Transcript
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We're back here on our Sunday night
Torah Foundation series where after
we learn some basics of the foundation
of the Torah, we could easily apply
these things to our lives and
literally transform them.
There was a guy that came to Rav
Kanievsky years ago
and told him that he has a problem.
What's the problem?
The problem is that his daughter went on
a shidduch date with this young bochur
who's a really nice guy.
Really nice bochur, really good middos,
comes from a decent family.
But what can you do that he has he's not
exactly the the brightest tool in the
shed, let's just say that. He has a weak
mind.
And the the father was saying to Rav
Kanievsky what does the Rav think? I
mean, especially since there are other
offers that my daughter has.
Rav Kanievsky
said to the father
he says, "You know
my father, the Steipler Gaon used to go
to all of the different rabbis to ask
them to give me a blessing.
When I was a little boy all the way even
when I was older.
Do you know what he used to ask them to
bless me?"
The guy says, "No, rabbi, I don't know."
He says, "Well he used to ask them to
bless me
that I have
a stronger mind.
Have a stronger mind. To give me siyata
d'Shmaya that Hashem would help me
because I had a very very weak mind. So
much so that
when I was a little boy and already the
kids already all knew how to read in the
class
I did not even know the aleph-bet.
That's how weak my mind was. And it
didn't change that much over the next
several years and in fact even when I
got to my teenage years
at best I was average.
The guy is obviously surprised that the
gedola dor is saying these things about
himself that he never knew.
And then the Rav says, "Come, let me
take you some Let me show you
something."
He follows the Rav and then he points at
these books. He says, "You see these
books?
I wrote all these books.
So even though I had such a weak mind
I toiled and toiled and baruch Hashem I
was able to write a few good books.
From there we learn rabbotai kerim that
regardless of where a person starts
certainly
they could improve over time.
And that's one of the main things we're
going to learn today
of how does it really apply to our life?
When people do teshuvah, when people
convert to Judaism
they usually are on a
roller coaster of emotions. But at the
same token
there's a lot of excitement
a lot of growth, a lot of changes.
Especially the way that they dress, the
way that they look.
In some regards the way that they behave
as well. What they eat, where they go
words they use, their vocabulary
changes, what they spend their time
doing.
And the more they learn Torah
the more confident they feel that they
are finally going to fit in
into the chosen people into
their grandfather's family because their
grandfather was a rabbi but their father
wasn't so much and their
childhood wasn't exactly full of
religion and now they're 25, 35 years
old and they're doing teshuvah but they
don't really know so much about Torah
but after they've learned for a few
years
they start
acclimating to this new environment.
And they feel strong. They feel better.
And many times if they don't have
the
understanding that they have to have a
rabbi that directs them, a rabbi that
guides them
they can make bad decisions.
And one of the bad decisions that people
make is that they start rationalizing
the Torah.
They start trying to understand things
based on their own common sense.
On one end
we see that many heretics
do just that.
They start rationalizing the Torah.
They try to
explain it in ways that
are not part of our tradition.
Whether it's saying that everything in
the Sefer Bereishit in the book of
Genesis
is a instead of being reality, it's just
a parable
or it's explaining that the Kohen Gadol
would get high in the Kodesh Kodashim
because according to some non-Jewish
scientist that's what they think.
All types of strange things that people
come up with.
But on the other hand
the Chovot Halevavot
told us over the last couple of weeks
that if you have the ability
to use your reasoning
then you must.
And if you don't
you'll be prosecuted for it.
So the question is
when are we allowed to use reasoning and
when aren't we?
Tonight's shiur is going to be for the
refuah shleimah
of Rav Ephraim ben Shulamit, Rabbanit
Sarah bat Anat, Rabbanit Levana bat
Sarah, Sarah bat Levana
Vimesh ben Noach and all of Am Yisrael
and all the righteous Noahides and of
course Avi Mori, David ben Israel and
Moti Doris bat Giora
and all of Am Yisrael and all the
righteous Noahides that support our
organization
whether it's by donating in our Kimcha
d'Pischa to help us help poor people in
Israel during this time of the year
before Pesach
or it's
throughout the rest of the year.
The more you help, the more we can do
good.
And we become partners.
One of the amazing things that we saw
today
in the campaign
is that one of the people that donated
says that he used to be an anti-Semite.
And now he's a Noahide.
Obviously aiming to be a very righteous
Noahide.
This is not just a
nice comment.
This is a Kiddush Hashem.
