The Need to Act
The prophet Hoshea
says (3-5), "Afterwards the Children of Israel will return and seek out Hashem
their G-d and David their king and they will tremble for Hashem and His
goodness in the end of days.
Rashi makes a very
powerful comment. He says, "The people of Israel were exiled because they rejected
three things: the kingdom of Heaven, the kingdom of the House of David and the
Beit HaMikdash. R. Shimon ben Menassiya said, 'Israel will not be shown a good
sign until they return and (Uvikshu) seek out these three things.'"
Rabbi Yissacher
Shlomo Teichtahl in his classic work "Eim Habonim Semeichah" cites
this Rashi a number of times as proof for two central ideas. Firstly, that by
seeking out Eretz Yisroel one is in fact attempting to acquire all three
because they all apply only there. His second point is that "seeking"
of necessity means much more than prayer. One cannot fulfill the requirement
"to seek" by prayer alone regardless of its sincerity.
King David prays
"One thing (Shaalti) I asked of Hashem that shall I seek (Avakesh): would
that I dwell in the house of Hashem all of the days of my life to behold the
pleasantness of Hashem and to contemplate in His Sanctuary."
What is the
difference between Shaalti — asked and Avakesh— seek. "I have asked and I
will seek." The former refers to prayers while the latter indicates that
David is ready to actively pursue his goal. So too the passage in Hoshea, "Afterwards
the Children of Israel shall return and seek" means that they will follow
up their prayer with action.
Rav Teichtahl was
writing in 1943 urging Jews to seek out Eretz Yisroel. We have thank G-d made
great strides forward since those dark days. For us the imperative is to
"seek out" Har HaBayit.
Yet we
didn't always respond to challenges with the same wisdom and sense of purpose.
We made mistakes. We made big mistakes.
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