Ba'chodesh ha'shevi'i b'echad la'chodesh yih'yeh
lachem Shabbason Zichron Teruah Mikra Kodesh (23:24)
The Gemora in Rosh Hashana (29b) points out that in Parshas Pinchas (Bamidbar
29:1), the Torah refers to Rosh Hashana as Yom Teruah – the day of blowing the
shofar – while Parshas Emor calls it Zichron Teruah – a remembrance of the
shofar blasts. The Gemora explains that Parshas Pinchas discusses a scenario
when Rosh Hashana falls out during the week and the shofar is actually sounded.
Parshas Emor, on the other hand, refers to a year in which Rosh Hashana falls on
Shabbos, on which there are no shofar blasts but only the remembrance of them.
This enactment was made due to a fear that a Jew may be unfamiliar with the
proper way to blow the shofar. To learn how to do so, he may carry it to the
house of the Rabbi, in the process violating the prohibition against carrying in
the public domain on Shabbos.
The Aruch L’Ner, Rav Yaakov Ettlinger, writes that upon examining Jewish
history, he discovered a very peculiar phenomenon. The years which were the best
for the Jewish people were all years in which Rosh Hashana fell on Shabbos.
However, he also noticed another anomaly. All of the years in which the Jews
suffered the most from attacks and persecutions were also years in which Rosh
Hashana fell on Shabbos. Why should Jewish history be so dependent on this
seemingly arbitrary association, and why it should sometimes be so beneficial
and at other times so detrimental to our nation?
Rav Ettlinger compares this phenomenon to the case of a king who had two
servants who were caught engaging in treasonous activities. At the trial, they
were both found guilty, and each was sentenced to death for attempting to rebel
against the king’s authority.
Prior to their executions, each of their wives, who also worked in the king’s
palace, approached the king to beg him to mercifully spare their beloved
husbands’ lives. Each woman argued that although her husband had indeed
committed an egregious crime, she had done no wrong. As she had faithfully
served the king and didn’t deserve to suffer the pain of losing her husband,
each woman beseeched the king to spare her husband’s life.
Because the king prided himself on his reputation as a just and fair ruler, he
listened to their arguments and considered their petitions. After some thought,
he turned to the first woman and informed her that he had accepted her request
and would spare her husband’s life. To the second woman’s chagrin, he then
announced that her husband’s sentence would stand.
Sensing their confusion over his differing verdicts to their seemingly identical
pleas, the king explained that as a merciful and benevolent ruler, he couldn’t
help but be swayed by their powerful emotional arguments and was therefore
prepared to grant their requests, which he indeed did do the first woman. Upon
looking at the face of the second woman, however, he was taken aback by the
numerous bruises that testified to the beatings she suffered at the hands of her
abusive husband. He therefore concluded that a husband who sins both against the
king and against his wife is undeserving of mercy.
Similarly, when the Day of Judgment arrives, the prosecuting angel recounts
before Hashem all of the sins that the Jewish people committed in the previous
year. Just when everything is looking bleak, the spouse of the Jewish people –
Shabbos (Bereishis Rabbah 11:8) – comes to our rescue and beseeches Hashem not
to leave her all alone without the partner enjoyed by the other days of the
week.
Even if our sins are numerous and overwhelming, Hashem may still commute our
sentence and give us another opportunity in the merit of the pleas of Shabbos.
If, however, Hashem sees that Shabbos is black-and-blue, beaten up and abused by
her beloved spouse, He feels compelled to throw the book at us. Let us resolve
to give our beloved spouse the honor which she deserves, and in that merit she
should always come to our defense.
B'chamisha asar yom la'chodesh ha'shevi'i ha'zeh Chag HaSukkos shivas yamim
l'Hashem bayom harishon Mikra Kodesh kol meleches avodah lo sa'asu (23:34-35)
Parshas Emor introduces us to the Yomim Tovim. The last festival listed
chronologically is Sukkos, although curiously, it is not described in the same
manner as all of the other holidays. Regarding each of the other Yomim Tovim,
the Torah mentions its date and then states what we are commanded to do at that
time, such as eat matzah on Pesach, and blow the shofar on Rosh Hashana.
However, when the Torah initially discusses Sukkos, it makes no mention of how
it should be celebrated, stating simply that its duration is seven days and no
work should be done on the first day. The Torah then digresses to state (23:37)
that this concludes the list of all of the Yomim Tovim, at which point it
reverts to discussing the laws of Sukkos (23:39-43) and mentions the
requirements to dwell in a sukkah and take the four species. Why is the section
discussing Sukkos split up in this peculiar manner?
