Tefilla of the Shelah Hakadosh
Remember to recite the Shelah HaKadosh Prayer for Children! Erev Rosh Chodesh Sivan (Thurs. May 29th) is an optimal time to do this!
Below is a link to the prayer in Hebrew and English:
Lag B'Omer - 33rd day of the Omer Count
Begins on the Night of Saturday May 17, 2014
The bow commemorates the fact that during Rabbi Shimon’s lifetime no rainbow was ever seen. (Bereishit Rabbah 35:2) Rashi (Ketuvot 77B) explains that when the generation has leaders who are perfectly righteous, the generation does not need a rainbow so that G-d can remind himself not to destroy the world.
Note: This was a good thing because the rainbow appears when the earth deserves punishment. The first time a rainbow appeared was after Noah’s flood, when G-d said that He will no longer destroy the world, rather He would send a sign: the rainbow.
During Rabbi Shimon’s lifetime, the world was filled with merit because of him and therefore never saw a rainbow. (Bereishit 9:8-17 and Rashi there)
There is a Kabbalistic tradition that on Lag b’Omer a rainbow of many colors will appear in the sky immediately before the coming of Mashiach. "Do not expect the coming of Mashiach until the rainbow is seen... in shining colors." (Zohar, Vol. 1, p. 72b)
Before the coming of Mashiach, a very special rainbow will appear. This rainbow will be so bright that all rainbows that have appeared on earth will seem very dim and weak in comparison.The bright strong colors of this rainbow are a sign that the Redemption is about to come. It is this rainbow, the Zohar tells us, that G-d was speaking about when He said to Noach (Bereishit 9:16), "I will look at it to recall the eternal promise."
(L'Chaim #840; Zohar 1:72b)
Tehillim 119:20
Tehillim 119:20
גָּרְסָה נַפְשִׁי לְתַאֲבָה אֶל-מִשְׁפָּטֶיךָ בְכָל-עֵת
garsah nafshi letaavah el-mishpateicha vechol-et
My soul is consumed with the longing that it has for Your ordinances at all times.
Another interpretation says: I am "consumed with the longing" to study, but the obstructions prevent me. As a result, "my soul is consumed" and shattered. Every time I am forced to remain idle from the Torah, "my soul" shatters from "the longing that it has for Your ordinances at all times."
Even when there is no need for me to study the practical Halachah, I study Torah out of passion and with great dedication. King David thus explains the reason for his deep desire to know the secrets of the Torah - his longing did not stem from the body but from the soul. "My soul is consumed with the longing that it has for Your ordinances at all times."
Some perceive the present verse as a petition: "Consume" - break away - "my soul" from the external husk that obstructs me from keeping the mitzvot. Man's physical nature gives rise to a desire for money, for instance, and this can make him commit robbery. But if You will "consume" - break away - "my soul" from the material, it will be "consumed" instead "with longing"... "for Your ordinances at all times."
Rava said, "Let a man study even though he forgets. Let him study even if he does not know what he is saying. For it says, 'My soul studies (leta'avah) [out of desire].' It does not say (tachanah) [to grind it fine]. Rashi explains, "In my passion for Torah learning, I would break it up (proceed to analyze it in detail) despite my limited capacity to grind very fine; I was actually incapable of in-depth study."
Torah learning is unlike any worldly commodity, since a person does not usually devote himself to other pursuits all the time. Today he may devote himself to this field of knowledge, and tomorrow to another. Not so the Torah, of which it says, "You will meditate in it day and night" (Yehoshua 1:8). Every day and every moment the student perceives new things. Even if he has already studied the matter before, novel insights are revealed to him. That is what King David says here, "My soul is consumed with the longing that it has for Your ordinances at all times."
