QUESTIONS AND COMMENTARY ON PARASHAT VA'ETCHANNAN
1. Hear, O Israel!
The LORD is our God, the LORD alone. You shall love the LORD your God with all
your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. Take to heart these
instructions with which I charge you this day. Impress them upon your children.
Recite them when you stay at home and when you are away, when you lie down and
when you get up. Bind them as a sign on your hand and let them serve as a
symbol on your forehead; inscribe them on the doorposts of your house and on
your gates. (Deuteronomy 6:4-9)
What is the connection between declaring our allegiance to
God through the words of the Shema and teaching words of Torah to our children?
How important is this mitzva? Are we
only responsible for teaching our own children Torah?
Rabbi Sobel
The concept of monotheism is at the heart of our faith and
is the foundational principle on which the Torah rests. When we recite the
words of the Shema, we bear testimony to the fact that there is only one God
and take the yoke of his Kingship upon ourselves. To worship and serve other
gods is a chillul Hashem (a desecration of the Lord's
Name) and a violation of the covenant God made with our ancestors. Tisha B'Av
reminds us of the serious consequences of idolatry, for on account of this sin
in year 586 B.C.E, the first Temple
was destroyed and our people went into exile (b. Yoma 4b).
But how is the sin of idolatry connected to the commandment
to teach our children the Torah? Commenting on this question the Zohar writes:
A man must teach his children
Torah, as it is written, "and you will teach them diligently to the children";
and if he does not teach them Torah and mitzvot,
it is as if he had made a graven image for him, and his in violation of "you
shall not make a graven image," etc.
By not teaching our children the way of Torah, we increase
the odds that they will follow false gods and commit sins that are tantamount
to idolatry like sexual immorality and bloodshed. The Torah and Brit Hadasha
are the best safeguards to ensure against these transgressions that led to our
first exile.
In addition, by raising our children apart from the wisdom
and direction of God's Word, we turn our children into idols, i.e. objects of
worship. By making our kids the center of our lives instead of God and God's
Word, we wind up worshipping our children instead of our Creator. Many of us
are all too familiar with well meaning parents who idolize their children,
worship the ground they walk on, and who place their children's wishes over the
directly revealed will of God found in the Torah and Brit Hadasha. As a new
parent, I recognize how easy it is to fall into this trap. We must be diligent to
guard against it.
The importance and value of teaching Torah to our children
cannot be overstated. Abraham is considered one of the first great heroes of
the Hebrew Bible and is even given the distinct honor of being called "the
friend of God" (Isaiah 41:8, James 2:23). But why was Abraham considered so
great and precious in God's sight? The
Torah in part answers this question for us when it states:
For I have known him (singled him out), in order that he may
command his children and his household after him, that they keep the way of the
LORD, to do righteousness and justice, that the LORD may bring to Abraham what
He has spoken to him.
Genesis 18:19
Thus, Abraham was considered praiseworthy in the sight of God
and was granted the privilege of being "known" and "singled out" by God because
the Lord knew that he would be diligent in teaching his children the way of
"righteousness and justice." If we aspire to be a faithful friend and servant
of God like our father Abraham, we should make it our primary goal in life to
teach our children the way of Torah and Messiah.
2. The first Shabbat after Tisha
B'Av is called Shabbat Nachamu. The special name for this
Shabbat is derived from the opening words of this week's haftara - Isaiah 40:1-26. What does the Hebrew word nachamu mean and why is this haftara always read after Tisha B'Av?
Rabbi Kaplan
This
week's haftara begins with the
resounding phrase nachamu, nachamu ammi "Comfort, o comfort, my people" (Isaiah 40:1). These words of
comfort and hope were spoken by God through the prophet at the end of Judah's exile in Babylon (ca. 538 BCE). This double nachamu (a plural imperative form of the root nun, chet, mem) is said in response to Daughter
Zion's plea that there is no one to comfort her (see Lamentations 1:16, 17, 21) after her children have been taken into
captivity. Daughter Zion's plea is read on Tisha B'Av as a part of the
reading of Lamentations (Eicha). Thus
the reading of these words from Isaiah 40 becomes God's annual response to the
grief and mourning we expressed through our fasting and prayer on Tisha B'Av earlier
in the week.
As
there were three special haftarot in
the weeks leading up to Tisha B'av (known as the "Three of Admonition" telata' de-puranuta'), so the reading of
Isaiah 40 opens a cycle of seven Sabbaths of consolation or comfort (nechemta') on which haftarot taken from the
later portion of the book of Isaiah (chapters 40-66) are read. This
cycle of prophecies of comfort and consolation invites us, like it invited our exiled
ancestors to a renewed life of faithfulness to God, Torah, and Messiah as well
as commitment to the Jewish people. At the core of this renewed life is the
story of redemption from Egypt, from Babylon, and from sin and death. As Isaiah 40:10-11
invites us,
Behold, the Lord GOD comes in might and
his arm wins triumph for him. See, his reward is with him, his recompense
before him. Like a shepherd he pastures his flock; he gathers the lambs in his
arms and carries them in his bosom. Gently he drives the mother sheep.
This
message of consolation for Daughter Zion/Jerusalem and her children, the Jewish
people, stands at the heart of the Brit
Chadasha and the message of Yeshua.
In his teaching on Torah, Yeshua says, "Blessed are they that mourn, for they
shall be comforted" (Matthew 5:4). Likewise before Yeshua's departure, he
promises to send a Comforter who is the Ruach HaQodesh (John 14:16-26). Interestingly the word for Comforter comes
from the same root (parakaleo) as the
word used to translate nachamu in the
Septuagint (the common name for a series of Greek translations of the
Tanakh).
Yeshua's
shaliach (emissary), Shaul, also
understood God's work of comfort as being central to the besora (good news). He writes in the opening of his second letter
to the messianic community in Corinth:
Blessed be God, even the Father of our
Lord, Yeshua the Messiah, the Father of mercies, and the God of all comfort;
who comforts us in all our tribulation that we may be able to comfort them who
are in any trouble, by the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by
God. For as the sufferings of Messiah abound in us, so our consolation is
abundant through Messiah. If we are being afflicted, it is for your consolation
and salvation. If we are being comforted, it is for your consolation, which you
experience when you patiently endure the same sufferings that we are also
suffering. Our hope for you is unshaken, knowing, that as you are partakers of
our sufferings, so shall you be also of our consolation.
2 Corinthians 1:3-7