Rav Menachem Tzvi Taksin suggests that the Torah is hinting to us that during
the time that the Jewish people were in the wilderness, they were not obligated
to sit in sukkos or to take the four species on Sukkos. The Torah explains
(23:43) that the purpose of dwelling in booths is in order to remember the
sukkos in which Hashem placed our ancestors after He took them out of Egypt.
According to this reasoning, there would be no purpose in building temporary
huts to remember something that they were experiencing on a daily basis.
Similarly, the command to take the four species on Sukkos is predicated on
(23:39) entering the land of Israel and gathering its produce, in which case it
wasn't applicable as long as the Jewish people were wandering in the wilderness
and hadn't yet entered Eretz Yisroel.
Rav Taksin adds that this understanding is alluded to by the fact that the Torah
initially emphasizes (23:34) that the festival of Sukkos is to be celebrated in
this seventh month - but when it repeats the mitzvos of dwelling in the sukkah
and taking the four species (23:39), it refers to them being done in "the"
seventh month. Rav Taksin explains that initially, Moshe was speaking to his
contemporaries about the Yom Tov that they would observe on the 15th day of the
seventh month of that year, and for that reason he mentioned only that the first
day is holy, as that was the primary commemoration of Sukkos in the wilderness.
He then declared that he had summarized all of the Yomim Tovim that they would
be observing, at which point he added that in the future, after they entered the
land of Israel, Sukkos would also be celebrated by sitting in booths and taking
the four species.
When this chiddush (original Torah thought) appeared in a Torah journal in 1928,
it generated quite a controversy, as several learned readers argued that it was
too novel to be relied upon without the support of earlier sources. At that
point, Rav Yisroel Veltz, the head of the Rabbinical court in Budapest who had
authored the original article in which he quoted Rav Taksin, attempted to come
to Rav Taksin's defense by citing the explanation of the Rambam (Moreh Nevuchim
3:43) that the reason for the mitzvah of taking the four species is to express
our joy at coming out of the barren wilderness to the verdant land of Israel. In
order to commemorate this, Hashem commanded us to take beautiful and fragrant
fruits which grew in great abundance in Eretz Yisroel at that time and could
easily be attained, which seems to support the claim that the mitzvah of taking
the four species did not apply in the wilderness.
However, even with the apparent support of the Rambam, skeptics persisted in
challenging Rav Taksin's chiddush, at which point Rav Veltz wrote to Rav Eliezer
Yehuda Waldenberg for his opinion on the matter. Rav Waldenberg responded by
citing additional sources to support Rav Taksin's position, including the
Abarbanel, who writes that the reason for including aravos as one of the four
species is because they were not found in Egypt, and certainly not in the
wilderness, so Hashem commanded the Jews to rejoice with them when they entered
Eretz Yisroel, where they grow in large quantities.
Regarding Rav Taksin's claim that the mitzvah of dwelling in sukkos also did not
apply in the wilderness, Rav Waldenberg cited the Mabit, who writes (Beis Elokim
Shaar HaYesodos 37) that although the Jewish people observed Pesach and Shavuos
in the wilderness, they were unable to celebrate Sukkos because they were
surrounded by the Clouds of Glory, and they were unable to fulfill their
obligations by sitting in a sukkah which rested underneath another sukkah (Sukkah
1:2). He adds that this is alluded to by the Torah's emphasis (23:43) that we
should sit in booths so that future generations should remember that Hashem
placed our ancestors in sukkos when they left Egypt, which implies that the
obligation was not incumbent immediately, but only upon future generations.
Answers to the weekly Points to Ponder are now available!
To receive the full version with answers email the author at
oalport@optonline.net.
Parsha Points to Ponder (and sources which discuss them):
1) The Mishnah in Gittin (90a) contains a dispute regarding when a man may
divorce his wife. Beis Shammai maintains that he may do so only if she commits
an immodest act, while Beis Hillel opines that he may do so even if she merely
burned his food, and Rebbi Akiva posits that he may do so even if he finds
another woman who is more attractive. According to Beis Shammai, why does the
Torah need to forbid (21:7) a Kohen to marry a divorced woman when she would be
forbidden to him regardless as a harlot? (P’nei Dovid, Har Tzvi 22:13, Derech
Sicha Vol. 2)
2) The Torah commands us (21:8) to sanctify the Kohanim and to treat them
respectfully, giving them precedence in all spiritual matters. If a Kohen and a
Yisroel ask a mohel to circumcise their sons on the same day, is there a mitzvah
to circumcise the son of the Kohen before the son of the Yisroel? (Keren Orah
Horayos 12b, Rav Shlomo Kluger quoted in Bishvilei HaParsha)
3) Can a person fulfill his obligation to count the Omer (23:15-16) by writing
that day’s count on paper? (Shu”t Rav Akiva Eiger 29-32, Shaarei Teshuvah O. C.
489:1, Shu”t Yabia Omer 4:43)
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