Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    SHELACH: A YEAR PER DAY

    The meraglim
    spied on Eretz
    Canaan for forty
    days, and they were
    punished that they must
    remain forty years in the
    desert. As it states (14:34),
    “Like the number of days that you spied
    out the land, forty days, a day for a year,
    a day for a year…”
    From this, Chazal (Chagigah 5:) say,
    “Whoever sins even one day a year, it is
    as if he sinned the entire year.”
    There is a principle that “Hashem gives
    kindness five hundred times more than
    He punishes.”
    The Chasam Sofer explains that if a
    person spends a day performing mitzvos,
    it will be counted as he performed
    mitzvos for five hundred years. A day of
    sin is counted as a year of sin, so a day of
    mitzvos is considered like he served
    Hashem for five hundred years.
    His reward will be enormous.
    The Chasam Sofer says that this is
    hinted at in the words, “[Keep the
    mitzvos…] so your days will be

    lengthened…like heaven is above earth.”
    The Gemara (Pesachim 94:) says heaven
    is a five-hundred-year walk from the
    earth. The Torah is saying that if you
    keep the mitzvos, it will be like you lived
    long. For each day you perform mitzvos,
    it will be like you lived five hundred
    years long.
    This information gives us so much
    encouragement. For every good deed,
    we will be rewarded as if we served
    Hashem for five hundred years.
    This lesson also reminds us how careful
    we must be with time. Every moment
    can be counted like so much more. Each
    good day is like five hundred years! Not
    something worth wasting.
    Early one morning, the Rebbe of
    Radoshitz zt’l announced, “A special
    guest has just arrived. This is his first and
    only visit, so I want to honor him
    properly. The guest is ‘today.’ It came
    today and will never come back.”
    Reb Eliyahu Lopian zt’l compared time
    to a travel bag. If one packs his bag in an
    orderly manner, there will be plenty of
    space for all his belongings. But if one
    throws in items haphazardly, the bag will

    not have enough room for everything.
    Time is similar. If one is cautious and
    orderly with his time, he will find a lot of
    time in his day. But if one is careless
    with his time, the days pass by quickly,
    leaving him without enough time to
    accomplish what is needed.

    A student asked Reb Shlomo Zalman
    Aurbach zt’l how to organize his daily
    Torah learning schedule. Reb Shlomo
    Zalman advised him to set aside time
    every day to review what he had
    previously learned. The student replied
    that he didn’t have enough time for that
    On Reb Shlomo Zalman’s table was
    a sefer that he had prepared to gift to
    a bar mitzvah bachur. The sefer was
    wrapped in decorative paper and held
    together with a rubber band. Reb
    Shlomo Zalman took off the rubber
    band and said, “See how small it
    became?” Reb Shlomo Zalman
    explained that time is similar. It can
    be short, but by stretching it, one
    finds a lot of time.
    Parashas Bechokosai states the
    rewards for keeping the mitzvos. One
    of the rewards is (Vayikra 26:9),
    V’panisi Aleichem. The Chiddushei
    HaRim zt’l explains, V’panisi comes
    from the word panai ,which means
    ample, extra time. The brachah is that
    the tzaddikim are granted ample time
    to accomplish a lot in avodas
    Hashem.
    (The Chiddushei HaRim would
    often repeat this translation, for it is
    indeed the greatest gift – to have time
    to do everything one desires in his
    avodas Hashem.)
    Some have the custom of giving a
    gold watch to a chasan. This is to
    remind the chasan that time is
    precious like gold.
    The Lev Simchah zy’a added that
    the gold is only the case that

    surrounds the time.
    The casing is always
    less valuable than
    what it holds. If the
    casing is made of
    gold, it tells us that
    time is far more
    valuable.

    Time is precious. With
    every moment, we can
    achieve so much. We just
    need to be vigilant not to
    get sidetracked by all the
    happenings of the world,
    which serve to distract us
    from Torah and mitzvos.
    Someone was in
    Switzerland, waiting for
    a train, but when the train
    arrived, he didn’t board
    it. His friend asked him
    why he wasn’t boarding.
    The man replied, “This train is
    uncomfortable. I am waiting for the next
    train, where every passenger gets their
    own table to eat on and bed to sleep in.”
    “But that train won’t be here for many
    hours.”
    He replied, “That’s okay. It is worth the
    wait.”
    “Is your goal to travel in comfort or to
    get to your destination?” the friend
    asked. “If your goal is the destination,
    you should board this train. It will get
    where you need to be.”
    “No. I need comfort, too. I’ll wait.”
    The train finally arrived, and he boarded
    it with joy. He enjoyed a good meal, and
    then, exhausted from the heavy meal
    (and from waiting in the sun for hours
    until the train arrived), he lay down and
    fell into a deep sleep. When he awoke,
    he looked out of the window and
    realized, to his horror, that he had
    boarded the wrong train and was
    traveling in the wrong direction!
    It was almost Shabbos – too late to
    catch a train to bring him home. He
    didn’t even have Shabbos clothes to
    wear or a place to stay!
    This happened because he focused on
    pleasure and forgot to focus on what was
    essential. Similarly, in life, we must
    focus on our destination. Olam Haba is
    the goal, and Torah and
    mitzvos are the means to bring us there.
    We shouldn’t consider worldly pleasures
    so vital until they distract us from where
    we are headed.