh Commandment). In this way Ahab violated all of the five commandments between man and man on the second of the Two Tablets. It is noteworthy how as Jezebel sets up the framing of Naboth she does so with the utmost piety, calling on the elders of Naboth's city to call a public fast (v 9) as an opportunity for soul-searching and the investigation of the sins of the people. She takes care to have Naboth framed not only for high treason against the king (for which, most conveniently, his property is by Torah law confiscated by the crown) but also for blasphemy! What is clear from this chapter is that the Ten Tribes had not merely fled the Torah in some simple sense so as to sink totally into some completely alien idolatry. With all their dalliance with the gods of the nations, they still saw themselves as following the Torah path: Torah observance and Torah violation were most subtly intermingled. Only through the clear vision and judgment of the true prophet is it possible to try to disentangle them and see things the way they really are. "Have you murdered and also inherited" Elijah asked Ahab (v 19) in words that could with justice be repeated to numerous "kings" and leaders of our own times. Elijah prophesies the bloody destruction of the house of Ahab and Jezebel – after which, in yet another twist to the story of this very complex, subtle character, we see that Ahab is truly chastised and repents, putting on sackcloth, fasting and going barefoot! CHAPTER 22 "And they stopped for three years: there was no war between Aram and Israel" (v 1). It was symptomatic of the times that there was no longer such a thing as peace, but only a temporary cessation of war – very similar to the way things are today. Another of the surprises in our story is that Yehoshaphat king of Judah was actually in alliance with the idolatrous Ahab. Yehoshaphat was indeed married to Ahab's sister in an alliance forged by their respective parents, Asa king of Judah and Omri king of Israel. Whereas the earlier kings of Judah had tried to regain their hegemony over the rebellious Ten Tribes through force, the policy of Asa and Yehoshaphat was to stretch out the arm of friendship – what in modern terms is called "outreach". In certain respects the alliance of the Kingdom of Judah and that of Israel in the times of Ahab and Yehoshaphat bears comparison with the alliance between the secular Zionists who established the State of Israel and the mainstream of Torah observant Jews without whose support it would probably have collapsed long ago. Another factor that has a contemporary ring is that the bone of contention between Israel and Aram (=Syria) was "Ramoth Gilead" (v 4) – none other than the Golan Heights! In the tradition of David his father, Yehoshaphat wanted to consult prophets before going out to war. When Ahab assembled four hundred of his own prophets, all of whom foretold victory using exactly the same words, Yehoshaphat felt extremely uneasy, but he was too polite to tell Ahab directly that he thought they were a bunch of false prophets: he merely asked if there was no true prophet present. Ahab's prophets remind one of the kinds of present day think tank experts and news commentators who act as soothsayers to the general public while the world falls apart all around us. The true prophet Michayahu son of Yimlah who was now called upon to prophesy has already appeared without being named in Chapter 20 vv 13, 28 and 35ff, where he previously prophesied to Ahab. In Ch 20 vv 42 he had prophesied that Ahab's soul would be taken in payment for his having freed Ben-Haddad king of Aram, and this was why Ahab hated him. In a prophecy of Ahab's coming death, Michayahu told of his vision of Israel "scattered on the mountains like a flock that has no shepherd" (v 17) – a vision that seems to apply until today!!! Michayah depicts the heavenly court in judgment over Ahab. The "spirit" that steps forward in v 21 offering to trick Ahab into going to war is said to have been the spirit of Naboth. The rabbis say that despite Ahab's idolatry, his fate was hanging in the balance because he was generous with his money and gave support to Torah scholars. What tipped the balance was his sin of taking Naboth's vineyard, which sealed Ahab's fate. Through the spirit of falsehood that spoke on the lips of his soothsaying prophets, Ahab was drawn out to war against Aram, in which an innocent archer (said to be Naaman, the king of Aram's commander-in-chief, II Kings ch 5) shot the arrow that killed him. Despite being mortally wounded Ahab ordered his chariot driver to prop his body up in the chariot so that the Israelites should not see that he was dying and loose heart, and Ahab was praised for this final act of heroism.
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  • From Destruction to Renewal: Lessons from Yosef, Yaakov, and Asarah B'Teves
    by R. Eliezer Simcha Weisz

    In Parshas Vayigash, Yosef reveals himself to his brothers, leading to an emotional reunion and the beginning of a new chapter for Yaakov’s family. After 22 long years, the brothers reunite and bring Yaakov down to Egypt. The Torah describes the poignant moment when Yosef and Yaakov finally meet:
    "וַיֵּרָא אֵלָיו וַיִּפֹּל עַל־צַוָּארָיו וַיֵּבְךְּ עַל־צַוָּארָיו עוֹד" (Bereishis 46:29)

    Yosef falls on his father’s neck and weeps, overwhelmed with emotion. According to most commentators, Yosef cries, though Ramban suggests it was Yaakov. Either way, this moment is deeply moving for both father and son.

    Despite the drama and history behind their reunion, Yaakov says nothing about the years of separation, nor does he ask why Yosef never wrote or explained his disappearance. Instead, his only words are:
    "אָמֽוּתָה הַפָּעַם אַחֲרֵי רְאוֹתִי אֶת־פָּנֶיךָ כִּי עוֹדְךָ חָי" (Bereishis 46:30).

    “Now I can die knowing you are alive.”

    Yosef also avoids discussing the past. Rather, he focuses on practical matters, telling Yaakov:
    "אֶעֱלֶה וְאַגִּידָה לְפַרְעֹה וְאֹמְרָה אֵלָיו אַחַי וּבֵית אָבִי אֲשֶׁר בְּאֶרֶץ כְּנַעַן בָּאוּ אֵלַי" (Bereishis 46:31).

    “Let me go to Pharaoh and arrange where you will live.”

    Why did neither father nor son address the past? Yaakov, Yosef, and their family had endured tremendous pain, but they chose not to dwell on it. Instead, they looked to the future. Yosef, aware of the challenges ahead, prioritized reuniting his family and safeguarding their spiritual identity. He immediately began arranging for the family to settle in Goshen, ensuring they would remain distinct and avoid assimilation.

    Similarly, in our present day, when facing trials, we too must find strength not in revisiting past losses but in our commitment to a hopeful future.

    This approach of looking toward the future also explains another puzzling moment in Parshas Vayechi: Yosef needed to be informed that Yaakov was ill:
    "וַיֹּאמֶר לְיוֹסֵף הִנֵּה אָבִיךָ חֹלֶה" (Bereishis 48:1).

    Why was Yosef not spending more time with Yaakov, especially given their years of separation? The Midrash (Pesikta Rabati) explains that Yosef was afraid Yaakov might inquire about the past—specifically the brothers’ betrayal—and curse them for their actions. For this reason, Yosef avoided being with his father. Yosef, having recognized his brothers' repentance, chose to focus on the future instead of reopening old wounds

    This mindset reflects a larger theme in Jewish life: pain and tragedy should propel us forward, not paralyze us in despair. After revealing himself to his brothers, Yosef and Binyamin reunite. The Torah describes their meeting:
    "וַיִּפֹּל עַל־צַוְּארֵי בִנְיָמִן אָחִיו וַיֵּבְךְּ וּבִנְיָמִן בָּכָה עַל־צַוָּארָיו" (Bereishis 45:14).

    Rashi comments:
    על צווארי בנימין אחיו—על שני מקדשים שעתידין להיות בחלקו של בנימין וסופן ליחרב. ובנימין בכה על צוואריו—על משכן שילה שעתיד להיות בחלקו של יוסף וסופו ליחרב
    "Yosef cried over the two Batei Mikdash that would stand in Binyamin’s portion and ultimately be destroyed, and Binyamin cried over the Mishkan in Shiloh, which would stand in Yosef’s portion and ultimately be destroyed."

    Even in their moment of reunion, Yosef and Binyamin wept—not over the past, but over future tragedies. Their tears reflect a profound understanding of the need to balance acknowledgment of pain with a forward-looking determination to rebuild.

