Sometimes our own familiarity with the things we daily say, see and hear can cause us to stop thinking about their meaning and significance. We say Shema each day, but must never take it for granted. Our member Paul Bloom looks further into this mitzvah and points out things we may easily miss.
One
of the most famous sentences in the entire Torah is:
שְׁמַע יִשְׂרָאֵל ה׳ אֱלֹקֵינוּ ה׳ אֶחָד
This
pasuk is found in our parashah. We say it every day. But what does it really
mean?
Rabbi
Alan Kimche explains something powerful: even though Shema appears in the
siddur, it’s not actually a prayer — at least not in the way we usually think
of prayer. Normally, in tefillah, we
ask Hashem for things: health, peace, livelihood, wisdom, redemption. But Shema
is different. It’s not a request — it’s a declaration. A pledge of allegiance.
Just
like soldiers pledge loyalty to their country, when we say the Shema, we are
pledging our loyalty to Hashem, to the Jewish people, and to our mission in
this world. And those first two words — “Shema Yisrael” — aren’t just a
poetic beginning. They’re a command: Listen. Pay attention. Tune in.
Why “listen”? Why not “see”? Rav Yitzchak Hutner points out that seeing can mislead us — it’s easy to be fooled by appearances. Just think back to the very first sin in the Torah: Chava saw the fruit and it looked good — and we all know where that led. But true understanding, true depth, comes from listening. Hearing the voice of Hashem, hearing the wisdom of Torah, listening to the truth that often can’t be seen with the eye, only felt in the heart. That’s why we cover our eyes when we say Shema — because the truths we’re affirming aren’t visible in the world around us. The world today looks divided, broken, chaotic. But we say “Hashem Echad” — we declare that beneath it all, there is unity. There is a Divine plan.
Another
beautiful idea comes from the Maharal
of Prague. He explains that when we say “Shema Yisrael,” we’re
not talking to Hashem — we’re talking to each other. To all of Am Yisrael. This isn’t just a personal
statement. It’s a national mission. I don’t say Hashem is my God — I say He’s our
God. We’re in this together.
There’s
a third layer — from the Sfas Emes.
He reminds us that we actually heard
the first two commandments directly from Hashem at Har Sinai — not through
Moshe, but with our own ears. That voice of Hashem still echoes in the world,
even if we can’t hear it in the usual sense. When we say the Shema, we’re
reconnecting to that eternal voice.
And finally, the Gemara tells us something beautiful: the very first people who ever said “Shema Yisrael” were the sons of Ya’akov Avinu. When Ya’akov was on his deathbed, he asked his sons if they shared his faith — and they replied: “Shema Yisrael” — Listen, our father Yisrael, Hashem is our God, Hashem is One. In that moment they were saying, “We are with you. We carry your faith forward.” And so when we say Shema today, we’re also speaking to our ancestors — saying to them: “We are still here. We believe. We continue your path.”
We are part of that eternal chain. When we say “Shema Yisrael”, and we connect to Ya’akov, to Har Sinai, to thousands of years of Jews who came before you — and, IY”H, to generations who will come after us.