Posted on 04/29/25
Strength and Vulnerability
In addition to helping us subdue our enemies, physical and military strength also deters adversaries and allows us to live without fear.[1] But strength is hard to achieve. Even the most potent nations and people have vulnerabilities. Hashem creates us and manages the world this way to remind us of our dependency upon Him.
As the Jewish people are meant to feel especially close to Hashem, He makes us more vulnerable. Our people have always experienced this vulnerability. After we triumphantly left Egypt, we were first threatened by the Egyptians at Yam Suf and then attacked by Amalek. Even after entering the Land of Israel, threats and attacks against us continued. Eventually, we were even exiled — twice.
Throughout our many centuries in exile, we constantly lived in fear. Even during peaceful times, we feared that trouble could be just around the corner. The Golden Age in Spain ended with the Inquisition and expulsion. Later, centuries of flourishing Jewish life across Europe concluded abruptly with the Holocaust.
The Zionist movement hoped that returning the Jewish people to Eretz Yisrael would finally put an end to our persecution. Getting us out of “the hair” of the European and Arab nations and relocating us to a desolate land of sand dunes would finally bring us peace.
The history of the State of Israel has, of course, been very different. In addition to the many bloody existential wars we have been forced to fight, the recent Hamas genocidal massacre, followed by the attack and demonization of the State of Israel and the Jewish people worldwide, reminds us once again of our vulnerability. The State of Israel has built a powerful army, yet we are still attacked. No Jew feels safe in Israel or around the world.
As we approach Israel’s 77th birthday, a number associated with the word oz (strength), feeling unsafe and vulnerable, we wonder how we and the state can attain the strength that has felt so elusive.
Tefillin
The Gemara offers an interesting answer: tefillin. The Gemara in Berachot teaches that “tefillin are strength” for the Jewish people.[2] Indeed, proper fulfillment of the mitzvah of tefillin is a condition for going out to war,[3] and the sight of us wearing tefillin is meant to instill fear in the hearts of other nations.
How do tefillin achieve this?
Moshe Rabbeinu provided the answer when he presented the mitzvah at the end of Parshat Bo. He explained that tefillin remind us of the “strong arm” Hashem used to take us out of Egypt.[4]
Moshe also called the tefillin an “ot” (sign) because they signify our relationship with Hashem, who also “wears” tefillin.[5] The tefillin signify our shared commitment and relationship — the parshiyot in His tefillin glorify us, while the parshiyot in ours glorify Him.[6] Our commitment to and appreciation of Hashem as the source of our strength merits His care and empowerment.
Interestingly, we remember Hashem’s “arm” by donning tefillin on our own. The implication is that Hashem empowers our arms. This explains why we wear tefillin on our weaker arm — to remind us that our strength comes from Hashem, not from our own arms.[7]
Remembering this not only earns us Hashem’s support[8] but also inspires confidence. Those who believe their strength comes from their own power realize that they remain vulnerable. Conversely, those who connect their strength to Hashem’s support understand they have no reason to fear.
Dovid HaMelech expressed this idea in his famous declaration that “Even when I walk through the valley of death, I will not fear because You are with me.”[9] Faith in the almighty G-d not only generates strength but also instills a deep level of confidence.[10]
The Lesson of Parshat Beshalach — From Yam Suf to Amalek
The next parshah, Beshalach, reinforces Parshat Bo’s tefillin message. The Jews left Egypt “b’yad ramah,” feeling strong and confident after vanquishing the mighty Egyptians.[11] Their confidence crashed soon after when the Egyptians once again threatened them at Yam Suf.[12] The Jewish people, who had been confident in the strength of their own arms and armaments,[13] were reminded of their vulnerability. They needed Hashem’s “arm” to save them.[14]
Of course, Hashem wants us to fight for ourselves and blesses us with the physical strength and heavenly help we need. We see this at the end of Parshat Beshalach following Amalek’s attack.[15]
Like Hamas and other Islamic terror groups, Amalek preys on the weak.[16] Moshe responded by having Yehoshua organize an army to fight Amalek. Significantly, holding the heavenly mateh (stick) used to facilitate the miracles in Egypt, Moshe climbed a nearby hill. When the battle began, he extended his arms heavenward. While his hands remained in this position, the Jews were victorious; when he lowered them, Amalek gained the advantage.