    Yaakov similarly cried when he first met Rachel, not about past hardships but because he foresaw that they would not be buried together:
    וַיִּשָּׁק יַעֲקֹב לְרָחֵל וַיִּשָּׂא אֶת־קֹלוֹ וַיֵּבְךְּ (Bereishis 29:11).
    רש"י: ויבך. לְפִי שֶׁצָּפָה בְרוּח הַקֹּדֶש שֶאֵינָהּ נִכְנֶסֶת עִמּוֹ לִקְבוּרָה
    He prophesied that they would not be buried together (Rashi).

    This forward-thinking approach is also evident at a bris milah, where we bless an infant:
    כְּשֵׁם שֶׁנִּכְנַס לַבְּרִית כֵּן יִכָּנֵס לְתוֹרָה, לְחֻפָּה וּלְמַעֲשִׂים טוֹבִים
    Just as he has entered into the covenant, so may he enter into Torah, marriage, and good deeds. (Shabbat 137b)

    Even at the start of life, we look ahead to the child’s future growth and accomplishments.

    This brings us to Asarah B’Teves, a fast that always coincides with the reading of Vayigash and Vayechi, the parshiyos detailing Yosef’s reconciliation with his brothers, his reunification with Yaakov, and its aftermath( commemorated this year on the Friday before Parshas Vayechi ). Asarah B'Teves is unique among the minor fasts in that, according to some halachic authorities, it would be observed even if it fell on Shabbat, similar to Yom Kippur. This is due to its designation in the Torah as "בְּעֶצֶם הַיּוֹם הַזֶּה" ("on this very day"), indicating its significance just like Yom Kippur .

    Thus the Beit Yosef (Orach Chaim 550:4), citing the Rabbeinu David Abudraham highlights the uniqueness of Asarah B’Teves:
    וה"ר דוד אבודרהם כתב בהלכות תענית שי' בטבת הוא משונה משאר תעניות שאם היה חל בשבת לא היו יכולין לדחותו ליום אחר מפני שנאמר בו 'בעצם היום הזה' כמו ביום הכיפורים
    “The Abudraham writes that the fast of the 10th of Teves is distinct from other fasts because, unlike other fasts, if it were to fall on Shabbos, it could not be postponed, as it is described with the phrase ‘on this very day,’ similar to Yom Kippur.”

    The Beit Yosef comments: "ולא ידעתי מנין לו זה"—"I do not know the source for this." Referring to the assertion of the Abudraham that Asarah B'Teves would be observed even if it fell on Shabbat.

    This unique characteristic may reflect the profound significance of Asarah B'Teves, likening it to Yom Kippur in its emphasis on personal responsibility and future planning. Asarah B'Teves is not merely a commemoration of the onset of Nebuchadnezzar's siege of Jerusalem;

    it serves as a reminder that the ensuing 30 months of siege could have been utilized for reflection and repentance, potentially altering the course of history.

    The fast encourages us not to dwell on past suffering but to take proactive steps toward a better future. Similar to Yom Kippur, Asarah B'Teves focuses on forward-thinking—setting aside the past to concentrate on future improvement. These days are not solely for mourning but are opportunities for introspection, growth, and proactive planning for a better tomorrow

    In addition to Yom Kippur and Asarah B'Teves, there is a third fast, Taanit Chalom (a fast after a troubling dream), which can be observed even on Shabbat. Unlike other fasts that mourn past tragedies and are forbidden on Shabbat, Taanit Chalom (like Yom Kippur and Asarah B'Teves )addresses anxiety about the future by encouraging introspection and personal growth. The Gemara (Berachot 31b) explains that fasting after a disturbing dream can annul negative decrees, making this practice constructive by shifting focus from sorrow to proactive self-improvement.

    On Simchat Torah 5784, Am Yisrael faced unimaginable loss. Yet, rather than succumbing to despair, we united in battle, prayer, and mutual support.

    Though the war has now endured for almost 450 days, bringing fear and uncertainty, we remain steadfast in our confidence that, just as in the past, we will persevere and witness brighter days ahead. We are resolved to focus on the future, refusing to dwell on the pain of the past.

    As we read the parshiyot of Vayigash and Vayechi and commemorate Asarah B’Teves, we are reminded to direct our thoughts and actions toward the future. The fast, together with the lessons from the parshiyot recounting Yosef and Yaakov's resilience and unity, urges us to take responsibility for what lies ahead—strengthening our commitment to Torah, fostering unity within our communities, and actively shaping a brighter future for Am Yisrael.

    The Rambam writes about the transformative potential of each person's actions:
    לפיכך צריך כל אדם שיראה עצמו כל השנה כולה כאילו חציו זכאי וחציו חייב, וכן כל העולם חציו זכאי וחציו חייב. חטא חטא אחד—הרי הכריע את עצמו ואת כל העולם כולו לכף חובה וגרם לו השחתה; עשה מצוה אחת—הרי הכריע את עצמו ואת כל העולם כולו לכף זכות וגרם לו ולהם תשועה והצלה, שנאמר 'וצדיק יסוד עולם' (משלי י,כה)
    Therefore, a person must view themselves all year as if they are half meritorious and half guilty..., and the entire world as equally balanced. If they commit one sin, they tip themselves and the entire world to the side of guilt; if they perform one mitzvah, they tip themselves and the entire world to the side of merit, bringing salvation and deliverance…” (Hilchos Teshuvah 3:4)

    Let us demand of ourselves to tip the scales through acts of kindness, unity, and responsibility. As the Rambam challenges us, one good deed can change the course of history:
    לפיכך צריך כל אדם שיראה עצמו... חטא חטא אחד... עשה מצוה אחת
    “Therefore, a person must view themselves all year as if they are half meritorious and half guilty... If they perform one mitzvah, they tip the scales for themselves and the entire world toward merit and bring salvation.” (Mishneh Torah, Hilchos Teshuvah 3)

    The challenge before each of us is clear: perform one mitzvah and change the world!

