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Zerizus/Joyful Haste

Teves/5781

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Just a Little Background

What is Zerizus?

I don't know about you, but when I am excited about something I walk faster. Like if my friends and I are walking to a wedding, I might be practically running! How do we make this excitement for Mitzvos?

Notice how zerizus is translated as joyful haste. Why is this? Because zerizus doesn't just mean doing it faster! Zerizus means doing it with a cheishek, with an excitement! 

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Raise Your Bar

Making Zerizus Practical

  • Once a day, act on inspiration you hear right away. Often, we hear a shiur or song or story and are so inspired. But if we don't act on it right away, the inspiration can fizzle chas v'shalom, and what will we have to show for our inspiration. WE CAN'T LET THESE OPPORTINTIES SLIP US BY!! A LIFETIME IS NEVER LONG ENOUGH!!


  • Once a day, when you are planning on doing something and you are pushing it off, do it now. Why wait? You will have to do it anyways!

  • RUN! What is the first thing that comes to mind when you think "zerizus"? Running and rushing to do mitzvos! Let us take it literally and take our mitzvos up a notch and do it fast! There is a reason a man, when going to shul has a mitzvah to walk fast on the way there and slowly when returning home.

  • When your mother or father or spouse calls you from across the house (this is applicable to the younger Hashem-Firsters, but maybe the older ones can put a twist on it), instead of shouting back "WHAAAT" or waiting for her/him to continue yelling, GO TO HER/HIM! Besides for it being zerizus, it will make them feel better and less strain on their voice;)

  • See if you can avoid saying "One minute" or "soon" when your parent/spouse asks you to do something. If you do it right away, you can get back to what you are doing faster either way;)

  • Take "Hashem First" literally and put Hashem FIRST in your day! YOU CAN:

  • Try not to text or email before davening. Or stated positively, Daven before texting or emailing. If you want, try not even to LOOK at them before. THINK TO YOURSELF, WHO IS MORE IMPORTANT? HOW DO I WANT TO START MY DAY? (If it helps, have the Modeh Ani song as your alarm clock, it definitely helps me!) It gets easier as time goes on, trust me!

  • Try not to press snooze. I know, this is a tough one. Show Hashem, instead of choosing to stay blissfully asleep at least for another 5 minutes, I am choosing YOU! I am choosing to begin my Hashem-filled day! I am choosing to put YOU first, YOU ARE MORE IMPORTANT TO ME THAN MY SLEEP IS! It is so so SOOO hard for me to get up right now, but YOU are worth it! That is the statement you are making! (no pressure;) If its easier, you can disable snooze on your alarm clock, so you have no choice but to get up.

  • Right after you make a mistake, do teshuva! Don't wait for Ellul, Hashem is listening all year! Clean the slate!

  • When a Mitzvah opportunity comes your way, GRAB IT! Imagine how you would feel if you were waiting on line for something and the person ahead of you gets the last item that you were planning on buying and there isn't any left for you. So every single mitzvah is a one time opportunity! You won't have the same exact mitzvah ever again! Grab it! It is golden! In most cases, if you do it sooner, it's worth more schar! Because you are getting more schar with zerizus.

  • Daven mincha at first available opportunity. It feels good when you do it with more than enough time till the zman, no? Most of us are unable to do it whenever we want. 

  • Zman tefila. Try to make zman kriyas Shema. We are showing Hashem we want to be mehudar His mitzvos. THAT'S WHAT HASHEM FIRST IS ALL ABOUT!

THIS ONE IS A BONUS THAT I AM SURE MOST OF US CAN RELATE TO: 

You know the two weeks before Pesach, everyone is returning all the items you ever borrowed

but never got around to returning? So now is a great opportunity to... 

  • Return all those random items you borrowed from people that is floating around your house. MITZVAS HASHAVAS AVEIDAH, it was lost there somewhere. Don't procrastinate, do it now!

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Let's Explore

Zerizus/Joyful Haste

WHEN WE SHOW HASHEM HOW MUCH WE WANT TO DO HIS MITZVOS, BY DOING IT FASTER, AND WITH MORE EXCITEMENT, WE ARE MAKING A STATEMENT. WE ARE SAYING, HASHEM, I AM NOT JUST DOING YOUR MITZVOS TO BE YOTZEI. I AM DOING YOUR MITZVOS BECAUSE I LOVE YOU AND I WANT TO COME CLOSE TO YOU!!

In Parshas Naso, Rashi says (quoting the Midrash) the reason that the Nesiim did not give their contributions to this Mishkan immediately: They said, “We'll wait to see what's missing, then we'll give everything else.” But then...everything was brought before they had a chance.


Chazal tell us that because the Nesiim were lazy,  they were punished – they lost the yud in their name.

