Parshas Tzav
A Segulah From Eliyahu To Protect From Evil Thoughts
These divrei Torah were adapted from the hashkafa portion of Rabbi
Yissocher Frand's Weekly Portion Torah Tapes: Tape # 675, Going Away for
Pesach and Bedikas Chometz. Good Shabbos!
I saw the following thought in the Sefer Tiferes Torah from Rav Shimshon
Dovid Pinkus, of Blessed Memory, who was tragically killed in a car
accident on the 11th of Nissan. I share this thought in honor of his
Yahrtzeit.
The Shalo"h Hakodosh (Shaar haOsiyos 30) writes in the name of Rav Moshe
Cordevero (1522-1570) that he once heard from an elderly Jew that an
effective method (segulah) for removing forbidden thoughts from one's mind
is to repeat the following pasuk [verse] over and over: "The fire on the
altar shall be kept burning on it, it shall not be extinguished." [Vayikra
6:6]. The Shalo"h comments that he is sure that the "elderly Jew" who Rav
Moshe Cordevero heard this from was the prophet, Eliyahu [Elijah]. However,
due to Rav Cordevero's great modesty, he did not want to reveal the true
source, since that would have revealed that he was worthy of conversing
with Eliyahu.
However, what does this pasuk have to do with forbidden thoughts?
Rav Pinkus addresses this question by reference to a comment of Rabbeinu
Bechayeh on this week's parsha. Rabbeinu Bechayeh cites the pasuk in
Proverbs: "Let your feet be scarce in your fellow's house, lest he be
satiated with you and come to hate you." [Mishlei 25:17] This is a poetic
way of expressing the often heard idea that it is unwise to wear out one's
welcome in his friend's home. Too much of a good thing is not good. Even
the best of friends can get tired of each other if they are always in each
other's houses. The Rabbeinu Bechayeh then quotes a Gemara [Chagiga 7a]
which says that this pasuk refers to the Beis HaMikdash. The intent is that
one should make himself scarce in the Beis HaMikdash, meaning that he
should not have a frequent need to bring Sin Offerings and Guilt Offerings
(which may only be brought in the Beis HaMikdash). However, the Gemara
says, that it is permissible to bring Olah offerings as often as a person
wants citing the pasuk in Tehillim: "I will enter Your House with burnt
offerings; I will fulfill to You my vows." [Tehillim 66:13]
Rabbeinu Bechaye explains the difference between a Sin Offering and an
Olah offering. The sin offering (korban chatas) comes from [unintentional}
violation of prohibited actions. A korban olah, on the other hand, atones
for improper thoughts. Improper thoughts, Rabbeinu Bechaye explains, is
something that a person can never totally escape from. Unfortunately, they
are very prevalent and they are more prevalent at night than during the
daytime. It is for this reason that the Olah offerings are to burn the
entire night. Night time is the time when people especially need atonement
from improper thoughts. About this it is written: "Command Aaron and his
sons, saying: This is the law of the burnt-offering: It is the
burnt-offering that stays on the flame, on the altar, all night until the
morning, and the fire of the Altar should be kept aflame on it." [Vayikra
6:2]
Now we know what Eliyahu meant when he told Rav Moshe Cordevero that the
segulah for ridding oneself of evil thoughts is recitation of the pasuk at
the end of the chapter on burnt offerings: "The fire on the altar shall be
kept burning on it, it shall not be extinguished." [Vayikra 6:6]
Just as we say that one who recites the pasukim associated with the
sacrifices is credited (nowadays) as if he brought that offering, so too if
one recites this pasuk from the section of the Korban Olah (burnt
offering), it is as if he brought a burnt offering and he thereby receives
the segulah associated with the Korban Olah namely protection from evil
thoughts.
Matzah: The Bread of Affiction and the Bread of Redemption
The reasons given for eating matzah on the night of the seder are somewhat
paradoxical. On the one hand matzah is the bread of affliction that our
fathers ate when they were slaves in Egypt (i.e. the poor slaves did not
even have time to let their dough rise due to the oppression of their cruel
taskmasters.) On the other hand, we eat matzah because their deliverance
came upon them so suddenly that their dough did not even have time to rise
before they had to hurry out of Egypt.
The Ramban in his Torah Commentary [Devorim 16:3] points out this dual
nature of matzah's symbolism. It is the bread which symbolizes the
enslavement and it is the bread which symbolizes the redemption.
This is rather strange. Imagine, for 200+ years the slaves were thinking
"Oh, what would I give for a piece of soft bread!" For centuries they were
salivating over the luscious white bread the Egyptian taskmasters were
eating. Bread would have been the appropriate thing to symbolize the
redemption! Such was apparently not the Divine Plan. The Almighty said "The
same matzah that you ate as a slave, now you eat as a free person."