    May Hashem bless us with the wisdom and strength to take responsibility for our actions, the courage to face the challenges ahead, and the unity to rebuild a world filled with Torah, mitzvot, and sanctity. May we merit to see the ultimate redemption, speedily in our days.
    From Destruction to Renewal: Lessons from Yosef, Yaakov, and Asarah B'Teves by R. Eliezer Simcha Weisz In Parshas Vayigash, Yosef reveals himself to his brothers, leading to an emotional reunion and the beginning of a new chapter for Yaakov’s family. After 22 long years, the brothers reunite and bring Yaakov down to Egypt. The Torah describes the poignant moment when Yosef and Yaakov finally meet: "וַיֵּרָא אֵלָיו וַיִּפֹּל עַל־צַוָּארָיו וַיֵּבְךְּ עַל־צַוָּארָיו עוֹד" (Bereishis 46:29) Yosef falls on his father’s neck and weeps, overwhelmed with emotion. According to most commentators, Yosef cries, though Ramban suggests it was Yaakov. Either way, this moment is deeply moving for both father and son. Despite the drama and history behind their reunion, Yaakov says nothing about the years of separation, nor does he ask why Yosef never wrote or explained his disappearance. Instead, his only words are: "אָמֽוּתָה הַפָּעַם אַחֲרֵי רְאוֹתִי אֶת־פָּנֶיךָ כִּי עוֹדְךָ חָי" (Bereishis 46:30). “Now I can die knowing you are alive.” Yosef also avoids discussing the past. Rather, he focuses on practical matters, telling Yaakov: "אֶעֱלֶה וְאַגִּידָה לְפַרְעֹה וְאֹמְרָה אֵלָיו אַחַי וּבֵית אָבִי אֲשֶׁר בְּאֶרֶץ כְּנַעַן בָּאוּ אֵלַי" (Bereishis 46:31). “Let me go to Pharaoh and arrange where you will live.” Why did neither father nor son address the past? Yaakov, Yosef, and their family had endured tremendous pain, but they chose not to dwell on it. Instead, they looked to the future. Yosef, aware of the challenges ahead, prioritized reuniting his family and safeguarding their spiritual identity. He immediately began arranging for the family to settle in Goshen, ensuring they would remain distinct and avoid assimilation. Similarly, in our present day, when facing trials, we too must find strength not in revisiting past losses but in our commitment to a hopeful future. This approach of looking toward the future also explains another puzzling moment in Parshas Vayechi: Yosef needed to be informed that Yaakov was ill: "וַיֹּאמֶר לְיוֹסֵף הִנֵּה אָבִיךָ חֹלֶה" (Bereishis 48:1). Why was Yosef not spending more time with Yaakov, especially given their years of separation? The Midrash (Pesikta Rabati) explains that Yosef was afraid Yaakov might inquire about the past—specifically the brothers’ betrayal—and curse them for their actions. For this reason, Yosef avoided being with his father. Yosef, having recognized his brothers' repentance, chose to focus on the future instead of reopening old wounds This mindset reflects a larger theme in Jewish life: pain and tragedy should propel us forward, not paralyze us in despair. After revealing himself to his brothers, Yosef and Binyamin reunite. The Torah describes their meeting: "וַיִּפֹּל עַל־צַוְּארֵי בִנְיָמִן אָחִיו וַיֵּבְךְּ וּבִנְיָמִן בָּכָה עַל־צַוָּארָיו" (Bereishis 45:14). Rashi comments: על צווארי בנימין אחיו—על שני מקדשים שעתידין להיות בחלקו של בנימין וסופן ליחרב. ובנימין בכה על צוואריו—על משכן שילה שעתיד להיות בחלקו של יוסף וסופו ליחרב "Yosef cried over the two Batei Mikdash that would stand in Binyamin’s portion and ultimately be destroyed, and Binyamin cried over the Mishkan in Shiloh, which would stand in Yosef’s portion and ultimately be destroyed." Even in their moment of reunion, Yosef and Binyamin wept—not over the past, but over future tragedies. Their tears reflect a profound understanding of the need to balance acknowledgment of pain with a forward-looking determination to rebuild. Yaakov similarly cried when he first met Rachel, not about past hardships but because he foresaw that they would not be buried together: וַיִּשָּׁק יַעֲקֹב לְרָחֵל וַיִּשָּׂא אֶת־קֹלוֹ וַיֵּבְךְּ (Bereishis 29:11). רש"י: ויבך. לְפִי שֶׁצָּפָה בְרוּח הַקֹּדֶש שֶאֵינָהּ נִכְנֶסֶת עִמּוֹ לִקְבוּרָה He prophesied that they would not be buried together (Rashi). This forward-thinking approach is also evident at a bris milah, where we bless an infant: כְּשֵׁם שֶׁנִּכְנַס לַבְּרִית כֵּן יִכָּנֵס לְתוֹרָה, לְחֻפָּה וּלְמַעֲשִׂים טוֹבִים Just as he has entered into the covenant, so may he enter into Torah, marriage, and good deeds. (Shabbat 137b) Even at the start of life, we look ahead to the child’s future growth and accomplishments. This brings us to Asarah B’Teves, a fast that always coincides with the reading of Vayigash and Vayechi, the parshiyos detailing Yosef’s reconciliation with his brothers, his reunification with Yaakov, and its aftermath( commemorated this year on the Friday before Parshas Vayechi ). Asarah B'Teves is unique among the minor fasts in that, according to some halachic authorities, it would be observed even if it fell on Shabbat, similar to Yom Kippur. This is due to its designation in the Torah as "בְּעֶצֶם הַיּוֹם הַזֶּה" ("on this very day"), indicating its significance just like Yom Kippur . Thus the Beit Yosef (Orach Chaim 550:4), citing the Rabbeinu David Abudraham highlights the uniqueness of Asarah B’Teves: וה"ר דוד אבודרהם כתב בהלכות תענית שי' בטבת הוא משונה משאר תעניות שאם היה חל בשבת לא היו יכולין לדחותו ליום אחר מפני שנאמר בו 'בעצם היום הזה' כמו ביום הכיפורים “The Abudraham writes that the fast of the 10th of Teves is distinct from other fasts because, unlike other fasts, if it were to fall on Shabbos, it could not be postponed, as it is described with the phrase ‘on this very day,’ similar to Yom Kippur.” The Beit Yosef comments: "ולא ידעתי מנין לו זה"—"I do not know the source for this." Referring to the assertion of the Abudraham that Asarah B'Teves would be observed even if it fell on Shabbat. This unique characteristic may reflect the profound significance of Asarah B'Teves, likening it to Yom Kippur in its emphasis on personal responsibility and future planning. Asarah B'Teves is not merely a commemoration of the onset of Nebuchadnezzar's siege of Jerusalem; it serves as a reminder that the ensuing 30 months of siege could have been utilized for reflection and repentance, potentially altering the course of history. The fast encourages us not to dwell on past suffering but to take proactive steps toward a better future. Similar to Yom Kippur, Asarah B'Teves focuses on forward-thinking—setting aside the past to concentrate on future improvement. These days are not solely for mourning but are opportunities for introspection, growth, and proactive planning for a better tomorrow In addition to Yom Kippur and Asarah B'Teves, there is a third fast, Taanit Chalom (a fast after a troubling dream), which can be observed even on Shabbat. Unlike other fasts that mourn past tragedies and are forbidden on Shabbat, Taanit Chalom (like Yom Kippur and Asarah B'Teves )addresses anxiety about the future by encouraging introspection and personal growth. The Gemara (Berachot 31b) explains that fasting after a disturbing dream can annul negative decrees, making this practice constructive by shifting focus from sorrow to proactive self-improvement. On Simchat Torah 5784, Am Yisrael faced unimaginable loss. Yet, rather than succumbing to despair, we united in battle, prayer, and mutual support. Though the war has now endured for almost 450 days, bringing fear and uncertainty, we remain steadfast in our confidence that, just as in the past, we will persevere and witness brighter days ahead. We are resolved to focus on the future, refusing to dwell on the pain of the past. As we read the parshiyot of Vayigash and Vayechi and commemorate Asarah B’Teves, we are reminded to direct our thoughts and actions toward the future. The fast, together with the lessons from the parshiyot recounting Yosef and Yaakov's resilience and unity, urges us to take responsibility for what lies ahead—strengthening our commitment to Torah, fostering unity within our communities, and actively shaping a brighter future for Am Yisrael. The Rambam writes about the transformative potential of each person's actions: לפיכך צריך כל אדם שיראה עצמו כל השנה כולה כאילו חציו זכאי וחציו חייב, וכן כל העולם חציו זכאי וחציו חייב. חטא חטא אחד—הרי הכריע את עצמו ואת כל העולם כולו לכף חובה וגרם לו השחתה; עשה מצוה אחת—הרי הכריע את עצמו ואת כל העולם כולו לכף זכות וגרם לו ולהם תשועה והצלה, שנאמר 'וצדיק יסוד עולם' (משלי י,כה) Therefore, a person must view themselves all year as if they are half meritorious and half guilty..., and the entire world as equally balanced. If they commit one sin, they tip themselves and the entire world to the side of guilt; if they perform one mitzvah, they tip themselves and the entire world to the side of merit, bringing salvation and deliverance…” (Hilchos Teshuvah 3:4) Let us demand of ourselves to tip the scales through acts of kindness, unity, and responsibility. As the Rambam challenges us, one good deed can change the course of history: לפיכך צריך כל אדם שיראה עצמו... חטא חטא אחד... עשה מצוה אחת “Therefore, a person must view themselves all year as if they are half meritorious and half guilty... If they perform one mitzvah, they tip the scales for themselves and the entire world toward merit and bring salvation.” (Mishneh Torah, Hilchos Teshuvah 3) The challenge before each of us is clear: perform one mitzvah and change the world! May Hashem bless us with the wisdom and strength to take responsibility for our actions, the courage to face the challenges ahead, and the unity to rebuild a world filled with Torah, mitzvot, and sanctity. May we merit to see the ultimate redemption, speedily in our days.
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  • When Jacob arrived in Egypt, Joseph presented him to Pharaoh. Jacob blessed Pharaoh that the Nile River should miraculously overflow when he approached it. As a result of this blessing, the predicted seven years of famine ended after only two years. As he promised, Joseph settled his family in the province of Goshen.
    Forgiveness
    וַיְכַלְכֵּל יוֹסֵף אֶת אָבִיו וְאֶת אֶחָיו וְאֵת כָּל בֵּית אָבִיו לֶחֶם לְפִי הַטָּף: (בראשית מז:יב)
    Joseph provided for his father and his brothers and his father’s entire household. Genesis 47:12
    Joseph taught us to repay evil with goodness, just as he did with his brothers, sustaining them for the rest of his life. He was able to forgive his brothers not only because he was a master of self-control, but chiefly because he understood the nature of human evil. As we have seen, the brothers’ evil act of selling him into slavery served G‑d’s plan that Joseph eventually become viceroy of Egypt. Joseph focused on the positive outcome of his brothers’ acts rather than on their evil essence.

