Acharei Mos-Kedoshim
ONE IS
ALL IT TAKES
Iyar 12/13, 5775 May 1 / 2 , 2015
16:30 30 Ki-vayom hazeh yechaper aleichem letaher etchem
mikol chatoteichem lifnei HASHEM titharu
For on this day He will make atonement for you, to purify
you from all your sins, before G-D, you will be purified.
The above is in reference to Yom Kippur, The Day of
Atonement; the day ALL Jews ask G-D for forgiveness from their sins, rid of
their deviations, and ask for purification.
19:1 Vayedaber HASHEM el-Moshe lemor
G-D spoke to Moses, saying,
2 Daber el-kol-adat benei-Yisra'el ve'amarta alehem
kedoshim tiheyu ki kadosh ani HASHEM Elokeichem
"Speak to the entire congregation [of] the Children of
Israel and say to them, You shall be holy, for I, G-D, your G-d, am holy.
The above is the beginning of Parsha Kedoshim, and is
followed by a listing of many Mitzvahs (Divine Commandments) .
These include, but are not limited to;
· One shall honor your mother and father
· One shall obey the principles of equality
· One shall partake in the Mitzvah of Charity
· You
shall not round off the corners of the hair on your head
The 1st three listed above are pretty obvious, and we
all know them well,but how about the last one and WHY!??? “you shall not round
off the corners of the hair on your head?”
The passage clearly forbids the removal of sideburns, the
place where one’s hair ends at his temples, and which marks the division corresponding
to the cerebrum and the cerebellum respectively. The hair at the temples is a natural veil
which hides the view of the back of the head. The relation of the frontal part
of one’s skull containing the cerebrum to the back part of the cerebellum is that
of the human element to the animal
element with in us. In order for us to maintain a strict code within
ourselves, the animal factor which indeed reflects our sensuality with lusts
and desires, must be subordinated to the higher dignity of the intellectual and
spiritual factors. By us recognizing
this division between the two, and by showing this outwardly and recognizing,
man maintains his appearance as “A MAN”. Many Orthodox Jewish Men adhere this Mitzvah,
and although it may not be practiced by you, it is indeed by them, and I have
the utmost respect!
This is just one of
613 Mitzvahs! And I am sure we all
have walked on the streets of the Lower East Side of New York, and have seen
men dressed in all black, and with beards and long sideburns, and thought,
Hmmm, I saw a Rabbi! May be?....., Or
May be just an observant Jewish man walking…………?
Why am I sharing this one Mitzvah, out of the other
612? Because so many people ask, “why?,
and It’s one that many aren’t aware of or about. It’s pretty obvious why one Honors one’s
parents, or should!!!!!! Or why one does not pursue his/her neighbor’s
spouse!!!!! With this fact, we all
learned something hopefully; a lesson of value!
Will all men that are reading this, go grow a beard?
Probably not, but will this have some-kind of impact and you will remember this
ONE Mitzvah and why Observant Jewish men adhere to….? I hope so!
My subtle point is there are 613 Mitzvahs/Commandments, and
although we most likely do not practice ALL of them (or all of them at once
even, and many do not pertain to, or can even be practiced by some), we are
aware of a few of them… With this implied
and understood, I ask each one of you to find a Commandment/Mitzvah you are NOT
AWARE of, not knowing about yet, and learn it, memorize it, practice it, and
make it a regular habit, and that is a Mitzvah in itself!
If you need a helping hand to look up one of the 613, just
ask, and we can study, learn, memorize and grow. It’s just ONE step, and as ‘they’ say, “One
Mitzvah at a time”
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