Count
Your Blessings
Posted on October 21, 2003 (5764) By Rabbi
Pinchas Avruch | Series: Kol
HaKollel | Level: Beginner
SHMINI ATZERES/SIMCHAS TORAH
and Parshas Vezos Haberacha – 22 Tishrei 5764
The First Day of the Rest of
the Year
by Rabbi Moshe Peretz Gilden
Simchas Torah’s
celebration of the completion of the Torah involves reading the final portion
from the Torah, VeZos HaBeracha, and reading the account of the seven days of
creation at the start of Beraishis (Genesis). The Torah’s conclusion is
primarily the blessings that Moshe gave
the Nation of Israel immediately before his death. But while the Parsha starts, “And this is the blessing that Moshe, the man of G-d, bestowed
upon the children of Israel before his death.” (Devarim/Deuteronomy 33:1),
before delivering the actual blessings, he first reviewed the giving of the
Torah by G-d on Mount Sinai. Why is this interjection
necessary?
Nachalas Dovid (Rabbi
Dovid of Tevil, primary disciple of Rabbi Chaim of
Volozhin, disciple of the famed Rabbi Eliyahu, Gaon of Vilna) explains that
blessings cannot simply enter our lives.
Rather, blessings are
requests for additional good to be added to the good one already has.
The prior blessing acts as
a vessel to receive and carry the additional blessing. Moshe wanted
to bless the Children of Israel, but he first needed to awaken their cognizance
of their existing blessings. Thus, Moshe started
with our receiving the Torah, utilizing the Jewish nation’s greatest blessing
as the receiving agent for his blessings.
We all know we are
supposed to “Count your blessings,” but we do not usually consider that a
person who only sees the negative parts of his life he has no vessel to carry
any blessings that he may deserve. However, one who is constantly attuned to
all the good that he does have can receive even more, for now he has a “vessel”
in which to carry them.
The holiday of Simchas
Torah is a day to rejoice in the completion of the Torah. But it is also the
completion of the cycle of holidays with which the Jewish year starts. We now
appreciate the gifts G-d has given us: a renewed
relationship with Him from Rosh Hashanah, a new lease
on life and all of life’s accoutrements on Yom Kippur, and a new sense of trust
in our Heavenly Father from Succos. Today we celebrate our manifold blessings:
we savor the blessings of these past three weeks, and with them we ready
ourselves to receive the bounty G-d has in store
for us for the coming year.
Have a Good Shabbos and a Good Yom Tov!
Pursuit
Of Peace
Posted on September 28, 2004 (5764) By Rabbi
Shlomo Jarcaig | Series: Kol HaKollel | Level: Beginner
Sukkos
Pursuit Of Peace
By Rabbi Shlomo Jarcaig
Our daily evening prayers
contain an interesting petition to the Almighty: “Spread over us the Succah of
Your peace.” Our Sages explain that the Succah is representative of the six
Clouds of Glory that surrounded and protected the Children of Israel throughout
their travels in the wilderness. These clouds remained with them through the
merit of Aaron,
the Kohen Gadol (High
Priest). The attribute that Aaron epitomized was a lover and pursuer of peace.
In what way does the Succah represent peace more than the other mitzvos (Divine commandments)? And what is the
meaningful connection between Aaron’s loving and pursuing of peace and our
observance of this mitzvah?
Rabbi Eliezer Dessler (1)
explains that when we leave our houses and move into Succah booths for a week,
we remind ourselves how little we really control our circumstances. By leaving
the “security” of our brick and mortar homes and subjecting ourselves to the
forces of nature, we are reminding ourselves that there is nothing given and
absolute in the physical world. All of its structures and pleasures are
temporal; only our Torah study and mitzvos have
a lasting effect.
Our only true control is
over the decisions we make in the situations in which we find ourselves.
This was Aaron’s unique
trait. Aaron was chosen by G-d to be the High Priest,
the Divine emissary to connect the Jewish people to G-d. Once the
paradigm shifts and spirituality becomes the national priority, the realization
soon follows that another’s spiritual growth is to my benefit. There is no room
for jealousy beyond the physical world. With this achievement, peace is the
natural byproduct.
Aaron chased after peace
because he understood the “win-win”: everyone involved gained spiritually from
the process, and the dividend was communal peace.
In our contemporary world
of techno-gadgets, the lesson of the Succah is all the more essential to remind
us of our limitations and enable our focus on our real priorities. With this
may we merit the experience of genuine peace prevailing among us.
Have a Good Shabbos and a Good Yom Tov!
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