The message in this is that in order to be a free person, we do not need
anything. If a person specifically needs "bread" as opposed to matzah to
consider himself free, then he is not a free person. A person who NEEDS the
physical pleasure of bread to give him his sense of freedom is not really
free. Rather, he is a slave to his physical needs.
The Master of the Universe emphasizes that freedom has nothing to do with
externals. It is entirely a phenomenon of one's internal awareness. I can
eat the same piece of matzah that I ate as a slave and also eat it now as a
free person. This is true freedom.
A friend of mine in the rabbinate once posed the following question to a
group of teenagers: What would you prefer to be poor and happy or rich
and unhappy? The unanimous response was to be rich and unhappy. They,
unfortunately, did not even understand the question. They could not
comprehend why they might be unhappy if they were rich.
The truth of the matter is that the less encumbered one is, the less one
needs, the more happy he can be. That is why the bread of redemption could
not be rye bread or white bread. It had to be the same matzah they ate as
slaves.
This idea is not only taught at the time of Pesach, it is characteristic
of Succos as well. Succos, of all the Festivals, is called "The Time of Our
Joy" (Zman Simchaseinu). On Succos, we leave the comforts of our home and
move into a flimsy little hut. Furthermore, the libation one brings on
Succos is not wine (as is the case with all other libations) but is water.
To be happy, a person should not need to retire to a flimsy Succah. To be
happy, a person should go out and have wine libations as we do the entire
year. The answer is the same. In order to achieve Simcha [joy], the Torah
is demonstrating that a person can go out into the flimsy Succah. He does
not need the comforts of his home. True happiness does not need externals.
It does not even need wine water will do just fine!
In the prayer after the Priestly Blessing that we say on the holidays, we
say "May it be Your Will... that You give me and all the souls of my
household our food and sustenance generously and not sparsely ...from
beneath Your generous Hand, just as you gave a portion of bread to eat and
clothing to wear to our father Jacob...". There seems to be something wrong
with this prayer. We are asking for generous sustenance ... like that
provided to Yaakov who was given bread to eat and the shirt on his back to
wear? Why don't we ask for sustenance like that given to Shlomo HaMelech
[King Solomon]?
The answer is that indeed, what Yaakov had was generous sustenance. Yaakov
was 100 percent satisfied with the material blessings he was given. This is
all he ever asked for [Bereshis 28:20] and he was happy with it. Generous
sustenance (parnasa b'revach) is never related to the amount. It is based
on what satisfies the person. This is what we pray for that we should be
as free as Yaakov Avinu was free, namely by being happy with a piece of
bread to eat and a single item of clothing to wear.
May we all have a Happy and Kosher Pesach.
This write-up is adapted from the hashkafa portion of Rabbi Yissocher
Frand's Commuter Chavrusah Torah Tapes on the weekly Torah Portion. The
halachic topics covered for the current week's portion in this series are:
Tape # 004 - When to Make the Bracha of HaGomel
Tape # 049 - Purim: Shalach Manos
Tape # 092 - Non-Kosher Products: The Dilemma of the Jewish Merchant
Tape # 140 - Pesach: The Mitzvah of Daled Kosos
Tape # 187 - Pesach: Does Maror Require a K'zayis?
Tape # 233 - Pesach: Women and Daled Kosos
Tape # 277 - Pesach: The Mitzvah of Heseiba
Tape # 323 - Pesach: Eating Matzo: How Fast?
Tape # 367 - Pesach: Afikomen After Chatzos
Tape # 411 - Pesach: Netilas Yodayim for Karpas & Wet Fruit
Tape # 455 - Pesach: Daled Kosos: Another Look
Tape # 499 - Davening Quietly
Tape # 543 - Birchas Hagomel, Airplane Travel & Other Issues
Tape # 587 - Afikomen Revisited
Tape # 631 - Bleeding Gums- More Than a Periodontal Problem
Tape # 675 - Going Away for Pesach and Bedikas Chometz
Tape # 719 - The Importance of Shabbos Clothes
Tape # 763 - Eating Matzo When Ill
Tape # 807 Who Says Haggadah in Your House? Hallel in Shul? Etc.
Tape # 851 Proper Attire for Davening
Tape # 895 - Birchas HaGomel - More Insights
Tape # 939 - Pesach: Gefilte Fish, Chrain and Charoses?
Tapes or a complete catalogue can be ordered from the Yad Yechiel Institute,
PO Box 511, Owings Mills MD 21117-0511. Call (410) 358-0416 or e-mail
tapes@yadyechiel.org or visit http://www.yadyechiel.org/ for further
information.
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