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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Student Summaries of Sichot of the Roshei Yeshiva Yeshivat
Har Etzion
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Yeshivat Har Etzion invites you to join us for its Annual
Dinner
which will be held Tuesday, March 21st at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in
NYC.
Rabbi Ari Berman - Rabbinic Tribute Award
Dr. Mark and Brenda Gardenswartz - Parents of the Year
Ilana Stein and Tova Warburg Sinensky - first American alumnae
of the Stella K. Abraham Beit Midrash for Women in Migdal Oz, and
Yeshivat Har Etzion Classes of 1985 and 1986
For more information contact the NY office at etzion@att.net or 1212-732-4784
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PARASHAT
BO
SICHA
OF HARAV AHARON LICHTENSTEIN SHLIT"A
"What is This Service to You?"
Adapted by Shaul Barth
Translated by Kaeren Fish
At the end of this week's parasha, the Torah tells us about the
obligation to bring the Pesach sacrifice, and adds: "You shall tell your son, on
that day, saying: Because of this God acted for me, when I came out of Egypt"
(Shemot 13:8). The Torah makes no mention of the question that prompts
this response, nor can we know what the questioner was trying to get at. However, we do learn that part of the
commandment of the Pesach sacrifice is to convey the commandment onward and to
tell the accompanying story to one's children and future generations. The reason
for this is clear: the Torah must continue to be passed down beyond the
generation of those who left Egypt, and hence the story must be retold. It is
for this reason that the Torah omits to mention any particular situation in
which this response is elicited; rather, it is "on that day" – any regular,
normal day that may be in the future.
Earlier, however, the Torah presents a different scenario, where the
telling is prompted by a specific question: "It shall be, when your children say
to you, 'What is this service to you?' You shall say, 'It is a Pesach offering
to God...'" (Shemot 12:26-27). The Torah does not describe this question
as arising out of nowhere, without any context; rather, it arises at a specific
time: "It shall be, when you come to the land that the Lord will give you as He
promised…" (12:25). From this perspective, the situation that the Torah is
describing is familiar to us – not only from the time of Bnei
Yisrael's first entry into the land, but also from the beginnings of
modern Jewish settlement in Eretz Yisrael. The question that is posed here is as
follows: in exile, the commandments were necessary for the purposes of creating
a national identity and uniqueness that would protect us from assimilation, but
why must they still be observed now that we are in Eretz Yisrael? The question
is in essence a demand to abandon the mitzvot, because – as the
questioners see it – these are necessary only for an external reason, to create
a nation that is consolidated around something. Therefore, now that we have
returned to our homeland, the mitzvot are no longer necessary. This
approach is expressed in the famous dictum of Achad Ha'am that "More than the
Jews have kept the Shabbat, Shabbat has kept the Jews."
However, the question may also be interpreted not as a casting off and
abandonment, but rather in a less extreme – and hence, perhaps, more dangerous –
sense. The question here does not mean to annul Divine service, but rather to
question its particular form: "What is THIS service to you?" This demand is not
for uprooting and rejecting, but rather for change and adaptation to reality. In
this sense, we must understand exactly how the Torah responds to such a demand
and how we are to contend with it.
On the surface, the Torah's reply seems unintelligible, unrelated to the
question: "You shall say: It is a Pesach offering to God, Who passed over the
houses of the children of Israel in Egypt, when He struck the Egyptians and
saved our children, and the nation kneeled and prostrated themselves." Upon
closer examination, though, we find here a fundamental lesson.
The parents' answer relates to the commandment of "Pesach dorot,"
the Pesach sacrifice brought in future generations. The original Pesach
sacrifice that the Jews brought in Egypt was quite different: they took a bunch
of hyssop, spread the blood on their doorposts, took the sheep on the tenth day
of the month, etc. All of these obligations are absent from the celebration of
Pesach in later generations.
Thus, in this statement we are effectively telling our children that
there is room for innovation and change where necessary, in accordance with a
changing reality; the commandment of the Pesach sacrifice in fact symbolizes
this change. However, we must also bear in mind the final words of the verse:
"And the people kneeled and prostrated themselves." Change is essential, and the
great Torah sages throughout history have applied Halakha to the situation of
each generation. But all of this can take place only on condition that it is
undertaken with complete commitment to Halakha and its obligations, rather than
out of a desire to cast away or to submit oneself to fashionable
philosophies.
There is a tendency among parents, when questioned by their children, to
dismiss the question and to remain frozen and inflexible in their position. Yet
sometimes there is an opposite tendency to submit altogether to the spirit of
the times and to youthful impatience, leading to a shift in the very
fundamentals for the sake of making life easier. The Torah, in its answer here
to the children, attempts to indicate a middle path that we should observe in
every generation. On the one hand,
we must preserve the Torah from any attempt at uprooting commandments or
fundamental principles; on the other hand, we must be open to change in certain
points if it is truly necessary. The basis for any such decision must be the
understanding that the Torah was given to us in order for us to observe it, not
for our convenience, and any change must come from an appreciation and
internalization of the greatness and depth of the Torah, as well as an absolute
commitment to Torah and its values: "And the people kneeled and they prostrated
themselves."
(This
sicha was delivered at seuda shelishit, Shabbat Parashat Bo 5765
[2005].) |