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Tzadik V’ra Lo part 2 by Rabbi Anthony Manning
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We dealing with a very sensitive topic,
one that I put off dealing with for many
many years, which is why is it that such
terrible suffering happens to people and
we have no real understanding of what
they could possibly have done to deserve
it. And in the first year we looked at
the issue of God's knowledge and free
choice, a more philosophical chuva, the
Rambam.
In the second year last week we looked
at the issue of what you might call
skeptical fearsome, which is the
approach that yes, God exists and if I
understood God, I would be good. And I
can't possibly God and that's not a
cop-out answer. That is a logical,
perhaps the most authentic, the most the
most honest answer you can give. How can
you possibly with such a narrow
perspective on the universe and the
future and the past and the world to
come etc. How can you even understand
what's going on? And we looked at the
the pros and cons of that.
Today I want to look at something which
I think people might find a bit less
comfortable, but you can't ignore it
because it's all over our sources, so we
have to try and work out what to make of
it, which is the issue of suffering as a
result of punishment. Um again, this is
something that comes up again and again
and we have to sort of look at how Hazal
saw this and how we as modern-day people
see this, especially after the
Holocaust.
So, that's what we're going to look at
today. Punishment theodicies, how we
understand them and also something which
is, you know, rather
in a highfalutin way called divine
intimacy theodicies. Meaning, can we
explain suffering as a way of bringing
us much closer to God and God closer to
us?
And even if we can, are we going to turn
around and say, "Thank you, but no thank
you. I'm happy without the suffering.
I'll take the distance. I'll try another
way." And we'll see the Gemara discusses
that and we'll leave that at the end of
the sheer on a bit of a question. We
have this idea of surin shell ahava.
Sufferings of love.
And the question is do we really believe
in that? Does the Gemara ultimately
accept that? Or does the Gemara say,
"No, you know something, that's not a
Jewish idea." The Rambam will say very
clearly will say very clearly says, "Not
a Jewish idea." The Gemara raises it,
the Gemara rejects it. Others, not so
clear, but we'll get to that towards the
end cuz we have a lot to do.
Let's start with number one, something
very straightforward.
The Homish presents reward and
punishment very clearly. Maybe just
before that, I'll just make make three
quick introductory statements.
Whenever you introduce a theodicy, a
justification of suffering
because of punishment, there are three
things you always have to bear in mind.
The what the sources we're bringing
don't necessarily explain the suffering.
They don't necessarily justify. All they
do is they say, "This could be a way of
understanding God's existence
notwithstanding the question of the
suffering that we're seeing in front of
it." In that sense, it's a defense. It's
not It's not a full-blown explanation.
And it's important that we retain
humility on that. We're not trying to
explain suffering specifically. And
we're also not trying to explain this
suffering, this person. And we'll see
it's absolutely immoral to ever project
these ideas onto someone else.
You're suffering because of All you can
ever do is look at yourself. We'll see
that. But it never explains specific
suffering to specific people in a
specific way. It's a much more general
argument. And it never explains away the
suffering.
Oh, now that I've worked this out, oh,
baruch Hashem, I understand God's plan
and I can get on with my life. Who am I
to interfere with God's eternal plan?
Just like you don't, you know, greet a
poor person who comes to your door
collecting stalker and say, "Well, you
know, buddy, God runs the world. You
know, I got money, you don't have money.
When God wants you to have money, then
you'll have money. Who do you think runs
the world? Not me."
God forbid, you never say that. And
therefore, even if you come up with a a
theodicy to a way of understanding God's
existence and and and suffering,
it never
absolves us of the responsibility to to
cure the suffering, to involve us. And
that's very, very important because it
One of the things that people object to
with this kind of argument is well, now
that you realize why there's suffering,
you're not going to do anything about
it. And we mustn't ever do that, and
we'll see sources on that, too. Okay, so
let's start at a apparently very easy in
a very easy way. Number one. By I'm sure
this is what we say. We read this this
morning in davening. If you listen to my
commandments
and that I am I am
If you do these mitzvahs with love,
you will my kosher after the holidays.
I give you all the things. I give you
money. I give you food. I give you
plenty. I give you peace.
But watch out.
In case you turn your minds away,
you go worship other gods. God
will be angry with you. He will shut off
the heavens.
So,
it's black and white, no? If we do the
right thing, we get reward. And if we
don't do the right thing, we get
punishment. It sounds that way. And the
mission does We'll see it's not quite
that way at all. But the mission does
seem to sometimes present very clear
very clear nexus between if you do this,
then good things will happen. If you do
that, then bad. Look at this again
challenging mission number two. We
read it on Friday night. Three specific
results in God forbid the death of women
in childbirth. I am zero and not careful
with family purity
and lighting candles. You're You're to
tell me that a woman didn't light
candles, she deserves to die in
childbirth? Of course not. God forbid.
But the idea that there's a connection
between the two seems to come out.
Number three, Rebbe Meir. Rebbe Meir
says,
"Nikia bakala, you should always try and
teach your children a good way to make
an easy parnosa." I don't know if
there's such a thing, but a clean and
honest and it's all very well saying I
want my son to be a doctor, I want my
son to be a daughter to be a lawyer, but
then they're going to work for 19 hours
a day and never sleep and and and so
it's not so straightforward.
And you have to daven always to God
she'ein umna she'ein ba aniyus v'ashirus
because there's no profession in which
people some people make it big
and some people completely fail. Some
people are successful, some people are
are rich, some people are poor. She'lo
aniyus minah umnas v'lo ashirus minah
umnas it's the money you make is not
dependent on the profession you choose
ela hakol al pi s'char it's all depends
on your merit.
Your z'chus.
Now, we'll see maybe at the end of the
series that z'chus here might actually
mean mazel.
And mazel is going to really throw us
off because after all of this talk about
good behavior, bad behavior, we're then
going to say, "Well, if you have a bad
mazel, then what can you do?"
So, we'll get there, but not yet. Just
to flag it. And then Rebbe Shimon bar
Elazar says, "You know something, I
don't understand it. I can't make money.
The birds seem to manage and the animals
seem to manage. All of nature seems to
manage to sustain itself, but I can't
make a living. Why is that? Because of
my sins. Because of my aveiros. I messed
up and I'm being punished." Seems again
fairly straightforward. Number four, the
Mishnah says again here in Sotah,
"B'mida sh'adam moded bah, modedin lo."
Whatever you choose as the way to go in
life, that's the way that God will lead
you in life. And he brings from
obviously the sotah the sotah did this
for her lover and now this parallel
thing happens to punish her etc. And he
gives an example, Shimshon Shimshon
halach
Shimshon couldn't keep his eyes on the
right things. He was looking at women,
that was his bet noir. And therefore he
couldn't
and therefore they poked out his eyes.
