The Blessings of the Shema (Part 6)
"The most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched
– they must be felt with the heart."
(Helen Keller)
The second blessing continues: “And unify our hearts to love and fear Your Name, and may we not feel shame for eternity.”
Rabbi Raphael HaKohen was the Chief Rabbi of Altona-Hamburg-Wandsbeck in the eighteenth century. Aside from being the revered mentor of the Jewish communities under his jurisdiction, he was also held in the highest esteem by the monarchy of Denmark. He authored several books that displayed his erudition and his mastery over the Written and the Oral Torah. In his classic Marpeh Lashon, Rabbi Raphael HaKohen writes that very often there is a marked difference between how we behave and how we think. He writes that the Torah first commands us to fear
Perhaps this is why our blessing uses the Hebrew word “b’libeinu,” which actually means “hearts” in the plural. It as if we are being told that we have two hearts — one heart that loves
And this clarifies why the verse ends with the words, “and may we not be shamed for eternity.” Rabbi Shimon Schwab explains that “eternity” is a reference to the World to Come. If we live our lives in a way that reflects the intensity of our relationship with
Rabbi Shalom Noach Berezovsky (1911-2000), the Chassidic Rebbe of Slonim (more commonly referred to as the Netivot Shalom, the name of the series of brilliant Torah thoughts he published) pointed out to his students that our Sages teach that the Giving of the Torah was not a one-time event that took place over three thousand years ago at Mount Sinai. Rather, the Torah is always accessible and waiting to be given to us anew. “At which moment does the ‘Receiving of the Torah’ take place?” he asked them. One student answered that it happens at dawn on the Festival of Shavuot. A second student suggested that it happens when the Ten Commandments are read during the Shavuot Torah reading. A third student had a different theory, and so on, with each student coming up with yet another possibility. After everyone had tried to find the solution, the Rebbe answered his own question, telling them, “Each person receives the Torah when they are ready to accept the yoke of Torah!”
To be continued…