Adapted from Reb Yessochor Frand
We just read the story of Chana in the Haftorah. Chana was childless. She came to the Mishkan
every year to cry her heart out. Chana
suffered the humiliation of her husband having a second wife who was blessed
with children, and who taunted Chana over her inability to have children.
Chazal tell us that Penina had a noble reason for doing that; she wanted to
inspire Chana to pray more. But Chana was miserable. Chana’s tefillos were finally answered on Rosh
Hashana. She eventually gave birth to a son who grew up to become the great navi
Shmuel, a man so central to the development of Klal Yisrael that Dovid HaMelech compares him to Moshe and Aharon –
משה ואהרן בכוהניו ושמואל בקוראי שמו.
The story of Chana
is so central to Yiddishkeit
that it forms the matrix for Shmoneh Esrei every day;
: 'וחנה מדברת על לבה' – מכאן למתפלל שצריך שיכוין לבו. 'וקולה לא ישמע'
– מכאן שאסור שיגביה קולו בתפלתו
and specifically the story of Chana contains a lesson that
is so vital and central to the message of Rosh Hashana that not only do we read
this Haftorah on the first day of Rosh Hashana, but the whole
Tefillas Musaf on Rosh Hashana was structured around the nine mentions of G-d’s
name in Chana’s prayer.
In Brochos (29a), the Gemara says that on Rosh Hashana,
we daven a Shmoneh Esrei of
nine brachos; the standard opening three, the standard closing three, and the
middle three special brachos of Malchiyos, Zichronos, & Shofros — the
middle portions of the Rosh Hashana Musaf service dealing with the coronation
of Hashem over ourselves and over all of creation, commemoration of Hashem’s
relationship with the world, and the importance throughout history of the sound
of the Shofar. The Gemara says that the source for the number of
these blessings, nine, comes from the nine Azkoros — the nine times that G-d’s
Name is mentioned in the prayer of Chana [Samuel 2:1-10].
What is so important about this episode that causes us to
base the central tefillah of Rosh Hashana on tefillas Chana?
Chana’s Shira, her Tefilla, emphasizes that life is full of
changing fortunes. Chana speaks of Hashem’s control of national security, of
the economy, and of every individual’s private life and fate: her message is
that G-d makes some people poor and he makes some people rich. He makes
the haughty low and the humble high. Fortunes keep changing.
קֶ֥שֶׁת גִּבֹּרִ֖ים חַתִּ֑ים וְנִכְשָׁלִ֖ים אָ֥זְרוּ חָֽיִל׃
The bows of the mighty are broken, And the faltering are
girded with strength.
שְׂבֵעִ֤ים בַּלֶּ֙חֶם֙ נִשְׂכָּ֔רוּ וּרְעֵבִ֖ים חָדֵ֑לּוּ
Men once sated must hire out for bread; Men once hungry
hunger no more.
עַד־עֲקָרָה֙ יָלְדָ֣ה שִׁבְעָ֔ה וְרַבַּ֥ת בָּנִ֖ים אֻמְלָֽלָה׃
While the barren woman bears seven, The mother of many is
forlorn.
Then Chana asks, Who it is that stands behind all these changes?
She explains
יְהֹוָ֖ה מֵמִ֣ית
וּמְחַיֶּ֑ה מוֹרִ֥יד שְׁא֖וֹל וַיָּֽעַל׃
Hashem deals death and gives life, Casts down into Sheol
and raises up.
יְהֹוָ֖ה מוֹרִ֣ישׁ
וּמַעֲשִׁ֑יר מַשְׁפִּ֖יל אַף־מְרוֹמֵֽם׃
The LORD makes poor and makes rich; He casts down, He also
lifts high.
And why does Hashem
do this?
Because
רַגְלֵ֤י חֲסִידָו֙ יִשְׁמֹ֔ר וּרְשָׁעִ֖ים בַּחֹ֣שֶׁךְ יִדָּ֑מּוּ כִּי־לֹ֥א
בְכֹ֖חַ יִגְבַּר־אִֽישׁ׃
He guards the steps
of His faithful, But the wicked perish in darkness— For not by strength shall
man prevail.
This is Chana’s message to the Jewish People on Rosh
Hashana: Life is so fickle. Fortunes are so fragile. Rosh Hashana is an
unbelievably scary day!
Emotionally, Rosh Hashana is one of the most difficult days
of the year. We can deal with Yom Kippur. We do not eat. It is a day of Mercy.
We separate ourselves from the rest of the world and we pour our hearts out.
But what are we supposed to do on Rosh Hashana? Rosh Hashana is the Yom HaDin
(Day of Judgment). Everything is riding on this day. And yet there is an
obligation to observe this day as a Festival — looking and acting and eating
like a Yom Tov. How do we cope with this dichotomy?
Rav Tzadok HaCohen points out that the Shevarim and
Teruahs, which are the broken sounds of the shofar representing the crying out
of a broken spirit, must always be sandwiched between two Tekiahs. The firm,
unbroken, Tekiah sound represents Simcha. This, Rav Tzadok says,
captures the theme of the day.
On the exterior, we must act and feel like it is a Yom Tov.
But on the interior — between the Tekios — we must have a terrible, terrible,
fear: a fear that anything can happen.
