
Not the Smartest — the Dedicated : Yitro and the Torah of Effort
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Show Notes
Why does the parashah of Matan Torah begin not with thunder and lightning, but with Yitro — a non-Jew, an outsider, a man who looks at Moshe Rabbeinu and says, “You’re doing this wrong”? Drawing on the Ohr HaChaim and insights highlighted by Rabbi Frand, this class reframes a foundational assumption: the Jewish people were not chosen for brilliance, and Torah is not acquired by raw intelligence. Yitro’s advice before Sinai teaches that wisdom exists everywhere, but Torah is given as an act of Divine love — and it belongs to those willing to work for it.
From Moshe’s forty days without food or water, to Rashi’s sharp critique in Parashat Devarim, to the quiet heroism of boys who stay in shul before and after tefillah pushing themselves to learn, and women waking early each morning to study together on the phone, this shiur explores what truly creates Torah greatness. Not genius, but effort. Not talent, but shvitz. In a world of comfort and convenience, Yitro comes before Sinai to remind us: Torah is not inherited by the smartest in the room — it is earned by those who show up, struggle explains, and refuse to walk away.