    Similarly, we ask G‑d to treat us like Joseph treated his brothers, perceiving our misdeeds as being ultimately for the good and responding to them with kindness. In order to “inspire” G‑d to see our misdeeds as being ultimately for the good, we must first do the same ourselves, by utilizing our misdeeds as motivation for self-improvement. The misdeed that fuels this transformation thus becomes a merit, retroactively serving a good purpose.

    We can further enhance our ability to transform our own misdeeds into merits by training ourselves to see other people’s offenses as potential merits, as well.1

    FOOTNOTES
    1. Likutei Sichot, vol. 5, pp. 241 ff.

    When Jacob arrived in Egypt, Joseph presented him to Pharaoh. Jacob blessed Pharaoh that the Nile River should miraculously overflow when he approached it. As a result of this blessing, the predicted seven years of famine ended after only two years. As he promised, Joseph settled his family in the province of Goshen. Forgiveness וַיְכַלְכֵּל יוֹסֵף אֶת אָבִיו וְאֶת אֶחָיו וְאֵת כָּל בֵּית אָבִיו לֶחֶם לְפִי הַטָּף: (בראשית מז:יב) Joseph provided for his father and his brothers and his father’s entire household. Genesis 47:12 Joseph taught us to repay evil with goodness, just as he did with his brothers, sustaining them for the rest of his life. He was able to forgive his brothers not only because he was a master of self-control, but chiefly because he understood the nature of human evil. As we have seen, the brothers’ evil act of selling him into slavery served G‑d’s plan that Joseph eventually become viceroy of Egypt. Joseph focused on the positive outcome of his brothers’ acts rather than on their evil essence. Similarly, we ask G‑d to treat us like Joseph treated his brothers, perceiving our misdeeds as being ultimately for the good and responding to them with kindness. In order to “inspire” G‑d to see our misdeeds as being ultimately for the good, we must first do the same ourselves, by utilizing our misdeeds as motivation for self-improvement. The misdeed that fuels this transformation thus becomes a merit, retroactively serving a good purpose. We can further enhance our ability to transform our own misdeeds into merits by training ourselves to see other people’s offenses as potential merits, as well.1 FOOTNOTES 1. Likutei Sichot, vol. 5, pp. 241 ff.
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  • Passionate Light
    By Tzvi Freeman

    The Infinite Light overflows with passion.

    The passion to enter within the finite, to define itself within space and time, to dwell within darkness.

    But this is its limitation: It is imprisoned within its endless presence, for wherever it goes it finds only itself.

    When Infinite Light meets darkness, no darkness is left. As it seeps into space and time, they blur and dissolve. Expose to it the finite cells of the human mind, and all reason surrenders.

    So the Infinite Light must first awaken a passion below, commensurate to its passion above. A passion of the intellect to know unbounded wisdom, of a created being to embrace its Creator, of darkness to shine. Only once it is awaited with burning desire, then may it enter, be welcomed and find peace.

    How could it be that a created being can accomplish that which is not in the hand of heaven to achieve? For in that human passion itself is G‑d, who is below as above, and within all things.

    Passionate Light By Tzvi Freeman The Infinite Light overflows with passion. The passion to enter within the finite, to define itself within space and time, to dwell within darkness. But this is its limitation: It is imprisoned within its endless presence, for wherever it goes it finds only itself. When Infinite Light meets darkness, no darkness is left. As it seeps into space and time, they blur and dissolve. Expose to it the finite cells of the human mind, and all reason surrenders. So the Infinite Light must first awaken a passion below, commensurate to its passion above. A passion of the intellect to know unbounded wisdom, of a created being to embrace its Creator, of darkness to shine. Only once it is awaited with burning desire, then may it enter, be welcomed and find peace. How could it be that a created being can accomplish that which is not in the hand of heaven to achieve? For in that human passion itself is G‑d, who is below as above, and within all things.
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  • In advance of his arrival in Egypt, Jacob sent Judah to prepare a yeshiva – a place where he and his descendants could devote themselves to constant study of the Torah.
    Undistracted Attention to Spiritual Growth
    וְאֶת יְהוּדָה שָׁלַח לְפָנָיו אֶל יוֹסֵף לְהוֹרֹת לְפָנָיו גֹּשְׁנָה וגו': (בראשית מו:כח)
    [Jacob] sent Judah ahead of him to Joseph, to make advance preparations in Goshen. Genesis 46:28
    Jacob sent Judah to start a school rather than asking Joseph to do so, recognizing that a Torah academy must be headed by a person who is completely removed from mundane affairs and is fully immersed in the study of the Torah. Since Joseph’s Divine mission required that he run the mundane affairs of Egypt, he could not also head Jacob’s school of Torah, notwithstanding his undisputed righteousness.

    Likewise, those who wish to adopt the vocation of the Torah scholar or teacher must be both allowed and required to be completely separated from worldly affairs, in order to be able to focus on educating our children without any distractions.1

    FOOTNOTES
    1. Likutei Sichot, vol. 3, pp. 827–830. See Eiruvin 65a.
    In advance of his arrival in Egypt, Jacob sent Judah to prepare a yeshiva – a place where he and his descendants could devote themselves to constant study of the Torah. Undistracted Attention to Spiritual Growth וְאֶת יְהוּדָה שָׁלַח לְפָנָיו אֶל יוֹסֵף לְהוֹרֹת לְפָנָיו גֹּשְׁנָה וגו': (בראשית מו:כח) [Jacob] sent Judah ahead of him to Joseph, to make advance preparations in Goshen. Genesis 46:28 Jacob sent Judah to start a school rather than asking Joseph to do so, recognizing that a Torah academy must be headed by a person who is completely removed from mundane affairs and is fully immersed in the study of the Torah. Since Joseph’s Divine mission required that he run the mundane affairs of Egypt, he could not also head Jacob’s school of Torah, notwithstanding his undisputed righteousness. Likewise, those who wish to adopt the vocation of the Torah scholar or teacher must be both allowed and required to be completely separated from worldly affairs, in order to be able to focus on educating our children without any distractions.1 FOOTNOTES 1. Likutei Sichot, vol. 3, pp. 827–830. See Eiruvin 65a.
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    Light and Legacy
    The third of Tevet, whether officially part of Hanukkah or not, reminds us that true celebration lies not just in the festival itself, but in how we allow its light to illuminate our path forward.
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  • I KINGS CHAPTER 19

    * * * I Kings 18:46 and 19:1-21 is read as the Haftara of Parshas Pinchas, Numbers 25:10-30:1 * * *

    With the rout of the prophets of Baal on Mt Carmel Elijah had brought about a tremendous KIDDUSH HASHEM ("Sanctification of God's Name"). Even Ahab was impressed, but the implacable Jezebel was unshaken and intended to use repressive terror to undo the results of Elijah's feat, swearing by her gods to kill him (v 2).

