Chasidut על במדבר 12:13
Hakhsharat HaAvrekhim
The members of the chevraya should make sure to sit together at Shalosh Seudos, the third meal at the conclusion of the Shabbos, as was previously described in depth. The Shalosh Seudos is like the Yom Kippur of the week. The day of Yom Kippur reveals the soul, cleanses it, and heals it of its illnesses for the entire year. So too, Shalosh Seudos, the Yom Kippur of the week, purifies the soul, reveling it and all of the yearnings, aches and pains that were hidden throughout the week. In the middle of the week the soul also aspires to take off and fly, but it is weakened from the harassment of adversaries and marauders who trample it, forcing its mouth shut so its voice is not heard. In such a state no one is aware that his own soul is sick with love. And then when Shabbos comes, man leaves behind the din of the world and all of its multitude, especially at the time of Shalosh Seudos, when he enters the inner sanctum of the Kodesh HaKodashim, delivering over his whole being to the Holy One. Then all of the yearnings of the nefesh show themselves. The nefesh cries over the pain it suffered throughout the week, days and nights, sometimes with aggressive desire, calling, “draw Your servant to Your will,”231Yedid Nefesh. sometimes with terrible pain crying out from the depths, “look God how they have beat me and wounded me,232See Shir HaShirim, 5:7 bringing me so far away from you,” and crying, “God, please heal her.”233Bamidbar, 12:13
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Kedushat Levi
שלש עשרה מדות א-ל “13 Divine attributes;” let us come back to Rabbi Dov Baer’s comparison of G’d’s 13 attributes of Mercy in their various nuances and the 13 categories of valid Torah interpretations of Rabbi Yishmael, and the statement that the category of קל וחומר, logical deductions, such as inferences from a minor to a major, corresponds to the Divine attribute א-ל in our verse. This may become clearer when we recall a statement by our sages in the Talmud Baba kamma 25. The Talmud there deals with Moses’ prayer in Numbers 12,13 after his sister Miriam had been struck with tzoraat, (a punitive skin eczema). He said: א-ל נא רפא נא לה, usually translated as: “please O G’d heal her!” G’d’s answer includes the reminder that if one has behaved so badly that one’s own father has spat in one’s face, does one not deserve at least a week during which one will be ostracized from society? It follows that one deserves at least the same level of punishment when one is guilty of such behaviour against the Creator! G’d thereupon decrees seven days of exclusion of Miriam from the main body of the people. This is a classic example of the logic called קל וחומר, and it was used by G’d’s attribute א-ל to which Moses had appealed at that time.
We may expand on this theme by citing the Talmud Sanhedrin 91 where we are told that when a cure occurs as overt intervention by heaven this is comparable to the application of the exegetical tool called קל וחומר, “logic.” When someone doubted G’d’s ability to resurrect man, the doubter who admitted believing that G’d had created man, was told that if G’d had created man out of nothing, how much easier is it for Him to restore the dead to life seeing that they had already been alive once. This is another example of how the attribute of א-ל is linked to the exegetical tool called קל וחומר.
Seeing that we have stated repeatedly that it is impossible for a creature, including the most spiritually oriented one such as Moses, to truly understand the essence of the Creator, the question of how the authors of the prayers could make statements about G’d’s attributes, etc.; is obvious. The answer is equally obvious. The sages who composed the liturgy observed attributes possessed by man, i.e. G’d’s creature, and concluded that these attributes must reflect similar attributes possessed by the Creator, else where did they originate? In other words, the attributes of G’d are closely related to the use of the קל וחומר, the exegetical tool known as “logic.” It is “logical” therefore to speak of הא-ל הגדול, etc., “the great Divine power,” in our prayers, the introductory words of the עמידה, the central prayer on all three occasions that we pray communally each day. When continuing to list specific attributes of G’d, this is in the nature of describing how the Creator has practiced צמצום, “self-restraint,” for the sake of His creatures. Expressed allegorically, this “self restraint” of G’d may be compared to the hair on one’s body, a לבוש, “garment,” designed to tone down the overwhelming light emanating from G’d’s essence, something that man cannot endure, and the reason why the Israelites at Mount Sinai asked G’d to make Moses their intermediary. When acquainting Moses with 13 of His attributes in our portion, our sages have described the grand total of these attributes mentioned here as תקונא דיוקנא, “the beard and peyot, sideburns,” of the Creator.
Seeing that the list of these attributes extends [i.e. beyond the word א-ל], all the way until the words רב חסד, “abundant in the dispensation of loving kindness,” (to His people Israel) David alludes to this when he said in psalms 118,5 מן המצר קראתי י-ה ענני במרחב י-ה, “When I called upon G’d out of my distress, He answered me in the most expansive manner.”
We may expand on this theme by citing the Talmud Sanhedrin 91 where we are told that when a cure occurs as overt intervention by heaven this is comparable to the application of the exegetical tool called קל וחומר, “logic.” When someone doubted G’d’s ability to resurrect man, the doubter who admitted believing that G’d had created man, was told that if G’d had created man out of nothing, how much easier is it for Him to restore the dead to life seeing that they had already been alive once. This is another example of how the attribute of א-ל is linked to the exegetical tool called קל וחומר.
Seeing that we have stated repeatedly that it is impossible for a creature, including the most spiritually oriented one such as Moses, to truly understand the essence of the Creator, the question of how the authors of the prayers could make statements about G’d’s attributes, etc.; is obvious. The answer is equally obvious. The sages who composed the liturgy observed attributes possessed by man, i.e. G’d’s creature, and concluded that these attributes must reflect similar attributes possessed by the Creator, else where did they originate? In other words, the attributes of G’d are closely related to the use of the קל וחומר, the exegetical tool known as “logic.” It is “logical” therefore to speak of הא-ל הגדול, etc., “the great Divine power,” in our prayers, the introductory words of the עמידה, the central prayer on all three occasions that we pray communally each day. When continuing to list specific attributes of G’d, this is in the nature of describing how the Creator has practiced צמצום, “self-restraint,” for the sake of His creatures. Expressed allegorically, this “self restraint” of G’d may be compared to the hair on one’s body, a לבוש, “garment,” designed to tone down the overwhelming light emanating from G’d’s essence, something that man cannot endure, and the reason why the Israelites at Mount Sinai asked G’d to make Moses their intermediary. When acquainting Moses with 13 of His attributes in our portion, our sages have described the grand total of these attributes mentioned here as תקונא דיוקנא, “the beard and peyot, sideburns,” of the Creator.
Seeing that the list of these attributes extends [i.e. beyond the word א-ל], all the way until the words רב חסד, “abundant in the dispensation of loving kindness,” (to His people Israel) David alludes to this when he said in psalms 118,5 מן המצר קראתי י-ה ענני במרחב י-ה, “When I called upon G’d out of my distress, He answered me in the most expansive manner.”
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