Twitter

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Torah for Pesach

Torah for Pesach
Lectures and Essays for Pesach and the Omer


New Essay:
In Search of Chametz:



The Evolving Haggada 













Those who helped the Jews leave Egypt - including the righteous women and Moshe.


The political and theological significance of the plagues




The Exodus and Elusive Perfection

The Leadership Of Moshe

Shmot - a Brief Overview What Is FREEDOM

Parshat Shmot / A Sign Of Redemption

Knowledge In Exile

The Staff

Parshat Vaeira / Deserving Freedom
(Why did things need to get worse before they got better - before leaving Egypt. The Role of Am Yisrael in the Exodus)

Parshat Bo / Polemic Against Egyptian Beliefs

Parshat Bo / Transcending Time

Parshat Beshalach / Pharaoh's Responses to the Plagues

Did we Leave Egypt too Soon

Matzah of Lot

Seder Night

Shira



Pesach






Mourning of the Omer






The Law of Chadosh in the Diaspora

One or two days Yom Tov for visitors to Israel?

Chametz (not) fit for man and dog


Cleaning books for Pesach

Essays


Total Eclipse

Of Matzot and Mitzvot

Shabbat HaGadol

Collecting Straw

The Fifth Cup

Frogs

Pharaoh's Heart

Around Midnight

Time for Freedom

The First Born

Rabbi Yehuda gave them Signs

The Eleventh Plague

The Wicked Son in the Passover Haggadah

A New Book, An Old Story - Parshat Shmot

Pharaoh's Conundrum - Parshat VaEra
  
The Dignity of Mitzvot - Parshat Bo

The Long Shortcut - Parshat B'Shalach

Parashat B'shalach - Winds of Salvation

Parashat Shmot 5775 Redemption Song

Parashat Bo 5775 It’s the Children

Haggadah based on the teachings of Rav Soloveitchik

Regarding Chametz and Kitniot in Israel on Shabbat Isru Chag

Sources for 21 Pesach Shiurim:

חמץ ומצה

הלילה הזה כולו צלי

חד גדיה


המצה של לוט

אין ביעור חמץ אלא שריפה

אלו קרבנו לפני הר סיני ולא נתן לנו את התורה דייני

ארבע כוסות

פסח – הלכה, מנהג, וחומרה

חייב אדם לעסוק בהלכות הפסח כל הלילה

חישב את הקץ

חרוסת

כנגד ארבע בנים  

מַצָּה זוּ שֶׁאָנוּ אוֹכְלִים עַל שׁוּם מָה. עַל שׁוּם מה? -לֶחֶם עֹנִי

מכירת חמץ

מתחיל בגנות ומסיים בשבח

(פֶּסַח,) מַצָּה, (וּמָרוֹר)

קטנית

חג הפסח עד חצות

שיר השירים עם ברכה

ערב תבשילין, קיטניות וחמץ - הבט הלכתי ומחשבתי

רַבִּי אֶלְעָזָר בֶּן עֲזַרְיָה זכירת וסיפור יציאת מצרים




1.     Transcending Time
2.     Torah Readings for Pesach
The Evolving Haggada 
8.     Around Midnight
14.                  Tumah, Hyssop and the Korban Pesach
18.                  Sunset of the Regime - Leaving Egypt
21.  The Exodus and Elusive Perfection
22.  The Leadership Of Moshe
23.  Shmot - a Brief Overview What Is FREEDOM
24.  Parshat Shmot / A Sign Of Redemption
25.  Knowledge In Exile
26.  The Staff
27.                  Deserving Freedom
28.  Polemic Against Egyptian Beliefs
29.                  Transcending Time
30.                  Pharaoh's Responses to the Plagues
31.  Did we Leave Egypt too Soon
32.  Matzah of Lot
33.  Seder Night
34.  Shira
37.  Pesach
41.                  From Egypt to Sinai
43.  Mourning of the Omer
45.                  The Dual Aspects of Sefirat Haomer
46.                  המכות של חושך
47.                  Raising Moshe
48.                  You Say You Want a Devolution
49.  The Law of Chadosh in the Diaspora
50.  One or two days Yom Tov for visitors to Israel?
51.  Chametz (not) fit for man and dog
53.                  Cleaning books for Pesach


