<div dir="ltr">I found a nice example of the different wat Brisk approaches questions.<div><br></div><div>In halichot Shlomo it brings a story of a "baal tokeah" who got very emotional before blowing the shofar.</div>
<div>The local rabbi reprimanded him asking whether he also gets emotional when putting on tefillin.</div><div>When RSZA heard the story he was upset at the rabbi and brought a letter from R. Akiba Eiger.</div><div>R Eiger writes in a similar case that in theory we should get emotional at every bracha and mitzva.</div>
<div>In practice thing we do frequently live is jaded. However, shofar comes once or twice a year and</div><div>so it is appropriate to get emotional over the bracha and mitzvah.</div><div><br></div><div>RYBS brings a similar story with his father (RMS) who was rabbi in a chabad community and also</div>
<div>asked the baal tokeah why he was so emotional. RYBS says he disagrees with his father. However,</div><div>instead of the "emotional" answer of R. Akiva Eiger and RSZA, RYBS gives a Brisker answer. He</div><div>
divides mitzvot into 2 categories. For most mitzvot the main idea is simply to perform the act,</div><div>put on tefillin, tzizit, erect a fence on the roof etc. However, for some mitzvot in addition to the formal</div><div>
act there is a thought behind it. The obvious example is tefillah where mere recital of the words is</div><div>not enough. RYBS proves that shofar is in the second category and shofar is meant as a way</div><div>of crying out to G-d and leading to teshuva. So the message is important and not just the formal act.</div>
<div>Hence, it is important to think about the message when blowing and listening to the shofar.</div><div><br></div><div>In summary according to R. Akiva Eiger one should in theory get emotional at every bracha and mitzvah</div>
<div>but it simply is diffucult to do for verey day mitzvot and so we "settle" for shofar. For RYBS there is a</div><div>fundamental difference between shofar (and a few other selected mitzvot) from the majority of</div>
<div>brachot and mitzvot.<br clear="all"><div><br></div>-- <br><div dir="ltr"><font color="#000099" face="'comic sans ms', sans-serif">Eli Turkel</font></div><br>
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