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    GREATLY IMPROVING OUR LIVES THROUGH BETTER TEFILAH

    Most of us, upon blunt
    and honest reflection, will
    sheepishly and ashamedly
    admit to ourselves that our
    tefilos are very sub-par.
    We realize to our dismay
    that even though we’ve
    been praying for decades,
    we don’t even know what all the words mean
    and, even when we know what they mean,
    we do not understand how to connect the
    different sentences into a meaningful whole.
    Rather, we say them like a totally disjointed
    formula.
    And, if only this were the sum total of the
    problem, it would be okay. But regularly,
    we are not only ‘not-paying’ attention to the
    meaning of the words, zipping through them
    like looking for a number in the phone book,
    but we are not even focusing on the fact that
    we are talking to G-d. Rather, we open up
    the siddur to dispense with an obligatory
    thrice-daily ritual, without any meaningful
    conversation with Hashem whatsoever.
    How sad this is! What a tremendous waste!
    The Rambam teaches us that we know the
    mitzvah of tefilah from the verse, “Ul’avdo
    b’chol levav’vechem,” to serve Hashem with
    all your heart. The commentaries note that
    G-d did not give us the mitzvah of tefilah

    with the popular term l’hispalel, to pray, or
    with the command v’dibarta, to speak, but
    rather with the unusual phraseology, l’avdo,
    to work with the heart. This choice of words
    is meant to convey that the fulfillment of real
    tefilah is only when we put our heart in it.
    Indeed, the Rambam, in Moreh Nevuchim,

    says that lip-service without any heart-
    involvement is not considered tefilah at all.

    Woe! Woe! For many of us, this perhaps
    means we haven’t prayed in decades!!!
    The saintly Shaloh HaKodesh, of blessed
    memory, writes that you could break people
    down into two distinct groups. There are
    those who when they pray, they pray to
    Hashem; and when they bless, they bless
    Hashem. Then there are those who pray but
    Hashem is nowhere in their thoughts, and
    when they bless they are not focusing on
    blessing anyone. The first group, he says, is
    very few indeed and can be counted even by
    a little child. The second is very numerous,
    like locusts and he, the Shaloh, hopes he is
    never included in the second group.
    To dramatize further the great misfortune
    of tefilah without kavanah, let me share with
    you a chilling suppositional story. Yankel

    Chaim passed away at the ripe age of ninety-
    three. Now it is Yankel Chaim’s turn to face

    Hashem in judgment. Yankel Chaim was a
    decent fellow, a kind husband, a good father.

    He had fixed times for Torah study, attended
    shul regularly, greeted his fellow man with
    a smile, gave charity. Therefore, he was
    greeted very pleasantly at the Heavenly
    Gates. But when his turn came to face the
    Almighty, he said to Hashem, “Master of
    the Universe, I have one question for You. I
    believe with absolute certainly that all You
    did for me during my lifetime was for the
    best. But why, Hashem, with your unlimited
    source of Heavenly wealth, couldn’t You
    have made my parnasa a little easier? Why
    did I have to struggle so mightily to make
    ends meet? Why did I have to move around
    from job to job and suffer under the verbal
    whips of many a merciless and insensitive
    employer? After all, Hashem, I was always
    a loyal soldier in Your army. Couldn’t You
    have greased the wheels of life a little better
    for me?”
    Listen closely my friends to Hashem’s
    answer to Yankel Chaim. “My dear Yankel
    Chaim, it’s really quite simple. You see,
    when you went to work for Me, (after all, you
    know that the work of the heart is tefilah),
    you were a very poor employee. You used
    to come to shul and when you davened, you
    didn’t even talk to Me. When you were
    praying on Shabbos, you thought about the
    Kiddush after davening, the sleep after the
    meal. During the week in the morning,
    you contemplated your clients and in the
    evening you thought about what you were
    going to have for supper. This kind of
    work, Yankel Chaim, was what you did for
    Me for decades. And you know, on earth, I
    always judge measure for measure. That’s
    why, when it came to your work, you were
    fated to have such a bumpy time.”
    I believe this is another meaning of the
    popular saying, “Daven for parnasa.” It
    doesn’t simply mean that you should
    pray for a better livelihood. Rather, more
    profoundly, our davening is a link to our
    livelihood, because if we work diligently
    for Hashem in tefilah, then Hashem will
    afford us wonderful working opportunities.
    What exactly does the “Work of the Heart”
    mean? The Avudraham explains that the
    work of tefilah is to free our minds from all
    worldly distractions, focusing on talking to
    our Creator and concentrating on what we
    are saying to Him. In this vein, the Vavei
    Ha’Amudim explains that tefilah is truly
    like a sacrifice, since by the korban we had
    to flay it before putting it upon the alter. So
    too, we must strip all exterior thoughts from
    ourselves, working to concentrate only
    upon the One above.
    The Avudraham then adds an adage which
    you might want to consider inscribing on the
    flap of your siddur. He states simply, “L’fi
    rov hakavanah, t’kubal ha’tefilah,” in direct
    proportion to the amount of concentration is
    the effectiveness of our tefilah. This is very

    good news for most of us. It means that if,
    until now, our tefilos have been very flippant
    and shallow, we have a grand opportunity to
    drastically improve our lives immediately
    with more meaningful tefilah.
    The awesome Menoras HaMeor writes
    that, when one steels himself to pray with
    proper kavanah, he creates for himself a time
    of special favor with Hashem which helps
    greatly with the acceptance of his tefilos.
    Perhaps this is the meaning of the verse,
    “V’ani tefillasi lecha Hashem eis ratzon
    – And I, if my tefilos are focused on You
    Hashem, will create a special time of favor.”
    The Midrash tells us that because of Aaron’s
    unwitting participation in the sin of the
    Golden Calf (and because of the strict justice
    meted-out to the righteous), he was supposed
    to lose all four of his children. However,
    since he prayed with kavanah, Hashem cut
    the punishment in half. He therefore lost
    two of his children, Nadav and Avinu. The
    commentaries teach, extrapolating for this
    Midrash, that who one prays thrice-daily
    with real kavanah, he can cut any punishment
    he was supposed to get down to an eighth of
    its original amount. The calculation is quite
    simple. Shacharis cuts it down to a half,
    Mincha further cuts it to a quarter, and Maariv
    decimates it to a relatively tiny eighth. Thus,
    we see what a powerful difference real tefilah
    can make in our daily lives.
    In the merit of our working diligently on our
    tefilos, may Hashem answer all our tefilos
    and bless us with good health, happiness and
    everything wonderful.