What more connection can you possibly
have midah midah than that? Before you
turn the page at the bottom number five,
very important statement. Amar Amar Ami
Ain mitah belo chet. There is no death
without sin. Ain yisurin belo avon. And
there's no affliction without bad
behavior. It's absolutely goes one with
the other. Ah, you might turn around and
say, "Okay, so I won't do averos."
And then I'll be okay.
I've got news for you.
You will do averos because we all do.
Number six, ki adam ain tzadik ba'aretz
asher ya'aseh tov velo yecheta. There's
no such person that someone who never
did anything wrong and therefore
everyone will end up being punished,
says Rashi. Number seven, ki adam ain
tzadik ba'aretz asher lo yecheta.
Therefore, you have to look to your
actions.
You have to try and be the best that you
can.
Um
Number eight, this will be an important
source. I'm doing this quickly because
none of this is difficult so far. What
we're going to see is the reaction
against all of these sources. Amar
Rabbah,
Amar
Imrei Adam she'isurin ba'im alav. If if
you see in life that suffering comes and
the Gemara elsewhere which I didn't
bring you, says suffering could God
forbid be very serious and very very
challenging and painful. But it could
even be a
a small thing, could even be yisurin.
The Gemara gives a few examples. When
you put your hand in your pocket for
your wallet and it's not there, that
that panicky moment it's not there. Oh,
it's in it's in my other pocket. Oh,
wow, that's good. I I was with somebody
yesterday, a colleague of mine, he lost
his car keys. Oh my goodness, yisurin.
And then he found his car keys, gan
eden, you know.
So, yisurin yisurin could be small
things, they could be big things, but
when they come, you first face with
yourself, then look yourself to do
chuva. She ain't nothing to say but that
girl. When I show up to the sham
Uh, we will we'll check our deeds as a
we'll do chuva.
Now, fish face below masa, what if you
looked at your life and you couldn't
find anything wrong? Hallelujah.
You looked at your life, nothing. I
can't see what I could possibly have
done here.
You can live a bit of Torah.
For sure you didn't learn enough Torah.
I can say everybody. Maybe that's more
men than women. We're not getting into
that now, but for sure it's Torah. She
am I reading the positive that as well.
The entire of a low masa, but if you
look at yourself and you think no, no,
no. I didn't do anything wrong and I
learned Torah day and day and night. I
didn't I can't find anything.
Then be a dual she is sewing shall I
have a hand. A very important source
we're going to get get to later. You
know, if you didn't do it you can't find
anything wrong and it's not little
Torah, then it's
afflictions of love. God is punishing
you and giving you suffering because he
loves you.
Now, we are going to have to ask a
question. Is that like a real thing or
is it
What do you mean? You looked at your
life and you couldn't find anything
wrong and you don't think there's any
little Torah?
That's your imagination. Meaning there
is something there and you're imagining
there's nothing there and that's what
you think is you sewing shall I have a
or is this genuine? No, this person is
perfect and that's why God's crushing
them because we'll see if it's okay
later that God afflicts those who he
loves.
What What What's going on? We'll see.
Don't don't It's just the beginning of
the show. Okay, fine.
Even Sadiqim
even the greatest Sadiqim do a virus
number nine. Says Kwarum is shown B
Bisyona who only shown Kapara who.
Do we bury people because it's a
Bisyona? It's a It's a disgrace if
they're not buried. It's not covered how
maze or because it gives them a Kapara
that they get atonement through the
barrier. So the Kamara says, wait a
second, we buried Sadiqim.
Why? So it must be because of Bisyona
cuz why do they need a Kapara?
No,
even Sadiqim. Even the greatest tzadikim
tzadikim also need tzadik la kapara
tzrihi. Yes, in the same Adam ain tzadik
ba'aretz asher ya'aseh tzadik v'lo
yecheta. Okay, fine.
Number 10. Again, I'm just lining these
up and I could have given you many, many
more.
God never holds back the reward that is
due to anybody. You'll get the reward
and you'll get the punishment, God
forbid. It's always going to be there.
There's never going to be a break in
that nexus. Number 11 is a famous
Gemara. Why was the first temple
destroyed? Because of these sins,
murder, immorality, etc. Why was the
second temple destroyed? Actually, let's
read the source cuz it's important. Why
was the first temple destroyed?
There were three terrible things going
on. Avodah Zarah, Gilui Arayos, Shfichus
Damim. But on the second temple, they
were very pious. They were very pious.
They were very pious. They were very
pious. They were very pious. They were
very pious. They were very pious. They
were very pious. They were very pious.
They were very pious. They were very
pious. They were very pious. They were
very pious. They were very pious. They
were very pious. They were very pious.
They were very pious. They were very
pious. They were very pious. They were
very
So what so what possibly have gone
wrong? No.
The number one thing is even worse.
Because it's just as bad as all of the
other three that the first temple was
destroyed. And probably even worse.
Because the first exile was 70 years and
this exile has been thousands. So in
case you thought that the second temple
was destroyed without sin, no. There was
hatred. Sinat Chinam was one of the
worst things you can imagine. But life
doesn't seem to work that way. Bad
people don't seem to get struck by
lightning and good people don't seem to
have good lives. So I brought here from
an unusual source. He was an Italian
commentator from the 18th century, 19th
century. And he says as follows. Number
12. Sometimes God feels the right thing
to do is to bring forward punishment. So
what possibly have gone wrong? No. The
number one thing is even worse. Because
it's just as bad as all of the other
three that the first temple was
destroyed Sinat Chinam was one of the
worst things you can imagine. Ah, but
life doesn't seem to work that way. Bad
people don't seem to get struck by
lightning and good people don't seem to
have good lives. So I brought here from
an unusual source. Rabbi Yitzchak
Reggio. He was an Italian
Italian
commentator from the 18th century, 19th
century. And he says as follows. Number
12. God feels the right thing to do is
to bring forward punishment.
Or that's to someone who sinned. Or that
I see as the total
and that's always going to be good for
them.
But sometimes sometimes it's going to be
a long time. And and you're not going to
get the the the reward.
And that's what we call the reward.
Because the will get his reward in
and you might not see it happening
immediately but don't worry, it's all
happening. We'll get to that in a
minute. Hopefully not literally but
we'll talk about it, okay?
And other times it seems
Sometimes bad people never get don't
seem to get punished. Don't worry, it'll
happen eventually. So
and this is what is called Russia the
total. This is a happiness dance of
that. Okay, fine.
I could have brought you another 15
sources. Maybe I already brought you too
many. But if you wanted to find
you know, evidence in our sources that
punishment goes with sin and reward goes
with
they are many many of them. It becomes
more difficult when you deal with
something as
traumatic and enormous as the Holocaust.
How are you going to develop a
punishment theology for that? Is it is
it in any way acceptable to even discuss
it that way? So I brought you a couple
of sources and then I'll add one in.
Number 14, let's start with
Lichtenstein.
Lichtenstein starts a conversation.
