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Acharei & Kedoshim - Shechina and Holiness
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What is the depth that underlies the idea that when we are careful about keeping our eyes pure, we merit to have a revelation of the Shechina-Divine Presence? How does this relate to the concept of Holiness? How does the concept of Holiness relate to 'singing to Hashem' in all situations - the good and the seemingly not good? What is the Truth that is revealed in the end of time with the destruction of the Wicked? Find out in this week's Parsha Podcast.
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
You're listening to the weekly partial
podcast with Ari Goldwag, recorded with
Hashem's never-ending assistance in
Rambam Mishneh Torah 57 82. This week's
parsha is parshas Acharei Mos if you're
in Chutz L'Aretz and Kedoshim if you're
in Eretz Yisrael. And what I'd like to
do over the next few weeks and months
where we're not reading the same parshas
together, I'd like to pick a pick a
topic that connects the two parshas
together so
we can have an idea that we can share,
we can think about
no matter where we are in the world.
And for this it's not very hard between
Acharei Mos and Kedoshim because the end
of parshas Acharei Mos we have the
issurim issurei ervah, the prohibited
relationships
relationships between people that aren't
that are not allowed, brother and
sister, child and parent. We're talking
about marital relations.
And we have at the beginning of parshas
Kedoshim we have the concept of Kedoshim
tiyu, that we're supposed to be holy.
The concept of holiness has to do with
this idea of
having the proper boundaries around this
concept which the Western world has
completely completely lost sense of
boundaries around. That's an important
idea, that's a very important topic, and
it is something that perhaps you could
say is the greatest nisayon of our
generation, and perhaps this nisayon was
never at this level as it was in
previous times. I'm not going to speak
directly to this issue so much. We will
see in the Medrash that it does speak
about it. But I'd like to read what the
Medrash has to say at the end of parshas
Acharei Mos and at the beginning of
parshas Kedoshim, and very powerful
message, very powerful for our times. I
think it's important to talk about it,
to think about it, to contemplate, and
to try to strive for something greater
because as we'll see in the Medrash when
we work on this area, so we are inviting
the Shechinah, we're inviting the divine
presence into ourselves, into our homes,
into our lives. And if heaven forbid we
don't work on this area, so then the
opposite is true. It's it's
the beginning of destruction.
And
you might know stories of people who
failed, destroyed themselves, destroyed
their families as a result of this area.
It's worth thinking about,
contemplating.
And like I said, don't get scared away,
but we're going to talk about it not
like head-on so much, but we're going to
talk about it. Rebbe Menashe bar Breida
Rebbe Yehoshua ben Levi Omer
Rebbe Menashe the son
of the son of Rebbe Yehoshua ben Levi
said as follows, "Shekol nishra divar
ervah
ve'eini zonah einam mimena." A person
who sees something forbidden, something
like licentious, person who's not
tznius, let's say, person who sees
something which is inappropriate, and he
looks away. Right, we're not in complete
control, you know, you walk out on the
street, sometimes there are things that
a person sees. You're checking your
email, you could be checking I mean,
there's lots of places where a person
can end up seeing something that they
don't want to see. I once did a
I once did a
a poll on YouTube.
Uh most people felt that it happens on
occasion that they see an ad on YouTube
um which is inappropriate. It's not up
to their standards, and that's why I
took off the ads of my on my YouTube
videos.
And you know, it happens a person sees
something that they don't want to see.
May not even be something that's
terrible, it may be just someone who's
not dressed tznius, they're not modest
to the full level that
we're used to looking at. Somebody who
sees something that they don't want to
see, and they don't focus on it, they
turn away.
They don't Right, it's hard to battle it
head-on, right? But
you know, gently turn myself away from
it. "Ve'eini zonah einam mimena." The
language of the Medrash is he doesn't he
doesn't allow his eyes to be sustained,
have sustenance from it.
"Zocheh l'hakbil pnei ha'Shechinah."
