VE-ZOS
HABRACHAH
by
Torah Reading for Simchas Torah: VE-ZOS HABRACHAH, Deuteronomy 33:1-34:12
Additional reading: Genesis 1:1-2:3
Maftir: Numbers 29:35-30:1
Haftara: Joshua 1:1-18
AND THIS
IS THE BLESSING
After the succession of stern
rebukes to
The last of the Torah's
fifty-three parshahs thus completes the circle to
make the perfect garden: 53 is the gematria
of the Hebrew word GAN = "garden". The Torah began with the creation
of Adam, recounting how he was placed in the Garden of Eden, only to fall and
be driven out. Similarly Abraham, Isaac and Jacob planted themselves in the
The Kabbalah
explains that G-d brought about the creation through the concealment of His
infinite light and perfect unity, leaving a seemingly separate, finite realm of
lack and imperfection. This provides man with an arena of challenge where he
can earn higher levels of connection with G-d through his own efforts. The flaw
in the creation is man's rebellious streak. When he succumbs to it, he
intensifies the darkness and evil in himself and the surrounding world. But he
is also vested with the power to repent and to overcome the evil. In tracing
how man became separated from G-d and teaching him the pathways he must follow in
order to reconnect, the Torah provides the complete remedy for the whole of
creation.
Having recounted man's
sins and the resulting tribulations -- imperfection and disunity -- and having
set forth the code of law through which man repairs himself
and the world, the Torah ends with rectification and unity. "And this is
the blessing. And there was a King in Yeshurun when
the heads of the people were GATHERED and the tribes of
Although the twelve
tribes of
Everything is in its
proper place. Everything has been rectified. Moses' mission has been fulfilled,
and as a mortal man, he too must die. We cry when we read of the death of Moses
-- we cry over our own mortality. Yet we must know that eventually we have to
die, for only through the death of the self can we be merged with the
All-encompassing One. There are no exceptions to G-d's immutable law, not even
in the case of Moses, who was the greatest of all the prophets. For failing to
sanctify G-d one time in the wilderness (Numbers 20:1-13), Moses was not
allowed to enter the Promised Land. Yet selflessly, he brought the Children of
Israel -- his children -- to the borders of the land, and all that was left for
them to do was to enter and make their conquest.
Moses comes to the end,
yet it is not the end, because life continues, and where the older generation leave off, the new generation pick up and carry
on. After the death of the old comes the birth of the new. It is never the end,
because as soon as we reach the end of the Torah, we immediately go back to the
beginning and start all over again! This very continuity is the Joy of the
Torah, SIMCHAS TORAH, the day on which we complete the annual cycle of the
Torah and begin again. Just as G-d is Eyn Sof -- NO END -- so, the Torah has
no end. When you reach the end of the cycle, the circle is complete and you
start again from the beginning. For the end is seamlessly
attached to the beginning, and the circle goes around and around.
Thus on SIMCHAS TORAH the
Children of Israel take all the Torah scrolls out of the ark and dance around
and around the reader's desk in circle after circle, to indicate the
endlessness of the Torah. You might have thought it would be impossible for
finite man to have any connection with the Infinite G-d. Yet in His compassion,
G-d has given us a way to connect with Him: through cycle after cycle of Torah
study. Through each circle and each cycle, we expand the horizons of our
knowledge of G-d, drawing down His all-encompassing light around and inside
ourselves, becoming steadily more and more suffused with His unity, love and
peace.
May we have the merit of
studying the entire Torah time after time, cycle after cycle, until "the
earth will be full of the knowledge of HaShem as the waters cover the
seas" (Isaiah 11:9).
Shabbat Shalom!!! Chag Same'ach!!!
Avraham Yehoshua Greenbaum
