Friday, August 19, 2016

Parshas Va'eschanan - Log Trucks and Vineyards

 ~ Thoughts on The Parsha ~
Parshas Va’eschanan

Log Trucks and Vineyards
By: Daniel Listhaus

שְׁמַע יִשְׂרָאֵל ה' אֱלֹהֵינוּ ה' אֶחָד:

“Hear, O Israel: Hashem is our God; Hashem is One.”
 -Va’eschanan 6:4

            The Shema is one of the most fundamental passukim (verses) which children are taught from a very early age. After all, the first paragraph of Shema encompasses the concept of kabalas ol malchus shamayim (literally: accepting the yoke of the Kingdom of Heaven).[1] Furthermore the Yerushalmi[2] says that all of the aseres ha’dibros (ten commandments) are hinted to throughout the entirety of Shema. There is no doubt that the Shema is core to Judaism and represents all of B’nei Yisroel purely accepting the Torah and mitzvos under Hashem’s reign. This was in fact the declaration made by the Shevatim to Yaakov avinu stating their absolute commitment to Hashem and the Torah.[3]

            The Medrash[4] states that Kriyas Shema consists of 248[5] words corresponding to the 248 limbs in the human body and Hashem guarantees that one who reads the 248 words of Shema with proper kavana (intention) will receive good health in each of one’s 248 limbs.

            The Rosh[6] cites the Medrash and sources it based on a passuk in Mishlei[7] which states, “Shamor mitzvosai v’chaya” (Keep My mitzvos and you will live). Hashem promises that if you guard His mitzvos, He will guard you. The Rosh continues to explain this concept based on the following moshol (parable) from Rebbe Shimon ben Chalafta: Imagine there are two people. One lives in Yehuda (one part of Eretz Yisroel) and has a vineyard in the Gallile (another part of Eretz Yisroel), and the other lives in the Gallile and has a vineyard in Yehuda. For many years they commuted to work until one day they bumped into each other and realized that with coordination they could work together to live more relaxing lives. If the one who lives in Yehuda could manage the vineyard there for the one living in the Gallile, and vice versa, they could save the daily time and effort of the commuting back and forth.

            This moshol serves as the source for comedian Brian Regan’s comment how he “…never understood log trucks because sometimes you’ll be out on the highway and see two big giant trucks loaded up with logs, and they pass each other on the highway... I mean, if they need logs over there... and they need them over there, you'd think a phone call would save them a whole lot of trouble” However, what is the real purpose of the moshol? Why is the moshol necessary? The concept of Hashem promising that if we guard His mitzvos He will ensure our health is easy enough to comprehend without the example. So why did Rebbe Shimon ben Chalafta feel necessary to provide a moshol for this?

            Furthermore, if one stops to think about it, the moshol itself does not seem to be parallel with the message it is trying to convey. The message is that one who reads each and every word of Shema with proper kavana will be assured good health. The converse would be that one who does not read the Shema with kavana will have no such guarantee. However in the moshol, the alternative to guarding each other’s fields was not that the fields would fall apart, rather that the same exact work would be done albeit through the extra effort of having to commute. Why give an example of people who were already both attending their vineyards? Why not instead give a case of a sort of comparative advantage scenario where one person is better at farming land but his work involves animal care and vice versa and then they offer to switch. Such an example would seemingly align better as painting the picture of someone who was doing something different before and offered to switch to do what’s right and more effective. However with the moshol of Rebbe Shimon ben Chalafta, the people are doing the same activity – maintaining vineyards and it is just a matter of location. How is that parallel to Hashem’s promise that if you keep His Torah then He will secure your health, which implies that the message is being said to someone currently not keeping the Torah and mizvos?

            Perhaps we could understand the moshol and message as follows. The Chovos Halevavos writes that there are different ways to do mitzvos. Unfortunately, we often times do mitzvos because we are used to them and they are part of our culture, but the reality is that as great as that itself is, it remains a relatively low-level of keeping Torah. The next significant level is the chovos ha’levavos – literally the obligation of the heart to feel the mitzvos and become the Torah. Perhaps this is the message that the medrash is really trying to convey and why Rebbe Shimon ben Chalafta felt it necessary to supply the specific moshol he did. The message is that just reciting Shema and mindlessly and routinely keeping the mizvos is not enough. In order to achieve the status of meriting Hashem’s promise, one has to do more than merely care for the proverbial vineyard; one has to care for the vineyard close to home and do it for the “other’s” sake, not for oneself. In other words, one has to keep the Torah and mitzvos by making it a part of one’s personal life – close to home – and do so for Hashem, not out of route or for external reasons. This is also why the halacha stresses that the Shema must be said with kavana. Merely reading the Shema is not a segulah for good health. It is the reading it with kavana and internalizing it that is comparable to guarding Hashem’s vineyard in your home court.

            May Hashem help us keep His Torah and mitzvos for the right reasons so that we could merit and experience a refuah shelaimah of ra’mach eivarim for ourselves and for all of k’lal Yisroel.


[1] Gemara Berachos
[2] Yerushalmi Berachos cited by Mishna Berurah 61:1:1
[3] See Gemara Pesachim 56a
[4] Brought in Mishna Berurah 61:3:6
[5] Really there are 245 words but the chazzan repeats the last three words on behalf of the congregation to total 248. See Mishna Berurah 61:3:6 regarding how to make up the words if not davening with a minyan.
[6] Devarim 6:4 see also Chizkuni there
[7] Mishlei 4:4

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