That person when we work on this area,
so we merit to receive the divine
presence. Amazing statement of the
Medrash.
We merit the divine presence.
Mai ta'ama? Where do we see this from?
"Ve'eitim einav me'eir'os b'ra'ah." The
pasuk says in Yeshayahu, in Isaiah
chapter 33 verse 15, "One who closes his
eyes from seeing evil."
"Maksi basra." What does it say
afterwards? When a person closes his
eyes from seeing evil, turns away from
something that he saw which is not good,
"Melech b'yofyo techazena einecha."
"Tirena eretz merchakim."
"The king in his beauty will your eyes
see, you will see far away lands."
So the the Medrash is understanding the
pasuk to say
that when a person turns away from
something which is not good, which is
inappropriate for him or her,
it applies to women as well.
What we see affects us. It What we see
causes us to think that that's possibly
okay, heaven forbid, right? What we see
affects us, no question. So when we turn
away from the thing that's negative,
what do we get? We get the the king in
his beauty. That's what we see, we see
Hashem. We get to see Hashem, your eyes
will see the far away lands, it means
spiritual lands, of course. Okay, so a
powerful a powerful tool in our daily
challenge in this area is to think about
the fact that
we get to see the divine presence. And
what that means, I don't you know, I'm
just saying the idea that
comes to me.
But what it means is that there's a
spiritual compliment accomplishment in a
certain sense. When I turn away from the
thing, and again it needs to
if I have too much energy around it,
becomes problematic, it becomes it's
hard to get stronger when I when I fight
it head-on. But if I can distract
myself, make myself busy with something
else, that's a very powerful eitzah.
Chazal tell us this.
They say that the sin doesn't come into
a person's heart unless it's empty of
wisdom.
Right, if a person is involved in Torah
and derech eretz, it takes a person away
from being involved in licentious
behavior.
So turning away from it is the way, the
path to receiving the divine presence.
Now, the next piece in the Medrash which
is the beginning of parshas Kedoshim,
so there's another idea.
It goes off on a tangent, but it brings
us back cuz Kedoshim has to do Being
holy means
that we separate ourselves from
inappropriate behavior in this area.
Okay, so the Torah is giving us an
opportunity to be somebody special.
To be somebody special.
But we go off on a bit of a tangent, we
we seem to to veer out of this this
topic for a while, so we're going to
veer away, and we're going to come back
to it, and we'll speak about perhaps how
there's a connection between the new
topic and this topic that we spoke about
until now. "Kedoshim tiyu" od d'chativ.
"Vayigbah Hashem Tzeva'os bamishpat."
The pasuk says
"Be holy because I am holy." That's what
Hashem says. Hashem says, "Be holy
because I am holy."
Says the Medrash, there's a pasuk that
Hashem is made great, Hashem is made
lofty through his judgment, through
divine judgment.
What does that mean? We're going to see
how it applies
to to us and to our pasuk and to our
concept. But first we're going to talk
about this. "Tanya Omer Rebbe Shimon bar
Yochai."
Rebbe Shimon bar Yochai, the head of
Rebbe Shimon bar Yochai says, "Im asah
Shem Shamayim migdal b'olamo." When is
God's name made great in the world?
"B'shashosam midas hadin al resha'im."
When we see that God does judgment with
those who are wicked, right?
When we see that tzaddikim, righteous
people, the Jewish people are being
persecuted, negative things are
happening to to righteous people, when
we see that, so it's a kasha, it's a
problem. Why is God doing this? How
could this thing happen? How could it be
that the Jewish people who are righteous
something negative is occurring to them,
so it's a kasha, it's a problem.
And it causes us to question our faith.
When Hashem, however, brings justice to
the wicked, and then the those who are
righteous, we see that they come out on
top in the end, when truth prevails in
the end, it's a tremendous kiddush
Hashem.
It's a positive thing, it brings about a
sanctification of God's name.
