Friday, June 15, 2007

Take two Almonds and call a Kohen in the morning...

B"H

Bamidbar (Numbers) Ch. 17:23 reads:
ויהי ממחרת ויבא משה אל אהל העדות והנה פרח מטה
אהרן לבית לוי ויצא פרח ויצץ ציץ ויגמלש קדים

Loosely translated:
And it came to be on the following morning that Moshe came to the Tent of Meeting and behold the staff of Aharon from the tribe of Levi has blossomed, and a flower grew out of it, and it budded, and bore Almonds.

A couple of questions come to mind right away:
First, why specifically Almonds?

Also, by picking the Almond, in a way it would seem that G-d diminished from the miracle:
We find in Talmud Yerushalmi, Tractate Taanit, Chapter 4, page 23a:
שקד אני רואה מה הלוז הזה משהוא מוציא את ניצו ועד שהוא גומר את פירותיו כ"א יום
Which indicates that an Almond goes from budding to complete fruit in 21 days.

So, if G-d wanted to make a miracle and make a dry staff bear fruit overnight, why pick the fruit that's already the fastest? Theoretically for the miracle to be "big" G-d should have chosen, say, an Avocado or a Banana or some other slow-to-ripen fruit. So, the second question is: why specifically Almonds?

Rashi answers the Almond question saying that Almonds are the fastest fruits which teaches us that to those who oppose the institution of kehunah (=priesthood), like Korach and his gang, punishment comes quickly and swiftly, much like an Almond's ripening.

However, the reason for the Almond appears to go a bit further with its connection to the kehunah But first, some background:
A general philosophical question is as follows: if G-d Almighty decides what we will be getting in terms of בניי חיי ומזוניי (=offspring, life, and income) for the entire year, all on Rosh-Hashana, and the decision is sealed and signed on Yom-Kippur, then why does a person need to come to shul 3 times a day and pray for the very same things? Are we worried that Hashem will "forget" what was decided?

After all, if it's all been decided on Rosh-Hashana then the person might as well sit at the beach -front, put his/her feet up, seep Margaritas, and just wait for בניי חיי ומזוניי to come pouring down from High. No?!?!

Actually, no! The abundance of בניי חיי ומזוניי that is decided on Rosh-Hashana and sealed on Yom-Kippur is purely spiritual. In other words, each person has sort of a spiritual bank account up High, and on Rosh-Hashana G-d make a deposit for the whole year. However, a person still needs to show up three times in synagogue each day to ask for a currency conversion: please G-d, take some of the abundance that was deposited in my spiritual bank account and convert it into tangible בניי חיי ומזוניי in the physical sense.

Now, there's a rule that no prayer goes unanswered, as we find in Talmud Bavli, Tractate Brachot, Chapter 5, page 32b:
כל המאריך בתפלתו אין תפלתו חוזרת ריקם (=anyone who prays with intent, his/her prayer does not go unanswered.) In other words, a person's prayers ascend to the Throne of Glory up High, and are heard by- and acted upon by G-d.

So, the question can then be asked: if that's the case, why don't we always get what we prayed for? Simply answered, some hold that no prayer goes unanswered, though sometimes the answer is "no!" This is a tongue-in-cheek, answer. What's the real deal?

The real deal is that when G-d hears a prayer He certainly answers by sending abundance down to the petitioner, of whatever the petitioner asks for. However, as the abundance flows down from higher loftier worlds, it makes a few stops at Customs (the borders between the higher worlds.) At each border crossing there are Customs agents (aka administering angels.) When the flow arrives these Custom agents start looking at the books: does the petitioner deserve any of the abundance, and if so how much does the petitioner actually deserve? etc, etc...

So, the net effect is that a person prays for spiritual-to-physical currency conversion, but the flow of abundance sent down from High doesn't always arrive when the petitioner expects it, or even in it's original form or in the manner that a person expects. All this is due to Customs...

To help with that, G-d Almighty, in His infinite mercy, sent us help in the form of the Kohamim (=priests). In fact they are commanded to bless us, as we find in Bamidbar (Numbers) Ch. 6:23,27:
דבר אל אהרן ואל בניו לאמר כה תברכו את בני ישראל אמור להם...
ושמו את שמי על בני ישראל ואני אברכם
Loosely translated as:
Speak onto Aharon and his sons: so you shall bless the Jewish people, say to them (=the Jewish people).... And they (=the kohanim) shall place My Name on the Jewish people and I shall bless them.

It is interesting to note that there are two opposites, so to speak, built into these verses: on the one hand it's the kohanim who are commanded to bless the Jewish people (verse 23), while on the other hand it's G-d Almighty who blesses the Jewish people (verse 27). So, who really blesses the Jewish people?

It's quite clear that Hashem holds all the abundance, so really the blessing is coming down from High, per verse 27, so what's the role of the kohanim?

To answer that, we look in Talmud Bavli, Tractate Beya, Chapter 2, page 18a, amongst other places, where it states:
כהנים זריזין הם
I.e., the kohanim are "quick" in their sacred duties. Our sages interpret this also as
"מזרזין הם" = "זריזין הם", i.e., not only are they fast (זריזין), but they also cause other things to speed up (מזרזין).

When a person's abundance is held up at Customs pending review by the Customs agents, the blessing of the kohanim (as quoted above from Bamidbar 6:23) speeds things up. When the abundance is rushed through Customs, there's less time and opportunity for the Customs agents to do proper and thorough analysis of the petitioner's worthiness. Things are rushed through so the abundance arrives better resembling its original form when it left the Throne of Glory, less changed, more pristine, more like what was asked of Hashem. This is the secret of the blessing of the kohanim -- to rush the abundance down.

We see from this that the whole concept of a kohen and his blessings, as well as his tasks around the Temple, are intrinsically connected to the concept of speed. In other words, at the the very essence of a kohen is the concept of speed.

It is natural therefore that the staff of the "real kohen" be adorned specifically with Almonds -- the fastest of fruit, for only the "real kohen" affects the speed of the flux of abundance. Once the other tribal leaders saw the Almond fruit on Aharon's staff, it was abundantly clear who possess the attribute of kehunah -- it's all in the Almond.


Good Shabbos with lots of abundance (and Almonds)!

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