Some years, in tranquil times, we might hear this and think
that this is a mussar shmuess, but we’re doing pretty well, and all we need is
for the Ribono shel Olam to sign off on extending last year’s contract. Not
this year, we’re not. Not one Jew in the world, from the billionaires in Panama
to the bnei Torah living off Kollel checks, is thinking that we are doing just
fine.
This is what Chana is trying to tell us. For some people
this year will be one of “the barren woman turning into a mother of seven”. But
hanging over our heads is the terrible fear of fate of Penina.
Chazal say that the 100 Shofar sounds of Rosh Hashana
correspond to the 100 cries that Sisra’s mother cried on the day of battle). Rav Schwab
asked, what is the significance of associating our holy Shofar sounds to the
wailings of that savage? Rav Schwab explained that the wailings of Sisro’s
mother represented the uncertainty of the future. If Sisra would come back
victorious, this would represent the greatest triumph of his military career.
On the other hand, he might come back in a coffin. Sisro’s mother did not know
which scenario would occur, so she wailed out of uncertainty and fear.
Life and Death. Success and Failure. On Rosh Hashana,
everything lies in the balance of Judgment — nothing less than totally changing
out fates. And yet, we as Jews, have to surround these emotions with the Tekiah
— the firm blast of confidence.
We cannot wear our emotions on our sleeve. But we must
realize that what will be determined on this day is nothing less than the fate
of our lives, of our family’s lives, of our community’s lives, and indeed the
life of the entire world. Anything can happen. This is the message of Chana.
There are no givens, there are no “Chazakas, nothing can be taken for granted.
All we can control is how we behave, how we daven, how thoughtfully we lead our
lives to be good servants of the RBSO that He can be proud of.
May we be zocheh to what Chana said in the end of her shira:
יְהֹוָ֞ה יֵחַ֣תּוּ מְרִיבָ֗ו עָלָו֙ בַּשָּׁמַ֣יִם יַרְעֵ֔ם יְהֹוָ֖ה
יָדִ֣ין אַפְסֵי־אָ֑רֶץ וְיִתֶּן־עֹ֣ז לְמַלְכּ֔וֹ וְיָרֵ֖ם קֶ֥רֶן מְשִׁיחֽוֹ.
The foes of Hashem
shall be shattered; He will thunder against them in the heavens. Hashem will
judge the ends of the earth. He will give power to His king, And triumph to His
anointed one,
We should all be
zocheh to see what Chana saw be’ruach hakodesh, the bi’as hamashiach and the
geula shleima bimheira b’yameinu .
Unrelated to your post other than it being another lesson, appropriate for rosh hashanah, as to why we read the first perek of shmuel for the Haftora. This relates to your post about 'Daven like you're the last 15000'.
ReplyDeleteThe same Yesod, that truly heartfelt tefilla will be answered, can be the reason why we read the story of tefilas Chana on the first day of Rosh Hashana.
וידע אלקנה את חנה אשתו ויזכרה ד' ויהי לתקפות הימים ותהר חנה ותלד בן
ותקרא את שמו שמואל כי מד' שאלתיו (הפטרה יום א' – שמואל א 1:19-20)
The Meiri (Rosh Hashana 11a) writes that we read the story of Tefilas Chana on the first day of Rosh Hashana as a lesson in the power of heartfelt prayer on this special day. What is curious is that chana was without children at this point for 19 1/2 years (see yalkut bereishis #78) Had she not been davening all those previous years? Why were her tefilos only answered this year? Did she daven with extra intensity only now and if so, why?
The pessukim describe how Elkanah gave Chana the best portion of the korbanos he brought (1 Shemuel 1:4-7), yet she was too despondent of her childlessness to have the stomach to eat. Rather than eating she was broken and crying. Seeing this and her unbearable pain, Elkana tells her ““Hannah, why are you crying and why aren’t you eating? Why are you so sad? Am I not more devoted to you than ten sons?” (1:8)
השאלות
(ט) מדוע לא קמה עד הנה להתפלל רק זה עתה הפעם הראשון, ולמה אחרי אכלה ולא קודם האכילה:
ותקם הנה עד עתה סמכה את עצמה על תפלת בעלה שהיה צדיק, ועתה שראתה שהוא מתיאש מן הרחמים התעוררה להתפלל בעצמה, ותקם אחרי אכלה כי היו רגילים להתפלל בעת הקרבת הזבחים בבקר ובמנחה
The Malbim explains that till now Chana assumed that she shared a partner in her suffering, that Elkanah was as pained by her bareness as much as she was. She therefore assumed that he davened for her with the same intensity that she did. [Much like Rivkah davened l`nochach ishto, she had till now assumed he was right there with her in Tefila.] So, although she had no doubt davened intensely and with great fervor, her reliance on the assistance of Elkanah’s tefilos, to some degree, took away from the ernstkeit of her own. Her Tefilos were therefore not answered, she was not davening like one of the last 15,000, she did not give it Her all, thinking that all was not dependent on Her.
Only now after hearing her husbands kind and tender words ‘Why are you so sad? Am I not more devoted to you than ten sons’, did she realize the gig was up. She realized that Elkanah had made peace with the situation, being resolved to consol her by being/having been – better than any ten children she can/should no longer look forward to.
Only now did Chana recognize that everything was solely dependent upon the power of her prayers alone. Equipped with this perhaps painful revelation, she found newfound conviction and davened as she never had before. And that was the year, with her realizing that Ein Od Milvado and therefore being yikriuhu b`emes, that her heartfelt prayers were finally answered.
100% on target. Thank you!
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