The greatest mitzvah you could ever do
to sanctify Kadosh Baruch Hu's name.
That was what was done.
Where a person
shows the world that through the power
of these lectures that teach Torah and
the truth of the Torah
a person can transform themselves to
such an extreme that they could
literally grow up and live
as a Nazi, as an anti-Semite for 20, 30,
40, 50 years.
But then after hearing the words of the
truths of the Torah
it could transform them
into not only no longer being an
anti-Semite
but actually loving the Jewish people.
Knowing who they really are.
And loving them enough to support them.
A lot of people have
things to say about what they think
about how we speak and whether it's too
strong.
But the best comments come from people
that actually watched the lectures.
Because those are the people that
actually had their lives transformed.
And baruch Hashem this is not the first
time we've
helped a person that was an anti-Semite
turn into a righteous person. We've even
had an a former Nazi convert to Judaism.
Another case a person that grew up
in a house of Hamas, literally
become a righteous Jew.
As you saw from one of the
recent songs in teshuvah music.
A lot of amazing stories
have happened over the last 10 years of
giving lectures.
And this is
all connected
to growing in Torah.
To growing through the power of the
words of the Torah.
But at the same token
not everybody goes in the same path.
Not everyone has such great success.
Sometimes people start really good
but veer off the path of success into
something new
something different.
And it's not always as successful.
Before we get into tonight's lecture, I
want to remind everyone to please donate
to the Kimcha d'Pischa, the sooner the
better because we're already committing
to help as many people as possible and
the second thing I want to give you guys
a heads-up for
is a huge new development
at our organization that will be
available for the first time
this year
which is that our Bedouin
is going to be able to buy the chametz
or sell the chametz for everyone that
wants to sell it
through the
efficient process
that we've developed with technology
through WhatsApp.
So,
anyone that wants to sell their chametz
this year before Pesach
not only sell it but sell it through a
Bedouin that they can rely on
to me the chametz
you'll be able to do it
through this
uh program that we'll be launching in
the next couple of days. We'll have it
in uh several languages in Hebrew and
English, Spanish, Portuguese.
And uh this is the sham in coming years
and other languages as well, but in
order for you to have it, of course, you
have to join our groups and
uh be able to get access to this uh to
this link. But once you have it,
it's a very, very easy, very efficient
way to sell your chametz
without filling out
forms, without going to a synagogue,
without asking who, what, when, and how.
It's all literally right in front of
you. You simply answer the questions,
you fill out the information on a
WhatsApp message, which is where
everybody is anyway these days cuz
they're sending messages.
And you'll be able to sell your chametz.
And because this is of course our first
year doing it, it's free.
We'd appreciate any donors, but
nonetheless
it'll be something that we're
giving to cloud Israel whether they
watch our lectures or they don't, but
anyone that wants to do it is welcome to
do it. And this is the sham it'll be a
big success where people will know that
they could be comforted, that they're
not worried about
selling their chametz whether
the people they did it through were
actually doing it or not or whether
you'll have it taken care of the ship.
So, with that being said about the time
we go back to the Bedouin of the vote.
We go back to rough Kanievsky. We go
back to all of the sages that take us
by the hand each week
to understand
where our heart is supposed to look at.
Where our heart is supposed to be.
In the last couple of weeks the Bedouin
of the vote told us
first
when it comes to Judaism it's not like
any of the other religions where you
could just simply
coast without any concern.
Rather, there's an obligation from
Hashem
that not only we fulfill the Torah
but if we were given a certain talent, a
certain ability, certain resources,
whatever we can do, we must do.
This is also said by Melech.
Everything that's within your strength,
do it.
But the Bedouin of the vote is not just
talking about
giving charity
or praying extra time.
He's talking about delving into your
heart, investigating it in order to
measure whether it's close enough to
Hashem or it could work harder.
And he says that some people
do not have
the mental prowess to actually do this.
They're not gifted.
They're not even average.
And he says those people that do not
have the mental ability to do such a
thing, to investigate their heart
to understand the depth of certain mix
vote, certain laws within the Torah
certain obligations, they don't have the
ability to do it. He says they won't be
charged for it. Why? Hashem knows what
he created.
If you don't have the ability to do
something, he's not going to prosecute
you
for something that you can't do.
He doesn't prosecute us
for not giving if we are poor.
He doesn't prosecute us
for not, you know, showing
a affection to family members that need
it from us because they're traumatized
if
we don't have a family.
So, the point is is that
the Bedouin of the vote knows what he
created.
