Picture this: You're visiting family
who live in a little county in Florida. They have acres and acres of
land. On this land, they grow many types of fruits and vegetables.
It's beautiful! There are patches of red, orange, yellow, green,
purple, brown, red and green, yellow and green, light green with dark
green, orange and green, etc.
You're sitting in their kitchen
admiring the beautiful crops and suddenly you see leaves fluttering
in different directions. The light winds start to come in. You see
drops of rain gliding down the kitchen window, one by one. You smell
the fresh aroma of rain and grass. Within minutes a light rain storm
has developed.
Did you know low wind speeds have
positive effects on many plants, leading to thicker and stronger
stems? Even for imaginary relatives who own imaginary crop fields!
The Torah in this week's parasha (32:2)
says, “Let my instruction flow like rainfall, let my saying drip
like dews; like a storm winds on verdure, and like raindrops on
grass.”
Rashi comments, “Like storm winds:
[Targum Onkeles translates it to be 'like rain winds'], just as the
winds fortify vegetation and nurtures it, so do the words of Torah -
Torah nurtures those who study it.”
This Rashi is interesting. How does
Torah nurture a person? Does Torah make you stronger? Does it protect
you, like a parent nurtures their child? In what way?
I believe the answer is that it makes
you stronger in Emuna. How?
Learning Torah gives you a direct
connection to Hashem. Once you've created that, your trust in Him
increases. When a negative event happens in your life, you can look
at it in many ways. Someone who has complete trust in Hashem will
feel serene. He knows it must have been for a good reason and that
Hashem is the only one who can take care of him. That is a feeling of
being nurtured by Hashem and that comes via learning Torah. The more
one learns Hashem's Torah and realizes the truth it holds, the more a
person will feel connected and protected. Even when situations seem
bad in our eyes.
Have a wonderful Shabbos,
Nisso