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Authentic Shalom • Torah.org
HASHEM
spoke to Moshe
saying: Speak to Aaron and his sons,
saying: This is how you shall
bless the children of Israel,
saying to them:
“May HASHEM bless
you and watch
over you.
May HASHEM cause
His countenance to shine to you and favor you. May HASHEM
raise His countenance toward you and grant you peace.”. (Bamidbar 6:22-27)
This blessing is scripted by HASHEM for the Kohanim to shower upon the Jewish People on special
occasions and in some places
daily. Parents too,
employ the same
words to bless their children every Friday
night. It’s rich
with wishes for everything good,
including the blessing of wealth, security, and basking in the favorable light of The
Almighty. What can be
better!? Oh, there’s one giant ingredient. The finale and the crown
of all this abundant goodness
is something called
SHALOM! Why is that so valuable and necessary after
so much has been granted. What is Shalom and what it does it add to the equation
of life?
This question is actually asked
by Rashi earlier
in Chumash. Before
the barrage of rebuke is launched in Bechukosai, the Torah promises material wealth with
the mental tranquility of living securely in the land.
Then the Torah
says, “And I will give you Shalom…”
Rashi on the
spot says, “Maybe
you’re going to say, ‘We have food
and drink’ but if there
is no peace then there is nothing! …From
here we learn
that Shalom is equal to everything!” So, we see that
Shalom has a high
value, and that’s
an understatement. How
does it work?
The Jerusalem Talmud and the Midrash in Parshas Nasso both say, “Ain Kli Machzik Brocha Ella Shalom”- “No vessel can hold blessing
like Shalom”. How can we conceptualize this.
Imagine walking through a giant grocery
store. Pick your favorite, Evergreen, Pomegranate, Seasons,
you name it. You fill
up your cart with goodies
for Shabbos. You are hungry
and tired and you can’t wait
to get home and to eat a nice filling
dinner and begin
to creatively prepare for Shabbos. After
checking out by the cash register and with ease happily paying the cashier you are told that you have to bring
your own bags.
You have a giant cart
load of groceries and no way to hold
them. You pile them in your arms
dropping some and trying to hold
onto what you
have while bending
to pick up what has fallen. Things
are breaking and melting and ripping and most of what you have paid for is lost before
you get home, leaving a trail
of groceries along
the way. You are now extremely frustrated and aggravated. You can’t
even enjoy a bite of food. What
a nightmare. But,
so it is to have
everything and to be lacking in Shalom. Shalom is the
vessel that holds, preserves, and carries whatever Brochos flow our way.
The Mishne in Pirke’ Avos
invites us to be from
the students of Aaron, “Love
peace (Shalom), pursue peace
(Shalom), love people
and bring them
close to Torah.”
Why must one love
Shalom first and then pursue
it? Because not only can you not effectively sell what you don’t
have, but you don’t
want to. Once
you experience it then automatically you become a naturally enthusiastic advocate. Did you ever
read a book
or hear a song that
excited and inspired
you to the point where
you could not wait to share it with others!? We have all experienced that. Shalom
is not an abstract idea,
it’s experiential and
to achieve it requires
many life and social
skills.
Shalom is harmonizing all
the elements in our lives,
so that that
not only are
they not at odds
with each other but they complement each other, like instruments of various
sizes and sounds blending symphonically into one orchestra. This requires discipline, a musical score, (a plan),
patience, a conductor, (a Rebbe), and self-knowledge. A person with Shalom may possess nothing and yet
have everything, and
someone can have
loads of stuff
and still have nothing,
because whatever he has complicates and destabilizes his life and it gives him
no peace. The
art of achieving and practicing peace
is an almost natural fulfillment of living a Torah
life, because “All
its ways are pleasantness and all its paths are peace!” It could be that
the biggest ambition
and the richest
reward we can hope to attain in life is authentic
Shalom!
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