Friday, 24 November 2017

Miller's Musings Parshas Vayeitzei: Dont Look....Up!



בס''ד





Perhaps the most well-known dream in history, the vision Yaakov had of the Angels ascending and descending the celestial ladder is one that equally inspires and perplexes.  The meaning behind what Yaakov witnessed is the topic of much discussion and conjecture, but I would like to focus here in particular on why a ladder was chosen as the means by which these divine beings rose heavenwards.



The genetic makeup and unique attributes of our nation, each find their genesis in those acts and qualities that our forefathers exhibited, which established them as the foundation of all their future generations.  Whether it be Avrohom’s self-sacrifice for G-d, or Yitzchok’s total submission to Hashem’s will, these became part of our nation’s DNA.  Yaakov is described as the Pillar of Torah, imbuing us with an innate bond with the Torah and connection to its ultimate truth.  It is difficult though to grasp how someone who worked for twenty years with Lovon and who, according to the Medrash, was only able to say Tehillim in that time, could still be accorded the moniker of the Pillar of Torah.  Surely this is not a befitting title for someone who had time only to say a few Tehillim each day!  The answer, explains Reb Elyashiv zt’l, is that Yaakov’s distinction in this area was not judged by the hours that he spent learning, but by whether he used that time that was available for Torah.  He could well have said “What worth is there to such a miniscule amount of learning!”, just as one may look up a ladder and say “There is no point in climbing the first rung when there is such a distance to the summit!”  This was the message the ladder conveyed.  Our job is not to concern ourselves with reaching the top, our job is to take one rung at a time and appreciate the value of every single step upwards that we take.



Aspiring to greatness is the first component needed to achieve it.  But along the way there is a great danger of becoming daunted and overwhelmed by the magnitude of the job that lies ahead.  It is at those moments that we must remind ourselves where are focus must be; on the next rung above us, and no higher than that.  Instead of trying to instantaneously achieve impossible levels, far above our current status, we must look for where our next small, manageable step could be taken and then fix ourselves solely on its attainment.  Accomplishing it may not be as glamorous as an overnight transformation, but it is the only way to ensure that the peak of our potential will ultimately be reached.



*May this Shabbos lift us one step closer towards our goals*



לעילוי נשמת לאה בת אברהם 

לעילוי נשמת שרה יעל בת גרשון

Friday, 17 November 2017

Miller's Musings Parshas Toldos: Food, G-dliness, Food



בס''ד


We all know that the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach, but we will still be surprised to see how much of an integral role food plays in our Parsha.  Yitzchok, poised to give Eisav a blessing that will decide his and his descendants future, requests that his son bring him some food.  But not just any food; it must be tasty food!  Are we to believe that a man so entirely detached from physical desires, as Yitzchok undoubtedly was, would deem it necessary to make the blessings contingent on there being some sumptuous meal as a prelude? 

One of the facets of Judaism that sets it apart from many other religions, is its belief that the highest level of spirituality is not through total abstinence.  Whereas other faiths may see those who deny themselves of worldly pleasures as being the greatest among them, Judaism views all physicality as a means to achieving our purpose, by infusing them with holiness through appropriate and prescribed usage.  In fact those who are on the loftiest spiritual level can feel within any mundane article how much sanctity has been imbued within it.  Eisav who was known to excel in honouring his father, brought him food that in that very act of pleasing his father, permeated the dish with the holiness of this Mitzva.  This, says Reb Shimon Schwab zt’l, is the taste that Yitzchok wanted to savour and what Yitzchok wanted to experience before bestowing the blessing on his son.  He wanted to feel the worthiness of Eisav, at least in this act, that emanated from the food that he would bring him.

The message that we are here to bring holiness to all that is around us, is something many of us may have heard before.  It will hopefully have helped us to appreciate the beauty of the world Hashem has given us and the unique path he has set for us.  However we may not have taken the next step of thinking practically about what this means for our day to day living.  Yet if we consider the implications of this philosophy we must necessarily start to consider how we are bringing G-dliness to all we possess.  Are we trying to bring sanctity into all our possessions and are we looking for means by which we can do this?  We are fortunate to have so many blessings from G-d, but we must start to think of ways that we can take all that we have and use them for the betterment of others, for the betterment of our own spiritual lives and thereby bring the betterment of all existence.  What else would we be doing with them!

