Judaism |
Kislev 5, 5770 / November 22, '09 | |
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Published: 04/17/09, 1:30 PM
Shemini: Taking Actionby Rabbi Dr Raymond Apple All actions should be weighed on God's scales. Why Hold Back? Rabbi Moshe Leib of Sassov offers an amazing comment on the commentary. Why, he asks, does Moses tell Rabbi Moshe Leib understands Moses differently: "Aharon," he believes Moses was saying, "So you are diffident? Fine. That is how God made you. Diffidence, modesty, humility - they are part of the make-up God gave you. You are diffident because that is what God wants. It is far better than being too conceited and over-confident. But you have to overcome the diffidence and stride ahead and do your duty regardless, and God will be with you." To Make a Difference In modern English, there is a secondary meaning to making a difference: living in such a way that our deeds make our society better and finer, leaving behind a world that is different, however much or little, because we were there. It doesn't necessarily mean that the whole of history is changed because of us, but that we help mankind to edge closer to its goal. One way of defining that goal is to make the world a Gan Eden without the sorrow and suffering that human beings cause one another. We will get there eventually. Where Gilbert and Sullivan say, "My object all sublime I shall achieve in time," we prefer to say, "we - all of us together - shall achieve in time" - provided we all "make a difference". A Rachmonus on Uzzah Uzzah and Achyo, the sons of Avinadav, "drove the new cart" (II Samuel 6:3); this means, according to Kimchi, What did he do wrong? One view is that as a non-Levite he should not have touched the Ark. Another is that he lacked faith that, as the sages put it, "The Ark sustained those who carried it" - literally, "The Ark carried its carriers." We do know that after Uzzah's death the previous practice was restored with the Ark borne on the shoulders of the Levites (I Chronicles 15:15). David was indignant at the incident, in all probability because insufficient instructions had been given to those who handled the Ark (I Chronicles 13:11); they should have been warned that incorrect handling of holy things could result in death (Numbers 4:15). Nonetheless, we feel sorry for Uzzah. He really meant to do a good deed. Did he deserve such a terrible fate? The Biblical text must be telling us that all one's actions, even the good ones, have to be weighed in advance. Instinct isn't always the best guide. Nisan 23, 5769 / 17 April 09
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