“RABBI’S MUSINGS (&
AMUSINGS)”
Erev Shabbos Kodesh Parshas
Tetzaveh
8 Adar 5778/February 23,
2018
Parshas Zachor
In case, you are afraid that the honor and respect conferred
upon rabbis goes to their heads, rest assured that rabbis have a built-in ‘humility
promoter’. They are called sermon snoozers. Most of them seem to sit in the
front row.
I should add that many rabbis have other humility builders as
well, which include, but are not limited to, the shul president, a bored board
of directors, and salary discussions. I personally am blessed not to know of
such humility-builders in our shul.
A rabbinical colleague related that he feels there is great
purpose served in the five-minute speech he delivers on Friday evenings,
following Kabbolas Shabbos. In his words, “either my congregants hear a nice
Torah thought based on the parsha, which they can repeat at their Shabbos
table, or they get a brief power nap, which gives them energy so that they not
fall asleep on their family during their Shabbos meal”.
It’s fascinating that everyone seems to feel tired on Friday
night during the short speech, no matter if it’s 5 p.m. during the winter, or 8
p.m. during the summer.
I remember one particular Friday night when I was speaking in
a certain shul to a relatively small crowd, and I was pretty sure that the
entire audience had dozed off. I was tempted to test it out by interjecting
some gibberish, to see if the assemblage would continue their subconscious
head-bobbing and nodding. But I wasn’t sue if one particular person was
listening, despite the fact that his eyes were closed, so I desisted.
Rabbi Zev Leff recounts that on one occasion, a congregant
approached him on Sunday morning to tell him that the rabbis’s Shabbos sermon
had kept him up all night on Motzei Shabbos.
Rabbi Leff continued that before he had a chance to start
feeling impressed with the poignancy of his own words, the man explained that
he always has a hard time falling asleep at night when he slept during the day.
The sermon had provided him with just that opportunity.
My rebbe, Rabbi Berel Wein, relates that he once had a
congregant who consistently slept through his derashos. As soon as Rabbi Wein
mounted the podium the man closed his eyes and slept until the derasha ended.
[I find it encouraging to know that even a noted and talented speaker like
Rabbi Wein has snoozers.]
Then, one Shabbos Rabbi Wein walked up at the pulpit to make
a brief announcement, and then went back to his seat. That week the man slept
through mussaf. Rabbi Wein added that the man was angry at him afterwards,
because he was convinced that he did it on purpose.
A rabbi once told me that in his experience it seems that
women seem to behave in the opposite manner during shul speeches. Through the
Mechitza, he coul tell that the women are locked in, listening to every word.
He added that he always wanted to have the women sit up front
during the derasha, while the men more comfortably dozed off behind the
mechitza.
Over time I have come to learn that not everyone who appears
to be sleeping truly is. There are individuals who listen with their eyes
closed. The majority of sleepers really want and try to listen at the beginning,
even as fatigue gets the better of them.
When they get home, if anyone at their Shabbos table asks
what the rabbi spoke about, they’ll answer “about twenty minutes” or “about the
parsha”, and then quickly change the topic.
Before the miracles of Purim occurred, the Jewish people
seemed to have slipped into a national spiritual fatigue. It wasn’t that they weren’t
serving G-d or performing the mitzvos, it was more that they were doing so on
autopilot, as a matter of obligation and emotionless rote.
The Purim miracle served to jumpstart the nation emotionally.
It reignited their collective inner spark and brought back a feeling of pride
to be the bearers of the Torah.
Shlomo Hamelech states in Shur Hashirim “I am asleep, but my
heart is awake. The voice of my beloved is knocking. Open for me my sister, my
friend, my dove, my perfect one...”
Inspiration knocks periodically, but we must be willing to
open the door to allow it in. That is accomplished by rousing ourselves from
our stupor, so that we can emotionally internalize the inspiration.
Such is what occurred at the time of Purim. It’s a holiday
that celebrates our spiritual rejuvenation and infuses every Jew with a sense
of joy and pride in being part of the Chosen Nation.
Purim doesn’t call out to us to wake up, it sweeps us off our
feet in a frenzy of joy and unity.
It’s a holiday that brings with it a spiritual awakening. Therein lies the source of its intense joy and celebration.
It’s a holiday that brings with it a spiritual awakening. Therein lies the source of its intense joy and celebration.
May we all attain it.
Shabbat
Shalom & Good Shabbos
Purim
Sameiach & Feilichen Purim,
R’ Dani and Chani Staum