So that's the the verse, "Vayigbah
Hashem Tzeva'os bamishpat." God has
raised up his honor is raised up when
there is judgment upon the wicked.
"Mishelo k'ralyan sagin." We have many
verses like this. This verse is in
Yechezkel, Ezekiel chapter 38 verse 23.
It's talking about when the Mashiach
comes, when the Messiah arrives,
"Yisgadal v'yiskadish Shemei Rabba." I
will be made great. Right, this is based
on this we have the Kaddish, "Yisgadal
v'yiskadash Shemei Rabba." We're asking
for that future time
when Hashem's name will be great, he
will become sanctified. Notice the word
sanctification, "V'yiskadish tiyu."
Right, we're talking about Kedoshim
tiyu.
There's a sanctification of God's name.
And we need to understand what does it
mean to be holy?
We talked about it in terms of not
looking at the things we shouldn't look
at. But what else it means in this
context is
being holy means that Hashem's name it
comes out kiddush Hashem, a
sanctification of God's name. Where is
the sanctification? "V'eida'ti l'einai
rabbim v'yeidu ki ani Hashem."
When I make myself known,
notice the language of "V'eida'ti."
Yedi'ah, knowing or making itself known
is connected to the concept we spoke
about at the beginning. Right, it refers
to Adam and Chava, when Adam and Eve are
together with marital relations, so it
refers to them as "Vayeida." He knew his
wife, Chava. Okay, so there's a concept
here that's clearly connected. But when
Hashem makes himself known, when he
reveals himself, that's also connected.
When he reveals himself,
that's when everyone knows that it's
Hashem, right? There's a kedushah,
there's a sanctification of God's name.
The kedushah is the holiness is when
things are made known, when the truth is
made known.
"V'seiv noda Hashem mishpat asah."
Pasuk says in Tehillim, in Psalms, God
makes himself known through his
judgments. When we see that the wicked
that they are paid back for their
wickedness, we see that righteous they
come out on top in the end, that's a
great revelation of God's name.
At this time
I will make them know. Again, this
language of knowing.
My hand, my power.
Jeremiah
16:21. This is in
chapter 6 verse 5.
In order that you know the righteousness
of God.
That's
what it means in the verse when it says
that God is made righteous through
judgments.
When God reveals himself, we see that
he's righteous. When God reveals
himself,
we see indeed there's a
there's a holiness that's revealed. So,
when we think about what does it mean
that we're supposed to be holy? It means
we're as we'll soon see and the
measure's going to say this, we attach
ourselves to holiness.
We attach ourselves to truth.
We attach ourselves to truth, to
justice.
And we're going to see that sometimes it
seems like things are not good for the
righteous. Sometimes it seems like
negative things are happening in the
world.
There are pogroms, there are
massacres, there are you name it. What
the Jewish people has gone through for
the last 2,000 years.
Being being uh demonized in the UN, etc.
All these things that seem unfair. Why
are we being singled out?
But we're going to see that by
recognizing the truth underlying all of
these things by recognizing that really
is in charge and all the things that are
negative are really good. Even the
things that seem to be the opposite of
good, those are also
those are also good. So, that's
attaching ourselves to truth and that is
that is holiness, that is sanctifying
name.
Let's see that inside.
We're going to be
This is what it means. I'm going to tell
my people that
You are always raised up.
You are always
up. You are
Your
hand is always you always have the upper
hand. And what does it mean that God
always has the upper hand?
Let's see.
In the way of the world, if a flesh and
blood king, a regular human king
so, he says certain things.
He's involved in a
and he says he brings down his judgment,
he says what the judgment is.
I mentioned this earlier. I said I said
So, when he gives a positive thing, he
brings it down a positive judgment, he
says let this person be awarded a
certain amount of money, whatever. So,
everyone praises him.
