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Rabbi Shaya's Thoughts

Spotting the egotists

How are we to know that when we are doing something noble and kind, that our actions might be perceived by others to be self-serving, done because of our ego, and others believe we are only doing so to boost our own self-worth? More so, how are we to ascertain true motivation in someone else?  


In this week’s Torah portion, Korach, we read about Korach, the man who challenged Moses’ and Aaron’s appointment as the leaders of the Jewish people. To glimpse into his confrontation with them, let’s take a step back. Korach’s challenge couldn’t have been just about leadership or even motivated by jealousy. There had to be something much more fundamental going on. 


Korach viewed the world from a very different perspective than Moses, which led him to come to a different result. How did they differ? 


Let’s start with a general premise.


Thought often leads to speech, which in turn leads to action. When it comes to our connection with G-d, this could be interpreted as when learning Torah, thought and speech should lead to the performance of the Mitzvot. However, we don’t want the Mitzvot to be forced upon us—we don’t want to feel obligated to perform a Mitzvah, rather, we want to be inspired to do one. That is why learning the background, the reasons, and their history, is an integral part of the preparation. Only once we have this background information do we come to the practice – the action. 


It is not only important that this inspiration comes from within ourselves, but it is also imperative that we then go from thought to action. What transpired at Mount Sinai was that G-d gave us – for the very first time – the ability to lift ourselves up, to elevate the physical and make us more spiritual. To bridge our action from the speech, and before that, the thought levels. 


Using Hebrew letters to explain this idea, let us look at the letter Hey. It is written with three lines. Two are connected to each other. These two lines represent thought and speech, two of the more spiritual elements, since they are non-tangible. The third line, the free leg, represents action. This independent line is written at the same level as the other one on the bottom, yet it doesn’t reach the same height as the one at the top. This balancing act of constantly reaching higher, trying to connect to a more spiritual counterpart but still not connecting, yet not removing itself from the spiritual, either.  This symmetry of action is what Judaism is all about. And our desire to reach higher. 


Korach missed this lesson on all fronts. His name is made up of three letters, all close to the Hey, but none of them Hey: Kuf, Reish and Chet. Each of these letters is similar, yet somehow different. The Kuf’s third line stands alone but is longer. In the Reish, the third line is missing, but in the Chet, it is connected.  When the Kuf’s leg goes below the line, Korach is signaling that his action, his Mitzvot, can be fulfilled independently of connection to thought, meaning that he doesn’t have to have love for, or be in awe of, G-d. He can just draw G-d down to his level without trying to lift himself higher. The Reish represents the idea that no action is necessary, as if he is saying he can connect to G-d with prayer alone—just in the spiritual realm—so why even bring the physical world into the picture? Then we have the Chet. The Chet’s third line is connected to the other two. This was Korach’s third perspective. He felt that he had already reached the “priesthood” and was already connected, so there was no need to lift himself any higher, as he already made it. 


Seeing Korach from this perspective can help us understand that this is much more than jealousy. When a person is so focused on themselves that they cannot even see what G-d wants from them, all they see is how they are at the center of the universe. 


We can take a lesson on how we should try to balance this third line. How to always see ourselves and our actions in the balance. Not too high and not too low. Always striving to reach higher and knowing that it is we who must make the effort to reach higher.   


Is it all about the Truth?

 

Truth. It is a celebrated word. An admired principle. In a court room we are asked to take an oath to say nothing but the truth.  Therefore, those who are known to be truthful people are looked up to. However, I would like to propose a question: Is telling the truth always a good thing? Are there times when keeping the truth to yourself is a better option?

 

Let’s look at this week’s Torah portion of Shlach, where we read about the famous story of the twelve leaders of Israel who go to scout out the Land of Canaan. Ten of them come back with a report that is not so rosy. They said that the people of the land were mighty and strong, that they would overwhelm the Jews if they tried to conquer them. The spies showed the people fruit that was huge, hence instilling fear in the Jewish people. All that they shared was “true.” So why do we look at them negatively? We cannot even say that they tried to silence the other two spies when they began to speak. Calev didn’t refute a word that they said – after all, it was true. All he argued with was their conclusion. The ten spies concluded that they would not be able to conquer the land, while the other two felt that it could be done.

 

This difference of opinion is, seemingly, a matter of opinion. No one was arguing if the Canaanites were strong, the question was just whether the Jews should be afraid of them or not. Therefore, if it was just a matter of opinion, why did we look at the ten spies as evil people? What did they do that was so bad? Why is telling the truth so bad?

 

Telling the truth and peddling the truth is not the same thing.

