In this week’s parsha, the Torah introduces a mitzvah that at first glance seems merely technical: “עשה לך שתי חצוצרות כסף” (“Make for yourself two silver trumpets” ( במדבר י:ב). These trumpets were not decorative. They were functional. They were the communication system of Klal Yisrael in the desert. What does this mean? Our member Rabbi Paul Bloom elaborates:
When Moshe Rabbeinu needed to gather the people, a tekiah was
sounded. When it was time to travel, a teruah was blown. Different sounds
carried different messages.
The Jewish people camped around the Mishkan in a vast desert. There were no telephones, no radios, no text messages. The silver trumpets unified the nation. They told the people when to assemble, when to travel, when to prepare for battle, when to celebrate and when to move forward. These chatzotzrot were the instruments through which Moshe communicated direction to the nation.
But Chazal notice something extraordinary. The Torah says “עשה לך”
— “Make for yourself.” And the Gemara teaches that these particular trumpets
belonged uniquely to Moshe Rabbeinu. The Aron, the Menorah, the Mizbe’ach — all
the holy vessels of the Mishkan continued for generations. Shlomo HaMelech
still used many of them centuries later. But not the trumpets. Every generation
needed new trumpets. Why? What is the Torah teaching us?
The Eternal Torah and the Changing World
Rav Yechezkel Abramsky explained a profound idea. The essence of
Torah never changes. The Torah is eternal. The Rambam writes that if a prophet
would arise and claim that one mitzvah has changed — even one detail — that
prophet is false. Torah is immutable. We believe with complete faith: “זאת התורה
לא תהא מוחלפת” (“This Torah will never be exchanged.”) The
principles of Torah are eternal truth. But Rav Abramsky explained that while
the Torah itself never changes, the way Torah is transmitted sometimes must
change. The “trumpets” change. The method of communication changes. The needs
of the generation change. Reality changes. This is why great Torah leaders
throughout history understood that in order to bring Jews closer to Torah, they
sometimes needed new chatzotzrot — new ways of reaching the Jewish people. Not
a new Torah, but new trumpets.
Boaz and the Sanctification of Everyday Life
Chazal connect this idea to an extraordinary scene in Megillat Rut.
Boaz walks into the field and greets his workers: “ה׳ עמכם”
(“Hashem be with you.”) and they answer: “יברכך ה׳”
(“May Hashem bless you.”).
The Mishnah asks: Why was Boaz using the Name of Hashem in ordinary
greeting? Would that not appear disrespectful? Would that not diminish
reverence for the Divine Name? And Chazal answer: “עת לעשות
לה׳” (“There are times when action must be
taken for Hashem.”) There are moments in
history when leadership must respond to the spiritual needs of the generation. Boaz
understood that his generation needed something. The Jewish people needed to
feel the presence of Hashem not only in the Beit HaMikdash, not only in formal
prayer, but in everyday life. In the marketplace. In the fields. At work. In
ordinary conversation.
So Boaz introduced a new “trumpet.” He taught people to greet one
another with awareness of Hashem. Not because Torah changed, but because the
generation needed a different language of connection.
Kohelet and the Wisdom of Timing
Shlomo HaMelech writes in Kohelet: “לכל זמן
ועת לכל חפץ תחת השמים” (“Everything
has its season, and every matter has its appointed time beneath the heavens.”) There
is:
●
A time to
speak, a time to remain silent
●
A time
for wa, a time for peace
●
A time to
build, a time to rebuild
The eternal values remain the same, but wise leadership understands
timing. And throughout Jewish history, our greatest leaders recognized moments
when the “trumpets” needed to sound differently.
First Example: Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi and the Mishnah
For centuries, Torah Sheba’al Peh was not written down. A
student learned directly from a rebbe. Torah was transmitted personally. Living
Torah. Breathing Torah. Not just information, but character, humility, fear of
Heaven, and spiritual warmth.
Then came the destruction of the Beit HaMikdash. Exile spread the
Jewish people across the world. Roman persecution intensified. Torah was in
danger of being forgotten. And Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi made a revolutionary
decision: He wrote down the Mishnah.
In one sense, this violated the longstanding tradition against
writing Torah Shebe’al Peh. But Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi understood: If we
continue using the old trumpets, Torah may be lost. The Torah itself would
remain eternal but the transmission system needed to change. And because of
that courageous decision, Torah survived. From the Mishnah came the Gemara. Then
Rashi. Then Tosafot. Then Rambam. Then Shulchan Aruch. The entire world of
Torah learning we know today grew from that decision—a new trumpet for a new
generation.