    Elijah understood that now was not the time to "press the hour" and insist that God should overthrow the regime immediately, for "whoever tries to press the hour, the hour presses him" (P'skika Zuta Gen. 27). Instead Elijah fled, just as Jacob had fled from Esau and Moses from Pharaoh. Elijah had tried to use drought and famine followed by the miracle on Mt Carmel to bring Israel to repent, but now he was overwhelmed with a terrible sense of failure and he wanted to "resign" from his ministry and leave it to God to redeem His people. Elijah went out into the wilderness without any food or water, and crouching under a solitary broom-tree that afforded scarcely any shade, he begged God to take his life.

    God miraculously provided Elijah with sufficient refreshment to sustain him for forty days and nights – parallel to the forty days and nights that Moses did not eat when he ascended to Heaven to receive the Torah – and Elijah retraced the steps of the Master of the Prophets in reaching "the Mountain of God in Horeb", i.e. Mt Sinai, where Elijah entered into the same cleft in the rock from which Moses had seen God's glory (Ex. 33:22).

    "And he said, I have been very zealous for the Lord God of hosts…" (v 10). Elijah's zeal for God was like that of Pinchas, whose soul he bore, and of whom God had testified that "he turned My wrath away from the Children of Israel in that he was ZEALOUS for My sake" (Numbers 22:11). Feeling that he had failed in his mission, Elijah was now asking God Himself to avenge the breach of His Covenant and the destruction of His Altar and the killing of His priests.

    Without yet giving Elijah any answer, God told him to stand at the opening of the cave where, as a reward for his zeal God "passed before Him" to let him see His glory. Targum Yonasan explains that the "great and mighty wind", "earthquake" and "fire" (vv 11-12) were successive revelations of great "camps" of angels – the agents through whom God controls the creation. (RU'ACH and ESH are respectively the air and fire elements, while RA'ASH is not necessarily only an earthquake but also alludes to the water element: Targum renders RA'ASH as ZIYAH, which also has the connotation of sweating: from the sweat of the Chayos comes the River Dinoor.)

    In a lesson to all spiritual seekers at all times, our text teaches that the true glory of God was not in these sensational pyrotechnics but in the tranquil silence of the "still, small voice" that came afterwards (v 12). When we search for God, we must listen with the utmost attentiveness to the almost imperceptible voice of truth that speaks so softly deep down in the heart and soul.

    Metzudas David explains that God took Elijah through this "performance" to show him that He wants to show kindness rather than arousing all His anger and coming against His creatures with hurricanes, earthquakes and fire. In asking him again, "What are you doing here Elijah?" (v 13) God was saying "Are you still here to ask for vengeance?" It was when Elijah repeated his complaint about the breach of the Covenant and his implicit request for vengeance (v 14, cf. v 10) that God told him to anoint another prophet in his place (v 15), in effect saying, "I can't take your prophecy since you are making accusations against My children" (Rashi ad loc.).

    It is said that for having accused the Children of Israel of abandoning the Covenant (i.e. ceasing to practice circumcision) while seven thousand still remained faithful (v 18), Elijah was penalized by having to attend every BRIS MILAH ("circumcision") ceremony performed ever after by those who go by the name of Israel. For this reason it is customary to prepare the "Chair of Elijah" at every circumcision and to place the baby upon it for a moment immediately prior to the performance of the operation, invoking the spirit of Elijah to inspire the child and everyone else present with his spirit of purity and zeal.

    In accepting Elijah's request to resign his ministry God told him to anoint (1) Haza-el as king of Aram (2) Jehu son of Nimshi as king over Israel (3) Elisha son of Shaphat as successor to himself (vv 15-16). To appreciate the significance of these prophecies, it is necessary to understand that Elijah himself did NOT personally anoint either Haza-el or Jehu. It was Elijah's disciple Elisha who anointed both of them (II Kings 8:9ff and 9:2ff). Since on Elijah's return from the wilderness he immediately encountered and anointed Elisha (our chapter v 19), he realized that the third element in God's message was fulfilled before the first and second and thereby inferred that Elisha would be the one to anoint Haza-el and Jehu later on as his "agent" (RaDaK). Haza-el proved to be a far crueler adversary against Israel than the kings of Aram who preceded him, while after the death of Ahab Jehu overthrew and massacred his entire house in a bloody coup, taking Israel deeper into sin and idolatry.

    In this way God relieved Elijah of his public ministry (though he continues to serve God and intervene, visibly or invisibly, at all kinds of junctures) and He took back the providence into His own hands, as it were, while appointing Elisha to succeed Elijah. It was not that Elijah had never seen Elisha before: according to tradition, it was Elisha who poured the water into the trough when Elijah called for fire from Heaven to consume his sacrifice (I Kings 18:34-5). However Elijah now placed his mantle over Elisha for a moment (v 19) as an invitation to full ordination as his successor. Elisha was already presiding over twelve pairs of plowing oxen – a sign that he was to be appointed as prophet and reproof-giver to the Twelve Tribes of Israel (RaDaK). Delaying only to bid his parents and friends farewell, Elisha went after Elijah "and ministered to him" (v 21) – for "ministering to Torah scholars is even greater than learning the Torah itself" (Eliahu Rabbah 5).

    CHAPTER 20

    The wars of Aram against Israel narrated in our present chapter are NOT the war that God foretold to Elijah (ch 19 vv 15 &17), which came a generation later. Nevertheless, ever since the end of King Solomon's reign the Arameans had been organizing to throw off the yoke of subjugation that King David had laid upon them. The endemic Aramean envy and hatred of Israel dated back to Laban and Bilaam, who epitomize the use of crafty intelligence and wisdom to HIDE Godliness. Behind the account of their war against Israel as told in this chapter lie allusions to the way in which the KELIPAH (husk) of Aram (corresponding to the vernacular language – "Aramaic" – and mundane intelligence) seeks to "hijack" the holy wisdom of the Torah for its own purposes.

    Thus Ben-Haddad king of Aram came against Israel with THIRTY-TWO kings (corresponding to the thirty-two pathways of wisdom rooted in the twenty-two letters and ten vowels of Hebrew).

    The rabbinic interpretation of Ben-Haddad's provocative ultimatum to King Ahab (vv 3; 6, see Sanhedrin 102b) is that he did not only want Ahab's silver and gold and wives and children but "all the MAHMAD – delight – of your eyes". This is an allusion to the Torah, whose teachings are "more delightful – NE'HMADIM – than purest gold" (Psalms 19:11). Ben-Haddad wanted to have the Torah surrendered into his own hands in order to reinterpret and falsify it in any way he chose. The amazing thing is that Ahab – the Baal and Ashera-worshipper – was perfectly willing to give up everything else but BALKED at the idea of giving up the Torah to the point that he was ready to go to war rather than submit. Ahab called all the elders of Israel (v 7), who certainly included the seven thousand who were still faithful, and the entire nation agreed to flout Aram, which shows that they were far from being crude idolaters who were in flight from their whole tradition. "For what reason did Ahab merit to rule for 22 years? Because he gave honor to the Torah, which was given with 22 letters" (Sanhedrin 102b). Verse 9 contains 22 Hebrew words.

    It was surely in the merit of the Israelite zeal burning in King Ahab that a true prophet informed him that God would deliver the Arameans into his hand (v 13). The prophet told him that instead of sending out his entire army to fight them, the king should dispatch only the "young men of the princes of the provinces" (v 14). These were the children of the princes of Ahab's subject states, whom they were forced to send to his capital as "collateral" to ensure that they would not rebel. The fact that there were 232 of these children again points to the great extent of Ahab's sphere of influence, which the Arameans were now trying to undermine. In addition, 232 is significant as the sum of the gematrias of the four chief MILU'IM ("fillings") of the name of HaVaYaH – 72, 63, 45 and 52. Moreover, this figure encompasses all the 231 "Gates" through which the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet are permuted with one another to make up the words of the Hebrew language (see Sefer Yetzirah and commentaries).

