
Parshat
Ki Tavo
September 12th-13th, 2003
16 Elul, 5763
Let’s say you walk out to get your mail, and beneath the normal
dispiriting heap of bills and solicitations, you notice an envelope
from…the White House. It says on the front, "Personal Message…Urgent."
Let’s suppose for a moment that it really IS a personal message to you
from the President of the United States (not merely some form letter),
composed on official stationary in the hand of the Commander in Chief
himself.
I bet you’d sit down immediately--perhaps even before pouring yourself
another cup of coffee--, and read the letter with the utmost attention (if
not with fear and trembling), carefully considering every single word and
phrase contained therein. [Regardless of your own political persuasion, or
whether you support all the policies of this particular President…and even
if you’ve been known to snicker at the way he sometimes garbles simple
sentences.] You’d most likely read it through once, and then go back and
read it a second time (with coffee). And what if you found that in this
letter, the President of the United States is summoning YOU to carry out
an important mission involving national security, something genuinely
serious, and that He is asking for your personal help NOW, today?
I think most people would jump (or at least stumble) to attention, ready
and eager to contribute their efforts in the present hour of pressing
need. In fact, they’d probably feel flattered that they had been singled
out to help on such a weighty matter.
Okay, if you’re still not convinced, imagine the same letter arrives from
some other important (and benevolent) authority figure of your own choice,
summoning you to a special assignment, NOW, TODAY. There’s gotta be
somebody each of us would listen to…
Which brings me to my point. (" ‘Bout time, Rabbi," I can hear my inner
critic say, in classic Savannah drawl.)
Each of us DOES HAVE a missive, addressed personally (and lovingly) to
us…from the Master of the World, the Creator of Heaven and Earth, the real
Commander in Chief. This message calls each of us, individually, to the
most crucial (and cosmic) assignment we could possible imagine: to make
ourselves (and all of Creation) holy. It must be done NOW, Today. The
"letter" is our Torah.
The Torah is not ancient (read, archaic) history. The Torah is here and
now (or, hear and now!). It is present tense…it calls to us today. If you
don't take my word for it--and I won’t blame you if you don’t--at least
lend your ear to Moshe, our teacher, in this week’s portion.
"This day, Hashem, your G-d, commands you to perform these decrees and the
statutes, and you shall observe and perform them with all your
heart and with all your soul." (26, 16; my
emphasis)
What did Moshe mean by telling the Jewish people that Hashem had commanded
them "this day" to perform the mitzvos of the Torah? Moshe was speaking at
the very end of his life (his last hours, really), as the Jewish people
readied themselves to enter the Land of Israel, decades after the Law had
been given. G-d had commanded the Jewish people to keep the Torah 40 years
previously, and Moshe had faithfully taught them the laws in all their
detail during the travels in the Wilderness. This day?
Rashi cites a
famous Midrash to explain what Moshe had in mind. (And let’s teach these
words diligently unto ourselves, now and forever after.) "Every day, let
them [the commandments] be new in your eyes, as if you were commanded
regarding them TODAY."
(Interestingly, the wording of the actual text of Midrash Tanchuma is
slightly different: "Every day, let the Torah be beloved to you, as if you
received it from Mt. Sinai TODAY.")
In fact, there is another Midrash (also cited by Rashi), that comes to
explicate a similar verse from the Shema: "And these words which I command
you this day shall be upon thy heart…" (6, 6) Why does Moshe say, "this
day?" Rashi writes: "Let them [the words of Torah] not be in your eyes
like an antiquated edict, to which nobody pays attention, but like a new
one that everyone runs to read…"
The Torah is not some old solicitation. We should see it as a NEW set of
assignments and responsibilities, a NEW book of instructions…each and
every day. The mission is, indeed, urgent.
Rambam (Maimonidies)
famously writes that a person should imagine the whole world as evenly
balanced between merits and transgressions. Your next mitzvah is needed to
tip the balance and redeem the whole world! (Not to pressure you or
anything…)
So, it is not enough just to study Torah…though that is a tremendously
great achievement. (Every last word.) We are called upon to learn it with
the same enthusiasm (and sense of immediate obligation) we would give to
perusing that personal presidential letter in our mailbox. We must see the
Torah as NEW every day, we must accept the commandments upon ourselves
anew each and every day. The Torah is a personal message from G-d to each
one of us. Given when? TODAY.
Though this concept is true all the time, it is especially apropos in this
sacred month of Elul, as we approach the Days of Awe. After all, this is
the season dedicated to teshuva, to self-transformation, when the shofar
blast has the power to wake us out of the spiritual slumber in which we
spend most of our days (even with all that coffee). We are approaching a
NEW year, a time to pave a new (and improved) path in our observance of
Torah, and our commitment to come closer to G-d. We can become new people.
This is what teshuva ("repentance") really means.
An awesome task, yes, but we should never forget that Hashem wants each
and every one of us to succeed on Rosh Hashanah, and to succeed in
becoming a new person in the New Year ahead. He is (always) ready to give
us Divine help in purifying ourselves…but we have to show we’re interested
in going that route. We have to make the effort to turn back to Him, to
approach the Torah--and its sacred commandments--with a sense of
enthusiasm and a new spirit. There’s no better time to start than…TODAY.
Don’t bother checking your mailbox. The message is right here:
"This day, Hashem, your G-d, commands you to perform these decrees and the
statutes, and you shall observe and perform them with all your
heart and with all
your soul."
GOOD SHABBOS.
My e-mail address is yosefe@comcast.net
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Rabbi Yosef
Edelstein, Savannah Kollel. Phone:
912-351-0469; fax: 354-9923
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