The Netziv writes elsewhere as a general rule that any chiddush
that changes the status quo must be lishma (see post here). Doing an aviera, even for a good
purpose, is certainly a great chiddush; therefore I would suggest that it falls under the same general requirement of lishma that applies to any chiddush.
We also one discussed a yesod from R’ Amiel, who explains that the
reason lishma is so critical by korban pesach, even more so than korban chatas,
is because pesach celebrates the founding of Klal Yisrael. When one is starting a new enterprise it is
absolutely essential to get every detail right, because if the foundation is
lacking, the rest of the building won’t stand.
(It’s already Kislev and Chanukah is coming – R’ Yosef Engel writes that
even though tumah hutra b’tzibur, the menorah had to be lit with tahor oil
because the first lighting, the act of dedicating the menorah for use, has to
be done perfectly). Yitzchak’s bracha
was not just about getting “tal hashamayim u’shamanei ha’aretz,” material good,
but it was about choosing who would carry on the legacy of the Avos and build
Klal Yisrael. It was the foundation, and
therefore had to be done with the purest intentions.
2) I can’t find the Sefas Emes – Likutim online, but would love to
link to it because I think you have to see this one inside. What’s the idea behind the malachim crying in
Yitzchak’s eyes to blind him? The Sefas
Emes highlights the pervious lines in that same Midrash (63:10) that teaches
that someone who has a talmid or a son who is wicked is stricken blind. It seems from the Midrash that this is for
the person’s own sake, so that he should not venture outside his home and be
the subject of gossip, e.g. “There goes so-and-so whose son is the
troublemaker.” The S.A., however, reads
it as a punishment as well. What the
Midrash is telling us is that it’s not just blindness that Yitzchak suffered
because he had an Eisav and loved him, but it goes back further -- even the trial of the akeidah was due to this reason! It’s quite a chiddush (I hope I am not misreading his meaning. If anyone takes a look and interprets what he says differently, pls comment!)
I think there is another version to that answer as to why tuma hutra betzibbur doesn't apply, I heard from Rav Shachter (perhaps bshem the Avnei Nezer) that it's not a prat in "chinuch" per se, but just that if there is no menora, there is no chiyuv to light, so tuma hutra betzibbur doesn't get off the ground.
ReplyDeleteIs this based on the Avnei Nezer (500) that says you need a menorah to light and can't just line up some candles on your table?
ReplyDeleteWhy is there no chiyuv to light if there is no menorah? Wouldn't there by a chiyuv, just you can't fulfill it because of ones? And is having a physical menorah which is tamei really the same as not having the physical object?