    Through a series of miraculous deliveries, God proved that Aramean military might was nothing in the face of Torah spirit. To disabuse the Arameans of their illusion that the God of Israel had power only in the hills, He lured them out to the valleys, where Israel smote 100,000 of them in one day (alluding to the destruction of a complete array of the Ten Sefirot of impurity, each consisting of sub-arrays and sub-sub-arrays). After the survivors fled to Aphek (which is a few kilometers east of the southern tongue of the Kinneret, Lake Tiberias), collapsing fortifications killed another 27,000 (corresponding to the 22 basic letters of the Hebrew alphabet together with the five "final" letters, a total of 27, each of which contains its own arrays and sub-arrays of the Ten Sefirot).

    Ben-Haddad fled but he knew as well as Israel's Arab adversaries know until today that the Israelite heart is tender, merciful and forgiving and that he would only have to say a few soothing words to the king against whom he had just unleashed two major wars in order to be able to enter into a "peace process" with him (vv 31-34). God had maneuvered Ben-Haddad into His trap (v 42) but Ahab let the Aramean king get away, much as recent Israeli governments have almost never lost an opportunity to allow the country's enemies to get away with their endless aggressions and provocations. God's prophet told Ahab that his misplaced kindheartedness would cost him his life and cause enormous national suffering, but Ahab did not want to listen and rushed off home in a furious temper.
    I KINGS CHAPTER 19 * * * I Kings 18:46 and 19:1-21 is read as the Haftara of Parshas Pinchas, Numbers 25:10-30:1 * * * With the rout of the prophets of Baal on Mt Carmel Elijah had brought about a tremendous KIDDUSH HASHEM ("Sanctification of God's Name"). Even Ahab was impressed, but the implacable Jezebel was unshaken and intended to use repressive terror to undo the results of Elijah's feat, swearing by her gods to kill him (v 2). Elijah understood that now was not the time to "press the hour" and insist that God should overthrow the regime immediately, for "whoever tries to press the hour, the hour presses him" (P'skika Zuta Gen. 27). Instead Elijah fled, just as Jacob had fled from Esau and Moses from Pharaoh. Elijah had tried to use drought and famine followed by the miracle on Mt Carmel to bring Israel to repent, but now he was overwhelmed with a terrible sense of failure and he wanted to "resign" from his ministry and leave it to God to redeem His people. Elijah went out into the wilderness without any food or water, and crouching under a solitary broom-tree that afforded scarcely any shade, he begged God to take his life. God miraculously provided Elijah with sufficient refreshment to sustain him for forty days and nights – parallel to the forty days and nights that Moses did not eat when he ascended to Heaven to receive the Torah – and Elijah retraced the steps of the Master of the Prophets in reaching "the Mountain of God in Horeb", i.e. Mt Sinai, where Elijah entered into the same cleft in the rock from which Moses had seen God's glory (Ex. 33:22). "And he said, I have been very zealous for the Lord God of hosts…" (v 10). Elijah's zeal for God was like that of Pinchas, whose soul he bore, and of whom God had testified that "he turned My wrath away from the Children of Israel in that he was ZEALOUS for My sake" (Numbers 22:11). Feeling that he had failed in his mission, Elijah was now asking God Himself to avenge the breach of His Covenant and the destruction of His Altar and the killing of His priests. Without yet giving Elijah any answer, God told him to stand at the opening of the cave where, as a reward for his zeal God "passed before Him" to let him see His glory. Targum Yonasan explains that the "great and mighty wind", "earthquake" and "fire" (vv 11-12) were successive revelations of great "camps" of angels – the agents through whom God controls the creation. (RU'ACH and ESH are respectively the air and fire elements, while RA'ASH is not necessarily only an earthquake but also alludes to the water element: Targum renders RA'ASH as ZIYAH, which also has the connotation of sweating: from the sweat of the Chayos comes the River Dinoor.) In a lesson to all spiritual seekers at all times, our text teaches that the true glory of God was not in these sensational pyrotechnics but in the tranquil silence of the "still, small voice" that came afterwards (v 12). When we search for God, we must listen with the utmost attentiveness to the almost imperceptible voice of truth that speaks so softly deep down in the heart and soul. Metzudas David explains that God took Elijah through this "performance" to show him that He wants to show kindness rather than arousing all His anger and coming against His creatures with hurricanes, earthquakes and fire. In asking him again, "What are you doing here Elijah?" (v 13) God was saying "Are you still here to ask for vengeance?" It was when Elijah repeated his complaint about the breach of the Covenant and his implicit request for vengeance (v 14, cf. v 10) that God told him to anoint another prophet in his place (v 15), in effect saying, "I can't take your prophecy since you are making accusations against My children" (Rashi ad loc.). It is said that for having accused the Children of Israel of abandoning the Covenant (i.e. ceasing to practice circumcision) while seven thousand still remained faithful (v 18), Elijah was penalized by having to attend every BRIS MILAH ("circumcision") ceremony performed ever after by those who go by the name of Israel. For this reason it is customary to prepare the "Chair of Elijah" at every circumcision and to place the baby upon it for a moment immediately prior to the performance of the operation, invoking the spirit of Elijah to inspire the child and everyone else present with his spirit of purity and zeal. In accepting Elijah's request to resign his ministry God told him to anoint (1) Haza-el as king of Aram (2) Jehu son of Nimshi as king over Israel (3) Elisha son of Shaphat as successor to himself (vv 15-16). To appreciate the significance of these prophecies, it is necessary to understand that Elijah himself did NOT personally anoint either Haza-el or Jehu. It was Elijah's disciple Elisha who anointed both of them (II Kings 8:9ff and 9:2ff). Since on Elijah's return from the wilderness he immediately encountered and anointed Elisha (our chapter v 19), he realized that the third element in God's message was fulfilled before the first and second and thereby inferred that Elisha would be the one to anoint Haza-el and Jehu later on as his "agent" (RaDaK). Haza-el proved to be a far crueler adversary against Israel than the kings of Aram who preceded him, while after the death of Ahab Jehu overthrew and massacred his entire house in a bloody coup, taking Israel deeper into sin and idolatry. In this way God relieved Elijah of his public ministry (though he continues to serve God and intervene, visibly or invisibly, at all kinds of junctures) and He took back the providence into His own hands, as it were, while appointing Elisha to succeed Elijah. It was not that Elijah had never seen Elisha before: according to tradition, it was Elisha who poured the water into the trough when Elijah called for fire from Heaven to consume his sacrifice (I Kings 18:34-5). However Elijah now placed his mantle over Elisha for a moment (v 19) as an invitation to full ordination as his successor. Elisha was already presiding over twelve pairs of plowing oxen – a sign that he was to be appointed as prophet and reproof-giver to the Twelve Tribes of Israel (RaDaK). Delaying only to bid his parents and friends farewell, Elisha went after Elijah "and ministered to him" (v 21) – for "ministering to Torah scholars is even greater than learning the Torah itself" (Eliahu Rabbah 5). CHAPTER 20 The wars of Aram against Israel narrated in our present chapter are NOT the war that God foretold to Elijah (ch 19 vv 15 &17), which came a generation later. Nevertheless, ever since the end of King Solomon's reign the Arameans had been organizing to throw off the yoke of subjugation that King David had laid upon them. The endemic Aramean envy and hatred of Israel dated back to Laban and Bilaam, who epitomize the use of crafty intelligence and wisdom to HIDE Godliness. Behind the account of their war against Israel as told in this chapter lie allusions to the way in which the KELIPAH (husk) of Aram (corresponding to the vernacular language – "Aramaic" – and mundane intelligence) seeks to "hijack" the holy wisdom of the Torah for its own purposes. Thus Ben-Haddad king of Aram came against Israel with THIRTY-TWO kings (corresponding to the thirty-two pathways of wisdom rooted in the twenty-two letters and ten vowels of Hebrew). The rabbinic interpretation of Ben-Haddad's provocative ultimatum to King Ahab (vv 3; 6, see Sanhedrin 102b) is that he did not only want Ahab's silver and gold and wives and children but "all the MAHMAD – delight – of your eyes". This is an allusion to the Torah, whose teachings are "more delightful – NE'HMADIM – than purest gold" (Psalms 19:11). Ben-Haddad wanted to have the Torah surrendered into his own hands in order to reinterpret and falsify it in any way he chose. The amazing thing is that Ahab – the Baal and Ashera-worshipper – was perfectly willing to give up everything else but BALKED at the idea of giving up the Torah to the point that he was ready to go to war rather than submit. Ahab called all the elders of Israel (v 7), who certainly included the seven thousand who were still faithful, and the entire nation agreed to flout Aram, which shows that they were far from being crude idolaters who were in flight from their whole tradition. "For what reason did Ahab merit to rule for 22 years? Because he gave honor to the Torah, which was given with 22 letters" (Sanhedrin 102b). Verse 9 contains 22 Hebrew words. It was surely in the merit of the Israelite zeal burning in King Ahab that a true prophet informed him that God would deliver the Arameans into his hand (v 13). The prophet told him that instead of sending out his entire army to fight them, the king should dispatch only the "young men of the princes of the provinces" (v 14). These were the children of the princes of Ahab's subject states, whom they were forced to send to his capital as "collateral" to ensure that they would not rebel. The fact that there were 232 of these children again points to the great extent of Ahab's sphere of influence, which the Arameans were now trying to undermine. In addition, 232 is significant as the sum of the gematrias of the four chief MILU'IM ("fillings") of the name of HaVaYaH – 72, 63, 45 and 52. Moreover, this figure encompasses all the 231 "Gates" through which the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet are permuted with one another to make up the words of the Hebrew language (see Sefer Yetzirah and commentaries). Through a series of miraculous deliveries, God proved that Aramean military might was nothing in the face of Torah spirit. To disabuse the Arameans of their illusion that the God of Israel had power only in the hills, He lured them out to the valleys, where Israel smote 100,000 of them in one day (alluding to the destruction of a complete array of the Ten Sefirot of impurity, each consisting of sub-arrays and sub-sub-arrays). After the survivors fled to Aphek (which is a few kilometers east of the southern tongue of the Kinneret, Lake Tiberias), collapsing fortifications killed another 27,000 (corresponding to the 22 basic letters of the Hebrew alphabet together with the five "final" letters, a total of 27, each of which contains its own arrays and sub-arrays of the Ten Sefirot). Ben-Haddad fled but he knew as well as Israel's Arab adversaries know until today that the Israelite heart is tender, merciful and forgiving and that he would only have to say a few soothing words to the king against whom he had just unleashed two major wars in order to be able to enter into a "peace process" with him (vv 31-34). God had maneuvered Ben-Haddad into His trap (v 42) but Ahab let the Aramean king get away, much as recent Israeli governments have almost never lost an opportunity to allow the country's enemies to get away with their endless aggressions and provocations. God's prophet told Ahab that his misplaced kindheartedness would cost him his life and cause enormous national suffering, but Ahab did not want to listen and rushed off home in a furious temper.
    ·121 Ansichten ·0 Vorschau
  • It’s not Always Easy to Belong
    by R. Gidon Rothstein

