Parshas
Vezos Haberachah,
Succos,
and
Parshas
Beraishis
The
Heart of it All
By:
Daniel Listhaus
וְלֹא
קָם נָבִיא עוֹד בְּיִשְׂרָאֵל כְּמֹשֶׁה
אֲשֶׁר יְדָעוֹ ה'
פָּנִים
אֶל פָּנִים:
לְכָל
הָאֹתוֹת וְהַמּוֹפְתִים אֲשֶׁר שְׁלָחוֹ
ה'
לַעֲשׂוֹת
בְּאֶרֶץ מִצְרָיִם לְפַרְעֹה וּלְכָל
עֲבָדָיו וּלְכָל אַרְצוֹ:
וּלְכֹל
הַיָּד הַחֲזָקָה וּלְכֹל הַמּוֹרָא
הַגָּדוֹל אֲשֶׁר עָשָׂה מֹשֶׁה לְעֵינֵי
כָּל יִשְׂרָאֵל
וַיִּבְרָא
אֱלֹקים
אֶת הָאָדָם בְּצַלְמוֹ בְּצֶלֶם אֱלֹקים
בָּרָא אֹתוֹ זָכָר וּנְקֵבָה בָּרָא
אֹתָם
“Never
again has there arisen in Israel a prophet like Moshe, whom Hashem
had known face to face; for all the signs and wonders that Hashem
sent him to perform in the land of Egypt, against Pharaoh and all his
slaves and all his land, and for all the strong hand and for all the
great awesomeness that Moshe performed before the eyes of all
Israel.”
-Vezos
Haberachah 34:10-12
“And
G-d created man in his image, in the image of G-d He created him....”
-Beraishis
1:27
This
last passuk
(verse)
of
the Torah discusses one of the most fundamental beliefs of Judaism –
the testimony by Hashem, that Moshe was the greatest navi
(prophet)
to ever live. The Rambam
includes this in his Thirteen Principles of Faith1,
and it is paralleled by the seventh verse of Yigdal2.
However, beneath the surface, there is yet another fundamental belief
contained in this passuk.
The
Kli
Yakar3
writes
that the reason why the Torah begins with the letter “beis”
and ends with the letter “lamed”
is because these two letters are the only letters which could form
words when combining them with any of the letters of Hashem's name.
Hashem's Great Name is composed of the letters “yud”,
“hey”,
and “vuv”.
One could add a “beis”
or a “lamed”
to any of these letters and get the following words: “bee”
(in me), “bo”
(in Him), “bah”
(in Her); “lee”
(to Me), “lo”
(to Him), and “lah”
(to Her). These are the only two letters in the Aleph
Beis
with this capability.
The
Kli
Yakar continues
to explain that these permutations are very significant. Hashem says
“bee”
- the whole world is dependent on Me. We, as His creations, announce
“bo
and bah”,
declaring that the world is indeed dependent on Him4.
Also, Hashem says “lee”
- the whole universe belongs to Me; while we state “lo”
and “lah”,
that the whole universe belongs to Him.
These
two ideas are really one, and are intertwined on a deep level. The
whole world is His not just because Hashem created it, but because
the whole world is dependent on Hashem. This is the idea of yichud
Hashem – the axiom that Hashem is One. There is nothing external to
Hashem's existence. The entire universe is a part of Him because it
is completely powerless without the will of Hashem keeping it being.
This is the yesod
(foundation)
of the whole Torah. Perhaps this is further hinted to by these first
and last letters of the Torah - “lamed”
and “beis”,
which themselves form the word leiv
(heart).
Realizing and appreciating the Oneness of Hashem is the heart of the
Torah.
The
Nefesh
Hachayim5
explains
that this is why Hashem is called “Elokim”.
The word Elokim
means – Powers. This Name of Hashem refers to the fact that Hashem
is Master and Controller of all Powers. As the Nefesh
Hachayim describes,
when a man completes a building, he could walk away and the structure
will remain by itself. Hashem's creations, however, exist only
because Hashem continuously recreates them every moment. This is
something that we say and prove each day in birkas
kriyas shema:
“In His goodness He renews daily, perpetually,
the work of creation. As it says6,
'[Give thanks] to Him Who makes
the great luminaries, for His kindness endures forever.'” Chazal
say that Hashem is consistently recreating the world, as the passuk
alludes
to by saying that Hashem makes
the
great luminaries (present tense), instead of writing that Hashem made
the
great luminaries (past tense).