There are many ways of having this
conversation. Number 13, he says the
Holocaust as a phenomenon raises many
intractable questions.
But the question which concerns us
principally is the prophetic question
which echoes throughout the generations.
Why do the righteous suffer? The
question of theology. And a number of
possible approaches exist in tackling
this problem.
And one of them is the first one he
gives. He says, let's just ask. Maybe
there was something that went wrong.
And it had to be fixed. A, not only is
it not true that God ignored what was
going on, but on the contrary, the
Holocaust represents a fulfillment of
his will. He goes through a lot of
different options here. And the first
one he gives is this one.
We need to recognize this and confess
that it was because of our sins.
To see the Holocaust as a punishment and
to answer the question of the suffering
of the righteous with another question,
why do we ignore our own behavior which
preceded the Holocaust?
If we are so concerned with the
fulfillment of the prophecy of quotes
women consuming their own offspring on
quotes, why do we not conduct an equal
level of soul searching when faced with
the image of priest and prophet have
been slain in God's sanctuary? Meaning,
maybe we have to look to ourselves as a
community, as a world Jewish community,
maybe we did something that went
terribly wrong and the Holocaust is a
result of that. Now, I only bring you
this
because Rabbi Aaron Lichtenstein is the
most sensitive, most empathetic, most
thought-through Pope commentator that I
could possibly think you could bring.
And I brought it to show you that even
he raises this question. He doesn't give
an answer because answers are not what
we're looking for, but he raises the
question, what did we do wrong? And
maybe we could do that right. And
actually, the Aish Kodesh, who as you
know lived through and died in the
Holocaust, says the same thing. Number
14, "A Jew must believe and perceive
that everything happens at the nod of
God and that the Holy Blessed One
does not execute judgment without
justice, God forbid."
This is fundamental. It is one of the 13
principles of the Jewish faith
enumerated by Maimonides in his
commentary on the Mishnah. I believe
without a doubt that the creator,
blessed is he, rewards those who observe
his commandment and punishes those who
violate them. Besides this, it is also a
source of strength and joy in the times
of suffering as written in the Tanya,
"If a person while in pain acknowledges
his sins, because everyone knows the
blemishes of his own heart, and sees why
this particular punishment was justly
dealt with, he will not complain, God
forbid. On the contrary, he will assume
that just as God has punished him, so he
will nurture him when he repents of his
sins. And like a father reconciling with
his son, God will comfort him. In these
reflections, a a person may take courage
and joy.
So, even people who were close to who
were directly involved in the Holocaust
didn't just dismiss this. Painful as it
is,
almost offensive as it is to ask this
question, he said, "No, we have to
actually ask this question as well."
But, I I brought another source which I
didn't put on the sheet.
Rabbi Eliezer Berkovits, and this is a
segue to the next section, which is a
turnaround from this. He says, "Not for
a minute." And I'll read you this
source. It's not It's from Faith After
the Holocaust. He says, "Not for a
single moment shall we entertain the
idea that what happened to European
Jewry was divine punishment for any sins
committed by them.
It was injustice, absolute. It was I
think there's a phone going off
somewhere. Oh, it just stopped. Baruch
Hashem. It was injustice countenanced by
God, but if we hold on to our faith in a
personal God, such absolute injustice
cannot be a mere mishap in the divine
scheme of things. Somehow, there must be
room for it in the scheme, in which case
the ultimate responsibility for this
ultimate evil must be God's. The idea
that all of this has befallen us because
of our sins is an utterly unwarranted
exaggeration. "I'm not prepared to hear
it," he says. "I'm not even prepared to
discuss it.
It's It's It's obscene to even ask that
question."
So, you see people I don't feel that I'm
in a position to make any comment, but
quoting from the people who lived
through that era, some of them said,
"Look, we have to take the question
seriously." Another said, "No, we're not
prepared to even discuss, even raise the
question of a punishment theology when
it comes to something like the
Holocaust." And one of the reasons is
the next group of sources we're going to
see. Because it's all very well Rav Ammi
saying there is no death without sin and
there's no punishment without
affliction, but the Gemara rejects that
opinion.
You can't just quote, which I did, that
opinion and not reach the end of the
Gemara. Look at source number 15. Source
number 15 is a tricky four or five lines
of Gemara, but let's look at it
together. The Gamara has just said there
is no Rav Ami has just said there's no
punishment there's no sin uh punishment
without sin. The Gamara questions.
Maseh, number 15 he says as follows.
Amru malachei hashareis lifnei Hakadosh
Baruchu, the angels said to Hashem,
Ribono shel Olam, me ma kanasta misah
shel Adam Harishon? Why are you
punishing Adam Harishon?
Throwing him out of the Garden of Eden.
So am aleihem, God says to them, listen.
Mitzvah kalah she hayisah bi yadi, I
gave him one tiny little mitzvah not to
eat from the fruit. V'hu avar alav, and
he messed it up straight away. Of course
I threw him out of the garden. It's a
it's a punishment.
Amru lo, they said to him, v'halo Moshe
v'Aharon shekiyemu es kol haTorah kulah
umesu. What about Moses and Aaron, Moshe
v'Aharon?
They didn't mess up. Now you're going to
say, well, maybe they did mess up, but
this this Mishnah is saying, this braisa
is saying they didn't mess up, and they
died.
What are you going to say about that,
God? It's not a punishment. So God says
to the angels, am aleihem, you know
something? You're right. Mikreh echad
latzadik ulerasha. Everybody dies.
Because everyone has to die.
And it's not because they're being
punished, because Moshe and Aaron
weren't punished, but they died because
everybody has to die. It's part of the
human condition. It was always meant to
be that way, says this source. Very
interesting. And it's not because of
sin, it's because we're human beings.
Ah, but Huda Amiki Haitana, so maybe Rav
Ami, who who thinks that everyone is
punished, and therefore death is a
punishment and suffering is a
punishment, maybe he holds like this.
The Tana, Reb Shimon ben Elazar, Reb
Shimon ben Elazar says, af Moshe
v'Aharon becheit amesu. No, Moshe and
Aaron did sin.
And that's what we normally taught.
Shenemar, yan lo he'emantem bi. God
says, you didn't believe in me. Ah,
he'emantem bi, if you had believed in
me, ad on lo yigmar chein litol min
ha'olam hazeh, you would you would have
gone to Israel.
So okay, good. So whose that opinion
like, says the Gamara? Maseh.
Arba meisu b'atzei shel nachash. There
are four people that died with no sin
whatsoever. The Elohim, hey, these are
them. Binyamin ben Yaakov, Amram avi
Moshe, Yishai avi David, the killer ben
David, four people who never sinned and
died. Okay? So, who is that opinion
like? If
you say that's going like the opinion of
the original angels, which is why why
why did you throw out Adam Harishon? I
know because everyone has to die, then
it can't be because they named Moshe and
Aaron, but they didn't name all these
other people. The Moshe and Aaron, they
didn't give this other list of Binyamin
and Amram, etc. It
must be that all the opinions here, and
you can go away and look at this later
to see how it all hangs together. All
the opinions must reject the idea that
death is a product and suffering is a
product of punishment.
