Dvar Torah / Chesed Avraham – Parshas Vaeschanan

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  • #1993908
    Maivin
    Participant

    Parsha favorites of Moreinu HaRav Avraham Chaim Tanzer zt’l. Including his uplifting and edifying teachings. Ideas and values with which he raised and educated 4 generations, including lessons gleaned from his great character.

    IF AT FIRST YOU DON’T SUCCEED…
    וָאֶ תְ חַנַן אֶ ל ה’ בָעֵת הַ הִ וא לֵאמֹר
    I pleaded with Hashem at that time
    saying… (3, 23).
    A number of fundamentals of Tefilla are learned
    from this passage of Moshe’s prayer – Tefilla
    LeMoshe.
    Our Sages tell us that Moshe davened 515 times
    to be allowed to enter the land! Didn’t he know
    that Hashem had not answered him? Could
    Moshe not see that the answer was ‘no’?!
    Moshe thus taught us that if you have prayed,
    and Hashem hasn’t answered, that does not
    mean that the answer is ‘no’. It does not mean
    rejection. It could well mean that Hashem wishes
    you to Daven again. And again. And again.
    Why would Hashem want Moshe to repeat his
    Tefilla 515 times? Moshe didn’t utter the same
    Tefilla again and again, rather, he entered into a
    negotiation; each Tefilla exposed a new angle as
    if to say: Perhaps on this account I can be allowed
    in? Perhaps in a different role, I could be allowed
    in? He simply reinvented himself 515 times.
    In truth the very process of pleading with
    Hashem to grant ones’ wishes is an edifying
    process. Hashem could have rejected Moshe’s
    pleas immediately, rather than wait till after 515
    prayers. Why did He wait? Hashem knew how
    much personal growth Moshe would gain from
    this process. These Tefillos changed the world in
    ways we can’t fathom, they changed Moshe in
    ways we can’t perceive. Indeed, they changed
    much of our understanding of Tefilla itself!
    Actually, our Sages are teaching us beyond
    Prayer, they are showing an attitude that is
    important for our life’s achievements and
    dreams.
    They are teaching that no answer might just
    mean ‘not now’ – it doesn’t mean ‘no’.
    It certainly means that in life, don’t depend of
    quick results. Don’t think that if it doesn’t go
    through instantly that you should give up. On the
    contrary, if it doesn’t go through immediately –
    keep at it. Again, and again and yet again.
    Just pick yourself up off the floor, dust yourself
    off, and start again!
    Most people quit too soon… They were poised to
    succeed, but they through the towel in at the last
    moment.
    Part B of this rule is that: ‘we don’t get tired’;
    meaning, that you need to keep reinventing
    yourself with vigour – not just going through the
    motions, but with freshness, with Chidush, with
    innovation.
    Abba taught that you need to take the long view.
    One of the rules of Avodah of Tzibbur – public life
    he said was: we don’t get tired. That means we
    don’t give up. We just keep at it. Again, and again.
    The other rule of public leadership that he taught
    of course was: When you can’t achieve what you set out, don’t take it as personal rejection. ‘Our is
    not to accomplish; our is to endeavour’ – so if
    after all your efforts, it’s truly not going
    anywhere, it’s time to do something else. But
    with a smile. Moshe Rabbenu taught us this
    lesson too. Although he invested so much in his
    Tefillos, when he was finally firmly rejected, he
    simply moved on to the next thing – absolutely
    calm and confident that he had invested all that
    could be expected of him – with no absolute
    attachment to a specific outcome – just to do our
    job – our Avodah. Our endeavour and enterprise.
    The final rule, was that some people make the
    mistake of holding on too long, of not knowing
    when to quit. There is a wisdom in knowing
    when, after all, Hashem is saying ‘no’.
    These were all great skills and lessons that Abba
    z’l not only taught, but lived. He practiced these
    tenets as the operating system that would guide
    and inspire, energise and sustain 6 decades of
    visions that realised beyond his dreams, and
    many that fell by the way side – but nevertheless
    he believed that every one of them were
    experiences and lessons and even actual
    achievements on both the personal and
    communal fields.
    I pleaded with Hashem
    Rashi comments that Moshe used a nuanced
    word for Prayer, one that carries the meaning of
    ‘Chinam’ – asking for a gratuitous gift. Rashi
    explains that although great Tzadikim have
    achieved much for Hashem and for Torah in life,
    it is not their way to claim any privilege for their
    good deeds, rather, they ask Hashem to bestow
    good upon just because of His endless kindness
    to all creatures.
    A Tzadik doesn’t use his achievements as a point
    for negotiation. He doesn’t ‘trade’ on his good
    deeds.
    The Chafetz Chaim famously addressed Hashem
    and said: Ribbono Shel Olam, look what you
    have given me: You gave me the Mishna Berura,
    the Likutei Halachos, the Sefer Chafetz Chaim –
    All my famous works You gave to me. What have
    I given You in return? Nothing….
    In other words, the Chafetz Chaim taught that all
    our Mitzvos and all our Torah and Charity that we
    perform, are all gifts and opportunities that
    Hashem, in His abundant love and kindness gave
    to us. We didn’t make them happen – He did!
    That is why Moshe didn’t appeal to Hashem to
    grant his prayer as a reward for his uniquely
    outstanding contribution to Torah and to
    Mitzvos, and to Klal Yisrael. Rather he said to
    Hashem: You have granted me so much
    opportunity to make contribution to Your great
    name, to Your great nation, to Your great Torah.
    May You please continue this kindliness, and
    allow me in Your goodness to enter the land, and
    to make an additional contribution there.
    Abba z’l lived taught that although Hashem
    surrounds us with kindness and generosity all
    day every day; each breath we inhale is a
    separate gift. Each morsel we swallow. He
    grants our basic needs and much luxury as well.
    The greatest gifts He gives, however, are the gifts
    of contribution. Abba truly felt that chiefest of all
    Hashem’s kindnesses to him, was to be granted
    the opportunity to serve Hashem through His
    Torah, and to be privileged to be one of those
    who uplift others and be of service to His People.

    #1994102
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    It also teaches us the love that Moshe Rabbenu had for EY to be mekayem its mitzvos where he did not stop davening until 515 tefilos.

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