פרשת
נצבים
&
ראש
השנה
Parsha
Stumpers and Something to Think About...
- At the end of parshas Nitzavim, Hashem tells us: הַחַיִּים וְהַמָּוֶת נָתַתִּי לְפָנֶיךָ, הַבְּרָכָה וְהַקְּלָלָה; וּבָחַרְתָּ בַּחַיִּים--לְמַעַן תִּחְיֶה, אַתָּה וְזַרְעֶךָ - “I have placed life and death before you, blessing and curse; and you shall choose life....”
A
few questions should immediately come to mind:
a.
Chazal
teach us that a “nesinah”
(a
“giving”) is shaveh
perutah
(value of a perutah
coin). In order for there to be two equal things that Hashem is
giving
before us, it must therefore be that they are both “valuable” (at
least in our eyes). Last time I checked, though, Death's &
Cursing's popularity was quite down. How could we understand that it
is a “nesinah”?
b.
Also, if this is our big choice of bechirah,
isn't it a bit unfair to word the choice as a choice between life and
blessing versus death and curse? It seems pretty obvious which one to
choose. Shouldn't a real bechirah
be
between two equal options?
c.
Being that the choice seems so obvious and clear, why is Hashem
telling us which one to choose, as He says, “and you shall choose
life”? And if it is not so obvious, why is He 'cheating' – so to
speak?
- Rashi (30:19) writes that “Hashem tells us to look at the sun, which obeys Hashem command perfectly – it rises and sets every day at the right time, even though it will not receive any reward for doing so. Therefore, certainly we who will get reward for listening to Hashem should do so...” How cold we understand this Rashi? There is a very simple pircha with this kal v'chomer that the sun is an inanimate object with no ability to think or decide, nor does it have any nesyonos to stop it. So how could it be so obvious that we should be expected to obey Hashem as well as the sun?
- We know that a person's parnasah is fixed on Rosh Hashanah. Which three expenses are not included in this equation?
- Why is it that two days of Rosh Hashanah are kept even in Eretz Yisroel, whereas other yomim tovim are celebrated there for only one day?
- At the end of every slichos in the Tefillah of Mi She'anah we say, “Mi she'anah l'avraham avinu b'har ha'moriyah hu ya'a'nei'nu” - "He Who answered Avraham our father on Har HaMoriyah, may He answer us.” What, though, was Avraham's tefillah on Har HaMoriah?
- Why are we allowed to eat honey? Usually, if an animal/creature is not kosher, then its products are not either kosher. A bee is not kosher, so why is its' honey?
No comments:
Post a Comment