Who We
Work For
Posted on April 8, 2022 (5782) By Rabbi Label
Lam | Series: Dvar
Torah| Level: Beginner
Halleluka…Servants of HASHEM, give praise;
praise the name of HASHEM. (Tehillim 113:1) -from Hallel
Pesach is in the air! Everywhere people are working extra
hard to be ready for the holy days of Pesach. Let
us emphasize these words, “working hard”. For some reason it is one of those
Yomim Tovim that no one can escape without “hard work”. Even if one is going to
a hotel a lot of preparation and dislocation is involved. Why should it be so?
It’s not for no reason!
Now I know this statement
may sound shocking to our sensibilities but here it goes, “Slavery is not
necessarily a bad thing!” We all know and agree that an abusive form of slavery
is bad news and everyone is repulsed by it. However, we refer to ourselves in Hallel as servants of HASHEM. It’s
a part of Hallel, the utmost enthusiastic praise of HASHEM! It is not a mournful dirge! It would be
our crown to be included in that rare club of servants of HASHEM. Moshe was called a servant of HASHEM. Yehoshuah was called a servant of HASHEM. Dovid HaMelelch is referred to as a
servant of HASHEM. We aspire to be worthy of such a title.
So, it sounds like being a servant, a slave is not only not a bad designation,
it may just be the most noble.
Now let’s get this
straight. Isn’t Pesach all about freedom? We commemorate and
celebrate and relive our exodus from Egypt and our freedom from the tyrannic
rule of Pharaoh. That’s the story we grew up with! Now at this advanced age
I am coming to realize that that is only half the story.
What does it mean to be a
servant/slave!? Your time is not your own. Your possessions are not your own.
Your life is not your own. You must do many things that are not necessarily in
agreement with a life of leisure. You are constantly being driven out of your
comfort zone. You are being guided and yes controlled by an external force, a
director, a boss.
There is a reason certain
images from the world reach our eyes. They give us a way of reflecting on our
situation. We have all seen the scenes of youth, most often, dressed in ways
that betray their dignity. They wander about lost and drugs and violence become
commonplace. I am being ginger here and circumspect but I think we can all
conjure up an image or ten million. Yet if one or a group of these same
young people joins the military, or submits to a sports coach, or is involved
in some religious training their appearance and level of achievement is
multiplied and amplified by the millions. What is the difference? A coach, a
boss, G-d can shape a man into something he could
never make out of himself.
This contrast is for our
edification. We did not get out of Egypt 3333 years ago to just be free to do
whatever we want to do. We actually only changed employers. Instead of working
a cruel dictator that did not have out best interest mind and who bullied into
submission forcing us to engage in futile labor just to break our hearts and
souls, we willfully submit ourselves to HASHEM Who
has demonstrated his concern for our ultimate well being and Who encourages us
to do actions that breath meaning into every step and every breath we take.
I am afraid that without a Rav, without a Shul, without a community,
without Torah learning, without G-d any good
and well-meaning Jew is at great risk of not only falling short of his
potential but even becoming a hazard to himself and others, not unlike the
wayward and destructive youth we referenced.
Great potential has a way
of blossoming or imploding as Langston Hughes expressed in his poem, “What
happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun? Or fester
like a sore–And then run? Does it stink like rotten meat? Or crust and sugar
over–like a syrupy sweet? Maybe it just sags like a heavy load. Or does it
explode!?”
Reb Yeruchem Levovitz said
that the main metric to measure the greatness of a Jew is, “How much of an Eved HASHEM* is he?” We all work for someone and fear
someone and love someone. The question is who do we work for and fear and
love?! On Pesach we became free to choose Who we fear and
love and Who we work for!
*Servant of G-d
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