Listen to
Your Still Small Voice
Parshas Vayikra
Posted on March 17, 2021 (5781) By Rabbi Berel
Wein | Series: Rabbi
Wein | Level: Beginner
Moshe hears the voice of the Lord as G-d calls to him.
However, it is not the same experience that it was at Mount Sinai. There, it
was with noise and fanfare, thunder and lightning, pageantry, and awe. At Mount
Sinai, even the soundwaves were visible and real. But here, according to the Midrash, it is a private revelation exclusive to Moshe. The great heavenly voice is not heard
outside the precincts of the Tabernacle itself.
According to some
commentators, this is one of the reasons why the word Vayikra itself is spelled
with a small letter –Aleph zeira – the small Alef at the end of the word
Vayikra. It is interesting to note that one of the celestial powers of the
Almighty is that of tzimtzum – the ability to diminish the godly presence, so
to speak, in the universe, to allow for nature and human beings to function in
the so-called vacated space.
We find that when the
prophet Elijah searches for G-d, he does not find Him in the great wind or in
thunderous sound, but, rather, in the still small voice of silence itself. I
have written many times about the importance of being able to find G-d within
our own being, within our own soul, for only by discovering G-d in that manner
can a person achieve permanent elevation of spirituality and faith.
External events may make a
great impression upon us, both physically and spiritually. But they are usually
only a temporary influence, a momentary catalyst. Determined pursuit of
spiritual and moral attainment is always dependent upon that still small voice
that Elijah heard within himself and is the voice that all of us can also hear
for ourselves, if we will do so.
We are all aware that it
is much easier to hear loud sounds than secretive whispers. To hear a low voice
or a whisper requires concentration. It demands a desire to hear, not an
automatic reflex of our auditory senses, but, rather, an intentional expression
of our inner desire to hear the seemingly inaudible. The experts of espionage and counterespionage, of
police and governmental surveillance, have constructed elaborate technological
methods for blocking out all the extraneous noise that their microphones pick
up, so that they are able to eavesdrop on the whispered conversations of enemy
agents, spies, saboteurs, and criminals. Only one extraneous noise can cancel a
surveillance project and prevent a consequence or benefit.
I would hazard to say that
this is true in the pursuit of a meaningful spiritual life as well. All the
outside static of everyday life, of the mundane and the tawdry, foolish and the
distracting, must be eliminated, for us to hear our own still small voice in
our soul. We live in a very noisy world, and the ruckus of life often prevents
us from hearing what we ourselves wish to say to ourselves, because of the
outside static of noise that constantly engulfs us. We should certainly
concentrate more on hearing our own inner self and soul.
Shabbat shalom
Rabbi Berel Wein
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