The Blessings of the Shema (Part 11)
"The most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched
– they must be felt with the heart."
(Helen Keller)
The third blessing continues: “Upon the earlier and upon the later generations, this affirmation is good and enduring forever. True and faithful, it is an undisputable decree. It is true that You are our
This part of the blessing carries with it the most wonderfully, poignant inference. The absolute bond with
Why does our blessing mention the “earlier” generations and the “later” generations? And what is the connection to “this affirmation is good and enduring forever”? Many years ago I heard an intriguing interpretation from one of my Rebbes. His explanation was based on the brilliant work of Rabbi Yitzchak Ber Weiss (1873-1942) that is entitledSiach Yitzchak. Rabbi Yitzchak Ber Weiss was the Chief Rabbi of Verbo, (in what was then) Czechoslovakia. He was murdered by the Nazis in 1942 and, unfortunately, most of his recorded insights and innovative works were lost to posterity. After the Holocaust, his surviving family managed to recover fragments of his original writings, which they published under the title of Siach Yitzchak. He writes that the “earlier generations” is a reference to those who stood at Sinai and received the Torah from
The reason that the word “truth” is repeated both in conjunction with the generations and, immediately afterwards, with the statement that G-d is our
Rabbi Shimon Schwab relates that he once read that as the Nazis were taking out a group of Jews to murder them, there was a great and revered Rabbi among them who told his fellow Jews that the last thing they should do before they were butchered was to recite this prayer with tremendous intent and concentration. To go to their deaths declaring complete and total affirmation in both G-d and His Torah.
These chilling words should leave each of us in a state of great disquiet. However, Rabbi’s Schwab’s purpose is not to frighten us unnecessarily, but, rather, to teach us the magnitude of our blessing and what it can achieve when said in the correct way. We have been granted the privilege to be able to recite these beautiful words every single day. Not under duress and not under threat of death, but, rather, free to joyously declare
To be continued…