NITZAVIM, DEVARIM 29:9-31:30
In this week's parsha we hear among other things:
When we stand before Hashem, we stand as one people, the Klal Yisrael, together in unity.
We will be exiled, but Hashem will gather us in and return us to our Land. Fast forward : We have already returned; redemption has begun.
Torah knowledge is not remote or distant, but is close at hand.
We have free
choice, either to reap the benefits of keeping Hashem's commandments or to not
walk in His ways and be subject to the curses. It is your call: choose life or choose death.
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In Parshat Nitzavim at 29:9-14: Moses gathered all the Israelites—men, women, and children—to enter them into a covenant with Hashem. This covenant established us as Hashem’s exclusive nation.
The covenant, Moses explained, was not limited to those who were physically present on that day; rather, it included all future generations of Jews as well. That means you and me.
The question
arises as to what is the right of Hashem to commit future generations, let alone children, to the
obligations of His covenant?
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In Parshat Nitzavim at 30:11-14, Moshe
enjoins us to follow the mitzvot, informing us that “it is not beyond you,
nor is it remote from you. It is not in heaven . . . It is not
across the sea . . . Rather, it is very close to you, in your
mouth, in your heart, that you may do it.”
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In Parshat, NITZAVIM there is a curious phenomenon that occurs at 29:28, and all in all in about ten places in the Chumash. These are the dots or nekudot that appear over a letter or word or words. In in our case it is the nekudot that appear over the words "for us and for our children until...".
הַנִּ֨סְתָּרֹ֔ת לַֽיהֹוָ֖ה אֱלֹהֵ֑ינוּ וְהַנִּגְלֹ֞ת ֹלָֹ֤נוֹּ ֹוֹּלְֹבָֹנֵֹ֨יֹנֹוּ֨ עַד־עוֹלָ֔ם לַֽעֲשׂ֕וֹת אֶת־כָּל־דִּבְרֵ֖י הַתּוֹרָ֥ה הַזֹּֽאת
“The hidden things belong to the Lord, our God, but the revealed things are for us and to our children forever: to do all the words of this Torah”.
What do we make of these nekudot? Is it Hashem's way of calling our attention to a particular passage?
Perhaps as some believe they were put there by a personage in authority such as Ezra the Scribe, who is likened to Moshe Rabbeinu.
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In the Parsha at 30:19 we are told to choose life:
וּבָחַרְתָּ, בַּחַיִּים--לְמַעַן תִּחְיֶה, אַתָּה וְזַרְעֶךָ
“…choose life, that you may live, you and your seed;”
This statement is very timely in light of the approaching High Holydays.
Look at the word “חַיִּים”. The letters חַם meaning warmth surround the double yud that stands for Hashem. When you are alive with warmth, you have Hashem within you.
Whether
you hold by the Ramban who says that the Mitzvah referred to is doing T’sheuvah
or you agree with Rashi that the Mitzvah is to abide by the entire Torah, it is
well within our grasp.
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In the Haftarah portion at Isaiah 63:9, the Prophet says that because of Hashem’s love and pity He will redeem us.
בְּאַֽהֲבָת֥וֹ וּבְחֶמְלָת֖וֹ ה֣וּא גְאָלָ֑ם וַֽיְנַטְּלֵ֥ם וַֽיְנַשְּׂאֵ֖ם כָּל־יְמֵ֥י עוֹלָֽם
“with His love and with His pity He redeemed them, and He will bear them, and He will carry them for all the days of the world”.
What exactly is redemption?
In today's vernacular: To redeem
something, is to get something out of hock.
For the Jew, the
Land of Israel is his native country.
For the Jew, Exile is having been barred, sent out from or dispersed
from his native country. For the Jew,
his Exile results from religious, political and punitive reasons. The Jew in the Diaspora is a Jew in Exile,
and he awaits a return to his Land. HE
AWAITS REDEMPTION.
Redemption is an essential concept in Judaism. In Judaism, redemption (ge'ulah, גְאוּלָה) refers to God redeeming or freeing us from our exiles, starting from the first exile, our slavery in Egypt (BT, Tractate Rosh Hashanah 11b). This form of redemption is called “Exilic Redemption”. There is a concept of a Final Redemption in the belief system of mainstream Orthodoxy that considers us to be currently in a state of exile. When we are redeemed or freed by God from the current Exile, we will return to our Land and as a consequence owe Him a debt of gratitude.
Redemption also applies to individuals or groups: an Israelite slave, Jewish captives, and the firstborn son. It is from these three cases that the concept of exilic redemption is derived because Jews are considered God's 'firstborn' derived from Jacob, and Jews are God's slaves forever.
Theologically, I am currently considered held
captive by mainstream Orthodoxy even though I reside in the modern state of Israel..
Mainstream Orthodoxy aside, for me Redemption
is well underway.
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The Hebrew verb haqhêl הַקְהֵ֣ל, "assemble" comes the Mitzvah Hakhel in Deuteronomy 31:10–12:
"At
the end of every seven years, at an appointed time, in the Festival of Sukkot the
year of Shemitah. When all Israel comes to appear before the Lord, your G‑d, in the place He will choose, you shall read this Torah
before all Israel, in their ears.
Assemble the people: the men, the women, the children, and your stranger in your cities..."
This is timely: We are entering a shemitah at Rosh Hashanah.
The
Hakhel ceremony was conducted on the first day of Chol HaMoed Sukkot, Trumpets
would sound and a large wooden platform was erected. The king would sit on this
platform and all in attendance would gather around him.
The High Priest, who would present a Torah scroll
to the king The king began the reading
with the same blessings over the Torah that are recited before every Aliyah in synagogues today.
The reading consisted of the following sections from the Book of Deuteronomy:
From
the beginning of the book through Shema Yisrael (6:4);
The
second paragraph of the Shema (11:13-21);
"You
shall surely tithe" (14:22-27);
"When
you have finish tithing" (26:12-15);
The
section about appointing a king (17:14-20);
The
blessings and curses (28:1-69).
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This week the 23rd of Elul was the Yahrtzeit of Rabbi Sholomo Carlebach, Z'L. Have a taste of this spiritual genius:
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What a surprise! Thank you for the wonderful afternoon spiritual uplift! And very timely to remind us of our focus now. Yitzhak
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