Essays
1.     Devolution
2.    Total Eclipse
3.     Of Matzot and Mitzvot
4.     Shabbat HaGadol
5.     Collecting Straw
6.     The Fifth Cup
7.     Frogs
8.     Pharaoh's Heart
9.     Around Midnight
10.  Time for Freedom
11.  The First Born
12.  Rabbi Yehuda gave them Signs
13.  The Eleventh Plague
14.  The Wicked Son in the Passover Haggadah
15.  A New Book, An Old Story - Parshat Shmot
16.  Pharaoh's Conundrum - Parshat VaEra
17.  The Dignity of Mitzvot - Parshat Bo
18.  The Long Shortcut - Parshat B'Shalach
19.  Parashat B'shalach - Winds of Salvation
20.  Parashat Shmot 5775 Redemption Song
21.  Parashat Bo 5775 It’s the Children
22.  Haggadah based on the teachings of Rav Soloveitchik
23.  Regarding Chametz and Kitniot in Israel on Shabbat Isru Chag




Monday, April 11, 2016

Parashat Metzorah 5776 Ignoring the Signs

Echoes of Eden
Rabbi Ari Kahn
Parashat Metzorah 5776
Ignoring the Signs

Perhaps it’s human nature: You see something on your skin you hadn’t noticed before. Has it always been there? Did it suddenly appear? You could have it checked by the doctor, but why make a fuss? You can just wait for your next regularly-scheduled visit – if there is one…

Modern man grapples with many fears. Whereas our ancestors worried about obtaining life’s basic necessities, we fear disease. They feared upheaval and calamity; we fear the disastrous results of years of excess. Some of us think we have it figured out: If you never have yourself examined, you are never sick. After all, they reason, illness is not real; it is the subjective determination of a physician. The problem with this thesis, of course, is that it is false.

The Torah speaks of a similar phenomenon, albeit in the metaphysical sphere: A lesion appears on the skin. It was not there yesterday; it should be examined. Here, though, the person who must perform the examination is not trained as a physician, he is born a kohen, because this ailment is not physical; it is a spiritual malady, or, to be more accurate, a physical expression of a spiritual condition.

The Torah describes the condition afflicting body, clothing or home in great detail: This is tzara’at. Although often translated as “leprosy,” most commentaries insist that the condition otherwise known as Hansen’s disease has nothing in common with tzara’at aside from the English translation it has been assigned. Rambam (laws of Tum’at Tzara’at chapter 16), for one, insists that the presentation of tzara’at is so different in its varied manifestations that it has nothing to do with the physical malady known as leprosy.

Tradition has generally associated the appearance of tzara’at with misspeech, be it divisive, hateful speech, slander, character assassination or even non-constructive, frivolous chatter. Thus, the kohen’s diagnosis of tzara’at is the first step along a long path of spiritual rehabilitation – but it is a step that cannot be skipped: Treatment cannot begin until the kohen has made his declaration -- unlike the physical ailment of leprosy which, if left untreated, whether a doctor pronounces a diagnosis or not, can result in death. Tzara’at is not tzara’at until it is declared so by a kohen, and is not treated until the kohen’s diagnosis is pronounced. (Rashi 14:36)

This crucial first step creates a distinct possibility for avoidance: Theoretically, a person can live in denial, hide the symptoms, and avoid altogether the “ordeal” of facing the kohen and the “treatment” that will ensue. Unfortunately, the underlying cause of the tzara’at, left untreated, can and will take its toll. Just as a person who ignores the warning signs of a physical ailment and avoids treatment will eventually face the physical consequences of neglect, so, too, the person afflicted with tzara’at who chooses to ignore the warning signs does damage to his or her soul. Ignoring the symptoms of tzara’at will not lead to physical demise, yet left unchecked, the malady festers and metastasizes, and causes pain to those around us.

The Torah teaches us to be sensitive - to minor changes in our person, our clothing, our homes, as well as to the feelings of those around us. Just as we should be sensitive to the physical health of our bodies and take note of changes, so, too, we are commanded to be sensitive to our spiritual health and to the wellbeing of our personal space, and to ask the kohen to pay a house call if any suspicious spots appear. If the kohen identifies the problem as tzara’at, the stricken individual must follow the instructions for containment and quarantine with precision, but equally importantly, he or she must correct the underlying cause of the ailment: A new diet of words and modes of conversation must take the place of the destructive, hurtful speech that brought tazara’at in its wake. The sufferer must take advantage of the period of isolation to learn to use the gift of speech to comfort and uplift those around him, to recognize the spark of the divine within others, and to allow that same spark of divinity within himself to shine.