 

Telling the truth means that in the right setting, when it is important for the truth to be known, the truth is told.

 

Peddling the truth means using the truth for your own benefit. You use the truth to further your own agenda. Of course, what you are saying is technically accurate. But the question is why are you saying it? Is it to make a point? Is it to hurt someone else with the truth? Or perhaps we may simply be careless with the truth that we know.

 

If the spies were truly concerned about the truth, then they should have brought their findings to Moses, as he was the one who sent them. However, they did not do that. They brought their report directly to the Jewish people. The spies were not interested in the truth, they were interested in the result; that the Jewish people should remain in the desert. 

 

The callousness and lack of sensitivity that they showed but should have known, especially after just seeing Miriam, Moses’s sister, pay the price for a similar mistake, is what made their error more difficult to swallow.

 

The lesson for us is clear. When we speak, even if it is truth, we must be sensitive as to what is motivating us. We should be empathetic about the people who we are talking about – even if it is true. However, the fact that what we are saying is true doesn’t give us a right to peddle that information around.

 

Peddling can be hurtful and damaging.

 

Shabbat Shalom,

 

 

 

 

Paying it forward

 

The idea to “pay it forward” is a nice concept—in theory. However, when it comes to practice, we often rethink this principle, and we start to question: How long do we have to pay it forward? Did we truly benefit that much? Perhaps we can only pay forward a little bit and the rest can be paid up at a later date. The excuses start to pile up.

 

In this week’s Torah portion, Be’ha’alotecha, we learn about an interesting story. Miriam, Moses’s sister, comes down with a rash called T’zaraat. She got this rash because she talked behind Moses’s back to their brother, Aaron. As a result of this rash, she was to remain outside of the “camp” for a period of seven days when the rash would go away. (Clearly, this was a spiritual punishment for a spiritual sin.) What happened was fascinating. Although the Jews were about to travel, they waited the full seven days to do so, until Miriam was ready to travel.

 

Why did all the Jews wait for Miriam?

 

Because G-d, Moses, and the Jewish people gave thanks to Miriam for the time that she waited for Moses.

 

When did Miriam wait for Moses?

 

When Moses was an infant and was placed in a basket in the Nile River, Miriam waited to see what would happen to the baby. When she saw that Pharaoh’s daughter took him, and then needed a wet nurse for him, she ran to help.  

 

It is this action that merited all the Jewish people waiting for her, this time for seven days, to show their gratitude.

 

The lesson for us is profound. Not only should time not decrease our appreciation, time should increase it.

 

Miriam waited a few minutes while all the Jewish people eventually waited a few days. It is not the amount of time, nor the number of people, but the lesson that matters. We should be looking for reasons to help others, not for excuses to back out.

 

Shabbat Shalom,

Same, yet different

 

It is interesting to observe a musician playing an instrument, especially when they are part of a large orchestra. You can hear many musicians playing the same instruments, the same chords, and seemingly producing the same sounds. Yet, if each one played on their own, they would produce their own unique sound. If you don’t have an ear sensitive enough to tell differences, you can surely see differences when it comes to sports. In almost all sports, individual players know the rules regarding, for example, how to hit a ball, still they don’t all hit it the same way; each puts on their own unique spin.  

 

This is true about everything in life.   

 

Recently an article detailed an advancement in technology. Your credit card can be charged simply by the unique way you swipe your phone over the credit card reader, since we each have a unique way of moving our hands. It’s not only pitchers and musicians who create unique methods of hand movement; each person has their unique way of moving their hands. 

 

In this week’s Torah portion, Naso, we read about the offerings of the tribe leaders at the inauguration of the altar in the Mishkan (Tabernacle). What is interesting to note is that all twelve leaders brought the exact same gifts as an offering, but the similarities don’t stop there. The Torah repeats verbatim each and every one of the gifts repeatedly, twelve times, as if it is news to us!  

 

Why can’t the Torah just tell us the order in which the tribe leaders brought the offerings and on which day? Why the need for repetition?  

 

Rashi, the famous biblical commentator, gives a detailed explanation of each offering based on the Midrash. Yet as he does this, he teaches us a subtle message. Rashi doesn’t share this insight on day one; he does so only on day two.  

 

Interesting.  

 

Rashi calls out both the uniqueness and the sameness of each leader. True, they brought the same gifts, but within the reasons themselves, each one found what matters to them, what resonated to them specifically. Their fingerprints were on their offerings.  

 

This is a lesson for us in our lives as well. We do many things as others do them, but it is important to do so in our own unique way.  

 

Shabbat Shalom  

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