At the same token
many are gifted.
Many do have the ability
to delve deeper into things, no
different than how they did with their
career, no different than they did with
other things that they're interested in
whether it's be hobbies or be profession
or anything else.
And he says
those people
have a bigger obligation
to dig into their hearts
and find
the reason.
Find the reason for things.
Yet at the same token again
the Mishnah in the second of all tells
us
chametz to to Bedouin of the chametz.
Wise men, be careful with your words.
Why? Because if you don't say
the words of wisdom the right way
the students could be led to gain them
instead of the garden
Why? Because if a person misunderstands
what the truth is.
If a person does not have the ability to
understand things yet
then
if you tell him he should rationalize
things
you're telling him to commit spiritual
suicide.
Now, everyone remembers
the frustration that we all had as
children when the adults told us that
you'll understand when you grow up.
Every kid hates it. Why? Cuz every kid
feels like I know I got I know I know. I
know.
That's the most common word among kids.
I know. They know everything. At least
they think they do.
But as you actually grow up
you realize you know what?
They were right. I do understand better
now that I'm older.
And the same thing applies in the world
of Torah.
What you understand initially
is nowhere near as much as you'll
understand later on if you continue
growing.
And the Bedouin of the vote now will
delve into that part
to first explain to us
that if we possess the intelligence and
the insight
and we're capable of verifying the
fundamentals of our Torah
the fundamentals of our commandments
then it's a duty for us to do so.
But not only
by our own common sense like the
heretics do
rather
also by reason, by by tradition, by the
Messiah.
And he says this is proven by a couple
of verses that I'll give us as example.
We'll go over one of them today.
The first verse he gives us is in
Deuteronomy chapter 17 verses 8 through
10.
Which says
keep me make a double the Mishnah
Bedouin of the double Bedouin of the
double Bedouin of the double
the Bedouin of the vote the sham of the
sham.
The sham of the sham of the double the
sham of the double the sham.
If a case should prove too difficult for
you in judgment
between blood and blood
between plea and plea
between
mark and mark
or other matters of dispute in your
courts.
And the verses end by saying you must
act in accordance
with what they tell you.
What does this mean?
Here the Torah is telling us
that
there are things
that we have to rely on the tradition.
Not only because it exists
but because it wouldn't make sense any
other way.
So, when something is too difficult in
judgment means that
it's not possible for you to judge
because it's not based on human logic.
It's rather divine logic.
So, when it says when it's between blood
and blood
it's deciphering whether the blood is
pure
or it's impure when it comes to a Nida.
A woman that's Nida
blood comes out
of that part of the body
and she's forbidden to her husband for
that period of time
until she's purified.
But sometimes
there's blood that's It's from Niddah.
And a person
is not able to tell
from themselves, you have to go to an
expert. This is the reason why
it's forbidden to
check the Bedikah
through a digital picture. It has to be
done with the naked eye.
The Rabbi that's an expert that has
learned this, not just the laws, but
learned specifically
to be able to tell the difference
between blood that's coming from a
different part of the body
to blood of the uterus
will tell you whether this blood is pure
or not.
In a picture there's no possible way of
doing that. Even if it's 8K, not just
4K, doesn't make a difference.
Once a person
tried to
mock the Torah
and they sent the Bedikah cloth
to Rav Gideon ben Moshe. Rav Ephraim is
a Rabbi.
And they left it there.
Which is the way that they do it every
synagogue or yeshiva or different places
in every community, they have a
anonymous place where
women bring their Bedikah cloth.
They drop it off there in some type of
uh bag.
Usually with just a phone number, no
name.
To remain anonymous for its new
purposes.
And then they get a message
either by getting a
text message or in the older days they
would be leave a note.
And the person would pick it up and know
that that's uh theirs.
And tell them whether it's pure or not.
And his decision is time sensitive, so
has to be done right away.
But this particular person wanted to
mock the Torah
and left
cloth with blood on it and said, "Is
this pure or not?"
And Rav Gideon ben Moshe
wrote to them
it's not possible
to become impure
if the blood comes out of your mouth.
He knew that this blood, although red,
just like all the other blood
came from the mouth and not from that
part of the body.
The expertise
is not based on
a uh
rational
logic.
It's based on the tradition.
Of course, the person amazed, shocked,
embarrassed
admitted
what they tried to do.
Further, the pasuk says
that if there is a difficulty with plea
and plea. Meaning
the issues of Choshen Mishpat, there's
damages.
