Dvar Torah for Rosh Hashanah
Based on Likutey Moharan I, 250
"Know that any type of pain and suffering is only due to lack of daat
(awareness). For anyone who has daat and knows that everything happens according
to God's plan has no suffering and feels no pain, 'for the Lord giveth and the Lord taketh
away' (Job 1:21). And even though there is suffering that must be felt... nonetheless, the
tribulations are very light and easier to accept when one is clearly aware that everything
happens according to Hashem's plan."
"If one hears the shofar blasts on Rosh Hashanah from a God-fearing religious
person, he will not be afraid of thunder all year long."
(Likutey Moharan II, 5)
The mitzvah of hearing the voice of the shofar, like all mitzvot, has innumerable
reasons. Even the bottom line of each mitzvah is "God said it, we do it," God does
want us to learn the right lessons from each so that are hearts will be open to feeling
His presence. Neither God nor we gain by our ignorance of Torah, written or oral, legal or
homiletic. It is a disservice and a disgrace, to ourselves and to Judaism, to observe the
mitzvot blindly, without considering their lessons. (Of course we have to do
them, just not unthinkingly.) But I digress.
Th voice of the shofar is many voices. It is crying and it is thunder. It is the voice
of the tzaddik, the voice of his teachings. Rosh Hashanah, the anniversary of mankind's
creation, is a day we have to respond to the angels' protest: "What is man that You
think of him?!" (Psalms 8:5). They argued against our
creation by saying that we would sin, we would be argumentative. Again we must answer
their challenge, their attempt to deny us life.
The thunder of the shofar is meant to remove the crookedness of our heart, the deceit
with which we fool others and ourselves. The crying of the shofar is our tears of regret
for having turned our backs on God, His Torah and His people for too long. The crying of
the shofar is our tears of appreciation for being Jewish; our Jewish breath, our Jewish
heartbeat, our Jewish hands; that we eat, breath and think Jewish.
The voice of the shofar is the voice of daat, the voice of the tzaddik's
teachings. The purpose of Creation, the Zohar teaches, is l'ishtamudan lei, to be
aware of Him. Each and every teaching and lesson of the tzaddik, of any tzaddik, in the
Torah or in the Prophets; in Talmud, Midrash or Zohar; or in post-Talmudic works till
today, is meant to instill in us the trepidation and exhilaration that comes with
being aware of God, with having daat.
This is the daat that precludes and eases suffering. But only the voice of the
shofar sounded by one who is "a God-fearing religious person" can bring us this
awareness. If the sound of the shofar comes from one who lacks these criteria, then we
will lack the awareness we were meant to have, the awareness that rebuts the charge of the
angels, the awareness that eases our suffering.
The voice of the shofar enables us to understand that God has a plan, that
what happens to us, as individuals, as a community, as a nation, is not, God forbid,
random. The "thunder" of bombs or personal tragedy, may God spare us, will not
frighten us away from our spiritual goals. Au contraire! If such things God
forbid occur, they will remind us of the daat of the shofar and remove the
crookedness of our hearts and move us to tears. We will acknowledge and submit to God's
plan, to His authority and rulership, as we do on Rosh Hashanah.
To you and yours, and the entire Jewish people, we at Breslov Research Institute wish tikateivu
v'teichateimu l'alter l'chaim tovim u'l'shalom (may you be written and sealed,
immediately, for a good life and peace).
agutn Shabbos!
Shabbat Shalom!
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