And therefore, we learn from this,
there are people that die and do not
deserve it. The suffering below
and there is suffering which is not
because of sin, which you have to derive
from me. You have to
Absolute rejection of Rav Ami. Rav Ami
who started this whole Sugya with what
we thought was a perfectly reasonable
statement based on all the sources. Of
course, if you sin, there'll be
punishment. No, you have to derive from
me. You have to. That's not how it
works. And therefore, the Gemara seems
here to conclude very clearly that we do
not regard suffering as a consequence of
punishment. I need to just go on because
there's going to If we don't go on, I'll
take your question at the end if I have
a little bit of time, but we've got a
lot to do. And actually, anyone who
suggests
that you're being You're suffering A
person's suffering because of their sins
is seen as being an outrageous person.
And I brought you
one of the speeches of Eliphaz from
Iyov. I'm not going to read it through.
You can read this in your own time.
But if you read through the book of
Iyov, you'll see
that even though So,
the comforters, if you like, of Job
start off fairly uh politely and
empathetically. If you look at the first
speech of Eliphaz, he says to Iyov, uh
"Okay, you know, you suffered terribly,
but come on, you were always the one
that kept everybody going. You were the
one that gave everyone chizuk. If you
can give everyone else chizuk, maybe you
can give yourself chizuk." He sounds
like a nice guy. If you get as you go
through the speeches, read the speech
later. It's terrible. He's basically
laying into him, "You must be a sinner
and you're wretched, and that's why it's
happening." Who speaks like this?
It's a terrible, terrible thing to say
to someone. And if you look in source
number 17, the very epitome of onaat
devarim, of how not to speak to someone,
how not to speak in an abusive and
oppressive way, the very example of that
is the way that Job's comforters spoke
to him.
When they said to him, "This happened
because you sinned."
It's the worst thing you can do. Number
17, says the Gemara.
Tanu Rabbanan.
Lo yisonu ish es anito. No one shall
afflict or or or punish as not punish,
but abuse, if you like, their friend.
Now, there are areas of halacha which
are onaat mamon, you overcharge people,
they pay too much money, but this is not
onaat mamon. But onaat devarim hakosev
medabei, it's talking about speaking in
an abusive way. Hakaitzar, how does this
work? Im haya baal teshuvah, if there's
a baal teshuvah in front of you, al
yomar lo, don't say to them ever, "Ah,
zeh chomer asher hayinu teshuvah." What
you used to do before you became frum?
That's terrible. You You remind them of
that? And then he gives other examples
which I didn't bring. If you're dealing
with geirim,
don't say to them, "Oh, now you're a
holy schmoly? Yeah? Two years ago you
were a non-Jew. You were eating doing
whatever, you know?" You don't say that
to people. You never say that to people.
By the way, just in parentheses, one of
the letters to the Rambam
is
uh is from Ovadia the Ger, where he says
in the Jewish community, people scream
at him and shout at him and say, "You're
a guy. You used to be a over the vote of
Zara." And they treat him badly and the
Rambam goes ballistic and he says, "How
can they speak that way? Because they
can't abuse a guy." And not only are you
you are never an over the vote of Zara
because you used to be a Muslim.
And that's monotheistic. But the people
who are screaming at you, they're the
ones that are over the vote of Zara
because they're losing their patience
and they're getting angry and they're
abusing you in speech. So you can't
speak to people like that. The in, says
the source. In my you sort of about love
if you see someone who's suffering.
In my you by love if somebody is sick,
God forbid. Or she had
its been off. Or God forbid they buried
their children. Someone who suffered an
unspeakable tragedy. I don't know never
say to them could Derek I'm
above the ear off.
Never speak to someone like that.
So
where are we?
Is punishment a result of sin or not?
Maybe not, but you certainly can never
say it. You can certainly never raise it
with anybody who's gone through a
punishment. Maybe you can look at
yourself and ask, "Can I see some
connection between something that I did
and something that happened to me?"
Maybe and maybe you'll see a connection
and maybe you won't and maybe you'll
just put it down to bitter terror. I
don't know. But you can't ever project
that on other people and you do see
this. The people say
disgraceful things when it comes to
suffering. And like we said last week, I
quoted Rabbi Aaron Soloveichik. When
when the secular people talk about this,
they they spout heresy. And when
religious people talk about this, they
often spout stupidity. Remember that
that's that that that quote from him.
And even after October the 7th, I read
things that just make your stomach turn
about, "Oh, these people were punished
because of this." And and these people
were put
I I saw I was on a WhatsApp group with a
rabbi and somebody posted a picture a
while ago
of showing where all the missiles like
were falling.
And they showed like Bene Brak was no
missile had ever fallen on Bnei Brak. He
was like a big like you know cuz
everyone of it
I I just
I couldn't quite believe that it had
gone on there. He He didn't even think
about it. Like he thought this was Oh,
you see? You see? Well, what exactly do
you see?
People in Bnei Brak are so holy they
never get hit by missiles? So, I I
private messaged him and I said, "Please
do me a favor and just take that down.
It's just so offensive and I don't want
to get into why because And to his
credit, he says, "Well, I don't
understand why." But he took it down.
Which is which is nice. I didn't want to
see something on the group or otherwise
he's even worse and everyone's screaming
at each other, you know, etc. But you
can't speak that way. On the other hand,
and there's almost another hand. So,
this is like a five-handed uh you know,
debate.
Even if we turn around and say, "Well,
you can't say that punishment is because
of sin."
Sins are sometimes more subtle than you
think.
Have a look at number 18. And we'll see
an amazing Rav Soloveitchik in a minute.
But Kol Zot
Lo Chata Eiuv Bisvatav.
The conclusion or the the the
introduction I should say to Eiuv
He never sinned with his mouth. He never
actually said anything wrong. At least
until he suffered. So, Amar Rabbah
Bisvatav Lo Chata, But Beleibo Chata.
There were subtle things he did wrong
and they were more serious than he maybe
thought. And I brought you number 19
where there's a beautiful Midrash. It's
brought in actually in in Avot de Rabbi
Natan.
Says in number 19, K'she Ba Alav Avraham
Avinu Al Pur'anut Gedolah, Amar Lifnei
Hakadosh Baruch Hu, "When When Eiuv had
this terrible suffering, he said,
"Ribbono shel Olam Lo Heiti Ma'achil
Re'eivim U'Mashkeh Tze'eivim? Did I not
do Hachnasat Orchim?
Did I not invite people in? Should I
have married with a possuk? Etc. V'Lo
Heiti Malbish Arumim? Did I not give
Chesed to give money for people to have
clothes?" And he gives another possuk.