Second Example: Paying Rabbanim and Teachers
The Rambam writes that Torah should not be taught for money. Ideally, Torah leaders supported themselves independently. Teaching Torah was never meant to become a profession for personal gain. But centuries later, Rav Yosef Karo — the author of the Shulchan Aruch — recognized a new reality. Communities were becoming more complex. The demands on rabbanim increased. If Torah teachers could not dedicate themselves fully to Torah leadership, Torah itself would weaken. And therefore a new model emerged:
Communities would support rabbanim, roshei yeshiva, and dayanim. Again,
this was not a change in Torah but a change in the “trumpets.” A new structure
for a new reality. And because of that decision, Torah institutions flourished
across the Jewish world.
Third Example: Rav Kook and Ahavat Yisrael
Perhaps one of the most dramatic examples came in the previous
century with Rav Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook. In Europe, Jews who abandoned
Torah were often seen as actively fighting against Judaism. They promoted
assimilation. They opposed traditional observance. They weakened Jewish
commitment.
But Rav Kook arrived in Eretz Yisrael and saw something different. He
saw Jews who were not observant… yet they were draining swamps, building farms,
reviving Hebrew, defending Jewish lives and rebuilding the Land of Israel.
Rav Kook said: We must relate to them differently. Not because
Torah changed. Not because mitzvot changed. But because history changed. Reality
changed. The generation required a new trumpet, a new language, a new way of
connecting Jews to one another and to redemption.
This approach was controversial. But so was Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi’s
innovation. So was Rav Yosef Karo’s. True leadership often requires courage.
Our Generation’s Trumpets
And now we come to our own generation. We are living through
extraordinary times. For nearly 2,000 years Jews dreamed of returning to Eretz
Yisrael. Today we are witnessing Kibbutz Galuyot, the rebuilding of Jewish
sovereignty, the flourishing of the Land, the revival of Hebrew and the
protection of Jewish life by Jewish soldiers
We are living inside pages of Tanach. And yet our generation is
deeply fragmented: Religious and secular, right and left, Israeli and Diaspora--different
communities, different languages, different fears.
And perhaps the lesson of the silver trumpets is this: We must
learn how to call Jews together. The purpose of the trumpets was not division. It
was unity: to gather the nation around a shared mission.
Moshe Rabbeinu used the trumpets to move Klal Yisrael toward the
Mishkan — toward the presence of Hashem. That remains our challenge. How do we
speak to fellow Jews? How do we inspire? How do we communicate Torah in a
language the next generation can hear? Not watered-down Torah, nNot compromised
Torah—but eternal Torah communicated with wisdom, sensitivity, and love.
The Torah gives the trumpets another role as well. Not only
communication. Not only gathering the people. The trumpets were also
instruments of spiritual awakening. The Torah says: “וְכִי
תָבֹאוּ מִלְחָמָה בְּאַרְצְכֶם עַל־הַצַר הַצֹּרֵר
אֶתְכֶם וַהֲרֵעֹתֶם בַּחֲצֹצְרֹת וְנִזְכַּרְתֶּם לִפְנֵי ה׳ אֱלֹקֵיכֶם
וְנוֹשַׁעְתֶּם מֵאֹיְבֵיכֶם” (“When you wage war in your Land against
an enemy who oppresses you, you shall sound a teruah with the trumpets, and you
shall be remembered before Hashem your God, and you shall be saved from your
enemies.”).
Notice something remarkable. The Torah does not say: “Strengthen
your weapons.” It says: “Sound the
trumpets.” Why? Because the essential battle is spiritual before it is
military. The Rambam writes in Hilchot Ta’aniyot that when suffering or war
comes upon the Jewish people, there is a positive mitzvah to cry out and sound
the trumpets. Why? Because the purpose is to awaken the people to teshuvah. The
Rambam explains that when Jews cry out before Hashem, they recognize that
events are not random: “Everyone realizes that the evil occurred because of
their deeds… and this will cause the trouble to be removed.” The trumpets were
therefore not merely military instruments. They were spiritual alarms—a wake-up
call, a reminder that Jewish survival ultimately depends not only on armies,
but on our relationship with Hashem. And perhaps this message has never been
more relevant than in our own generation.
The Challenge of Communication
Sometimes religious Jews become frustrated. “How can they not
understand?” “How can they not see?” But every generation requires different
language, different methods, different pathways. Some Jews connect through
learning. Others through kindness. Others through Israel. Others through
history. Others through community. Others through acts of courage.
The Torah does not change. But the trumpet may. And perhaps this is
one of the greatest lessons for parents, educators, rabbis, and leaders. You
cannot always speak to this generation the same way previous generations were
addressed. You must understand the soul of the generation. You must understand
its struggles, its distractions, its fears, its opportunities—and then sound
the trumpet clearly.
