by Rabbi Ephraim Sprecher
| 
 | 
 What
 do we hope to accomplish when praying for a person stricken with CORONA? 
G‑D knows exactly what we need. My Rebbe Rav Pam, would repeat the 
question a cancer patient asked him in all sincerity. If pain and 
suffering are caused by one’s sins (Shabbat 55) and serve as a purifying
 process to spare the person from suffering in Gehenom, how may one pray
 that G‑D remove the pain?
 Does
 a critically ill patient tell the physician not to operate or 
administer painful treatments to cure him of the deadly illness? Of 
course not! In fact, he pays the surgeon great sums of money to do so. 
If G‑D, the Great Physician, is administering treatments to cleanse me 
of my sins, asks the patient, how can I pray that the suffering be 
removed?
 Rav
 Pam related that this very question is answered by Rav Chaim Volozhin 
in Nefesh HaChaim. Rav Chaim explains that praying to G‑D to remove 
personal or communal suffering is NOT an attempt to change G‑D’s mind. 
One’s intention should be to relieve the pain that G‑D Himself, as it 
were, feels when we suffer pain. This is what the Talmud (Sanhedrin 46) 
says, “When a Jew suffers for his sins what does G‑D say? ‘I have pain 
in My Head! I have pain in My Arm.’”
 Additionally,
 while many Jewish communities around the world are in distress because 
of CORONA, this is also a great Chillul Hashem because the non‑Jews say,
 “Where is the Jewish G‑D, who allows His chosen people to suffer?”
 When
 a Jew prays for relief from his suffering, his intention should be to 
remove the Chillul Hashem that such suffering brings, and the aspect of 
“I (G‑D) am with him in his suffering” (Tehillim 91).
 Thus
 the verse in Shmuel Aleph ch1 states, “and Chana prayed AL HASHEM” 
which means Chana prayed FOR G‑D! Chana meant to say that if I am 
suffering then surely You G‑D are also suffering. So she prayed for the 
relief of G‑D, and thereby she would also benefit.
 By
 praying for relief from the suffering and pain of CORONA, one is 
attempting to reduce this Divine Pain, as it were. Such prayer is not 
only permissible, but is also an essential aspect of AHAVAT HASHEM (Love
 of G‑D), which according to Baal Hatanya is fulfilled thru AHAVAT 
YISRAEL (Love of every Jew).
 How
 do we demonstrate AHAVAT YISRAEL during CORONA? The answer lies in 
SEFIRAT HAOMER! The Counting of the Omer teaches us that we get to 
choose how we spend our time even in isolation. It’s easy to connect to 
this idea now, during the CORONA lockdown.
 Despite
 CORONA’s misery, it gives us an opportunity to repair our broken 
society, to bridge the gap that divides us. For example, our Holy 
Soldiers, who were not exactly welcome in Bnei Brak, have now become 
heroes by delivering food parcels to infected families while risking 
their own health to help other Jews in distress. Perhaps this is G‑d’s 
game plan to get the Jewish people to unite and love each other despite 
our differences.
 We
 have certain physical freedoms taken away from us now, but we are still
 in control of our time, and how we choose to use it. We count each day,
 to make each day count by reaching out to the lonely. CORONA that has 
put millions of people into isolation reminds us that there are people 
who are always socially isolated. Do we pay attention to those people 
who suffer from constant loneliness? These lonely people, who have no 
family, those who are home alone, waiting for someone to give them a 
kind word, do we hear their voice and feel their pain? Perhaps this 
virus, that forces us to become lonely, is a wakeup call to remember all
 the lonely people throughout the year. Loneliness can be painful, but 
is also easy to alleviate with a friendly smile, a kind word, and a 
cheerful greeting through a phone call.
 These
 seven weeks are the bridge from Pesach, our Physical Freedom, to our 
Spiritual Freedom of Shavuot – the Festival of the Giving of the Torah. 
This is a time for personal spiritual growth, when we can overcome 
physical dependence and bad habits in order to self‑improve.
 Being
 in lockdown has given us the opportunity to evaluate our lives – how we
 spend our time, and to decipher what is really important and what we 
take for granted. Because we count each day for 49 days, we have a 
chance to reflect on our personal spiritual growth on a daily basis, to 
see how our lives are developing. We can evaluate day by day how we 
spend our time.
 This SEFIRA (count) will have an important impact on our weeks, months and years for the rest of our lives.
 The message is that despite CORONA we are still in control of our time and how we choose to spend it.
***


No comments:
Post a Comment
I appreciate your comments and read them all. You are invited to visit again and, of course, leave comments. These are the rules:
1. This is a change brought about by my first foul, spam-worthy comment on the part of an anonymous commenter: I WILL NOT POST ANY MORE COMPLETELY ANONYMOUS COMMENTS. You MUST have at least a nickname at the end of your post, period. If you don't have enough courage to name yourself in some form or fashion, don't bother to comment here.
2. If you do not agree with content posted on this blog, please use polite ways of responding; make it easy for me to resolve conflict. Foul language, nastiness and attempts to convert me and my readers to other religions will be deleted. My blog; my call.
3. I, the blogger, reserve the prerogative to moderate comments, or not, without notice, for any reason.