    Parshat VaYigash

    The Missing Member of Ya’akov’s Family

    Ibn Ezra starts his comment to Bereshit 46;23 asking whether Chushim, the only son listed for Dan after the verse referred to benei, plural, was one or two. He thinks either possible.

    He moves on to the much thornier problem of why the Torah says there were seventy members of Ya’akov’s family, 46;27, when a count shows only sixty-nine. Some thought the Torah rounds up final numbers, to which Ibn Ezra objects that it also “miscounted” Leah’s descendants, 46;15, saying there were thirty-three, when thirty-two are named.

    He doesn’t like a Midrashic answer, Yocheved was born at the walls of the city of Egypt, because it would mean she gave birth to Moshe at age a hundred and thirty years. The Torah makes a big point of Sarah giving birth at ninety, Ibn Ezra thinks it definitely would have mentioned this.

    Worse, paytanim, liturgical poets (whom Ibn Ezra takes to task in other places in his commentary as well), in a poem for Simchat Torah, claim she lived to 250!

    He instead thinks Ya’akov is the missing family member, and is included with the first set of descendants counted. Verse seven supports his claim, when it says these are the names of Benei Yisra’el who came to Egypt, Ya’akov and his sons, Ya’akov part of the set. He dismisses Shemot 1;5, which says seventy offspring of Ya’akov came to Egypt, thinks it Scriptural inexactness, clear in 35;26, where Binyamin is counted among the sons born to Ya’akov “in Padan Aram.” Similarly, 46;27, in our context, says these were the offspring who came to Egypt, just like Devarim 10;22 says seventy forefathers went down to Egypt, when Menasheh and Efrayim were born in Egypt and never left.

    Our missing person is Ya’akov, according to ibn Ezra.

    Becoming Benei Yisra’el

    On the way to Egypt, Hashem appears to Ya’akov, 46;3, and identifies Himself as the God of your Father. Sforno thinks Hashem was acknowledging His different commands to the two. Hashem told Yitzchak not to go to Egypt, is now sending Ya’akov there. Sforno spots an explanation in the continuaion, I will make you a great nation there.

    Were he and his family to stay in Canaan, they would intermarry with the locals and assimilate. It’s not a worry in Egypt, because the Egyptians wouldn’t even eat at the same table .

    Two verses later, the Torah says Benei Yisra’el carried Ya’akov, their little ones, and wives down to Egypt. Rather than sons of Ya’akov, a plausible reading of the verse, Sforno thinks the phrase shows this was the point where they began to act like a nation, Benei Yisra’el, to contend with challenges from God or people (emulating Ya’akov’s wrestling with the angel, where Ya’akov earned the name Yisra’el for this exact reason).

    For Sforno, this was the moment. Hashem sends Ya’akov to Egypt to grow into a separate nation without mixing into the surrounding one, and Ya’akov’s sons here begin to function as the entity we still call Benei Yisra’el.

    Conflicted Emotions

    When he reveals himself to his brothers, 45;5, Yosef urges them not to be sad nor angry, emotions Or HaChayim thinks come from contradictory starting places. Sadness evinces a lowliness of soul, where anger comes from arrogance . To explain how the brothers could have conflicting emotions, Or HaChayim locates their origins.

    The sadness starts with the brothers’ realization they had been wrong to sell their brother, as they had said amongst themselves in 42;21. Bereshit Rabbah 91 thought the brothers had brought significant funds with them, intending to redeem Yosef from whoever owned him. Yosef was now telling them they had achieved their goal, and no longer needed to be sad over the sale.

    The anger was at themselves, for having caused all the trouble from selling Yosef. When people try to fix a problem and instead make it worse, self-anger is a common reaction. Yosef therefore told them they could now see the value they had in fact achieved with their act, his being in a position to support the family during the famine.

    They need not be sad nor angry, it all worked out.

    A Cheat and An Introduction

    I have decided to add Emes Le-Ya’akov, the comments of R. Ya’akov Kamenetsky, to our weekly list. First, because too many times when I encounter him, I find him so thoughtful and interesting, why deny ourselves? Besides, the other commentators for this year write briefly enough to leave room for one more.

    For this week, I’m going to cheat and use a comment of his from Mikeitz that’s still somewhat relevant to VaYigash, although I freely admit I’m cheating because I liked it so much. On 42;9, R. Ya’akov respectfully rejects Ramban’s theory of why Yosef pretended the brothers were spies.

    Rav Ya’akov goes in almost the opposite direction, starting with a rejection of the premise, that it can ever be our responsibility to make sure a Divine plan comes true. He quotes a passage my teacher, R. Lichtenstein, Z”L, was wont to quote, Berachot 10a, where the Gemara has Yeshayahu (the prophet) upbraid Chizkiyahu for thinking he can know better than the predicted future. R. Ya’akov applies it here.

    He suggests instead that Yosef was trying to show the brothers the fallibility of our best reasoning. They had judged him a danger to the family because of his dreams, and had every reasonable support to think so. From their perspective, they were absolutely right, R. Ya’akov thinks Yosef is saying to them. Yet they were wrong.

