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Bitachon in the Desert: Trusting Hashem in Daily Portions BeHaalotecha

Bitachon in the Desert: Trusting Hashem in Daily Portions BeHaalotecha

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Bitachonin the Desert: Trusting Hashem in Daily Portions When I first started working for my dad,it was at a fiscally difficult time. His partner and cousin elected to bebought out which created a huge financial burden, there were big loancommitments and a new and very expensive showroom. My dad would hand me a paper on Mondaymorning with an amount. This is what we need to deposit by Friday to cover theweek. It was a way to focus and keep things moving. Years later when all the commitments andthe loans were paid, he would still remind me every week of something whichstays with me today: “Don’t worry about making enough for theyear. Worry about making enough for the week. Because if you ask Hashem tocarry you through the whole year, you’ll forget to come back to Him tomorrow.But if you ask for this week, you’ll come back next week. And the week after.And every day, you’ll be in a relationship with Him.” He’d also tell us about the king withtwo sons. One came once a year for his allowance. The other came every week.The second son complained. “Why do I have to keep coming each week while mybrother only comes once a year? Why can’t you just give me everything at once?” And the king smiled and said: “Because Ilove you. I want to see you. I want to hear your voice. Spending time with yougives me great pleasure. So I only give you enough for a little while—because Iwant you to come back.” That’s bitachon. Trust. Not just in theoutcome—but in the relationship. In Parshat Beha’alotecha, we read aboutthe manna—the miraculous bread that fell from heaven. Our Sages teach thatreading this portion is a segulah for parnassah, for sustenance. But the Mishnah Berurah warns us:reading the words without internalizing their meaning is like carrying a checkwithout depositing it. The manna teaches us that hishtadlut—oureffort—is a vessel, but it is not the source. As Shlomo HaMelech writes inKohelet: “לא לחכמים לחם”—“Bread does not come tothe wise.” Rabbi Asher Weiss explains that theportion of the manna reminds us our sustenance is ordained from Above. On RoshHashanah, it is decreed precisely how much each person will earn for the year.Our job is to do the necessary hishtadlus to create a vessel to containHashem's blessing, while recognizing all along that it is not our effort thatbrings success but Hashem's blessing alone. Some years back I wrote of a Shabbatafter season in Florida. I sat with some of the wealthiest men in our communityand they all started sharing their stories. To a man, they all testified, itwas not their brains, not their strategy, not even their hard work and longhours which brought them wealth, it was in every case a convergence ofcoincidences that could only be orchestrated by Heaven above. Rabbi Elimelech Biderman, quoting theTiferet Shmuel, finds this message in the menorah, which opens this week'sparashah. All seven lamps received the same amount of oil. But the “nermaaravi”—the western lamp—burned longer. Why? Because Hashem willed it so.Hishtadlus isn’t the decisive factor. The menorah itself teaches that whenHashem desires, the same oil lasts longer. “המֲַרבֶּה לֹא הַעַדִיף וְהַמֲעִיט לֹאהְחַסִיר” (Shemot 16:18) No matter how much manna they gathered,they returned home to find that it exactly suited the needs of their family.Rabbi Asher Weiss draws from this that effort alone does not determine results.Hashem provides according to what is destined for each of us. This is one of the most radical truthsof Torah: You don’t control outcomes. You only control your vessel—your trust,your awareness, your faith. The Talmud in Yoma 76a explains: Why didthe manna fall daily, not weekly or monthly? To teach Am Yisrael to rely onHashem every single day. A person who has no food for tomorrow will cry out toHeaven with sincerity. And the Midrash Tanchuma says the same:“So that Israel’s hearts would turn toward their Father in Heaven every day.” Rabbi Biderman shares another mashal:the older a fish, a snake, or a chazir grows, the stronger it becomes, eventhough they eat almost nothing. To teach us: “Man does not live on breadalone...” The Zohar in Beshalach (62a) revealsthat the manna flowed through the sephirot into Olam HaBeri’ah. The NoamElimelech quotes R' Zusha: the question “What will we eat?” damages thechannel. Rabbi Asher Weiss echoes this idea, teaching that even the questionitself reflects a lack of bitachon and creates a blockage in the channelsthrough which blessing flows. Faith, on the other hand, keeps the pipelineopen. The story is told of R’ Zusha, whotouched a door and walked away. Rabbi Asher Weiss recounts this story as anexample of how true bitachon diminishes the need for hishtadlus. According ...

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