5.14.2017

Give Me Your Tired



BEHAR-BECHUKOSAI 
SUNDAY, MAY 14 18 IYAR, 5777

 ב"ה וְכִי תֹאמְרוּ מַה נֹּאכַל בַּשָּׁנָה הַשְּׁבִיעִת הֵן לֹא נִזְרָע וְלֹא נֶאֱסֹף אֶת תְּבוּאָתֵנוּ: וְצִוִּיתִי אֶת בִּרְכָתִי לָכֶם בַּשָּׁנָה הַשִּׁשִּׁית וְעָשָׂת אֶת הַתְּבוּאָה לִשְׁלשׁ הַשָּׁנִים (ויקרא כה, כ-כא) 

AND IF YOU SHOULD SAY, “WHAT WILL WE EAT IN THE SEVENTH YEAR? WE WILL NOT SOW, AND WE WILL NOT GATHER IN OUR PRODUCE!” I WILL COMMAND MY BLESSING FOR YOU IN THE SIXTH YEAR, AND IT WILL YIELD PRODUCE FOR THREE YEARS. (VAYIKRA 25:20-21)

 Give Me Your Tired Once every seven years we observe a year ofShemittah in the land of Israel, during which we refrain from working the land and growing new produce. For our sustenance in the Shemittah year, G-d promises that in the sixth year the earth will yield much more produce than it normally does, providing enough food to last for two and a half years, until new crops are ready for harvest in the eighth year. The tremendous output that G-d promises for the sixth year utterly defies the earth’s natural ability. 

The sixth year’s crop would naturally be smaller and weaker than that of the previous years, as the nutrients in the soil deplete somewhat after five consecutive years of planting. In fact, this is one of the reasons suggested for the observance of Shemittah in the seventh year: to ensure that the nutrients in the earth will have a chance to replenish (see Moreh Nevuchim 3:39). Nevertheless, G-d promises that specifically the produce of the sixth year will be greater than the crop of any other year. This promise is reflected in our efforts to bring about the coming of Moshiach and the long-awaited Redemption. 

The Talmud (Sanhedrin 97a) compares our history to the seven-year Shemittah cycle. After six thousand years of human effort to develop G-d’s world, the seventh millennium will be a sabbatical era, holy and sanctified to G-d—namely, the era of Moshiach. Like in the sixth year of the Shemittah cycle, the question of “what will we eat in the seventh year?” is strongest in the sixth millennium. For with every passing generation, our sensitivity to holiness has only become duller in comparison to the generations that preceded us. 

How can it be that our impoverished deeds will succeed at bringing about the coming of Moshiach, if theirs did not? To this G-d responds with the guarantee, “I will command My blessing to you in the sixth year”: it is precisely your simple devotion and loyalty despite the weariness of thousands of years of exile that will elicit the extraordinary blessings of the era of Moshiach. 

—Likutei Sichos, vol. 27, pp. 189-190 BEHAR-BECHUKOSAI SUNDAY, MAY 14 18 IYAR, 5777 ב"ה וְכִי תֹאמְרוּ מַה נֹּאכַל בַּשָּׁנָה הַשְּׁבִיעִת הֵן לֹא נִזְרָע וְלֹא נֶאֱסֹף אֶת תְּבוּאָתֵנוּ: וְצִוִּיתִי אֶת בִּרְכָתִי לָכֶם בַּשָּׁנָה הַשִּׁשִּׁית וְעָשָׂת אֶת הַתְּבוּאָה לִשְׁלשׁ הַשָּׁנִים (ויקרא כה, כ-כא) AND IF YOU SHOULD SAY, “WHAT WILL WE EAT IN THE SEVENTH YEAR? WE WILL NOT SOW, AND WE WILL NOT GATHER IN OUR PRODUCE!” I WILL COMMAND MY BLESSING FOR YOU IN THE SIXTH YEAR, AND IT WILL YIELD PRODUCE FOR THREE YEARS. (VAYIKRA 25:20-21) Give Me Your Tired Once every seven years we observe a year ofShemittah in the land of Israel, during which we refrain from working the land and growing new produce. For our sustenance in the Shemittah year, G-d promises that in the sixth year the earth will yield much more produce than it normally does, providing enough food to last for two and a half years, until new crops are ready for harvest in the eighth year. The tremendous output that G-d promises for the sixth year utterly defies the earth’s natural ability. The sixth year’s crop would naturally be smaller and weaker than that of the previous years, as the nutrients in the soil deplete somewhat after five consecutive years of planting. In fact, this is one of the reasons suggested for the observance of Shemittah in the seventh year: to ensure that the nutrients in the earth will have a chance to replenish (see Moreh Nevuchim 3:39). Nevertheless, G-d promises that specifically the produce of the sixth year will be greater than the crop of any other year. This promise is reflected in our efforts to bring about the coming of Moshiach and the long-awaited Redemption. The Talmud (Sanhedrin 97a) compares our history to the seven-year Shemittah cycle. After six thousand years of human effort to develop G-d’s world, the seventh millennium will be a sabbatical era, holy and sanctified to G-d—namely, the era of Moshiach. Like in the sixth year of the Shemittah cycle, the question of “what will we eat in the seventh year?” is strongest in the sixth millennium. For with every passing generation, our sensitivity to holiness has only become duller in comparison to the generations that preceded us. How can it be that our impoverished deeds will succeed at bringing about the coming of Moshiach, if theirs did not? To this G-d responds with the guarantee, “I will command My blessing to you in the sixth year”: it is precisely your simple devotion and loyalty despite the weariness of thousands of years of exile that will elicit the extraordinary blessings of the era of Moshiach. —Likutei Sichos, vol. 27, pp. 189-190

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