But when the king of flesh and blood
king he he's he's bringing down a
judgment which is negative
I say
everyone is shaking, everyone's quiet,
they don't know what to say, they don't
they don't want to praise him. They're
afraid what's going to happen if he
judges me.
They
know that there could be a mistake in
his judgment. So, they're afraid.
They're afraid even though they might
think that they're righteous, they may
be they're afraid
to be judged.
But
God is not that way.
When it comes to God, when it comes to
his judgments, when it comes to the way
that reality plays out in the world, we
don't always understand it, of course.
And there are questions and there are
difficulties in understanding how is it
how is this justice? How do we
understand that the Jewish people who
have remained faithful for 2,000 years
to God's Torah and to his and having
faith in him, etc. How is it that
difficult situations arise for the
Jewish people?
Right? But if we put that question on
hold and we have
faith in God, we put that question on
hold and we recognize that
it's always God and God is always just
and God always cares and loves us and
everything is for our good. So,
when it comes to God, even when
something bad happens
so to speak, there's room for kilos,
there's room to praise him.
Let's see. Let's see onward. The measure
should explain this more.
I am explains
as follows.
See the verse says that David is more.
The says that King David sang a song.
Kindness and judgment.
I will sing I will sing to you. I will
sing.
What's he saying? It's very strange.
He's singing because of kindness and
judgment? What's what's going on? So,
it's our our concept. King
David says in front of
the boy in the room. If I see you I will
sing. If you do kindness with me, I will
sing. Whether
it's kindness or whether it's not
kindness
I will sing to
interesting change in I will sing
I will sing I will sing.
You have to know the differences between
them.
I'm not going to get into that now. I'm
out of time.
So, we see this idea. King David was
somebody who was able to sing
good situations, negative situations, he
kept singing.
He kept praising God.
I don't have time. I am done. See
how the
And I would say it's important to even
point out already at this point. I would
say when we attach ourselves to the
truth of the fact that God is good
and that even if we don't see the good
at this moment, we still believe it's
good. Like we spoke about last week with
the story of the freezers
that didn't that didn't work out. The
freezers that didn't work.
Remaining
remaining true to what we know that God
is good and this must be good as well.
So, it's a powerful affirmation of
truth. That's a sanctification of name.
That's truth.
We will see the truth in the end. When
the Messiah arrives,
he says I'm going to be made great. I'm
going to be made holy. You're going to
see the truth in the end that all along
all the things that I did that seemed to
be negative are really good. That the
Jewish people all along are my chosen
special people. That will be made clear
in the end. The truth will be revealed.
Those who are wicked will be destroyed.
They will receive the final judgment.
The that which is true, the truth will
be revealed. So, when we attach
ourselves to that from the beginning, so
we're we're making a we're making a
we're making a we're making a we're
making a we're making
They will receive the final judgment.
The that which is true, the truth will
be revealed.
So, when we attach ourselves to that
from the beginning, so we're we're
making a
we're making a we're making a
I don't know if you saw the video on
here in Israel of the 90-year-old
Holocaust survivor who is a
at his great-grandson, one out of 49
children grandchildren.
As the siren was going off to remind us
to think about the the Holocaust, the
people who died, lost their lives in the
Holocaust, who were murdered in the
Holocaust. At that very moment, he was
sitting there
with with a great-grandchild on his lap
and then the was happening. What a
moving video, what a moving thing when
you see Look,
look, look, despite that, despite what
happened we're still here. We're in
We're in the land of Israel. The siren
is blowing and this man survived and
generations have come out. What an
incredible incredible
such a moving thing.
And
this is a this is a revelation. This is
a revelation.
It's an incredible revelation of God in
the world. You see that despite this
darkness
there is truth in the end. There's good
in the end.
I'm going to talk to you
He says twice in God, which is the name
of God's judgment,
I will praise him. By him, which is the
name of God's
mercy, I will praise him.
Either way, whether it looks like
judgment or whether it looks like mercy,
I'm still going to praise him. It's
possible to tell him chapter 56 verse 5.