The Mishnah[17] asks: “Do Moshe’s hands make or break a war?” It answers: “When the Jewish people directed their sight heavenward and committed their hearts to their father in heaven, they were victorious.” Ultimately, Hashem intends for us to fight for ourselves and strengthens our efforts, but only if we recognize that our strength comes from Him.[18]
The Torah describes Moshe’s outstretched arms as “faithful hands.”[19] They were “faithful” not only because they reliably remained outstretched but also because they embodied the faith he and the Jewish people relied upon.
The Avraham Avinu Precedent
By raising his arms heavenward during war, Moshe followed the lead of Avraham Avinu, who responded to the king of Sedom’s offer of the spoils of war by similarly raising his arms.[20] Avraham refused to partake in the spoils of war offered to him by the king, lest the impression be that the king enriched him. Neither the king nor Avraham deserved credit for Avraham’s riches or his victory; Hashem was responsible. Avraham felt unentitled to the spoils of Hashem’s victory.[21] The victory had been through Avraham’s hand, but only because of Hashem’s assistance.
Avraham’s words to the king of Sedom earned the Jewish people the mitzvah of tefillin.[22] This is understandable, as tefillin teach us the true source of our strength. Avraham’s attribution of his victory to Hashem earned his descendants the mitzvah that empowers us. Like our ancestor Avraham, we are blessed with divine empowerment when we recognize Hashem as the true source of our strength.
Israel at 77
The State of Israel has developed magnificently over the past seventy-seven years. Baruch Hashem, there are millions of religious Jews living lives rich in Torah learning and inspired by tefillin. Hashem has also blessed us with material and military strength: Israel has a strong economy and a powerful army.
Unfortunately, the populations committed to the religious and material spheres do not always align. Much of the religious sector is disconnected from the state’s economy and military, and much of the latter is not connected to the former. Our strength lies in recognizing the connection between these two spheres.
In recent decades, the Religious Zionist community has pursued leadership positions in the army and the economic sector. We must bolster this effort, recognizing that only when success in these areas is perceived as heaven-inspired will it provide us with true strength and security.
May fighting our wars and living our lives with this “tefillin mentality” merit us Hashem’s empowerment and the associated strength and success.
Rav Reuven Taragin is the Dean of Overseas Students at Yeshivat Hakotel and the Educational Director of World Mizrachi and the RZA.
His new book, Essentials of Judaism, can be purchased at rabbireuventaragin.com.
[1] See Melachim I 5:5, Michah 4:4.
[2] Berachot 6a. See also Menachot 43b (“ha’kol b’chizuk”) and Shabbat 49a (“meginot”).
[3] Sotah 44b.
[4] Shemot 13:9,16.
[5] Berachot 6a. For different explanations of what this means, see the Rashba, et al., and his Chiddushim to Aggadah.
[6] Ibid. See also Maharsha on that Gemara.
[7] This may be the significance of the Gemara’s derivation of (Menachot 37a) of this halachah from the reading of the world “yadchah” as yad keiheh.
[8] Yirmiyah 17:7; Tehillim 32:10 (see Rema, YD 179:4); Mishlei 29:25 as explained by the Kad Hakemach, Erech Avel; Tehillim 40:2 as explained by the Midrash (et al.) and the Derush B’Inyan Hakivui LaRamchal, and Etzbah Ketana (Chidah) on the berachah of Et Tzemach Dovid.
See also Maharsha (Berachot 6a), who explains that the sight of tefillin on our heads inspires fear when we wear them in a way that Hashem’s Shechina resides upon us.
[9] Tehillim 23:4.
[10] Yeshaya 33:6 with Rashi; Berachot 60a; and Alshich to Tehillim 29:3.
[11] Shemot 14:8. See also Devarim 32:27, where the phrase “yad ramah” is used this way. See also Bamidbar 15:30, where the phrase also appears in a negative context.
[12] See Rashbam, Shemot 14:8.
[13] Shemot 13:18.
[14] Many of the Yam Suf pesukim mention Hashem’s “arm.” See Shemot 14:31 and 15:6,17.
[15] Shemot 17:8–16.
[16] Devarim 25:18.
[17] Rosh Hashanah 3:8.
[18] Shemot 17:16 may imply that when we fight with this perspective, “our hand touches G-d’s throne.” See Ramban to 17:16.
[19] Shemot 17:12. This phrase is also the siman for the number of pesukim in Parshat Beshalach.
[20] Bereishit 14:22.
[21] Avraham’s attitude foreshadows Yehoshua’s commandment not to partake of the spoils of Yericho after Hashem miraculously toppled the city’s walls (Yehoshua 6:17–19).
[22] Sotah 17a.