*May the holiness of Shabbos imbue all we have with its sanctity*

לעילוי נשמת לאה בת אברהם 


לעילוי נשמת שרה יעל בת גרשון

Friday, 10 November 2017

Miller's Musings Parshas Chayei Soroh: Absolutely Everything



בס''ד


It may be said that old age is a blessing in and of itself.  The other option is surely an avoidable one wherever possible.  Our Parsha includes the curious sentence that Avrohom “was old, advanced in days, and Hashem blessed Avrohom with everything”.  There are a plethora of questions that could be asked on this statement but we will restrict ourselves to two.  Firstly we may wonder what is meant by Avrohom being blessed with “everything”?  Are we to believe that he truly had everything!  The second question is as to why there is a juxtaposition of Avrohom being aged and the fact that he received such blessings?

The Talmud tells us that the word “old” “זָקֵן” means one who has acquired wisdom.  Wisdom however is a word that is very much a matter of personal perspective. For one the term may have entirely different connotations to that of another.  The Torah definition of wisdom must of course be an absolute one and it is that of superior knowledge and internalisation of the Torah and its worldview.  Being blessed with everything is in fact also something that is subjective, dependent entirely on a person’s attitude.  With this in mind we can begin to understand the verse above.  Were a person sagacious enough to know, as Avrohom in his wisdom did, that whatever they have been given is all they need to be able to fulfil their role and purpose, then one would live with an acceptance that they do indeed have everything; everything they need.

A challenge that everyone faces, no matter who the person is and their situation in life, is the challenge to not look at others.  There is a natural tendency to see how others live and feel that if only I could have their life and their set of circumstances I would be able to achieve so much more and be so much better.  In truth however this is a complete fallacy and often a justification for our own failings.  G-d has given us absolutely everything that we need and if there is anything that we do not have it is simply because with the task that has been set out for us, there is no necessity for it.  By switching our mind set to the correct attitude, our lives are instantaneously changed from being just okay to being entirely perfect.  That’s quite a difference!

*May the perfection of Shabbos help us realise the perfection of our lives*

לעילוי נשמת לאה בת אברהם 


לעילוי נשמת שרה יעל בת גרשון



Friday, 3 November 2017

Miller's Musings Parshas Vayero: Homeward Bound



בס''ד


Tests come in all shapes and sizes, but the one that Avrohom faced in this week’s Parsha, to sacrifice his own child, was surely one of the greatest ever faced.  This almost unsurmountable mission, to take the child that he had been promised and who he had longed for, the child that he was told would be the progenitor of a great nation, and offer him as a sacrifice to G-d, was a test that defied reason, feelings and everything he had stood for.  The question that is to be addressed is why it is referred to as Akeidas Yitzchok, the binding of Yitzchok?  What is it about the tying of Yitzchok down that is so fundamental to the essence of what took place?

Avrohom was a man that stood for compassion, empathy and benevolence.  To murder his own child went directly against everything he believed in and everything he had preached for so long.  He had taught that human sacrifice was morally reprehensible and incompatible with an ethical life and here he was ostensibly acting in the most hypocritical manner possible.  And then we have Yitzchok, a man that represented absolute strength and power, to persevere with life no matter what is thrown at you, allowing himself to become a sacrificial gift.  To truly grasp the crux of what took place, the word that is perhaps most appropriate is submission.  Submission to the will of G-d no matter how hard the task, submission to His will no matter what consequences there may be and submission to His will no matter what personal sacrifice it entailed.  Perhaps the binding is both literal and metaphorical, in that the nature of the impossible act they performed was one in which they bound themselves to G-d’s plan, willingly foregoing their own personal needs for the highest purpose of submission to His.



There is no end to the trials that we face along our mortal journey.  Many require overcoming our desires and defects and some require us to see G-d’s plan when it is so desperately obscured from view.  But if we are to try and somehow encapsulate all of these, submission may be the best place to start.  It is something that goes against a person’s innate desire for autonomy and the ego that tells us we are the ones who decide our fate.  Yet if we truly seek the ultimate good of closeness to  G-d, we must be willing to submit ourselves to the fact that only He knows what is truly best for us, both in what we should do and what should happen to us.  This is no easy task, but by binding ourselves to His will, we are simultaneously binding ourselves to the infinite pleasure of being in His presence, back home where our soul belongs.


*May the sanctity of Shabbos help us bend our will towards His*





לעילוי נשמת לאה בת אברהם 


לעילוי נשמת שרה יעל בת גרשון