V'Af Al Pi Kein Amar Hakadosh Baruch Hu
L'Eiuv, "Eiuv, God says to him, "No, no,
no.
Adayin Lo Higata L'Cheltzi Shel Avraham.
You did all this Chesed, but you didn't
reach half of what you could have done.
Not like Avram. And he says, "Atayo
sheva show
you sit in your home waiting for
collectors to come to give stock up. For
Orchin
and the people come to you to eat.
And you
you give people according to their
level. If they're fancy people you give
fancy food and very simple people you
give simple food.
You think that's chesed?
That's not really what it's all about.
You do chesed on your terms. You're not
doing chesed for what other people
really need. You think you're a tzaddik,
but you're not a tzaddik as much as you
think.
And the Malbim in number 20 says, "How
do you know who's a tzaddik?" Sometimes
it's hard to know about yourself.
How do you know? You assume you're a
tzaddik. Today we're all bothered by the
problem with tzaddik varalo cuz we all
think that we're perfect.
You know, in years gone by people were
more bothered by rasha v'ra why why is
this bad person having such a good life
because it's usually easier objectively
to see if someone's bad and even that
you never really know.
You back to Rav Dessler's bechira point.
You could have somebody who was brought
up in a terrible environment in gangland
and his parents were murderers and drug
dealers and one day he says, "Instead of
instead of hitting this person on the
head and killing them and stealing their
money, I'll just push them on the side
of the road and steal their money. And
why why should I hit them if I don't
need to?" And you see this and you
think, "This is a disgraceful thing."
And actually for this person, what an
unbelievable mitzvah they did. So it's
very hard to know. Look what the Malbim
says. Shemit
and who done it mission with tzaddikim
karab. We judge people on what we can
see.
She
we see them with our eyes we with our
ears we hear them with our ears. She
we see them looking doing good not doing
bad. And we done it
we think that he's careful about it and
he's a tzaddik. Oh, then tzaddik missing
so he says tzaddik missing from the
front. We think that he's a tzaddik.
But someone can look like a tzaddik on
the outside, but you don't know what's
going on behind closed doors. You don't
know what they're really doing. You
don't know what they're really capable
of doing. And he goes through the whole
source and says we really just don't
know who's a tzaddik and who's not a
tzaddik, which I think there's a lot of
truth to that. And certainly, you know,
judging on appearances is the worst
possible thing you can do. You know, you
can't tell who's a tzaddik by what they
dress like. Obviously, we we all know
that very well. And therefore Iyov
was more There was more subtle problems
there than you necessarily think.
He He didn't deserve to be spoken to the
way he was, but but who was he and what
did he actually do? So, I brought you in
21. There's almost nobody in the whole
of Tanakh that we have as much debates
about who they were, where they lived,
when they lived, if they lived, as Iyov.
Nobody really knows. Number 21.
Moshe got the sefer of Parshas Bilam and
Iyov. So, it says originally in the
Gemara here Moshe wrote the book of
Iyov. Okay, that's nice.
Messiah later Rebbe Levi bar Lachma cuz
that supports the view that says that
Amora Rebbe bar Lachma Iyov be made
Moshe higher. Iyov was a man that lived
at the time of Moshe.
The Aima be made Yitzchak. Or maybe he
was someone that lived at the time of
Yitzchak. And I've missed out all the
proofs that brings. The Aima be made
Yaakov. Maybe he lived at the time of
Yaakov. The Aima be made Yosef. Maybe he
lived at the time of Yosef.
And then Rava says Iyov be made Meraglim
higher. He was at the time of the sin of
the spies. And then Yosef bar Abba came
later of Shmuel bar Nachmani. Someone
went to Rav Shmuel bar Nachmani's share.
When be Yosef bar Abba came later Iyov
lo haya v'lo nivra ela mashal haya.
There was no such person as Iyov.
The whole book is a mashal. And the
Rambam follows that opinion about
tzaddik v'ra lo.
And the Rebbe Yochanan and Rebbe Eliezer
bar Abba said Iyov be made oleh goleh
haya. He was one of the He was one of
that came back from the Galut in Babel.
Maybe he lived in the
Maybe he lived in the time of
And then the next one, maybe he lived in
the time of
Maybe even
maybe like the Queen of Sheba. I mean,
nobody knows.
I don't think you could find any debate
like this.
What What are they trying to tell us?
So, have a look at
you can read most of it for yourself,
but I think it's it's it's an absolutely
beautiful piece. It's in
I've already put you in source number
22. He picks up on this idea that there
are so many opinions about where he
lived and when he lived. Have a look at
look at this with me. However, in two
respects
is saying as it was God saying to
you, "You were lacking in the great
attribute of loving kindness."
And he's getting this from
I was there like we said. You never
assumed your proper share of the burdens
of community responsibility. You never
joined in the community's pain.
Nor did you ever properly empathize with
the agonies of the individual sufferer.
As a kind, good-hearted person, you took
momentary pity on the orphan. You were
wealthy. You could afford to give
substantial charitable contributions
without straining your financial
resources. However,
over to page five means more than a
passing sentiment, a superficial
feeling. It has to demands more than a
momentary tear or a cold coin. It has to
means to merge with the other person, to
identify with his pain, to feel
responsible for his fate. And this
attribute of you lacked in your
relationships with the community, with
the individual. And now he goes through
all the different opinions.
You were a contemporary of Jacob who
struggled with with Esau, with the man
at the ford of the Yabbok. Did you seek
to help him and offer him your counsel
and wisdom? Who was Jacob? A poor
shepherd. And you? A wealthy and
influential man. Had you accorded Jacob
a proper measure of sympathy and caring,
had you treated him with With attribute
of steadfast loving kindness, he
wouldn't have had to endure so much
suffering. And then he goes through each
one. You were there during the time of
Moses. Where were you when? And you were
active during the generation of Ezra and
Nehemiah. You with your wealth and
influence could have significantly
accelerated the process of Yeshuv
Haaretz, of settling the land.
You were only concerned about yourself.
You gave Hesed on your terms. And it's a
beautiful piece of R' Soloveitchik. He
picks up on each of those opinions and
says to Iyov, "So, where were you when
they needed you?"
If you look at Iyov, he's a tzaddik,
but he's with his own family. He's He's
very into his own teshuvah, and teshuvah
for his own children. But, you know,
where is he for the whole klal? Is he
there for the klal? And R' Soloveitchik
says at the end of the book of Iyov, he
is there for the klal. And that was his
message. So, was Iyov punished justly?
Yes, says R' Soloveitchik, cuz his sin
was much deeper. And therefore,
sometimes when it comes to aveira, um
things are are more subtle, and we need
to look We need We need to look harder.
I once I must tell you a story. I once
went to somebody's house in Manhattan.
And uh you know, I I speak a lot around
the place, and people put me with
families for hospitality.
