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Shiurim and Divrei Chizzuk from our Mashpia Rav Mordechai Burg
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In this shiur, delivered in "Steve's", Rav Burg explores the moment Klal Yisrael lost Miriam and, along with her, their sense of continuity.Rav Burg delves into why their reaction to a lack of water was truly a displaced expression of grief over Miriam’s absence and how finding language for our loss can transform our struggles.When Hashem told Moshe to speak to the rock, it was a lesson for us all: we can give language to the hardest parts of life, approach them tenderly, and discover that those very places become life-giving wells.
In 1968, after the first manned mission to orbit the moon, the Rebbe taught that even a lunar expedition contains lessons in avodas Hashem. Quoting the Baal Shem Tov, the Rebbe reminded us that everything a person sees or hears must become a lesson in serving Hashem.So what can we learn from a Knicks championship?This shiur takes the drama of the season, the missed shots, the hustle plays, the OG Anunoby block, the impossible comeback, the trust in role players, the timeout that should have been called, and the fifty-three-year drought and turns it into a powerful mussar message.A mistake is only a failure if you stop running after it happens. Greatness is often one more inch of effort. Confidence is built when nobody is watching. A healthy life is constructed, not collected. A timeout is not weakness; it is refusing to let panic coach the team. And a long drought does not mean the story is over.
Chazal teach that a person should not take leave of his friend through ordinary conversation, laughter, lightheadedness, or idle words, but through a dvar halacha because through that, “he remembers him.”Why are endings so spiritually powerful? Why does the Gemara specifically require halacha, not simply Torah? And why is the Gemara’s example connected to Adam HaRishon, Bavel, and the palm trees of Babylonia?In this final shiur of the Tomer Devorah year, Rav Burg explores the inner meaning of goodbye. A goodbye is not merely the end of an encounter. It is a threshold, the delicate space between presence and absence, where memory is formed and meaning is encoded.When we part from another person, we can escape the vulnerability of the moment through joking, distraction, or empty chatter. Or we can leave them with something life-giving. A dvar halacha is Torah that becomes movement, a path forward. It says: I may be leaving, but I am not leaving you empty.Through the image of the palm tree, Chazal reveal the secret of healthy attachment: even when branches spread outward, there remains one heart. Even in Bavel, the place of exile, confusion, and fragmentation, there can still be inner unity.True connection does not create dependency. It helps another person internalize light, direction, and strength. And sometimes, the people we meet awaken Torah within us that we did not even know we were carrying.
After Korach’s rebellion, Klal Yisrael was spiritually shattered, a generation sentenced to die in the desert, vulnerable to the false comfort of a leader who told them what they wanted to hear: “You are all holy.”But the blossoming of Aharon’s staff revealed a deeper model of leadership. True leadership is not about power, status, or standing above the people. It is the ability to stand among dry staffs, among people who feel lifeless, ashamed, resentful, or disconnected and help them come alive again.In this shiur, delivered in Ba'er Miriam, Rav Burg explores the difference between counterfeit restoration and true revival. A true leader earns his place above the people by carrying the burden of standing among them.
In this shmooze, delivered at the final Mishmar of the year in Mevaseret, Rav Burg explores the inner meaning of Techeiles and why Chazal connect it specifically to Avraham Avinu’s refusal to accept even “a thread or a shoelace” from the King of Sodom.Why would Avraham accept gifts from Pharaoh and Avimelech, yet refuse anything from Sodom? What is the deeper connection between Sodom’s worldview and the mitzvah of Techeiles? And why does the Gemara describe such a long visual process — Techeiles resembles the sea, the sea resembles the sky, the sky resembles sapphire, and sapphire resembles the Kisei HaKavod — instead of simply saying that Techeiles reminds us of Hashem’s throne?The answer opens a powerful window into the psychology of possession, desire, and spiritual vision.Sodom represents a world of dry land: what you see is all there is. My possessions are mine, my success is self-made, resources are finite, and therefore even giving without loss feels threatening. Avraham Avinu refuses that consciousness. He raises his hand to Hashem, declaring that even the power of his hand comes only from above.Techeiles is the reward because Techeiles trains the Jewish eye to see differently. The sea teaches us that beneath the surface of reality there is a hidden world. The sky teaches us that beyond what we see, there is height, vastness, and purpose. Sapphire teaches us that when the physical world is used for Hashem, Divine presence becomes crystallized within creation. And from there, the eye is lifted toward the Kisei HaKavod itself.This is the secret of Techeiles: not merely to remind us of Heaven, but to teach us how to look at earth until Heaven becomes visible within it.
The Meraglim were not simple people. They were great leaders, tzaddikim, and respected voices in Klal Yisrael. And yet, the Torah reveals a moment where fear entered the room and began to sound like wisdom.In this shiur, delivered in Tomer Devorah, Rav Burg explores the inner difference between Yehoshua and Calev. Yehoshua is saved through Moshe Rabbeinu’s tefillah and the addition of the small letter י, the humble point within a person that refuses to be erased. Calev is saved by leaving the group, going to Chevron, lowering himself at the graves of the Avos, and reconnecting to the roots beneath the fear.What emerges is a powerful understanding of two kinds of smallness. There is the smallness of the Meraglim, who see giants and feel like grasshoppers. And there is the smallness of the י, a humility that remains anchored in Hashem and therefore cannot be intimidated by giants.
Why would Tzelafchad desecrate Shabbos for the sake of Heaven?Chazal reveal that the mekoshesh eitzim was not acting out of rebellion, but out of desperation. Klal Yisrael thought that after the decree not to enter Eretz Yisrael, perhaps they were no longer bound by mitzvos. Tzelafchad wanted to create a moment so shocking that it would force clarity.But that is exactly where the danger lies.Shabbos teaches us that the world does not need to be held together by our anxiety, our force, or our need for control. Public chillul Shabbos is compared to avodah zarah because it relocates power from Hashem to man. And tragically, in trying to protect Shabbos by forcing the issue, Tzelafchad cracked the very consciousness that Shabbos was meant to create.In his shiur, delivered in Sharfmans, Rav Burg explores the deep psychological message of the mekoshesh, the frightening words of Tosafos that had Klal Yisrael kept that second Shabbos no nation could ever have ruled over them, and the beautiful tikkun found in the daughters of Tzelafchad.A powerful shiur about Shabbos, anxiety, control, leadership, emunah, and learning how to care deeply without trying to control everything.
Moshe Rabbeinu reaches a breaking point. The people are crying for meat, but Moshe understands that this is not really about food. Something deeper is missing.Hashem’s answer is surprising: not meat, but more leaders. Seventy elders. Prophecy spreading beyond Moshe. And then Eldad and Meidad begin to prophesy, not in the Ohel Moed, but in the camp.Yehoshua is horrified. They are saying Moshe will die and Yehoshua will bring the people into Eretz Yisrael. But Moshe is not threatened. He is not jealous. He understands something only the greatest leaders understand: when your light appears in someone else, you have not become smaller. You have become more present.In this shiur, delivered in Yeshivat HaKotel, Rav Burg speaks about leadership, insecurity, unmet needs, Moshe Rabbeinu, Eldad and Meidad, and the courage to create people who no longer need you.
Shiurim and Divrei Chizzuk from our Mashpia Rav Mordechai Burg
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