Readings for
Saturday, September 13, 2025
Ki Tavo (When you enter)
26:1-29:6 Devarim
(Deuteronomy)
Ki Tavo is the seventh sedrah in the book of Devarim
or Deuteronomy. The sedrah takes
its name from the second and third Hebrew words in the first sentence of the
reading. “And it will be when you enter (Ki Tavo) the Land that
the Lord, your God, gives you as an inheritance.…” Ki Tavo stands in stark contrast with the
previous three sidrot. The torrent of
laws slows to a trickle, with a mere half dozen. At one level the sedrah reads as a
re-affirmation of the covenant made at Sinai. Now Moshe shifts to the consequences of
obeying and disobeying the commandments.
The sedrah divides into the following four parts:
Rituals To Be Performed in the Promised
Land (26:1-15)
Moshe provides
the formulary to be followed at harvest time and when tithing.
Mt. Gerizim and Mt. Ebal (27:1-26)
Moshe describes
the ritual that will be performed once the people have crossed the Jordan. It will provide a concrete reminder of the
consequences of choosing to obey or disobey the commandments. The tribes will stand on the slopes of these
two mountains and hear the blessings and the curses.
The Blessings and The Curses (28:1-68)
The first
fourteen verses include a compilation of the Blessings that will come to the
people for obeying the law. The balance
of the chapter includes the Curses, or in Hebrew, the Tokhehah (Rebukes), which
will befall the people for disobeying the commandments.
Reaffirmation of the Covenant
(28:69-29:8)
The tradition
is to avoid ending on a negative note.
So the sedrah continues with a reaffirmation of the covenant that was
originally made at Sinai.
Themes
Commandments
606. The obligation to recite a specific
prayer upon bringing one’s first fruits to the sanctuary (26:1-10).
607. The obligation to make a certain
declaration when the portions and tithes are paid (26:12-15).
608. The prohibition against eating the
Second Tithe while in mourning (26:12-15).
609. The prohibition against eating the
Second Tithe while ritually unclean (26:12-15).
610. The prohibition against spending any
money exchanged for the Second Tithe on anything other than food and drink
(26:12-15).
611. The commandment to emulate God’s
behavior by walking in His ways (28:9).
Biblical
Literacy by Rabbi
Joseph Telushkin with edits by this author.
Elul
Devarim
continues to reinforce and set the stage for the penitential period that
reaches its crescendo with the Days of Awe.
As your read the portion on the Blessings and the Curses listen and you
may hear echoes of the Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur prayer “who shall live and
who shall die…who shall perish by fire and who by water…who shall rest and who
shall wander….”
The Importance of the
Promised Land and the Pain of Exile
We are
commanded to bring the offerings to a central place once we have entered the
Promised Land. But the Torah does not
mention Jerusalem
by name. Why does Moshe keep missing his
chance to use the name of Jerusalem? Is this an omission, and if so what could
explain it?
The commands
concerning the offerings of the first fruits represent one of the few times
that the Torah actually contains the specific wording for a prayer. Many of you will recognize part of the
formulation from the narrative in the Haggadah.
Why do we make the recitation of Jacob’s experience with Laban and
Jacob’s childrens’ experience with the Egyptians a part of the blessing we
utter when we bring our first fruits to the Temple? According to Rabbi Menachem Schneerson, both
of these episodes represented attempts to wipe the Israelites from the face of
the earth. Both of these episodes took
place outside of the Promised Land in areas where we settled with a certain
degree of comfort. But these other
places were neither our land nor our proper place of abode. The offering of the first fruit could only be
brought once we were settled in our own land.
In other words, we are thanking God not just for the fruits but for
having brought us to the place where we could flourish both materially and
spiritually.
The first
fourteen verses of Chapter 28 are the Blessings. If you view Moshe’s speech as prophecy, then
the rest of the chapter is best described as the Admonitions and not just the
Curses. These are the rewards and the
punishments for following and not following the commandments. The Blessings are tied to being in the
Land. The Curses are tied to being in
exile. In other words, Jews are best
able to find physical safety and spiritual fulfillment when we are settled in
our own land following the commandments.