And this fellow was unbelievable at
Hachnasat Orchim. He had a bunch of
people, you know, at his table. And And
I'd never seen anything like it. He was
so amazing. And at the end, I stayed
behind a little bit when everyone left,
and I said to him, "Look, you know, we
don't know each other, but I just want
to tell you
I I've seen Hachnasat Orchim, and I've
done Hachnasat Orchim, but I've never
seen anything as amazing as this. This
is like beyond."
So, he said, "Come, I want to show you
something." So, he He said, "Crouch down
here and look with me underneath the
table." Okay, that's a bit strange
already. I think I I don't get that. So,
I I you know, why not? You know, we So,
I look underneath the table, and he
underneath the table, he has one of
these long, big Manhattan homes and a
big, long table seats about 20 people.
In the middle leaf of the table
is written underneath, he says, "I wrote
this. I instruct my children to use this
leaf of my dining room table for the lid
of my coffin."
And he says, "This is what I'm taking
with me.
When I'm laying there looking up,
this is what I'll be looking at." A
little bit morbid, maybe.
Okay?
But and and actually I found elsewhere
that this is brought down as a as as a
minoc. But I'm just saying, he didn't
just do chesed, he said, "I'm going to
really invest in this." And this is what
you have never did. He never did it to
that degree. Okay? So, on the one hand,
yes, sin is a is a cause of punishment.
On the other hand, it's outrageous to
suggest that. It's not. On the other
hand, maybe things are more subtle than
we think and it's not as simple as we
originally thought. Now,
there are two other ways of looking at
this. One of them is we're off on the
wrong track. When it talks about reward
and punishment,
it's not in this world. Why are you
trying to find connections? It's in the
next world. We'll see Russell O'Veitchik
is very unhappy with this answer. Very
unhappy. But look at number 23.
I'm a Rabbi Elazar bar Rabbi Zadok.
L'mat sadikim nimshalim b'olam hazeh.
What are sadikim like in the world that
we live in here?
He says, "I'll tell you what they're
like.
L'eilam shekulo omed b'makom taharah,
like a tree that's that that's
trunk is in a in a pure place, v'nofav
notezim l'makom tum'ah, and it's there
are a few branches that overhang an
impure place.
Notsatz nofav, when you cut off the
branches, kulo omed b'makom taharah,
then it's all completely in a pure
place. Kacha Kodesh Baruch Hu mevi
yisurim al tzadikim b'olam hazeh, so too
God brings punishments, sufferings, not
punishments, sufferings on tzadikim, on
people who are
not deserving of them, b'olam hazeh,
k'dei sheyirshu olam haba, because there
are the few things that they did wrong,
and he's going to pay them off for that
in this world. So, in the Olam Haba,
they get everything in a pure way. And
he brings a possuk for that, too.
The lama rashaim lama rashaim doing, and
what are the wicked like but Olam Haze
in this world? Le ilan shekula im
b'makom tuma, like a tree which is
rooted in a really impure place. V'naftu
netzav l'makom tahara, and its and its
branches overhang a pure place. Notzatz
nafra, if its if its branches those
branches are cut off, kulam oylim
l'makom tuma, it's all in a makom tuma.
V'kacha kodesh Baruch Hu mashpia aleihem
l'tova u'rashaiv b'Olam Haze. So, too,
the few good things that the rasha did
are paid off
to them as a benefit in this world,
k'dei so they can go to the lowest hell
in the next world and not have to be
paid off for that. And therefore, very
clearly,
the Gemara is here saying in Kiddushin
that whenever we talk about reward and
punishment, we're talking about Olam
Haba. In this world, all you're going to
get is just the tzaddik is going to get
punished for the few bad things they
did, and the rasha is going to be
rewarded for the few good things they
did, but it's all really happening in
Olam Haba. By the way, the Ramban in his
disputations with the Christians used
this and spun this. He was a a very good
at what we call today spin. If you read
his disputations, which he he wrote up,
it's actually very interesting cuz the
king in Spain when he went dis- in his
disputation with Pablo Christiani, uh
the king said he could say whatever he
liked, which was a very big thing. And
so, he really said it how it was. And at
the end, of course, he had to lose
because that's the It's like being in
the International Court of Justice. And
you know, you have
you know before you even start that you
have to Jews have to lose. But he the
king said, "I never heard anyone lose so
so well, you know, as you had to lose."
But then the Ramban decided to write the
whole thing up as a book and publish it.
And the king said, "I I said you could
say what you like. I didn't say you
could write what you like." And then he
got thrown out. He was thrown out of the
country. But one thing that the Ramban
did is the Christians threw at him the
following. He said, "If God loves the
Jews,
why are you in such miserable poverty,
but we, the Christians, are at the top
of the world?"
So, the Ramban smiled and said, "I've
got a Gemara just for you, because the
people who benefit in this world are
only getting paid off because they're
going to hell in the lowest possible way
in the next world. But the people who
live in poverty and suffering in this
world are the people who are getting
rewarded in the next world."
I'm not sure how impressed they were
with that, but
but it was it was a good thing. You have
to think on your feet on these
disputations. But look at number 24.
The Gemara against S'char Mitzvah
Ba'Ha'olam Ha'Ba, there is no reward in
this world. And it brings the famous
case of the uh of it was Rabbi Yaakov
who saw uh a father going to tell his
son to do do Kibud Av Va'Em and climb up
a a tower to bring to shoo away the
mother bird and bring down the eggs. And
both of those mitzvahs are mitzvahs to
which the Torah promises you good and
long life.
And the boy climbs up, obeying the
parent, falls off, dies.
So, where's the good? Where's the long
life? Clearly, it must be in the world
to come. And the Gemara says, "Maybe
that never happened." No, it did happen,
he saw it. And by the way, of course,
the Gemara goes on to talk about Acher,
Elisha ben Avuya, Avuya, who went off
the derech because of this in a in a
very, you know, big way. I'm not getting
into that now. But the Gemara says,
"Everybody knows that the tzaddikim
suffer in this world. It's obviously all
about the next world. It can't be about
this world." And this is the position
that you see in Rav Saadia Gaon. I'm not
going to read 25 inside, but you can
read it for yourself. In the Rambam,
let's look at number 27.
B'Yishmael Adam Echad O Anshei Medina
Chaitim in Hilchos Teshuvah,
when people or a whole country do bad
things, Ba'Yisrael Chotzei Cheit,
She'Osim B'Da'at O B'Ratzon, they do it
on purpose and willingly, they're not
doing it by mistake. Kemosha Hadana Ra'u
Yeli Parami Mana, they deserve a
punishment.
Va'akodesh Baruchu
Hu Yude'a Eikhli Ipara.
He knows how this person needs to be
punished. Yesh Khet She'adini Shnei
Pramim Ela Al Ketz Ba'olam Hazeh Begufa
Uvemona. There are things that sometimes
has to happen to people in this world.