    He taught them the lesson starting with himself, in his position because he was thought the wisest man in Egypt, who made the mistake of thinking them spies, which they knew was untrue. Where most rulers refuse to change their minds, he surprised them by changing his, letting them all but Shim’on free to bring food back to their family (for the idea of monarch’s refusal to admit error, R. Ya’akov cites Bava Batra 3b, where we also know the idea from the end of Megillat Ester, Achashverosh is willing to circumvent a previous decree, not revoke it).

    At that point, the brothers began to recognize their guilt (it is there they say “But we are guilty,” R. Ya’akov points out).

    Perhaps the drama with Binyamin was the last nail of the proof, R. Ya’akov says, because Shabbat 55b includes him among those who died completely sin-free, yet the brothers themselves were willing to believe he had stolen the goblet (a passage in Bereshit Rabbah 92;8 supports his view, he points out).

    With Yosef’s big reveal, they finally saw it. All their best thinking, and they were powerful thinkers, took them down a path to error. Perhaps, he says, that’s what Bereshit Rabbah 93;11 meant when it detected a rebuke in Yosef’s words. For R. Ya’akov, it was all he had put them through, showing them again and again that even our best and brightest can get it wrong.

    Rabbinic writers celebrate a remarkable insight with the words of Mishlei 24;26, lips should kiss those who give right (or good) answers. An insight as relevant today as it was in R. Ya’akov’s time, as it has been throughout history, too much confidence is the beginning of a bad road.

    Ya’akov and his sons finding their places in the world, not an easy path to tread.
    It’s not Always Easy to Belong by R. Gidon Rothstein Parshat VaYigash The Missing Member of Ya’akov’s Family Ibn Ezra starts his comment to Bereshit 46;23 asking whether Chushim, the only son listed for Dan after the verse referred to benei, plural, was one or two. He thinks either possible. He moves on to the much thornier problem of why the Torah says there were seventy members of Ya’akov’s family, 46;27, when a count shows only sixty-nine. Some thought the Torah rounds up final numbers, to which Ibn Ezra objects that it also “miscounted” Leah’s descendants, 46;15, saying there were thirty-three, when thirty-two are named. He doesn’t like a Midrashic answer, Yocheved was born at the walls of the city of Egypt, because it would mean she gave birth to Moshe at age a hundred and thirty years. The Torah makes a big point of Sarah giving birth at ninety, Ibn Ezra thinks it definitely would have mentioned this. Worse, paytanim, liturgical poets (whom Ibn Ezra takes to task in other places in his commentary as well), in a poem for Simchat Torah, claim she lived to 250! He instead thinks Ya’akov is the missing family member, and is included with the first set of descendants counted. Verse seven supports his claim, when it says these are the names of Benei Yisra’el who came to Egypt, Ya’akov and his sons, Ya’akov part of the set. He dismisses Shemot 1;5, which says seventy offspring of Ya’akov came to Egypt, thinks it Scriptural inexactness, clear in 35;26, where Binyamin is counted among the sons born to Ya’akov “in Padan Aram.” Similarly, 46;27, in our context, says these were the offspring who came to Egypt, just like Devarim 10;22 says seventy forefathers went down to Egypt, when Menasheh and Efrayim were born in Egypt and never left. Our missing person is Ya’akov, according to ibn Ezra. Becoming Benei Yisra’el On the way to Egypt, Hashem appears to Ya’akov, 46;3, and identifies Himself as the God of your Father. Sforno thinks Hashem was acknowledging His different commands to the two. Hashem told Yitzchak not to go to Egypt, is now sending Ya’akov there. Sforno spots an explanation in the continuaion, I will make you a great nation there. Were he and his family to stay in Canaan, they would intermarry with the locals and assimilate. It’s not a worry in Egypt, because the Egyptians wouldn’t even eat at the same table . Two verses later, the Torah says Benei Yisra’el carried Ya’akov, their little ones, and wives down to Egypt. Rather than sons of Ya’akov, a plausible reading of the verse, Sforno thinks the phrase shows this was the point where they began to act like a nation, Benei Yisra’el, to contend with challenges from God or people (emulating Ya’akov’s wrestling with the angel, where Ya’akov earned the name Yisra’el for this exact reason). For Sforno, this was the moment. Hashem sends Ya’akov to Egypt to grow into a separate nation without mixing into the surrounding one, and Ya’akov’s sons here begin to function as the entity we still call Benei Yisra’el. Conflicted Emotions When he reveals himself to his brothers, 45;5, Yosef urges them not to be sad nor angry, emotions Or HaChayim thinks come from contradictory starting places. Sadness evinces a lowliness of soul, where anger comes from arrogance . To explain how the brothers could have conflicting emotions, Or HaChayim locates their origins. The sadness starts with the brothers’ realization they had been wrong to sell their brother, as they had said amongst themselves in 42;21. Bereshit Rabbah 91 thought the brothers had brought significant funds with them, intending to redeem Yosef from whoever owned him. Yosef was now telling them they had achieved their goal, and no longer needed to be sad over the sale. The anger was at themselves, for having caused all the trouble from selling Yosef. When people try to fix a problem and instead make it worse, self-anger is a common reaction. Yosef therefore told them they could now see the value they had in fact achieved with their act, his being in a position to support the family during the famine. They need not be sad nor angry, it all worked out. A Cheat and An Introduction I have decided to add Emes Le-Ya’akov, the comments of R. Ya’akov Kamenetsky, to our weekly list. First, because too many times when I encounter him, I find him so thoughtful and interesting, why deny ourselves? Besides, the other commentators for this year write briefly enough to leave room for one more. For this week, I’m going to cheat and use a comment of his from Mikeitz that’s still somewhat relevant to VaYigash, although I freely admit I’m cheating because I liked it so much. On 42;9, R. Ya’akov respectfully rejects Ramban’s theory of why Yosef pretended the brothers were spies. Rav Ya’akov goes in almost the opposite direction, starting with a rejection of the premise, that it can ever be our responsibility to make sure a Divine plan comes true. He quotes a passage my teacher, R. Lichtenstein, Z”L, was wont to quote, Berachot 10a, where the Gemara has Yeshayahu (the prophet) upbraid Chizkiyahu for thinking he can know better than the predicted future. R. Ya’akov applies it here. He suggests instead that Yosef was trying to show the brothers the fallibility of our best reasoning. They had judged him a danger to the family because of his dreams, and had every reasonable support to think so. From their perspective, they were absolutely right, R. Ya’akov thinks Yosef is saying to them. Yet they were wrong. He taught them the lesson starting with himself, in his position because he was thought the wisest man in Egypt, who made the mistake of thinking them spies, which they knew was untrue. Where most rulers refuse to change their minds, he surprised them by changing his, letting them all but Shim’on free to bring food back to their family (for the idea of monarch’s refusal to admit error, R. Ya’akov cites Bava Batra 3b, where we also know the idea from the end of Megillat Ester, Achashverosh is willing to circumvent a previous decree, not revoke it). At that point, the brothers began to recognize their guilt (it is there they say “But we are guilty,” R. Ya’akov points out). Perhaps the drama with Binyamin was the last nail of the proof, R. Ya’akov says, because Shabbat 55b includes him among those who died completely sin-free, yet the brothers themselves were willing to believe he had stolen the goblet (a passage in Bereshit Rabbah 92;8 supports his view, he points out). With Yosef’s big reveal, they finally saw it. All their best thinking, and they were powerful thinkers, took them down a path to error. Perhaps, he says, that’s what Bereshit Rabbah 93;11 meant when it detected a rebuke in Yosef’s words. For R. Ya’akov, it was all he had put them through, showing them again and again that even our best and brightest can get it wrong. Rabbinic writers celebrate a remarkable insight with the words of Mishlei 24;26, lips should kiss those who give right (or good) answers. An insight as relevant today as it was in R. Ya’akov’s time, as it has been throughout history, too much confidence is the beginning of a bad road. Ya’akov and his sons finding their places in the world, not an easy path to tread.
    ·361 Ansichten ·0 Vorschau
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