06 Jan PARSHAS VAYECHI; THE REDEMPTION CODE – HARAV YITZCHAK GINSBURGH
PARSHAS VAYECHI
THE REDEMPTION CODE
HARAV YITZCHAK GINSBURGH
GAL EINAI – JERUSALEM
FROM ‘TIMES OF ISRAEL‘
.“And Joseph said to his brothers, ‘I am dying, and God will deeply remember (pakod yifkod) you and he will bring you up from this land’…And Joseph took an oath with the sons of Israel saying, ‘God will deeply remember (pakod yifkod) you, and you will bring my bones up from here’”.
Pakod yifkod is the redemption code. God tells Moses to say to the Children of Israel, “I have deeply remembered (pakod pakad’ti) you,” and Rashi explains, “This sign was given in their hands, that with this wording they are redeemed”. Pekidah is a deep form of memory that brings about practical awakening, as in the first time this verb appears in the Torah, “And God deeply remembered (pakad) Sarah.”
If God deeply remembers us, we may think that we have no role to play and that we can sink into a deep slumber. But that is not true. Our actions, awakening from below, awaken God to act from Above. This is a main principle, in the words of the Zohar: “With awakening from below, awakening from Above is enabled.”
What is the action on our part that awakens the Divine “Pakod yifkod”?
We deeply remember God, and then God deeply remembers us. In other words, the Shechinah (God’s immanent Divine Presence) itself is with us in exile and we must deeply remember it, feel its pain and desire to redeem it. The more dedicated we are to this deep remembrance, to deeply remember the spark of God inside us, so God will deeply remember us.
This is the secret of the double wording: “Pakod yifkod”. Pakod alludes to our awakening to deeply remember God and yifkod alludes to God’s deep remembrance of us. Thus, the meaning of the verse, “Pakod yifkod Elokim etchem” is “Pakod Elokim/You deeply remember God – and then –Yifkod etchem/God will deeply remember you”.
The root pakod has many meanings in the Holy Language. It is also used to describe the inner connection between husband and wife, as in the words of the Sages, “A man is obligated to have intimate relations (lifkod) with his wife”. Thus, “God will deeply remember (Pakod yifkod) you” means that God will remember us like a husband who intimately relates to his wife. Here, it is even clearer that the perfection of this is in mutual interaction: The wife awakens toward her husband (Pakod) and the husband awakens toward his wife (Pakad’ti).
l. Lax- Addictions and Counseling
IN ADDICTION, as it is in remembering the exile from Egypt, as it is in all of life’s challenges, ‘pakod yifkod’as Rashi explains is ‘a deep form of memory that brings about a practical awakening’ This is integral to the process of revealing the concealed sparks of holiness and igniting these most powerful sparks of growth.
ABOUT THE AUTHORRabbi Ginsburgh was born in S. Louis, Missouri in 1944. He initially pursued an academic career in mathematics and philosophy, later studying Torah under the guidance of several great sages–most notably, the Lubavitcher Rebbe. Rabbi Ginsburgh made Aliyah to Israel in 1965. His familiarity with mathematics, science, philosophy, psychology and music has enabled him to lecture throughout Israel, relating the ancient wisdom of Torah to many currents trends in academic thought and art. He has published over 120 books, 40 on Psychology and Torah.
He is sometimes referred to as “the Malakh” ( lit. ‘the angel’). Times of Israel
Leib Getzel (Lawrence) Lax
Addictions and Counseling
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