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Rabbi Shaya's Thoughts

Appreciating Judaism

 


 

A real nuisance in life is when we experience a “joy killer.” For example, you may be on a high and someone comes and tells you something that is so irrelevant in life, to the point that it can – and does – make you feel depressed. Why would they want to do that? Even if that information were important, we would ask ourselves: Can’t it wait? Isn’t there a better time to share it, other than now?

 

Yet, this is exactly what G-d does at the beginning of this week’s Torah portion, Mishpatim. One of the first laws that we read is about a Jew who must sell themselves into servitude. This comes about when a person becomes so destitute and impoverished that the only way they can see themselves getting out of their financial difficulties is by becoming an indentured servant. The verse spells out the details: A Jew can only serve a master until the end of the Sabbatical cycle, and at the time are set free. If they insist on staying on to serve longer, they may do so but only until the Jubilee year. However, there is a ritual that needs to be performed if that is the case: The indentured servant’s ear is pierced at the door posts, near the Mezuzah, as a sign that instead of listening to G-d and being a servant to Him, he choose to serve a human being instead.

 

This information is so irrelevant to the Jewish people at this moment in their lives that they simply cannot relate. They are all wealthy people at this point in their lives, as the Torah tells us that the Jewish people left Egypt with much wealth. Shouldn’t G-d teach the Jewish people then about jealousy and about charity, and other more relatable topics? Hopefully, the reality of someone becoming so poor will not affect the Jewish people for many years to come. Especially since we know that these laws were not even put to the test of time often. So why the need to teach such an obscure law now? Why kill the joy of the moment, the high that they were experiencing at Mount Sinai?

 

On the surface, we are right, this law seems out of place. However, let us not stop here. Let’s look deeper into the details. What happens if a person gives themselves up as an indentured servant, putting aside the reason why they did so. What is the deeper message here?

 

This person got caught up in the materialistic world too much, to the extent that they lost everything they had, and the only way they see to get out of their mess was to become an indentured servant to another human being. To make matters worse, they are now selling their soul to another human being instead of to trusting in G-d. There is a conclusion to be drawn here: Too much focus on the physical pleasures of the world leads to paying even less attention on G-d.

 

How can this be resolved?

 

When this person brings physical, pleasurable items to their new “master,” they are given the opportunity to elevate the mundane of this world and use it for a higher purpose. At this moment, that might not happen, since they are just a servant to another human being. However, the goal is to not remain there, but to become free again. Even so, the lesson will be relearnt at that moment.

 

This lesson that Judaism is not meant to remain in the spiritual realm but to be brought down and integrated into the physical mundane world, is an integral principal of Judaism, hence, the reason why this law is specifically taught now, right after the Torah is given. It’s not a joy killer, but a joy enhancer.

 

Shabbat Shalom.

 

 

Looking for Results

It is action that counts. It is all about the end-result. Talk is cheap. Did you do it or didn’t you do it? These statements and similar ones were drilled into many of our heads when we were children, emphasizing the importance of action over all else. Actionable measurement of our success or failure was the most important thing. If we just spoke about something, or if we thought about something, that was not enough – it was the action that counted.

 

Now that we are older, it is time to think about these accepted truisms.

 

Are our thoughts worthless? How about our speech? Is it really only about our action?

 

In this week’s Torah portion, Yitro, we are given the Ten Commandments. Amongst them we have the commandment to observe Shabbat. We are told to keep the seventh day holy. One way to keep the day holy is to refrain from working. G-d worked for six days when He created the world, and on the seventh day He rested, so too shall we rest on the seventh day. This sounds like a simple and reasonable statement. G-d didn’t work, so we too shall not work.

 

However, G-d didn’t work with His “hands” the prior six days either; all that G-d did was speak. G-d said “let there be light” and there was light, and so too with the rest of creation. We mortals on the other hand, cannot just say “let there be light,” and if we did, light would not appear. Since we must build and create a fixture, a fire, or whatever to have a source of light, our efforts are much greater – they are in the realm of action.   

 

To be practical, the Torah teaches us to look at the results of what G-d created, regardless of how He made it happen. Afterward He rested, therefore, we too, shall rest.

 

This is also why we are not commanded to refrain from talking about work on Shabbat, although there are people who like to be extra-holy and do try not to talk about business matters on Shabbat, so that they don’t ruin their day of rest. Just as someone will not talk about work while they are on vacation, “let’s keep work and pleasure” separate.

 

We can take this even further. When we don’t talk about business matters in Shul on Shabbat, or at the Shabbat dinner table, we are showing ourselves and our friends, as well as G-d, that although we are not G-d, and we are not “commanded” to be G-d-like to such an extent, we recognize the unique ability of the human being, meaning that even though our speech cannot create things, it still counts for something, hence, the reason why we are not talking about work-related subjects. As we all know, certain topics will put us in certain moods—even our thoughts can have an effect on us, and that is why we stay focused on this holy day.

 

G-d, on the other hand, only requires us to do what is easily attainable, but that doesn’t stop us from reaching even higher with our own initiative. 

 

If we try. 

 

 

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