We'll see in a minute what that means.
Veyesh Khet She'adini Shnei Pramim Ela
Al Olam Haba. But there are other things
where really the the main punishment is
in the next world.
Ve'ein Lo Ela Shumnesik Ba'olam Hazeh.
And there's no there's no touch Do you
don't get touched in this world. Veyesh
Khet She'adini Shnei Pramim Ba'olam
Hazeh Uve'olam Haba.
So is that Is that punishment in this
world or isn't there?
The Gemara just said there isn't. But
then the Rambam said, "Well, God knows
what to do best. Sometimes there is in
this world, sometimes it's only in the
next world, sometimes it's in both
worlds."
So this long piece in 28, which I'm not
going to read through right now, but
it's it's it's it's all in Hilkhot
Teshuvah, very important stuff to read,
is well worth it.
And the Rambam there basically says,
"I'll tell you what it means in the
Shema that we sa- started with when it
says, 'If you do mitzvot, I'll give you
rain, I'll give you food, I'll give you
peace. And if you do aveirot, I'll give
you war, I'll give you famine, etc.'" So
the Rambam says,
"That's not reward and punishment. The
only reward and punishment is in the
next world," he says. So what's the
Shema talking about? He says, "It's very
simple.
If you Let's give a mashal. If you give
a cell phone as a gift to a 5-year-old
kid, which I don't recommend, okay? And
you know, you see the next day they've
kind of flushed it down the toilet or
something. And you say, "Well, what did
you do?" "Oh, I dropped it." "Well,
obviously you're not old enough
to have this phone. I'll wait till you
know how to deal with it properly, and
then you can have what I give you." And
you take it away from them.
So so too, says the Rambam, this world
is not about reward and punishment, it's
about opportunity. Are we able to use
this world? He has a whole lengthy
analysis for what it's meant to be used
for. This world is meant to be used in
order to connect to God. If God sees us
using the world for what it was meant to
be used for, so he gives us more because
you're obviously you obviously know what
to do with it. I give you extra. You can
do better with it. But if he sees that
we're just abusing the world, messing it
up, using it for our own purposes and
not in order to connect with God, so he
says, "Well, why would I give it to you?
All you're doing is making it worse.
You're just making yourself You're just
causing yourself problems. I'm going to
take it away. I'm not giving you more
opportunity to do things even worse than
you're doing. It's not punishment. It's
consequence. It's consequence.
So, it's like they say to the kid, "It's
not that you're a bad kid. You just did
a bad thing." Yeah?
So, God's saying, "I'm not punishing
you. I'm just not going to give you the
you know, the rope to hang yourself
with."
But really punishment, reward and
punishment is only, says the Rambam, in
the next world. And actually, that's
Rashi's position as well. I brought you
in 29
uh on the pasuk in Ha'azinu coming up
soon. Had sur tam in par law that God is
all just kol darkhav mishpat El emunah
ein avel tzadik v'yashar hu. And so I
Rashi says there, "You are the one who
will give the tzadikim olam haba and
just punish them whatever they need a
little bit to take away in olam hazeh."
And so too with the resha'im like we
have seen. And actually,
the the Ramban
uh says, "And actually, that's what he
thinks it means in the Gemara when it
says yissurin shel ahavah."
And this is important to get clear cuz
everyone disagrees on what yissurin shel
ahavah means. The Ramban says, "I think
it actually means what we just
described. When God does things which
feel bad to people in this world, but
really he's doing it so they can get a
proper payoff in the next world. It's
not a punishment. It's yissurin shel
ahavah. It is there are consequences. It
is because they sinned," he says, "but
they sinned in a very minor way. They're
not a bad person, but they have to get
that payment, if you like, in this
world. That's his Shirin Shel Ahava in
his book. And you can read yourself. He
says, "That's how the tzaddikim are, if
you like, {quotes and quotes} punished
in this world for the things that they
did, minor things they did wrong."
That's his Shirin Shel Ahava. Rav
Soloveitchik says, "I don't like this
one little bit." And I can see from your
face, you already some of you don't like
this, either. And and he speaks very
very harshly about it. Look in number
31.
"I believe,"
he says, "in the halakhic approach to
suffering here, in the lecture in 61, I
believe that this is a very clear-cut,
unequivocal example of how the thematic
halakha has handled evil. It is a
radical approach, of course, simply
disposing of it.
If sometimes if a problem is too
embarrassing and too tormenting, one
simply puts it in the wastebasket and
ignores it.
Kick it up to next the next world, and
we're all happy."
On the one hand, we know that this
metaphysics has worked miracles with our
people whose history is a continuous
tale of martyrdom and suffering. The
Jewish community found in this
metaphysics of evil relief, hope, and
courage. Yet, what seemed apodictic,
meaning absolutely clear and simple to
our ancestors, inspired by indomitable
faith and a passionate transcendental
experience, might prove to be extremely
complicated matter for contemporary
egoistic man, who is spiritually
uprooted uprooted, homeless, perplexed.
I can state with all candor that I
personally have not been too successful
in my attempts to spell out this
metaphysics in terms meaningful to the
distraught individual who floats
aimlessly in an all-encompassing
blackness like a withered leaf on a dark
autumnal night tossed by the wind and
rain. I tried,
but failed,
I think, miserably, like the friends of
Job."
Interesting. He's very honest.
He says that when you tell people the
reason you're suffering in this world or
the reason people suffer in this world
is because you're really a tzaddik and
you're going to get paid in the next
world and you're just being, you know,
having the branches chopped off so that
you have a pure place in Olam Haba.
That doesn't speak. That doesn't speak
to us. He doesn't Maybe it's our
generation. He said, "I've tried. I
failed. People just don't get this at
all."
There is another approach, which albeit
sounds a little bit on the Christian
side, but it could be, he says, that the
tzaddikim suffer for the sins of the
generation.
Okay. So, that's very interesting.
And actually, I brought you one source
from Derech Hashem that basically says
that, but there are others as well. I
brought There's a Gemara I didn't bring
you on the sheet, but I'll quote it to
you now. Gemara in Shabbos the amar of
Gurion v'itemar of Yosef bar Rebbi
Shmaya. B'zman she had tzaddikim b'dor,
when there are tzaddikim in your
generation, tzaddikim nitpasim al hador,
they get caught
for the sins of the generation and they
suffer and they die for the sins of the
generation. And the And the Derech
Hashem brings this down as well,
which is interesting. Again, it was that
It's a Gemara. Was that influenced in
any way by anything else? It's a good
question, which is not for now. You
don't see many sources like that, but it
is an idea as well. So, at Can, we've
got seven or eight minutes left. At Can,
we've dealt with punishment as an idea
and we've basically said there seems to
be a lot of connection between sin and
punishment. No death without sin, no
affliction without, you know, aveira.
And yet, that's rejected by the Gemara.