If you follow this logic, it is not enough for each person to observe
the commandments. Everybody, the entire
community, has to observe them. That is
why there are so many admonitions about helping others to observe the
commandments and about avoiding inappropriate secret behavior. In other words, what modern man calls
Salvation is both a personal and a national experience. This is not intended as an argument for
Zionism or making Aliyah. Devarim
predated them both. While many of the
early Zionists saw themselves as secularists, their beliefs were deeply rooted
in our religious heritage. There are
those who contend that Chapter 28 was written after the exile. This means the chapter is an attempt to
explain the fate of the Israelites. Such
an interpretation does not render this chapter valueless. Rather, it shows that the Jews had developed
a unique view of history. The well-being
of the people did not depend on caprice or whim. God was not, as Napoleon said, on the side of
those with the biggest canons. Rather,
national well-being was based on following a set of laws rooted in basic
morality and social justice.
The Reason for Observing
the Commandments
Why should we
observe the commandments? This is one of
those big philosophical questions that nag us all at some time or another. For once, the Torah provides us with a simple
answer. We “observe and perform” because
God tells us to do so (26:16). Of
course, in the simplicity of the answer lies the complexity of the issue.
Observance of All the
Commandments
If repetition
signifies importance, then this must be a major concept. In 27:1 we find “Observe the entire
commandment that I command you this day.”
Again in 28:1 we read, “…to observe, to perform all of His commandments.…”
The theme is repeated again in 28:9 and
28:45. According to some commentators,
these and similar admonitions are not about breaking the commandments, but
about rejecting one or more of them.
There is a big difference between violation and nullification. The admonition to observe the entire
commandment has produced many of the major commentaries created throughout
Jewish history. In some cases, the text
of the Torah is so spare that it is left to the sages to create the manner of
observance. The best known examples are
the commandments found in the three paragraphs of the Shema which gave rise to
the mezuzah, the talit, teffillin and the system of Jewish education. Then there is the challenge of finding ways
to observe commandments that seem inoperative.
One example of this is the commandments tied to the Temple offerings since there is no Temple. Using the words of Hosea, “so will we render
for bullocks the offering of our lips” (14:3), prayer was deemed to replace
sacrifices and reading about the sacrifices from the Torah stood as a
replacement for the sacrifices themselves. As Reb Shlomo of Radmosk says, “He who studies
the passage in the Torah concerning the burnt offerings is considered to have
actually sacrificed a burnt offering.”
Another example is related to the opening verses of this week’s sedrah
concerning the bringing of the first fruits.
The Talmud states that when one brings a gift to a sage, it is as if one
has brought an offering of the First Fruits to the Temple.
The Covenant
Moshe continues
to remind us that the Israelites have entered into a covenant (26:16-19). There is a reciprocal relationship between
God and the Israelites. Neither side is
allowed to give up on the relationship, which is what makes it different from
all other relationships.
Mountains
Once again we
see high places playing an important cultic role. In this case they are Mt. Gerizim and Mt. Ebal. How was it decided which tribes stood on the
sides of which mountain? The six tribes
on Gerizim were sons of Leah and Rachel, the wives of Jacob (Joseph stands for
the half tribes of Manasseh and Ephraim because Levi is being counted this time). Four of the tribes on Ebal were the children
of Bilha and Zilpah, the concubines of Jacob.
Supposedly the tribe of Rueben is on this mountain because Rueben lost
his birthright. Zebulen’s presence
presents more of a mystery. Supposedly
it is because he was the youngest of Leah’s sons and somebody had to be number
six to make it come out even. You could
also have said that since Asher was also standing on Ebal, this mountain contained
everything from A to Z.
The Altar
The first altar
built in the Promised Land is to be built with “unhewn stones” (27:6). The admonition not to use an “iron tool”
(27:5) will be repeated when Solomon builds the Temple.
Iron is an implement of war and death, neither of which are compatible
with God’s abode, which is to be a house of peace.
Silence
Before talking
to the people about the blessings and the curses, Moshe cries out “Hasket
u-Shema, Yisrael” or “Silence! Hear, O Israel!”
(26:9). We are used to hearing Shema
Yisrael. It is the use of Hasket or
Silence that throws us off. As Dr.
Abraham Gottlieb points out, this is the only time that the word Hasket appears
in the entire TaNaCh. Before we can
learn, before we can listen, we must be completely silent. Silence means more than just an absence of
noise. It means a removal of all of
those obstructions that keep us from hearing the “still small voice.” On a practical level, this statement may have
been the source for a variety of Rabbinic admonitions about frivolity in a
house of prayer and periods during the worship service when one is not to be
interrupted.