We find
we find
also in King David was a master being
able to praise despite all the
challenges and difficulties.
Such beautiful words of King David. When
I find difficulty and oppression
I will call out to God. I will recognize
that it's from him.
And
when I'm successful, when I when I win
over my enemies, I will call out in the
name of him. That's him.
Seeing him everywhere.
Who
should
I also say? Job said This is in
the one verse 21.
God gave and God took. May God's name be
blessed.
God
is is a
is merciful.
So, so he could bless
despite the difficulties.
He
knows what he's doing. Everything that
God does is really good in the end.
We will see it in the end, but it's good
even now.
We
will
When God gives, he doesn't ask anybody,
doesn't ask permission. Interesting
point that the measure is pointing out.
But
when God brings judgment upon
a person or on on the world, so he
discusses it, so to speak, with the his
court, with his angels, with the
ministering angels, as it were.
Which means there's there's mercy always
there. There's always mercy.
The
verse talks about this concept. We're
not going to get into that.
Here we come to the end of the madrash,
bringing it back.
I'd like to point out before we get back
to the original topic which had to do
with
the inappropriate relationships.
I'd like to point out here that there's,
you know, there's we can't look at
certain things, right? When we
I don't know about you, but when I hear
stories
of of
Klal Yisrael, the Jewish people, it's
very hard for me to read stories about
the Holocaust. I read it on Tisha B'Av.
It's very hard for me to hear those
stories. It's hard for me to think about
situations like what happened last year
and we spoke about it after Lag B'Omer
last year when
45 people lost their lives.
And it's very difficult to think about
it. I think about it I I could get I
could get so sad, right?
But we don't look. Part of what this
madrash is saying is
I need to hold on to my faith which is I
can't look at that thing. There's times
that we can look and we can see the
beauty of something, right? We can see
that this is Hashem. We can see wow,
look the Jewish people are flourishing
in the land of Israel. This is
incredible.
We see the the the rebirth of the Jewish
nation back in the land of Israel, 7
million people strong, right? So we look
at that and it's beautiful. It's
something in that we can look at. But
then we can look back and say what
happened 75 years ago, 6 million Jews
were slaughtered.
We can't We can't
horrible terrible terrible There's not
even There are not even words. You can't
even say terrible because it doesn't
probably describe it.
Right? So so you can't look at that.
There's like a you know, you can't look.
There are places that we can look and
there are places we can't look. So I'd
like to point out here as a connection.
And when we look at a place that's wrong
and we don't have the proper
outlook on it,
so we're looking at something and
revealing something that shouldn't be
revealed. We're looking at something
that can't be looked at. And when we
don't look there, we just say "Kadosh,
Hashem is holy. He has rachmanus. We
don't understand the mercy. Where's the
mercy in that?" But we understand that
that's true and we attach ourselves to
the truth and we don't look.
That's where we reveal that's a kiddush
Hashem. We reveal
Hashem's name there. We reveal that God
is there even though we don't know how
and we don't want to look at it, but we
reveal that it's there. We'll see. We
will see in the end that he was there
all along.
There's a revelation in Sometimes
there's a revelation in looking and then
sometimes there's a revelation in not
looking.
Okay, that's the That's what I'd like to
say is the connection to the issue of
what we saw at the very beginning of not
looking at things that are that are
licentious, that are inappropriate.
Turning away and that's where we bring
in the Shechinah. We bring in the divine
presence there.
Right? A person is married, they're
they're allowed to look
right? At certain times of the month.
There are certain times that where where
it's appropriate and that's Shechinah as
well. It's a different kind of Shechinah
than the looking away when it's not the
right time to look. Where it's not the
right person to look at. The Torah gives
us these boundaries and these and this
clarity in order to understand that it's
good. It's all good, but it's good in
the right way of looking at it. We can't
look at it whenever we want. We can't
see
things that we're not meant to see.
