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From Brisk to Boston: The Sermons of Rabbi Soloveitchik

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From Brisk to Boston: The Sermons of Rabbi Soloveitchik A. Lustiger The Rav as Darshan Drush Taking a Biblical verse or verse fragment, often out of context, to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: From Brisk to Boston: The Sermons of Rabbi Soloveitchik


1
From Brisk to BostonThe Sermons of Rabbi
Soloveitchik

A. Lustiger
2
The Rav as Darshan
  • Drush Taking a Biblical verse or verse
    fragment, often out of context, to derive a moral
    or contemporary message
  • Rav has left a huge legacy in this area
  • Messages on public policy or personal behavior
    usually imparted via drush

3
Example Kol Dodi Dofek (Fate and Destiny)
  • Cannot ask why there was a Holocaust
    (theodicy)
  • Must ask what is the proper response to the
    Holocaust--gt teshuva
  • EWY HNMMW BQEYL AYH HRC TE
  • It is a time of travail for Jacob, and from it
    through it we will be saved

4
The Ravs Approach to Drush
  • Going beyond homiletic interpretation of Biblical
    verses, to homiletic interpretation of halacha
    itself.
  • Very idea contrasts with Brisker tradition
  • Halacha is normative, objective, ahistorical,
    apsychological...
  • (Mistakel Beoraiso Uvara Olmo)
  • Nothing more inscrutable than the reasons for
    individual mitzvot
  • The question why fundamentally invalid as
    applied to mitzvot
  • Why suggests what motivated him?
  • Motivation suggests that the subject has an
    unrealized need

5
The Oved Hashem (Parshas Chukas Lecture- 1973 RCA)
  • The why question is invalid.
  • The question, what does it mean to me? is both
    valid and necessary.
  • The Oved Hashem
  • ...not only discharges his duty, but enjoys,
    rejoices in and loves the mitzvah.
  • If the mitzvah does not deliver any message to
    us, avodas Hashem is unattainable.
  • We cannot experience the great bliss of
    fulfilling Divine commandments if the logos is
    shut out of that involvement.
  • We have no right to explain mitzvot we have a
    duty to interpret mitzvot. What does the mitzvah
    mean to me, how can I assimilate the mitzvah in
    my total religious consciousness?
  • Not only permissible but we are duty bound to
    raise this question.

6
Example 1 Drasha on Purim (1956)
  • Question Gemara asks Why no Hallel on Purim?
  • Gemara answers Reading of Megillah
    constitutes Hallel
  • The Rav asks If so, why doesnt reading of
    Haggadah constitute Hallel on Pesach night?
  • Gemara Hallel is recited Pesach night due to
    Gezeiras Hakasuv
  • (UKL YEY) GX DQTH LYLK OKL HYHY HZH RYH
  • Ravs Reason
  • Theme of Hallel is miraculous, supernatural (e.g.
    SWNYW HAR OYH)
  • Hallel therefore not appropriate for Purim,
  • Purim was a natural miracle.
  • Only way to give praise for natural miracle is
    to retell the event ( i.e. by reading Megillah)

7
Example 2 Drasha on Sukkot (1954)
  • Question Why must the skhakh on a Sukkah be
    penetrable to rain?
  • Ravs Reason
  • Man must be able to see stars through skhakh, to
    see a vast universe beyond his small sukkah, to
    look beyond his limited surroundings towards God.
  • Myopic man thinks that his immediate
    surroundings, his limited horizons are all that
    exist.
  • When three strangers passed Abrahams tent, he
    thought they were nomads who worshipped the dust
    of their feet could not see beyond their
    immediate surroundings.
  • Asked them to wash their feetand sit under the
    tree to consider the organic process of growth,
    and focus beyond the treetops to the heavens.

8
Example 3 Eulogy for R. Chaim Ozer Grodzenski
(1941)
  • Question Why did the Kohen Gadol wear both a
    headplate (tzitz) and a breastplate (choshen)?
  • Ravs Reason
  • The tzitz, placed on the Kohens forehead
    represents knowledge of Torah
  • The choshen, which was consulted prior to Israel
    went to war, represents decisions of national and
    political importance
  • The Kohen Gadol wore both because only one who
    has a vast knowledge of Torah is empowered to
    make decisions on public policy as well.
  • It is impossible for the heart to absorb love of
    Israel without a head which is Kodesh Lashem
    there is no ahavat yisrael without kedushat
    yisrael.

9
Example 4 Drasha on Yom Haatzmaut (1958)
  • Question Why are we allowed to ascend Mount
    Sinai and not the Temple Mount?
  • Gemara At Mount Sinai RHB WLEY HMH LBWYH
    VWMB -
  • At Mount Moriah (ZZ HRYXBH TYB LH OBMR)
    DE YDE YTXWNM TAZ
  • Ravs Reason
  • Israel did not participate in the giving of the
    Torah they slept on the night of Shavuos the
    holiness was therefore transient
  • At Mount Moriah Abraham and Isaac went through
    the Akeidah holiness is identical with
    sacrifice this holiness was permanent
  • Man, not God, is almost always the active
    participant in the endowment of holiness
  • E.g. OYNMZHW LARY DQM
  • The reason the State of Israel has experienced
    suffering and sacrifice throughout its history is
    because the State of Israel similarly involves
    holiness.

10
Example 5 Lavan and Techeilet
  • Question Why must a Tallit have many white and
    blue threads.
  • Ravs Reason
  • The white threads represent clarity,
    rationality that which is self-evident
  • The many threads of white urge us to use our
    minds for discoveries in technology, to explore
    and master nature.
  • The blue thread, the likeness of the sea and
    the heaven represents the mysteries of the human
    experience which elude understanding
  • The one thread of techeilet pertains to the
    spiritual realm, where man is humbled by the
    mystery of existence.
  • In our personal lives
  • We experience period that are rational, planned,
    and predictable (white)
  • At other times, stark and harsh reality leaves us
    shocked and humbled (blue)
  • In Jewish history
  • The Jew must mainatain his identity and religious
    loyalty under conditions of both lavan and
    techeilet
  • The durability of Jewish commitment through times
    of uncertainty is represented by the permanence
    of the techeilet dye.

11
In the Ravs words...
  • There is an educational-philosophical problem
    that has weighed heavily upon me. To contemporary
    Orthodox Jews the Torah is revealed in
    intellectual categories, in cold thought and
    logic. However, it has not merited being revealed
    in a living sensory mode, which causes both
    trembling and gladdening of the heart. They
    recognize the Torah as an idea, but they do not
    encounter it as an unmediated reality that one
    can taste, see and feel...
  • I have not fulfilled my obligation as a guide and
    teacher in Israel. I am lacking the fortitude
    that as a teacher and a Rabbi they required...
  • -Al Ahavat Hatorah Ugeulat Nefesh Hador

12
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