Customs and Ceremonies
Dr. Jeffrey
Wolf, speaking in the name of Rabbi Solovetchik, offers the following. At the end of the Torah reading, when the
scroll is raised and held wide-open for the congregation to see, we are
re-enacting the ceremony that took place between the mountains. This serves as a reminder that the Torah is a
living document, not some set of ancient utterances of only quaint historic
value.
Amen
In Hebrew, the
word Amen is spelled with three letters: “aleph, mem, nun.” According to some the Hebrew word Amen is an
acronym taken from the Hebrew expression “El Melech Ne’Eman” which literally
means “God, King, Who is Trustworthy” or figuratively, “God is a faithful
King.” This three-word formulary is
recited before saying the Shema when one is praying without a minyan. The word Amen can be a noun (faithfulness), an
adjective (true or faithful) or an adverb (certainly or truly). As a general rule, Amen is recited after all
blessings, but a person does not say Amen when he or she is reciting the
blessing. Amen is also said after each
verse of the Kaddish, but the reader does not say Amen. This is one of the reasons that Kaddish is
said with a minyan i.e., to ensure that there are responders to say Amen. This week’s sedrah contains one of the
fourteen examples of the Amen formulary found in the TaNaCh. Upon hearing the words of the Levites
(27:16-26), the Israelites are commanded to respond by saying “Amen.” According to Rabbi Hayim Halevy Donin, when
people say Amen, they are endorsing the words they have just heard. They are affirming their belief in the truth
of what has just been said. “Where
‘Amen’ follows a petitionary blessing or a prayer of supplication, it also
carries the meaning of ‘so may it be’…. Anyone
who hears another recite a blessing is required to respond with ‘Amen’ upon its
conclusion….” This admonition about
responding “Amen” has become important because anybody who does not know a
prayer, but hears it and responds with “Amen” is said to have fulfilled the obligation
of saying the prayer.
Joy out of Sadness
Even in sorrow
we can learn how to enjoy. In the words
of the Admonitions we read, “Because you have not served the Lord your God in
joy and gladness.…” (28:47). Rabbi Moshe
Pinchas Weisblum points out that the Ba’al Shem Tov, the founder of Chassidism,
used these words to encourage a joyful approach to life and the performance of
the mitzvoth. He further points out that
in the sixth chapter of the Tanya, Rabbi Zalman, the Lubavitcher Rebbe, states,
“that not only are joyous feelings necessary for service but bad feelings and
sadness will prevent us from appropriate service to God. Feelings of sadness lead to depression and
reluctance to perform good deeds.” These
sentiments are common throughout Jewish thought as can be seen in the teachings
of the Chyda, Rabbi Cahim Dovid Azulie, who was a great leader among Sephardic
Jewry. As we approach the Days of Awe,
it is quite easy to become intimidated by our own shortcomings. The message here is that we have no right to
our feelings of doom and gloom. In fact,
these feelings are actually self-defeating and will keep us from reaching the
level we wish to attain.
Healing the Universe
One way of
doing this is to elevate the mundane - to take the ordinary activities of life
and infuse them with a sense of the spiritual.
You can do this with the recitation of berachot (berachah - sing.) or in
English, benediction. In this sedrah,
the Israelites are not just commanded to make an offering of the first fruits
of their harvest; they are commanded to make a specific blessing. There is nothing more mundane than digging in
the dirt which is the basis for all agricultural endeavors. Yet by reciting a blessing, by praising God
for His beneficence, we have taken the hot, sweaty, dirty business of producing
a crop and made it into a holy activity.
There are innumerable berachot tied to a multiplicity of daily
activities. Depending upon the
situation, the wording will be different, but the intent will be the same.
Ki Tavo and Selichot
Why is the
sedrah of Ki Tavo read on the Saturday morning prior to the recitation of
Selichot? One explanation is offered by
Reb Shlomo of Radmosk in his book Tiferes Shlomo and it centers on the Tochachah
or Rebukes. According to this tzaddik,
even if the Jewish people were guilty of the transgressions described in those
passages, by reading the Rebukes, the Divine Judge would consider that the
Children of Israel had already suffered them and that any punishment which had
not been meted out would be struck from the Divine Ledger. In part, he bases this conclusion on the
earlier cited passage that if one has read about the sacrifice, it is as if one
has performed the sacrifice.