For a more in-depth analysis see:


 Echoes of Eden


Audio and Essays Parashat Metzora:

Audio and Essays Parashat  Metzora:

New Echoes of Eden Project:

Ignoring the Signs

Audio: 

Tumah/Hyssop/Korban Pesach

Commandments as a replacement for Holiness

Iyov Yona and Eliyahu Prophets and Non-Prophets

FreeBird

Metzora




Essays:







Feeling Kinship

FreeBird

The Holy Hyssop


Sunday, April 3, 2016

Parashat Tazria 5776 Power of the People

Echoes of Eden
Rabbi Ari Kahn
Parashat Tazria 5776
Power of the People

The book of Vayikra makes a sudden shift from the world of the Mishkan to the laws of purity (taharah) and impurity (tumah). In a sense, these are two sides of the same coin: Those who encounter tumah are banished from the Mishkan; we may say that tumah is the antithesis of what the Mishkan stands for. Therefore, a person in the state of tumah must separate from the place of holiness. What is this state of impurity? Where does it come from and how is it resolved? As is the case with many technical terms, translation can only produce an approximation of the concept we call tumah. In general terms, tumah may be associated with death or quasi-death experiences. Even childbirth generates tumah: Although it is the most basic, most immediate experience of life, childbirth is part of the cycle of mortality that is part and parcel of the human experience. The newborn child will, inevitable, inescapably, suffer from the same mortality that lies at the base of all tumah.

Similarly, if not somewhat strangely, a person who suffers from living death, from the physiological manifestation of the spiritual disease known as tzaraat (often lamely translated as leprosy) is considered more profoundly impure than a person who comes into contact with actual death. The leper is sequestered, quarantined, removed completely from all three concentric rings that made up the Israelite camp. Not only is the leper completely isolated, he or she must warn one and all of the affliction, alert everyone they encounter to keep a safe distance by calling out tameh! tameh!. On the other hand, when a person dies, family members who became tameh in the course of the burial must leave the Mishkan, but the community comes to them. The mourners are not sequestered, not isolated. They are cared for, consoled and comforted, gently reintroduced into the community and, eventually, the sacred confines of the Mishkan. Not so lepers: Until they are completely healed, they remain personae non grata.

There is an unmistakable linguistic parallel that may bring this contrast into sharper focus. Describing the leper, the Torah states:

The kohen must declare him unclean. When a person has the mark of the leprous curse, his clothing must be torn, he must go without a haircut, and he must cover his head down to his lips. Tameh! Tameh! (Unclean! Unclean!) he must call out. As long as he has the mark, he shall remain unclean. Since he is unclean, he must remain alone, and his place shall be outside the camp. (Vayikra 13:44-46)

Some of the terms here are familiar to us from an earlier narrative: The sons of Aharon, Nadav and Avihu, died suddenly in the Mishkan itself, and Moshe instructs the family not to mourn:

Moshe said to Aharon and his sons, Elazar and Itamar, 'Do not go without a haircut and do not tear your vestments; otherwise you will die, bringing Divine wrath upon the entire community. As far as your brothers are concerned, let the entire family of Israel mourn for those whom God burned. (Vayikra 10:5)

Here, then, is the inverse of the leper: The leper is completely estranged from the Mishkan and all of society, while the Kohen Gadol and his sons are commanded not to leave the Mishkan. The leper must comport himself like a mourner, letting his hair grow long and tearing his clothes, while Aharons family is forbidden to show any of these outward signs of mourning.

A concise comment in the Talmud may shed light on this inverse relationship. We noted above that the leper must call out and declare to all he is tameh (spiritually impure). The simple understanding of this behavior is pragmatic: The leper suffers from a severe spiritual malady, and his condition may be highly contagious - especially according to the Talmudic opinion that connects leprosy with speaking gossip (Erachin 16b). It becomes eminently clear why this person must be removed from society. Yet the Talmud sees the lepers cry as something else altogether: The Talmud teaches that the lepers cry tameh, tameh is, in fact, a  call to anyone who hears his cries to pray for him (Shabbat 67a). The leper must ask the very people whom he may have slighted to show greatness of spirit, to forgive him, to have compassion and pray for him. The lepers plea to his community serves to teach him to value the very people he had slandered, those for whom he had shown disregard and disrespect.  

This contrasts starkly with Moshes instructions to Aharon and his remaining sons in their time of pain and mourning: The task with which they had been entrusted, the position of kohen, was not one they could walk away from. Aharon was given both the responsibility and the power to pray for the entire nation; he no longer had the luxury of private time. The Kohen Gadol is not only the representative of the people before God, he is also the servant of the people. Aharon would no longer have the luxury of time off, even to mourn his personal loss. Whereas the kohen embodies the greatness, the power and the holiness of the community, the leper is forced to beg the community to pray for him, teaching him to value his community as the first step towards reconciliation and rejoining the community.

For a more in-depth analysis see:


 Echoes of Eden