Two people
have a conflict over money matters.
He caused damage to the wall
of his neighbor. The neighbor says that
he owes him now a certain amount of
money.
There's all types of different issues
that the tradition will teach us.
That the law of the land is not
applicable here, but rather halakha is.
If he stole and he got caught versus if
he stole and he gave it back without
getting caught before he got caught.
Different things.
Also
mark and mark.
What is mark and mark?
This is leprous mark.
Not as common today.
But
certainly something that relies
on the tradition.
Why? Because when I tell you
that a person that came to the Cohen
and told them
I have a mark. And he shows them a part
of his body, his hand, his leg, some
part of his body that has a small little
white mark.
Specific type of hair is coming out of
there.
At that moment the Cohen says, "Tamei,
tamei."
He's impure.
On the other hand
if somebody else comes
right after
and their entire body
has now turned
to a different color.
Same color as this other guy has a
little mark.
But the other guy has one little mark,
THIS GUY'S ENTIRE BODY TURNED THAT WAY.
Cohen says
"Tahor, pure."
Obviously, this is not logic.
This is the tradition.
And therefore the Torah says
V'asita
al pi hadavar asher yagidu l'cha.
You must act in accordance with what
they tell you.
What the sages tell you
is the tradition is what you must do.
Why? Because
even if you have a 200 IQ
or a thousand IQ competing with
haMelech
you will still not be able to understand
the divine logic.
So here comes
the Chovot haLevavot now.
And he says
when you look at these cases
that are cited in this first verse
you will find that they are the type
that must be broken down to its details
categorized and analyzed in the method
of tradition.
Not by logical demonstration.
Meaning the only way to figure out what
to do in these circumstances
is evaluate
case by case, step by step.
And how the tradition applies to it
with each and every step.
Notice though
that among the cases that are mentioned
in this verse
there is no mention
that's made on any matter that could
have been discovered by the way of
intellect.
Meaning he says, "You see, they Torah
tells you, listen to the sages.
They're going to tell you what to do
with these cases.
But it specifically tells you to listen
to them about cases that there's no
other way for you to figure them out by
your own intellect.
It has to be based on the tradition.
The verse does not say
"If you have questions on the subject of
God's unity
or about his names and his attributes or
on any of the fundamentals of our Torah
such as the service of God, the bitachon
in Hashem
trusting Hashem
humility before him
devoting to him all that you have
refining your good deeds
and removing the detrimental defects
turning away from sin, meaning doing
teshuvah
fear of God, love of God
diffidence before him
self-accounting
because these are all purely motivated.
And similar matters which a person can
discover through their intellect.
So first, the Chovot haLevavot is
telling us, "Look, there is a time
where
your intellectual
ability is irrelevant."
Why? It doesn't apply.
Because there's a tradition.
And that's the only way to judge the
case.
But the Torah doesn't say that
everything
must always be judged just that way.
Because it doesn't say everything.
It specifies.
And it doesn't mention things like
emunah, bitachon, fear of Hashem, love
of Hashem, and so on.
Which are things that
you can discover
through your intellect.
In fact
you could also
simply accept them
and acquire them because the sages said
it also, meaning the tradition.
So you could do this and you could do
that
with some of these things.
Whereas some things you could only use
the tradition.
So what the Torah is trying to teach us,
says the Chovot haLevavot
is that you should reflect in your own
mind
and use your intellect in these matters.
But first,
you must learn them from tradition,
which covers all of the commandments in
the Torah,
their principles and their details, and
then examine them with your mind,
understanding, and judgment until the
truth becomes clear to you and falsehood
is rejected.
As the Torah says,
in the book of Deuteronomy, understand
it today and reflect on it in your
heart, Hashem is the God in the heavens
above
and on the earth below, there is no
other. This is what we say in Alenu
Leshabeach.
To explain what the Chovot Halevavot is
trying to tell us here,
is that
there are things
that
we do not have the right to use our
logic
because the tradition is the only way to
understand them,
which means God said so, therefore we
do.
But and then there are things
like the ones we mentioned
that
you can
and in fact, if you can, you must
use your logic
when you're delving into them
in addition
to the tradition.
So, how do you know
when to do that?
How do you know that you grew up and
you're old enough to do it?
Because they told you when you were a
kid, when you were a new,
when you get older, when you become more
knowledgeable, then you'll understand.
How do you know that you could
understand?