If
in fact the name Elokim
refers to this facet of Hashem, we must try to understand the
fundamental passuk
in
Beraishis
which describes that Hashem created man “b'tzelem
Elokim”
(in the image of Hashem [Elokim]).
What does it mean to be created “in the image of Hashem”, and why
does the passuk
specifically
use the name “Elokim”
to illustrate that man was created in the image of Hashem?
In
order to understand why the Torah specifically chose to describe man
as a “tzelem
Elokim”,
we must first realize the power which is contained within humans. The
Nefesh
Hachayim7
explains that the things which people say and think about have big
ramifications in our physical world, as well as myriads of spiritual
worlds, which we create and effect. When we say good things about
people and think Holy thoughts, we are builders. However, when we,
chas
v'shalom,
speak lashon
harah and
think bad thoughts, we do more damage than those who destroyed the
Beis
Hamikdash.
Words
are the building blocks of creation.8
Throughout Parshas
Beraishis,
every time Hashem created something during the sheishes
y'mei beraishis
(the six days of creation), it is always prefaced with, “And Hashem
said...”9.
This is also something we declare every day in davening
- “Baruch
she'amar ve'haya ha'olam”10
(Blessed
is He Who spoke, and the world came into being).
Humans
were created by Hashem to contain a balance of a guf
(body)
and a neshama
(soul).
The responsibility that comes with this is tremendous. It is our task
to ensure that the physical actions we do in this world are not ones
which will cause negative ripples in the spiritual realms. We have a
power within us which is similar to Elokim;
the
ability to create things which are dependent on us.
We have the ability to create and change myriads of worlds with our
devarim
(words)
and machshavos
(thoughts).11
The
chag
of
Succos
is very different from Yom
Kippur.
On Yom
Kippur
we strive for Holiness like a malach
(angel). We do not eat, drink, or get benefit from other physical
pleasures. Instead we spend day and night davening to Hashem,
declaring His kingship, and asking for forgiveness. Succos,
on the other hand, is z'man
simchaseinu -
a time of joy. Succos
is all about taking physical items and infusing kedusha
in
them. We sit in the succah,
shake the lulav
and esrog,
and sing of the greatness of Hashem, His Torah, and His chosen people
on simchas
Torah.
This
is why Succos
is so special, because it pinpoints and positively feeds this
uniqueness of man. It gives us a head start for the upcoming year by
allowing us to transport the intangible kedusha
into
the world, thereby uplifting the world in Holiness.
May
Hashem help us keep the closeness with Him that we achieve over this
Succos,
Shemini
Atzeres,
and Simchas
Torah
for the entire year, in order that we should maximize our power of
“tzelem
Elokim”
that is infused within us.
1This
is the seventh Ani Ma'amin
2Yigdal
could be found in the Siddur at the beginning of Shacharis.
3Devarim
34:12
4The
Kli Yakar explains that the
reason for both the masculine and feminine terminology is because of
Kabbalistic reasons.
5Sha'ar
1: Perek 2
6Tehillim
136:7
7Sha'ar
1: Perek 3
8This
concept is also alluded to in the Lashon
HaKodesh
(Biblical Hebrew Language). The Hebrew word for “word” and the
word for a “thing” are the same – “davar”.
The
reason for this is because words and things are really one and the
same, since words create things.
9See
also Avos 5:1 which mentions this and asks why Hashem
did not just create the whole world with one saying instead of ten
separate times.
10P'sukei
D'zimrah in Shacharis
11 Interestingly,
Rashi (Beraishis
1:28) writes that although
everything was created by Hashem through speech, man was actually
created with Hashem's hands – so to speak. The Gra (Gur
Aryeh Beraishis
1:27) comments that because Hashem created man with His hands, we
are much closer to Him than other creations. With this idea, perhaps
the reason Hashem created us with His hands is in order that we
should ourselves have the ability to create with our speech. Things
created with Hashem's words could not themselves create. Man
however, is much closer to Hashem and has this ability. Furthermore,
Rashi (Vezos
Haberachah 34:12) reminds us
that Moshe received the Eseres Hadibros in
his hands. Perhaps this too is symbolic that Hashem gave over a
power of speech (the dibros)
into the hands of the chachomim and
B'nei Yisroel to
interpret with s'vara (logic)
and the sh'losh esreh middos she'hatorah nidreshes ba'hen
(Thirteen rules through which
the Torah is explained) using our speech and thought.
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