No Prayer for a Loan
A Jew came to a
tzaddik and asked him to offer up a prayer that would help him gain a loan from
a local non-Jewish noble. The tzaddik
refused because he did not want to be party to having his co-religionist suffer
a measure of the Rebukes found in Devarim 28:43, 44. “The stranger in your midst shall rise above
you…he shall be your creditor, but you shall not be his.…”
Communal Responsibilities to Care for
the Weak
Once again we are reminded that in God’s eyes our own well-being is tied
to how well we to take care of our communal obligations and the powerless. We are reminded to give “to the Levite”
(community responsibility) “the stranger, the fatherless and that the
widow.” Judaism does not believe there
is a moral good in poverty and does not have a problem with the accumulation of
wealth. The challenge is to use that
wealth in a manner that meets the high standards of the Torah. This is especially significant at this time
of the year when we all, regardless of our wealth and status, appear before the
Heavenly Host begging for forgiveness and a sweet year
So
will the Lord cause to rejoice: (i.e., “so will He make) your enemies (rejoice) over
you, to annihilate you.” (But the Holy
One, Blessed is He, Himself, does not rejoice. From here, we learn that the Holy One, Blessed
is He, does not rejoice over the downfall of the wicked, for in our verse it
does not say יָשׂוּשׂ (in the simple conjugation), “rejoice,” but rather
יָשִׂישׂ in the causative conjugation, “cause to rejoice.” i.e., God will make
others rejoice over your downfall, because you acted wickedly, while He Himself
will not personally rejoice over your downfall. Nevertheless, when it comes to bestowing good
upon the righteous, God Himself rejoices, as it is said: “just as the Lord rejoiced (שָׂשׂ) over you (to
do good for you,” where the verb שָׂשׂ is in the simple conjugation, for God
Himself rejoices here)). - (Meg. 10b) So will the Lord cause to rejoice: (i.e., “so will He make) your
enemies (rejoice) over you, to annihilate you.”
(But the Holy One, Blessed is He, Himself, does not rejoice. From here, we learn that the Holy One, Blessed
is He, does not rejoice over the downfall of the wicked, for in our verse it
does not say יָשׂוּשׂ (in the simple conjugation), “rejoice,” but rather
יָשִׂישׂ in the causative conjugation, “cause to rejoice.” i.e., God will make
others rejoice over your downfall, because you acted wickedly, while He Himself
will not personally rejoice over your downfall. Nevertheless, when it comes to bestowing good
upon the righteous, God Himself rejoices, as it is said: “just as the Lord rejoiced (שָׂשׂ) over you (to
do good for you,” where the verb שָׂשׂ is in the simple conjugation, for God
Himself rejoices here)). - (Meg. 10b) So will the
Lord cause to rejoice: (i.e., “so will He make) your enemies (rejoice) over
you, to annihilate you.” ([But the Holy One, Blessed is He, Himself, does not
rejoice. From here, we learn that the
Holy One, Blessed is He, does not rejoice over the downfall of the wicked, for
in our verse it does not say יָשׂוּשׂ (in the simple conjugation), “rejoice,”
but rather יָשִׂישׂ in the causative conjugation, “cause to rejoice.” i.e., God
will make others rejoice over your downfall, because you acted wickedly, while
He Himself will not personally rejoice over your downfall. Nevertheless, when it comes to bestowing good
upon the righteous, God Himself rejoices, as it is said: “just as the Lord rejoiced (שָׂשׂ) over you (to
do good for you,” where the verb שָׂשׂ is in the simple conjugation, for God
Himself rejoices here)). - (Meg. 10b So will the
Lord cause to rejoice: (i.e., “so will He make) your enemies (rejoice) over
you, to annihilate you.” (But the Holy
One, Blessed is He, Himself, does not rejoice. From here, we learn that the Holy One, Blessed
is He, does not rejoice over the downfall of the wicked, for in our verse it
does not say יָשׂוּשׂ (in the simple conjugation), “rejoice,” but rather
יָשִׂישׂ in the causative conjugation, “cause to rejoice.” i.e., God will make
others rejoice over your downfall, because you acted wickedly, while He Himself
will not personally rejoice over your downfall. Nevertheless, when it comes to bestowing good
upon the righteous, God Himself rejoices, as it is said: “just as the Lord
rejoiced (שָׂשׂ) over you (to do good for you,” where the verb שָׂשׂ is in the
simple conjugation, for God Himself rejoices here)). - (Meg. 10b A Problem of Translation
The
modern English translation of Chapter 28, verse 63 as found in Etz Chayim
and other texts reads, “And as the Lord once delighted in making you prosperous
and many, so will the Lord now delight in causing you to perish and in wiping
you out.” What kind of Lord would take
delight in causing the Jews to perish?