And yet, sin can be more subtle like
Iyov and Rav Soloveitchik saying you
were a big baal chesed, but are you
really the tzaddik that you think you
are? And then there's ideas that maybe
it's not about punishment at all, it's
about Olam Haba or maybe even the
tzaddikim are dying and suffering for
the generation. Let's look at a couple
of last things.
Is there ever an idea that someone can
be can suffer
but not because of anything they did
wrong, but because God wants to be close
to them in their suffering. Or is that
obscene almost as a suggestion?
And I just wanted to I'm trying not to,
you know, pull any punches here. I'm
trying to give you a full range of
what's going on here. So, let's have a
look at source number 33.
And then we'll see some interesting
sources just to finish off
in the last 5 minutes. So, we saw the
source in 33, uh which is the if if
suffering comes to you, then check your
deeds, and if you can't find anything,
then it's bittle Torah, and if you can't
find bittle Torah, then it must be
yissurim shel ahava. And it continues as
follows.
Uh second line, uh yeah, amorav amorav
schora, amorav chuna, kol she hakadosh
baruchu who chafetz ba, anyone that God
really loves,
medakem be yissurim, he crushes them
with suffering. She nemar, "Hashem
chafetz dako ha chailo." God loves,
he crushes with illness.
What's going on here?
Where is it?
Where's what? Uh source 33, at the very
end of 33, that's up there.
And actually, we may even find that with
Iyov. Iyov says at the end of this whole
experience, you know something?
I actually got closer to God from it.
Look at what Iyov says, very interesting
statement.
He says as follows.
L'shema ozin shemati'cha, I used to hear
you with my ear,
the ata, but now aimi ra'acha, I can see
you with my eyes. I feel I've got closer
to God, that God has punished me, God
has not punished me with nothing,
there's no punishment here. Rashi said
yissurim shel ahava, there's no hint of
a sin that the tzaddik did, but there's
nevertheless a if you like this crushing
almost kind of divine hug that God gave
this person. I know it brought you two
English sources here that makes
express this. Number 35, some suffering
can constitute a religious experience is
a non-Jewish source and a path to
knowledge of God to intimacy with the
divine. According to this divine
intimacy theodicy, God sometimes permits
personal suffering in order to provide
occasions in which we can perceive God,
understand him to some degree, know him,
and even meet him directly.
And then in 36, some religious people
report that suffering instead of being
contrary to the love of God is actually
a medium in and through which his love
can be experienced. Now, that's actually
very interesting because how does how
are we going to stop people becoming
masochists?
You know, I want to suffer and the more
I suffer, the more the closer I'm going
to be to God. It's actually could be
very problematic. And we even see the
other way around. God tells us if you're
suffering, I'm closer to you because I'm
suffering.
And this is where we get into very
interesting theological debates. Look at
number 37. I'm going to cut this part
out for a moment. Can't you
tell
I'm suffering just like you're
suffering.
Where am I speaking to you from?
Where am I meeting you?
In the thorn bush.
I'm caught up, says God, in the thorns.
The idea of thorns, by the way, of
course was taken up by the Christians as
well in the whole crucifixion story got
it straight out of the Midrash, straight
out of the idea of God suffering. And so
too I brought in 38 that God suffers
with the individual as well.
A very challenging topic and actually on
the on the pages of Tradition Journal
there was a big debate in the '60s
between Rabbi Ephraim Joshua Heschel
who said that there's this concept of
what he called divine pathos.
That God is really suffering on some
level, whatever that means.
And Rabbi Yisrael Berkovits, who rejects
that completely as a Christian theology.
And he get very unhappy.
And you can read that. I can send you a
link. Maybe I already put put it on
there. That that back and forth in the
'60s between two giant Jewish thinkers.
On the one hand, Rabbi Heschel, on the
other hand, Rabbi Berkovits. Where
Heschel was saying that, you know, God's
suffering with us. And Berkovits was
saying that's just Christian theology
and you're just been reading too too
much from the Christian text. And that's
not a Jewish idea. And actually recently
Rabbi Dr. Berman wrote an article
saying, "Why was Rabbi Berkovits so hard
on Rabbi Heschel here? There's plenty
sources for this. There are plenty of
sources." So, what do we what do we have
to say about this idea of Yissurim shel
Ahava? Do we believe in it? Do we not
believe in it? So, let's finish with one
little thing. 39. Source number 39.
So, here's two rabbis who seem to
believe in Yissurim shel Ahava.
So, source 39. Pleiku Rabbi Yaakov,
Rabbi Idi, Rabbi Akiva bar Chanina. Chad
amar Elohim Yissurim shel Ahava. What
what is this this this affliction from
love?
Kasha ein bahem bittul Torah. As long as
you're not losing out on Torah. You know
it could be cuz if you're losing Torah,
it must be because you are being
punished.
V'chad amar Elohim Yissurim shel Ahava
kasha ein bahem bittul tefillah. If you
if you can't daven anymore, then you
know it's not Yissurim shel Ahava. Says
no. Amar Elohim Rabbi Abba bar Chiya bar
Abba. No, hachi amar Rabbi Chiya bar
Abba. My dad used to say this. Amar
Rabbi Yochanan in the name of Rabbi
Yochanan. Eilu v'eilu Yissurim shel
Ahava. There are lots of people who have
Yissurim shel Ahava. Even if they can't
daven. Even if they can't learn.
V'amar Rabbi Yochanan cuz Rabbi Yochanan
said, "Dein garma d'siyarei veih." This
is a bone from my 10th child. He used to
carry with him, maybe a tooth.
He buried nebach 10 children.
Rabbi Yochanan. And Rashi says that that
could only be Yissurim shel Ahava. He
could never have done anything bad
enough
to be punished that he God forbid buried
10 children. And he used to comfort
people and say to people, "Look,
you're suffering terribly. I just want
to show you this. This is a a tooth from
Nebuchad 10th child that I buried. And
therefore, it seems that these people,
these two rabbis,
and
believe in this believe in this idea.
But not so fast. Not so fast. Because if
you will finish with 42, go over the
page.
Rashi says it must be
had
and that's and that we believe in it is
a real thing. But number 42, it's so
ironic. These same two rabbis
that he quotes as being the, you know,
believers in
Rabbi he had this terrible suffering
presumably was static he was
number 42
one day
became very sick.
I
mean Rabbi
went to visit him. He's the same two
rabbis. He said to him,
Are you doing it?
Is it doing it for you?
You believe in
so does
with a poem with a tooth from his child.
I'm going to say he said to him,
No, I don't want it. I can't do it. Just
take it away.
I'm going to say he said to him,
"Okay, give me your hand." He
helps him off the chair.
So much for over.
We can't deal with it. We can't cope
with it. And then irony of ironies,
later Rabbi
Rabbi
himself got very sick.
I
went to visit him and he said to him,
"How do you feel now?"