It's the same idea of yediah, of
knowing.
It's the same idea of connecting,
connecting to truth in the context of of
of understanding God's judgment and and
how everything is rachmanus. We have to
be careful how we look at it. Looking at
it wrong can have a negative
consequence.
Same thing in this area. I'm going to
read you in Sifrei Devarim. Rami masata
nevu'ah l'Amcha.
Says Rebbe Yehudah,
"You are exalted." We said this pasuk
before. "You are exalted." What does it
mean?
You act in exalted way in this world.
Nasata kehunah l'Aharon l'olam brit
melach.
Aaron is a kohen. He's a priest.
Concept of the brit melach, the covenant
of the salt. I'm not going to get into
that.
Nasata malchut l'David l'olam. You gave
kingdom to King David, right? King David
recording all of these verses about him.
He's this master of being able to see
the good, able to sing to God whether it
seems good or whether it seems the other
the other way around.
She nemar l'olam l'da'at ki Hashem
Elokei Yisrael nosei mamlacha. Pasuk
says in Devarim, "It is upon you to know
that Hashem gave the kingship."
Sod hakadosh l'Yisrael ends off the
madrash
with our original point which is the
holiness of the people of Israel. L'olam
she nemar kedoshim tihiyu. We are to be
holy.
When we look at things in the right way
and we don't look at things when they
shouldn't be looked at,
so we are attaching ourselves to God's
holiness.
King David is the one who reveals
the holiness and the the truth of
godliness everywhere.
In the good, in the negative. He sings
to God everywhere.
He's able to reveal that in the places
that we can look and the places we can't
look because it's too too overwhelming
to look in that place that looks
negative. But we look away and we say
this is God.
This is also God. That's the aspect of
King David. He's the one who reveals
that the that God is there even when you
can't see him there.
And so too when it comes to the kedusha
of the Jewish people, when it comes to
our holiness,
we obtain holiness by not looking in the
places where we're not supposed to look.
That's where the Shechinah comes in.
That's what we said at the beginning.
That's where the divine presence comes
in. It comes in in the place where we
don't look because we recognize that
looking in the right places,
looking at the things that are shiyach
to us, that that have to do with us
only,
that
the the things that are, you know, are
ours and appropriate in the right time,
right? Looking at those things,
we recognize that that's where God is.
God we can't look elsewhere. We can't
see the things where it's it's not
appropriate to.
That's what kedusha is about. Kedusha is
about seeing and not and knowing when to
see and when not to see and recognizing
that
those places where we're not supposed to
look,
that's because Hashem wants us to.
That's also from Hashem. Places where
we're allowed,
that's from Hashem as well. Everything
is from Hashem. And these are great
challenges. These are awesome things,
but this is kedusha. This is what
holiness is about. This is how we reveal
holiness in our
incredibly unholy
civilization. Western society is falling
and crumbling
because of these areas, because of their
lack of boundaries, because of their
lack of ability to close their eyes. And
so the Shechinah pulls away from those
places
as we see going on. You see what's going
on and you can all you can say You look
at the Western world, look at what's
going on in the United States. Look at
what's going on in in Europe. You can
see the crumbling because
of this terrible terrible
inability to control themselves.
And so we as the children of Klal
Yisrael, we as the Bnei Yisrael, we have
this obligation, kedoshim tihiyu,
to look
only where we're allowed to look and not
look
where we're not supposed to look. To
look at the time when we're supposed to
look and not look at the time we're not
supposed to look. To recognize
this is God's judgment. This is
We don't understand. This is God's
rachmanus, but it's really all
Hashem's rachmanus. It's all of His
mercy. May I bless you and ask you to
bless me. Hashem should help us that we
should be able to indeed strengthen
ourselves in the areas that need
strengthening. Hashem should help us to
be able to
sing to God
no matter what the situation is. Thank
you so much for listening. Have a
wonderful Shabbos.
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you.
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