Gentle Reminders
Posted on May 31, 2010 (5770) By Rabbi
Naftali Reich | Series: Legacy | Level: Beginner The universal image of the devout Jew is a praying figure wrapped in
a tallis, but it is not the tallis that is significant. Rather, it is the long
fringes on each of its four corners. At the conclusion of this week’s Torah
portion, we read that these fringes were to be dyed a particular shade of blue
called techeiles. What was the significance of this particular shade of blue?
The Talmud explains:
“Because techeiles is reminiscent of the sea, and the sea is reminiscent of the
sky, and the sky is reminiscent of the Kiseh Hakavod, Hashem’s celestial
throne.” Wearing techeileth, therefore, draws the mind to thoughts of Hashem
and is a source of constant inspiration.
The questions
immediately arise: Why do we need any memory devices at all to remind us of
Hashem? Why doesn’t the Torah simply command us to think of Hashem
continuously?
Furthermore, why does
the Torah choose techeiles which reminds us of Hashem in such a roundabout way?
Why doesn’t the Torah simply choose a color directly associated with Him?
The commentators point
out that our natural tendency of people is to connect what we see with whatever
is dear to our hearts. Thus, a businessman spotting a piece of paper on the
ground will think of the problems of waste disposal, the new technologies, the
investment opportunities in companies active in this field. A policeman
spotting the same piece of paper will think of the littering laws, zero
tolerance policies, litterbug fines. An environmentalist will think of the tree
that was cut down to produce this piece of paper which was so casually
discarded. The businessman, the policeman, the environmentalist may all have
been walking along absorbed in totally unrelated thoughts. But that little
deviation from the ordinary, the simple piece of paper lying on the ground,
pulls each one out of his reverie and sets him off in his own individual
direction along the route that is dear to his heart.
In this light, the
commentators explain the rationale behind techeiles. The Torah does not make
unrealistic demands of us. The Torah realizes full well that no matter how
spiritual we want to be, no matter how much we would like think of Hashem, we still
live in the mundane world. We have to earn a living and pay the mortgage and
take care of the children, and we cannot realistically expect to keep our minds
focused on Hashem at all times.
If, however, we truly
yearn to be connected with Him, if we harbor a strong love for Him deep in our
hearts, then a few gentle reminders here and there will bring Him squarely back
into our thoughts. Therefore, the Torah does not simply command us to think of
Hashem at all times. It is too much to expect of us amid the sea of
distractions in which we live. Instead, the Torah tells us to keep a symbol
with us at all times, a symbol which will remind us of Hashem with just a brief
glance.
To accomplish this
purpose most effectively, the Torah does not choose a symbol directly
associated with Hashem. Rather, the Torah chooses a fairly simple symbol which
can insinuate itself easily into the mad rush of daily life, a shade of blue
that reminds us of the sea. But once the chain of thought is set in motion, our
natural tendencies take over. That flash of blue sets us to thinking, and if
there is a true love for Hashem deep in our hearts, our thoughts will naturally
turn to Him. If the heart is set in a good direction, the mind is sure to
follow. But the converse is also true.
A great sage was visiting an art gallery, and he saw a large
redfaced man protesting vigorously in front of a colorful abstract painting.
“How can you display such lewd art?” the angry man yelled.
Intrigued, the sage drew closer and looked at the painting.
“My good fellow,” he said. “This is a wonderful painting. It
is a warm representation of a mother soothing a distraught child. The lewd
images you see on the canvas are a reflection of the lewd images that occupy
your own mind.”
In our own lives, we are all caught up in the dynamics of our
daily existence, continuously distracted by financial, familial, social,
emotional and all sorts of other concerns that make up the fabric of our lives.
Under these circumstances, it is very easy to forget about Hashem. But if He
has a permanent place in our hearts, if deep down we recognize and acknowledge
that life has no meaning without a strong relationship with Him, then we will
inevitably find myriad symbols everywhere that will nudge us gently back on
track and bring Him back into our thoughts.
Challah: The Breadwinner
Posted on June 19, 2008 (5768) By Rabbi
Osher Chaim Levene | Series: The Living Law | Level: Beginner
The Mitzva:
When kneading a
sizeable dough of the five main types of grain (wheat, barley, rye, spelt and
oats), a portion of challah was first separated as tithes to the Kohen before
the bread was eaten (Bamidbar 15:19-21). (Today, the separation of challah is
performed but burnt).
The fruit from the field
can be eaten immediately. The production of bread, however, necessitates an
elaborate series of activities including threshing, winnowing, grinding,
kneading, and baking. Still, a portion of dough is first set aside to G-d
before man partakes of it.
Bread is the mainstay
of man’s diet. Bread, that is not the foodstuff of animals, magnificently
embodies the uniqueness of humanity. In fact, there are some remarkable
parallels illustrating the affinity between “bread” and “man”.
Only man has to work as
a “breadwinner” with backbreaking labor. Actually, this toil was as a direct
consequence of man misusing his bechira, “free will” and the repercussions of
Adam’s sin, eating of the Tree of Knowledge, which according to one opinion was
of wheat (Berachos 40a). Adam feared “shall I and my donkey eat out of the same
trough?” (Pesachim 118a) but his fears were allayed when G-d declared to him
“with the sweat of your brow you shall eat bread” (Bereishis 3:19).
The sophisticated
manufacture of bread, despite its elongated process, affirms man’s superior
intelligence.
When his actions are
holy and directed to G-d, he is rightly crowned the “king” over the other
creatures of this world. However, were he to sin, he plummets from his position
and loses this title. Adam was rightly concerned lest he degenerate to the
lowly level of an animal, to indulge in animalistic behavior.
In his formation on
the Sixth Day of Creation, Adam’s body was “kneaded [like a dough] from the
[earth of the] ground” (Sanhedrin 38b) into which G-d implanted a divine “soul”
to elevate and uplift him from a purely materialistic existence.
In-other-words, Adam’s curious description of the “challah of the world”
(Bereishis Rabbah 14:1) points at his exalted status that rests upon his
ability to sanctify himself and the world around him just as the portion of
challah is sanctified to G-d before partaking of the rest of the bread.
It is true that this
task “with the sweat of your brow you shall eat bread” would require wrestling
the stubborn earth to elicit the latent holiness within. But do this he must –
until he can declare G-d in the universe as evident within the blessing on
bread produced by man, proclaiming G-d with the words: “hamotzei lechem min
ha’aretz, the One who brings forth bread from the ground” (Shulchan Aruch,
Orach Chaim, 167:2).
It is appropriate how,
like man as king over the creatures, bread is similarly elevated above
everything else.
Bread is itself a
symbol of kingship. When Boaz gave Ruth “bread” (Ruth 2:14) he symbolized how
she was deserving of siring kings (Shabbos 113b). It is not coincidental that
King David, descendant of Ruth, came from “Beis Lechem” (Bethlehem) that
literally translates as “House of Bread”. The most prominent and “king” of all
foods, bread has a separate blessing of its own. It is the basis of the meal
(breaking bread) which is typically eaten first and afterwards there is the
biblical obligation to recite “birchas hamazon, blessing after the Meal”.
This, then, provides an
additional dimension of the symbolism of challah. Lest man forget how he is the
“challah” and “king” over the lower world, his diet is distinctive to that of
the other beasts.
His goal is to always
be the “breadwinner”: to grapple with the “ground” and to bring forth its
“bread” and spend his energies to ensure the sanctification of G-d in the
world.
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