One might ask: How can anyone speak about Aliyah during dangerous
times? How can Jews consider moving to Israel precisely when there is war,
terror, uncertainty, and fear? But perhaps the parsha itself answers that
question. Immediately after the discussion of the trumpets, the Torah describes
the complaints of the Jewish people in the desert: “וַיְהִי
הָעָם כְּמִתְאֹנְנִים” (“The people were like complainers.”) Rashi
explains that they complained about the hardships of the journey toward Eretz
Yisrael.
Earlier, the Torah says: “וַיִּסְעוּ
מֵהַר ה׳ דֶּרֶךְ שְׁלֹשֶׁת יָמִים” (“They traveled from the Mountain of
Hashem a three-day journey.”). Rashi explains something astonishing: Hashem
compressed a three-day journey into one day because He wanted to bring the
Jewish people into Eretz Yisrael immediately.
The Da’at Zekenim explains that beneath the complaints was a deeper
issue: Fear. Fear of war, fear of what awaited them in the Land, a lack of
emunah.
The Chiddushei HaRim asks a powerful question: If Hashem wanted to
bring them quickly into Eretz Yisrael, why make the journey difficult at all? And
he answers with a profound principle: It is impossible to acquire Eretz Yisrael
without suffering.
The Gemara says: “שלוש מתנות טובות נתן הקב״ה לישראל וכולן
לא נתנן אלא על ידי יסורין” (“Three precious gifts were given to
Israel only through suffering.”) And one of them is Eretz Yisrael. Hashem was
actually trying to shorten the suffering.
Had the Jewish people accepted the temporary hardship with love and
faith, they would have entered the Land immediately. But instead they
complained—and that ultimately led to the sin of the spies, the rejection of
the Land, and forty years in the wilderness. Sometimes the difference between
redemption and delay is the willingness to endure temporary discomfort for
eternal gain.
Aliyah and the Call of the Trumpets
There is another dimension here as well. The trumpets were used
when it was time for Klal Yisrael to journey> to move forward, to leave the
comfort of one encampment and continue toward the Promised Land.
Sometimes Jews become spiritually comfortable in exile. But the
trumpets remind us: Judaism is a journey. History is moving. Hashem is calling Am
Yisrael forward—toward redemption, toward responsibility, toward Eretz
Yisrael and toward national destiny.
Every generation hears that call differently. For one Jew it may
come through Torah learning. For another through antisemitism. For another
through love of Israel. For another through children and grandchildren. But the
call is sounding. The question is whether we are listening.
Too often in Jewish history, we have resisted difficult transitions. We prefer comfort, familiarity, security, predictability. But Jewish history teaches again and again: “No pain, no gain.” Growth requires sacrifice. Redemption requires courage. Returning home requires faith. And perhaps the trumpets of our generation are calling us not merely to survive Jewish history — but to participate in it. Perhaps this also explains Moshe Rabbeinu’s extraordinary plea to Yitro. Moshe says: “נֹסְעִים אֲנַחְנוּ אֶל־הַמָּקוֹם אֲשֶׁר אָמַר ה׳ אֹתוֹ אֶתֵּן לָכֶם לְכָה אִתָּנוּ וְהֵטַבְנוּ לָךְ (“We are traveling to the place that Hashem promised to give us. Come with us and we will do good to you.”) Yitro hesitates. The commentators suggest many reasons: Fear of leaving familiar surroundings, concern about livelihood, concern for family, fear of war and fear of uncertainty
How contemporary those fears sound. They are the same concerns many Jews still express today. But Moshe continues urging him. Why? Because Moshe understood something fundamental: Living in Eretz Yisrael is not merely about convenience. It is about destiny. One commentary explains that Moshe was telling Yitro: “If you come with us, your very presence will create a Kiddush Hashem. Others will be inspired by your courage and commitment.” Sometimes the greatest inspiration comes not from speeches — but from action. From Jews willing to journey toward the future of the Jewish people despite uncertainty.
Conclusion
The silver trumpets teach us something profound. The Torah is
eternal. But every generation requires leaders who know how to communicate
eternal truths in ways the generation can hear. Moshe had his trumpets. Rabbi
Yehuda HaNasi had his. Rav Yosef Karo had his. Rav Kook had his. May we merit
to hear the trumpets of our generation clearly!
The trumpets calling us to a deeper emunah, greater unity, spiritual
courage, responsibility for Am Yisrael, and renewed connection to Eretz
Yisrael. And may we have the wisdom not to repeat the mistakes of the
wilderness generation — not to allow fear, comfort, or hesitation to delay
redemption.
May we instead respond with faith, courage, and vision, and merit
to see the complete Geulah במהרה בימינו. Amen.

