Parshas Chayei Sarah Why Is There No Shehecheyanu at a Wedding

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Date:
November 26 2016
Length:
59min 32s
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26
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327
Comments:
3

Series: BCBM

Venue: Kehillas Zichron Mordechai (Teaneck, NJ) Kehillas Zichron Mordechai (Teaneck, NJ)

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Parshas Chayei Sarah Why Is There No Shehecheyanu at a Wedding

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    1. Title: No shehecheyanu at chatuna
      Author: False == 1 ? Anonymous : Ralph Zwier &##44;

      Your shiur is so clear and understandable. I so enjoyed listening to it. May I venture an idea, an extension of your last few sources which say something to the effect that "a wedding mightn't turn out to be all positive"? I say: A wedding is SIGNIFICANTLY different from all the other cases where we do make shehecheyanu, because there is an institution called "get" in the Torah which undoes a wedding. The bracha "zman" contains the word "vekiyyemanu" which implies permanence. But there is not necessarily permanence with a wedding.

    2. Title:
      Author: False == 1 ? Anonymous : Teacher Reply &##44;

      Dear Sir: Thank you for your response; I’m glad you enjoyed the Shiur. Your point about the institution of the *get* as something that can undo the marriage is excellent and very well taken; it certainly contributes to the idea that the wedding ceremony is indeed not the “end” of the mitzvah - indeed, it can be uprooted (through a *halachic* mechanism), thus mitigating against the *Shehecheyanu*. *Yasher Kochachah*!! The connection to the word “*vekiyemanu*” as implying permanence is interesting, though in the *berachah* itself it doesn’t have to have that connotation, and can rather imply having been “sustained” up to this point. I thank you for listening to the Shiur and for sharing your insightful comments. Kol Tuv, M. Taubes

    3. Title:
      Author: False == 1 ? Anonymous : Teacher Reply &##44;

      Dear Sir: Thank you for your response; I’m glad you enjoyed the Shiur. Your point about the institution of the *get* as something that can undo the marriage is excellent and very well taken; it certainly contributes to the idea that the wedding ceremony is indeed not the “end” of the mitzvah - indeed, it can be uprooted (through a *halachic* mechanism), thus mitigating against the *Shehecheyanu*. *Yasher Kochachah*!! The connection to the word “*vekiyemanu*” as implying permanence is interesting, though in the *berachah* itself it doesn’t have to have that connotation, and can rather imply having been “sustained” up to this point. I thank you for listening to the Shiur and for sharing your insightful comments. Kol Tuv, M. Taubes

    Learning on the Marcos and Adina Katz YUTorah site is sponsored today by Francine Lashinsky and Dr. Alexander & Meryl Weingarten in memory of Rose Lashinsky, Raizel bat Zimel, z"l on the occasion of her yahrzeit on Nissan 14, and in honor of their children, Mark, Michael, Julie, Marnie and Michelle, and in honor of Agam bat Meirav Berger and all of the other hostages and all of the chayalim and by the Goldberg and Mernick Families in loving memory of the yahrzeit of Illean K. Goldberg, Chaya Miriam bas Chanoch