Tehillim 119:1 - Tehillim 119:2 - Tehillim 119:3 - Tehillim 119:4 - Tehillim 119:5 - Tehillim 119:6 - Tehillim 119:7 - Tehillim 119:8 - Tehillim 119:9 - Tehillim 119:10 - Tehillim 119:11 - Tehillim 119:12 - Tehillim 119:13 - Tehillim 119:14 - Tehillim 119:15 - Tehillim 119:16 - Tehillim 119:17 - Tehillim 119:18 - Tehillim 119:19
Tehillim 119:19
Tehillim 119:19
גֵּר אָנֹכִי בָאָרֶץ אַל-תַּסְתֵּר מִמֶּנִּי מִצְוֹתֶיךָ
ger anochi vaaretz al-taster mimeni mitzvoteicha
I am a stranger on the earth; do not hide Your commandments from me.
"I am a stranger on the earth" and my days are few, so "do not hide Your commandments from me." Let them not stay hidden so that I may implement them. If I fail to keep them now, when shall I keep them?
"I am a stranger on the earth," and do not know the day of my departure. So, "do not hide Your commandments from me." I am like a passing stranger who requires that provisions for the road be at hand in case he must depart suddenly.
King David felt that since a man's stay in this world is only temporary, he must equip himself with Torah learning and the observance of mitzvot.
The story is told about a certain province in India where the inhabitants would elect a king to rule over them for one year. Once, they crowned a fool who was unaware of this time limitation to his reign, and he built palaces for himself. At the conclusion of his year-long reign, he was separated from all his wealth. He was succeeded to the throne by a sage, who soon found out that his reign would last only a year. He then invested much effort to amass a great deal of money, which he deposited in another country. At the end of the year he had everything, and he rejoiced in both places.
"I am a stranger "גר" (ger) on the earth." The Midrash says, "Was, then, David a stranger? He said, rather, just as one who today becomes a convert (ger) is ignorant of Torah, so a man's eyes are open and yet he may be unable to distinguish between his right hand and his left hand in Torah knowledge. If David, who composed all these songs and psalms, said, 'I am a stranger on the earth' and know nothing, it is assuredly true of us that we know nothing!"
We are both strangers and settlers (cf. v. 39:13), like all our forefathers (cf. Bereishit 23:4). "For our days on earth are a shadow" (Iyov 8:9). Just as this shadow passes, so the human being passes away. However, our days are like a shadow only when we do not study and apply the Torah.
Thus our Sages teach, "The day is short, the work is abundant, and the workers are lazy; the reward is ample and the master urges."
Accordingly, it says, "I am a stranger on the earth; do not hide Your commandments from me."
I ask, "Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things from Your Torah" (v119:18). Profound secrets are not revealed to those not sufficiently deserving, but I am a stranger here on earth. My soul is carved from on high.
"I am a stranger on the earth; do not hide Your commandments from me." King David is telling us that his entire existence in this world is like that of an alien in a strange land. He is here only for one purpose: to collect Torah and mitzvot to bring to the World to Come. Therefore he beseeches Hashem: "Do not hide Your mitzvot from me." Indeed, every Jew should try to emulate the behavior of King David. A person should strive to make Torah his primary occupation.
The Chofetz Chaim related an excellent parable to illustrate this idea:
Tehillim 119:1 - Tehillim 119:2 - Tehillim 119:3 - Tehillim 119:4 - Tehillim 119:5 - Tehillim 119:6 - Tehillim 119:7 - Tehillim 119:8 - Tehillim 119:9 - Tehillim 119:10 - Tehillim 119:11 - Tehillim 119:12 - Tehillim 119:13 - Tehillim 119:14 - Tehillim 119:15 - Tehillim 119:16 - Tehillim 119:17 - Tehillim 119:18
Tehillm 119:18
Tehillim 119:18
גַּל-עֵינַי וְאַבִּיטָה נִפְלָאוֹת מִתּוֹרָתֶךָ
gal-einai veabita niflaot mitoratecha
Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things from Your Torah.
According to the Midrash, King David said to the Holy One, "Master of the world! It is Your will that I "keep Your word" (v119:17). So, "open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things from Your Torah." If You will not open my eyes, how shall I know? Although my eyes are open now, I know nothing.
Come and see! Although Shmuel was a prophet, he did not know until the Holy One revealed to him; as it says, "Now Hashem has revealed to Shmuel a day before" (Shmuel Alef 9:15). We also find the same thing in the case of Daniel (Daniel 2).
