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Simcha
Part 3: Joy in Marriage
Joy in Marriage
Joy finds its heights in marriage, and joy, so important
for all human interactions, is crucial in marriage.
The following sources range from the halakhic to the
mystical to the practical.
The Blessing
The blessing made at the wedding is a blessing
over joy. The last blessing of the sheva brakhot blesses
G-d “. . . who created joy and happiness, the chatan
(groom) and the kalla (bride), rejoicing, song, exulting
and gaiety, love and brotherhood, peace and friendship
. . . .” and closes, “Blessed are You, Hashem, who
causes the groom to rejoice with the bride.”
The Mitzva
G-d in the Torah actually commands the chatan to
give joy to his new wife for the first year of their
marriage. “When a man takes a new wife he should
not go out to the army nor be involved in any aspect
of army service (even non-combat). Rather, he should
be free to be at home for a year and bring joy to the
wife whom he married.” (Devarim 24:5) According
to Torah law this grants him an exemption from normal
army service for that year.
Hagaon Rav Shelomo
Zalman Auerbach zt”l used to tell chatanim: The army
exemption lasts for a year, but the end of the verse,
“He should bring joy to his wife . . .” stands independent
in the verse. The obligation to bring joy to one’s wife
is for a lifetime. (Hatorah Hamesamachat, by Yosef and
Ruth Eliahu)
Note the focus on the
obligation to make another happy, as opposed to being
in a situation where you are happy.
The Wedding
Why is a wedding so joyous? Why do the sages say
that “One who brings joy to the bride and groom is as
one who rebuilt the ruins of Jerusalem”?
The Nesivos Shalom (the late Slonimer
Rebbe, zt"l) shares an idea:
Joy is rooted in the
“world of building” and through it both physical and
spiritual building are successful. Sadness is connected
with the “world of destruction”.
Joy has a powerful
influence on the chatan and kalla at the opening of
their marriage when they are building their home. The
intense joy of their wedding brings them into the world
of building, to build a house of holiness and purity.
This is called building
one of the ruins of Jerusalem. for Jerusalem was called
“the joy of the earth” (Tehillim 48). The Medrash (Shemot
Rabba, end of Shemot) tells us that no sadness entered
Jerusalem. There was a special place right outside Jerusalem
called the “Dome of Calculations” where people would
go to make calculations -- so that they should not come
to sadness in Jerusalem, “the joy of the earth,” and
harm its lofty level.
Creating Divine
Completion
The Maharal (paraphrased from Netivot Olam, Netiv
Gemilut Chasadim, Chapter 4) on the joy of the wedding:
The unity of a man
and a woman involves the Divine bringing into being
of a new existence in the world. When a man and woman
marry the two letters of the Divine Name -- the yud
in the word “ish” and the hei in the word “isha” --
come together. This is because their unity is a Divine
one. By nature, the man and the woman are separate;
their connection is possible because of their spiritual
unity. When they come together , Divine perfection and
completion is formed. When there is completion there
is joy; and G-d forbid, when there is a lack there is
mourning.
One who makes the chatan
and kalla happy merits the five sounds (kol sasson vekol
simcha, kol chatan vekol kalla, kol mitzhalot chatanim
meichupatan . . . ); because he has helped bring about
Divine unity he merits total ease, a spreading out into
all four directions and the middle that they unite at.
This is the significance of the 5 sounds -- for sound
spreads out.
Bringing Joy into
Marriage
Smiling
“Receive everyone with a pleasant countenance.”
Shamai in Pirkei Avot (1:15)
Rav Simcha Cohen elaborates
in Habayit Hayehudi (The Jewish Home): Everyone is naturally
concerned about whether others love them and value them.
A smile speaks openness to another, respect, value,
and joy. When one meets another and does not smile,
it might communicate to another, “You’re not important
to me = I’m not excited to see you.” Shamai spoke about
all people, but all the more so, this is crucial for
a married couple.
A couple that smiles
when their eyes meet are communicating a subconscious
message: I value you, you are important to me. Especially
crucial: the moment a husband walks in the door from
work.
Joy and Peace of
Mind
Happy is the home that
is a dwelling place for joy. Real joy can only be found
where there is peace of mind, true rest that a person’s
soul desires. Even a person who’s day on the outside
is full of anger and anxiety -- can return home to rest
and tranquility. Joy out of “menucha”. (From Rabbi Eliahu
Kitov’s "Ish Uveito")
A Vegetable Peeler
Even a vegetable peeler can bring joy.
Hagaon Rav Shelomo
Zalman Auerbach, zt”l visited the sukka of Hagaon Rav
Avigdor Nebenzhal shlita in 5740 (1979). A student took
advantage of the situation and asked how much a husband
should spend on clothing for his wife in order to fulfill
the mitzva of making her happy on the holiday. A halakhic
discussion dealt with different sides of the issue and
then Rebbetzin Auerbach zt”l commented with a smile,
“When the invention of the vegetable peeler reached
Jerusalem, the Rav bought one for me in order to bring
me joy on the holiday . . . It was really very practical.
. . .” (Hatorah Hamesamachat, by Yosef and Ruth Eliahu)
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