But we can wonder: what was wrong with what they did? Laziness? They were prepared to give so much, so why were they punished for being lazy?


Rav Segal, the Manchester rosh yeshiva, says that this is a basic yesod of how seriously the torah views laziness. Theres a big ta'anah on a person who isn’t a zariz.

Laziness can actually turn a bad argument into one that sounds pretty reasonable. Now imagine a person under their covers, and the alarm goes off. They tell themselves, “You know, if I sleep another 20 minutes, I will have even more koach to learn, better davening, so it’s a mitzvah to lie in bed and linger, because then I can serve Hashem will more geshmak!!” And all of a sudden it’s a mitzvah to lie in bed and miss z'man tefilah. Maybe it's true? But the argument here is because of laziness. When a person is being lead by laziness, when a person isn’t ready with enthusiasm, with geshmak to do what has to be done, it's no longer a good ta'anah.


Orchos tzadikim (in shaar hazrizus) explains that zrizus is one of the first middos that a person requires. Enthusiasm – WANTING to do something. We see this middah so powerfully in Avraham Avinu, with the nisayon of Akeidas Yitzchak. Imagine what was going through Avraham’s mind... And:  “Vayashkeim Avraham ba'boker.” He got up early! Not only did Avraham do what Hashem told him to do. But look at HOW did he did it! He could have easily taken his time, woken up later, had a long breakfast. But no! If Hashem told me to do something, I am going to do it NOW! K'lal yisrael is living in the zchus of Akeidas Yitzchak, because of Avraham’s zrizus. He did it ALL THE WAY.


We all do mitzvos – but how are you going to perform these actions? Are you going do it “because you HAVE to”? It's all about the motivation – the ahavas Hashem. Avraham understood that it was Hashem’s command, so of course he did it because Hashem told him to, because he HAD to. But he also did it with zrizus! With Geshmak!


Reb Dovid Drayim was a Litvish yid who moved to a small town, to Gateshead. There was nothing there. He wrote twenty-two letters to various rabbanim, asking them to come to Gateshead and build the community. Out of twenty-two , he got only two replies. One of them was a polite refusal. The other  was rabbi Dessler, who wrote, “Next time you're in London, please come and discuss it with me.” Rabbi Dessler actually moved to Gateshead. He opened  a kollel and a seminary; he built the Torah in Gateshead to what it is today. Why? Because someone was a zariz. There are excuses and ta'anahs, but the Torah wants a person to be moser nefesh.


When Bnei Yisrael came to the Yam Suf, it did not split until it saw the coffin of Yosef Hatzaddik. Yosef broke his nature. Yosef overcame a test, overcame nature. Middah k'neged middah, the Yam Suf overcame nature and split for Yosef. 


This is what zrizus is all about – overcoming our nature, our basic lazy instinct, to run to do mitzvos with passion and excitement.


In World War I, there was an exhausted soldier on the battlefield. Everyone around him was dying but he noticed one group of soldiers that was always upbeat, always able to pick themselves up after getting knocked down. They were always murmuring things from little books (sifrei Tehillim).  And at one point in the war, when missiles were flying, he picked up his eyes to Heaven and said “I hate being a soldier. I don’t know how to pray; show me You're watching over me. I want to be shot in my hand, and it will be a sign.” Moments later, there was a ceasefire and the fighting came to a stop. Then one lone shot pierced the air, and hit the soldier's finger. That was his sign from Hashem. He promised himself he would go home and check out what Judaism is all about. He really wanted to do it all the way, but first he decided to go to college and finish up his studies, get a degree in agriculture. By the time three months of college were over, his resolve was over too. He was so not into becoming frum anymore. Years later, he claimed that if he would have went to a Rabbi right away, he would have been religious right now. Because of his laziness, because he waited to act – he lost.


On the other hand, during World War II, there was a nineteen-year-old jew from Israel who wanted to join the war fighting for his brethren. He was on a plane to England, returning from a bombng mission, and the plane started running out of gas. They circled a bit then had to do an emergency landing, fifteen miles from base. It was a terrible crash. The plane ripped into two, with many dead, many injured. But there was one person without a scratch. This boy walked back to the base at night and they were shocked to see him alive. He was given a pill to calm down and slept for 24 hours straight. When he woke up, he asked to be taken home and right away he went to Rav. He told the Rav that he wanted to become frum, and by the end of his military career, he was a frum army captain.


In both these stories, they wanted to do teshuva, to embrace Yiddishkeit. But the zrizus made all the difference.

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Information from this writeup has a lot based on a shiur from Rabbi Avi Weisenfeld.

Special thank you to Mrs. Mindel Kassorla for helping with this writeup!

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