Our Sages have expounded further: Everyone is presumed blind until G-d opens their eyes. For there is outer vision and there is inner vision. To see with the inner eye, it is necessary to remove the partition. That is what David asked for here, "Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things from Your Torah."
The Scripture also says elsewhere, "For they will see eye to eye, Hashem returning to Tziyon" (Yeshayahu 52:8). This refers to the eye within the eye.
Regarding outer vision, it says, "And that you do not follow after your own heart and your own eyes" (Bamidbar 15:39); and regarding vision internal to the eyes, it says, "that you may look upon it (Him)" (ibid.). Hence David says here, "Open my eyes, that I may behold" in depth "wondrous things from your Torah."
This indicates that King David wanted to possess all fifty gates of understanding, notwithstanding that Moshe acquired only forty-nine gates. The Mashiach ben David will possess all fifty.
Everything is from the mouth of the Mighty One; everything is the Torah of G-d: whole, pure, holy, [and] true…every letter of the Torah contains wisdom and wonders for him whom G-d has given to understand it. Its ultimate wisdom cannot be perceived as it is said, "Its measure is greater than the earth and broader than the sea" (Iyov 11:9) A man can only follow in the steps of David, the anointed of the G-d of Yaakov, the most pleasant singer of hymns of Yisrael, who prayed, singing, "Open my eyes, thatI may behold wondrous things from Your Torah."
Tehillim 119:1 - Tehillim 119:2 - Tehillim 119:3 - Tehillim 119:4 - Tehillim 119:5 - Tehillim 119:6 - Tehillim 119:7 - Tehillim 119:8 - Tehillim 119:9 - Tehillim 119:10 - Tehillim 119:11 - Tehillim 119:12 - Tehillim 119:13 - Tehillim 119:14 - Tehillim 119:15 - Tehillim 119:16 - Tehillim 119:17
Tehillim 119:17
Tehillim 119:17
גְּמֹל עַל-עַבְדְּךָ אֶחְיֶה וְאֶשְׁמְרָה דְבָרֶךָ
gemol al-avdecha echye veeshmera devarecha
Gimel. Deal bountifully with Your servant, that I may live and keep Your word.
He begins with the first obstacle to the attainment of saintliness, namely illness. He pleads, "Deal bountifully with Your servant that I may live." Let me always be in good health, so "I will keep Your word."
He asks for life, not in order to indulge in pleasures, but in order to "keep" the mitzvot whereby the human being achieves perfection in the World to Come. The reward is reaped there; here one works towards the reward.
"Deal bountifully with Your servant, that I may live." Remove from me the burden of providing my sustenance. But grant e just enough to sustain me, so "that I may live" without pain "and keep Your word."
The singular form - "word" - refers to the Ten Commandments that were divinely spoken as a single utterance.
David asked further for the removal of those obstructions that beset him as king. He had to deal with matters of state and engage in wars, so he asked for a long life in order to fully accomplish his purpose.
"Deal bountifully with Your servant, that I may live." Grant me life that is a bountiful gift, not life that is punishment. Let it be a good, upright life that deserves the name "life." Sometimes, most of one's life is an affliction because it is wasted. For this person, death would have been the better thing.
Accordingly, David pleads: Let mine be the kind of life where "I will keep Your word."
Tehillim 119:1 - Tehillim 119:2 - Tehillim 119:3 - Tehillim 119:4 - Tehillim 119:5 - Tehillim 119:6 - Tehillim 119:7 - Tehillim 119:8 - Tehillim 119:9 - Tehillim 119:10 - Tehillim 119:11 - Tehillim 119:12 - Tehillim 119:13 - Tehillim 119:14 - Tehillim 119:15 - Tehillim 119:16
Tomer Devorah - Emulating G-d: From Days of Old
Hitbodedut: "HaShem, I realize that I have no separate existence from you and therefore I yearn to be more like You. Please help me to rise above my nature and lead me in the path that I wish to go, which is to think, say and do only what is pleasing to You. May I merit to bring love and mercy to my interactions."