What kind of Lord would take delight in wiping out the Jewish people,
his Chosen People?” Thanks to the Artscroll
Interlinear Translation and Rashi, we find that the problem is with the
translators and not with the Torah or the Lord.
“And it will that just as Hashem rejoiced over you to benefit you and to
multiply you so Hashem will (make your enemies) rejoice over you to banish you
and to destroy you.” (Artscroll Interlinear). In other words, God will not rejoice or take
delight in our banishment or destruction.
But as part of the humiliation that we will suffer, He will make it
possible for our enemies to rejoice and delight in our banishment or
destruction. As Rashi points out the
Hebrew is in the “causative conjugation” meaning “cause to rejoice.” God “does not rejoice in the downfall of the
wicked” but He does rejoice in those who follow His commandments and therefore
received His rewards.
Haftarah
60-1:22 Isaiah
The Man/The Book: Chapter 60 in its entirety provides the text
for the haftarah. The words are those of
the unknown Second Isaiah who provided comfort and hope to the remnant of the
Jewish people living in Babylonia during the
exiles that followed the destruction of the First Temple.
The Message: The
prophetic vision is grandiose, to say the least. Much of the reading deals with a triumphal
return to Jerusalem,
which will enjoy a re-birth of commercial and political might that will make it
even more magnificent than the Jerusalem
of old. The reading is filled with
images of divine light. “Arise! Shine! For
your light has arrived…” (60:1). “You
shall no longer have need of the sun for the light of day” because “the Lord
shall be unto you an eternal light…” (60:19). “Never again shall your sun set…for the Lord
shall be unto you an eternal light…” (60:20).
But when would the exile end? The
last verse answers the question, but the reader is not sure what it means. Some say it means that when the time comes
for deliverance, whenever that might be, God will make it happen quickly. Others say that the time of deliverance is at
hand and God is going to make it happen quickly. How much man can do to encourage the final
Redemption and how much is strictly a matter of Divine decision is a debate
that has divided commentators as great as Rashi and Radak, so do not look for
an answer from this Am Ha-aretz.
The Theme-Link: This
is the sixth of the Seven Haftarot of Consolation. According to the traditionalists, the
connection is with the calendar and not the sedrah. It is one more of the prophetic portions
designed to provide comfort to the Jewish people following the tragedy of Tisha
B’Av. At the same time the triumphal
vision of Isaiah provides an antidote of joy to the depressing list of Rebukes
featured in the sedrah. It continues
with the theme that eventually the Israelites will find favor in God’s eye and
return from Exile. Once again, the words
of Isaiah make their way into Lechah Dodi.
The haftarah begins with the famous Hebrew words, “Koome, Ohre” (Arise
and Shine), and continues, “for your light has come.” These same words are found in reverse order
in the second line of the sixth verse of the hymn sung to welcome the Sabbath
Queen. Over the last several weeks, we
have seen that the author of Lecha Dodi drew on the teachings of Isaiah. What is the connection between welcoming
Shabbat and Isaiah? Second Isaiah is the
prophet of the Redemption. According to
some, Shabbat is supposed to be a foretaste of the Final Redemption. As the Jews welcome Shabbat into their lives
each week, they hope that it will be the last Shabbat because the world will
finally be redeemed.
A Tale of
Two “Keys:” Last week we read the haftarah for Ki
Taytzay which is ten verses long, making it the shortest haftarah of the
year. This week we read the haftarah for
Ki Tavo which is twenty-two verses long, making it one of the longer prophetic
readings of the year. With all that is
expected of Bar and Bat Mitzvah students, the key to easing their “burden” is
to make sure that they chose the right “Ki.”
Saturday Night September 13,
2025
Selichot
No sooner do we
finish with Shabbat than we gather for the recitation for Selichot. For those of us who are confused by the
apparent “floating” of these nighttime penitential utterances, the following
might be of some use.
http://www.chabad.org/holidays/JewishNewYear/template_cdo/aid/4350/jewish/Selichot.htm
The following
is a “neutral” description of this custom
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism/Selichot.html
Copyright, September,
2025 Mitchell A. Levin