Parshas Zos Habracha
Success is a Lifelong Effort
By Rabbi Pinchas Avruch
Our liturgy declares the holiday of Succos to be the "z'man simchaseinu",
the Time of our Gladness. It is readily understood why Pesach is called the
Time of our Freedom and Shavuos is the Time of Receiving the Torah. Our
Sages offer numerous interpretations of the designation given Succos. One of
the more common explanations is the climactic role of Succos and Simchas
Torah in the Tishrei holiday season. We have devoted the previous two weeks
to the recognition of G-d's dominion over the entirety of creation on Rosh
Hashanah, the introspection and self-correction of the Ten Days of
Repentance and the cleansing and rededication to G-d's way on Yom Kippur. We
now enter Succos, the opportunity to focus on the basic blessings with which
G-d showers us daily. We are elated in our recognition and appreciation of
both His protection, as demonstrated by our leaving our "secure" homes for
unfortified, temporary Succah booths, and his gift of water, which is the
focus of the Simchas Beis HaSho'evah (the Celebration of the Drawing of
Water, a service that was practiced in the Bais HaMikdash/Holy Temple in
Jerusalem, which is commemorated on the second day of Succos), the special
Hoshanah Rabah supplications on the seventh day of Succos, and the Prayer
for Rain on Shmini Atzeres. One who has truly grown closer to G-d through
the reflective process of Rosh Hashanah/Yom Kippur possesses the faith to
experience pure joy in the realization of G-d's love demonstrated in these
simple, yet most essential, gifts.
The pinnacle of our ecstasy is our celebration of the Divine gift which
continues to define us as a nation, the Torah. Simchas Torah, as part of the
Shmini Atzeres celebration, is actually a holiday separate from Succos, with
no species to wave, no Succah to sit in. We are left with one focus: the
Torah remains as G-d's revelation of His commitment to the Jewish people and
our guidebook in how to express our commitment to Him. We celebrate that
each of us has a share in the Torah, and it is through the maximization of
the potential of that share that we forge a stronger bond with our Creator.
Yet, it is at this moment when we are flying highest that the Torah sends us
a sobering, grounding message not to take all of this potential energy for
granted. The highlight of the Simchas Torah morning service is the
completion of the Five Books of Moses with the reading of the final two
chapters of Devarim/Deuteronomy and the immediate launching of the new cycle
of Torah reading with the first 34 verses of Beraishis/Genesis. The closing
of Devarim is the final events of the final day of Moshe's life: his
blessing of the Jewish people and his death and mourning. "So Moshe,
servant of G-d, died there in the Land of Moav..." (34:5) This is the first
and only time that Moshe is called the "servant of G-d". In the first verse
of the portion he is called a "man of G-d". For forty years, throughout the
last four books of the Bible, Moshe is the bearer of the word of G-d and its
teacher to the Children of Israel. A few verses later (10) the Torah itself
testifies that "Never again has there risen in Israel a prophet like Moshe,
whom G-d had known face to face." Moshe had a familiarity with G-d, an
ability to request "an audience", that no other prophet has ever enjoyed.
Why is he now first called G-d's servant?
Rabbeinu Bachya (1263-1340; author of Biblical commentary containing four
modes of interpretation: plain meaning of the text, and midrashic,
philosophical and kabbalistic exegesis) explains that the term servant is
really most appropriate, since a servant accompanies his master into the
innermost chambers of the residence and is always in his presence. But the
Medrash on Psalms explains that G-d never calls the righteous "holy" until
their deaths, because throughout their time in this world they are hounded
by their Yetzer Hara (evil inclination) and G-d does not trust them until
they die.
Moshe Rabbeinu, our teacher Moshe, the mortal who spent forty days and
nights on Mount Sinai without food or drink to receive the Torah for the
Jewish people, who time and time again beseeched G-d on the people's behalf,
who had to wear a veil to shield the public from the radiance of his face
following his meeting with G-d, who spent the last five weeks of his life,
the entire Book of Devarim, trying to cajole the Jewish nation to fortify
itself in the service of G-d, who moments earlier was called "a man of
G-d"...G-d did not trust him to be called a true "servant of G-d" until
after his demise, until after he could positively claim victory in his
lifelong battle with his evil inclination. Who are we to be sure of our
footing as we climb our way to higher heights in our relationship with the
Almighty?
It has been a wonderful season of growth throughout these past weeks. As we
head into the final days, as the z'man simchaseinu comes to a thunderous
climax with our final days in the Succah, our prayers for our simple life
source called water, our celebration of our share in the spiritual life
source called the Torah, let us capture the energy of these days to catapult
us to soar ever higher as true "servants" of G-d.
Have a good Yom Tov.
Copyright © 2001 by Rabbi Pinchas Avruch and Project Genesis, Inc.
Kol HaKollel is a publication of the Milwaukee Kollel Center for Jewish
Studies 5007 West Keefe Avenue; Milwaukee, Wisconsin; 414-447-7999