Tehillim 119:16
Tehillim 119:16
בְּחֻקֹּתֶיךָ אֶשְׁתַּעֲשָׁע לֹא אֶשְׁכַּח דְּבָרֶךָ
bechukoteicha eshtaasha lo eshkach devarecha
I will delight in Your statutes, I will not forget Your word.
I do not know the reasons for "Your statutes." Yet is their observance a "delight" to me. "I will not forget Your word" of admonition that "you shall keep My statutes" (VaYikra 19:19).
Another reading says: "I will occupy myself (eshtaasha) with Your statutes." Similarly, it says, "At that day shall a man look to (yishe) his Maker" (Yeshayahu 17:7).
Some see this verse as expressing a plea. David says: Let me "delight in Your statutes" - let me know the reasons for them; so "I will not forget to keep Your word."
"I will delight in Your statutes." Similarly, when a king hands over an item for safekeeping, the trustee of that item will be delighted. His joy will keep him from misplacing it.
"I will delight in your statutes." The mitzvot are meant to bring a person joy, provided he follows the median path in his observance of the Torah. For "her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace" (Mishlei 3:17). Therefore, "I will not forget Your word" in all its wisdom.
Usually, when a person is involved in doing something that he does not understand, he derives no pleasure from his task. But "I will" also "delight in Your statutes" whose reasons are unknown. "I will not forget Your word," when You said: A statute have I established and a decree have I decreed. You are not permitted to transgress My decrees!
Tehillim 119:1 - Tehillim 119:2 - Tehillim 119:3 - Tehillim 119:4 - Tehillim 119:5 - Tehillim 119:6 - Tehillim 119:7 - Tehillim 119:8 - Tehillim 119:9 - Tehillim 119:10 - Tehillim 119:11 - Tehillim 119:12 - Tehillim 119:13 - Tehillim 119:14 - Tehillim 119:15
-MeAm Lo'ez
Tomer Devorah - Emulating G-d: Which You have Sworn to our Fathers
Hitbodedut: "HaShem, I realize that I have no separate existence from you and therefore I yearn to be more like You. Please help me to rise above my nature and lead me in the path that I wish to go, which is to think, say and do only what is pleasing to You. May I merit to bring love and mercy to my interactions."
Tomer Devorah - Emulating G-d: Kindness to Avraham
Hitbodedut: "HaShem, I realize that I have no separate existence from you and therefore I yearn to be more like You. Please help me to rise above my nature and lead me in the path that I wish to go, which is to think, say and do only what is pleasing to You. May I merit to bring love and mercy to my interactions."
Tehillim 119:15
Tehillim 119:15
בְּפִקּוּדֶיךָ אָשִׂיחָה וְאַבִּיטָה אֹרְחֹתֶיךָ
befikudeicha asicha veabita orchoteicha
I will meditate in Your precepts, and look at Your paths.
Here, "precepts" are the conceptions derived from the Torah. "I will meditate in Your precepts, and look at Your paths" of conduct. Then I will endeavor to walk in your ways. Even as G-d is merciful, I will endeavor to be merciful (cf. Shemot 33:19, 34:6).
A related reading of asicha is "I will speak," and the corresponding interpretation says: When I speak the precepts of the Torah, I "look at" them with the eye of the intellect in order truly to know them. I shall not be as one who prattles with his mouth and his heart is not with him (cf. Mishlei 23:7).
The Midrash expounds: "I will meditate in Your precepts." It is possible to be instructed by the Torah in worldly matters as well. For instance, from Noach's ark we can infer the (balanced) dimensions of a ship (Bereishit 6).
Tehillim 119:1 - Tehillim 119:2 - Tehillim 119:3 - Tehillim 119:4 - Tehillim 119:5 - Tehillim 119:6 - Tehillim 119:7 - Tehillim 119:8 - Tehillim 119:9 - Tehillim 119:10 - Tehillim 119:11 - Tehillim 119:12 - Tehillim 119:13 - Tehillim 119:14
-MeAm Lo'ez