About 20 years ago,
when my dear Rav Rav Ephraim
was still in Yeshiva, bachur Yeshiva,
during this time of the year, they would
usually bring
big rabbis to give the
boys chizuk.
And Rav Dov Yaffe
came to the Yeshiva.
He was one of the
most well-known mashgichim
and extraordinary
tzaddik, Yirei Shamayim, talmid chacham.
And he came to speak to the bachurim in
the Yeshiva.
Of course, all of the bachurim
were excited to hear the words of this
modern-day sage,
and they were looking forward to hearing
all of the complicated
chiddushim that he would give them, all
of the extraordinary insights,
what he found in the secret parts of the
Torah,
the hidden treasures that took decades
upon decades to discover.
But to their dismay,
when the mashgiach Rav Dov Yaffe came,
he didn't speak about any of what they
expected.
In fact,
all he spoke about
is that you know that Hashem runs the
world.
You must see Hashem in everything
because Hashem is there.
Some of the bachurim
were confused.
Why is the rabbi
teaching us this? I mean, we're not
secular kids.
We're not even weak
Yeshiva bachurim that don't want to be
here. We're studying here. We're in the
Yeshiva during bein hazmanim.
Obviously, we're dedicated.
Why is he
talking to us like this?
And when he completed his talk,
some of them felt like
why did he come all the way out here?
He traveled an hour and a half
here and he's going to go back an hour
and a half
just to tell us that
God runs the world?
Rav Rosenberg
was the Rav of Netanya, the city of
Netanya,
or the community Rav over there.
He says to them,
we
heard about
Hashem running the world
and we believe it.
We believe Hashem runs the world.
The difference between us
and Rav Dov Yaffe
is while we know it and we believe it,
he lives it.
And that's the difference.
You can know that something exists.
You can even say, I don't just believe
in God, I know God exists.
We have an obligation in the Torah to
know God,
to know that he exists.
So, you can tell somebody, "Yes, I know.
I know it's true. I know the Torah is
true.
I believe that Hashem runs the world."
But then,
when you hear stories of emunah,
how people
that are on a completely different level
overcome their obstacles,
you realize how far away you are from
them.
And you don't really understand how
How is it that
he's able
to leave everything, sacrifice
everything
just to help this person
that he doesn't even know?
Why?
How is it that
he's able to rebuild
rebuild
his life,
rebuild a community after he lost a wife
and 11 kids in the Holocaust?
People lose a wallet and they cry for
weeks.
The Klausenburger Rebbe lost an entire
family, a wife and 11 kids.
But yet, that did not stop him for even
a moment
from rebuilding the world of Torah and
being one of the, literally, the
forefathers of modern-day Torah.
He built hospitals, he built yeshivot,
he built communities in different parts
of the world. Not just one part, not
just two.
How?
You see that
their reality
and our reality are two different
things.
Rav Rosenberg was trying to tell the
bachurim,
we heard about emunah.
And we even have emunah.
But he lives it.
Meaning,
he sees Hakadosh Baruch Hu in
everything.
While we
pick and choose
where
we remember Hashem,
where we choose to have emunah in
Hashem.
Usually, people
when it comes to
being a
looking for
some type of
way to blame Hashem
when bad things happen to them,
they say, "Why is Hashem doing this to
me?
Why is Hashem doing all these bad things
to me?"
But when they have
something that
is good
or something that they want that's good,
they say, "Be'ezrat Hashem." Like,
hopefully Hashem is going to help me
with this. Hopefully Hashem helped me
with this.
Meaning that
it's really
we choose when to put Hashem into our
life.
But a person can elevate themselves to a
point
where there is no separation.
They literally see Hashem's hands in
everything.
Ein Od Milvado
doesn't just mean there's nothing else
but him to them.
It's literally how they see.
At the time of Rabbi Akiva Eiger,
a couple hundred years ago,
there was a big war
against Hasidut.
And
surprisingly,
the grandson of Rabbi Akiva Eiger
became a Hasid,
which was a shock
to everyone and in fact
a disappointment to his father.
The son of Rabbi Akiva Eiger
was disappointed that his that his son
became a Hasid and not only a Hasid
a Hasid of Kotsk
which was one of the types of Hasidut
that
they literally couldn't stand because of
how much they
looked down at materialism
and matters of this world.
So, after the son was there for about a
year or so
he came back to visit his family
now as a Hasid, Hasid [snorts] Kotsk.
And his father says
"What do you find over there at Kotsk?
What do you find over there that you
don't have over here?"
I mean, obviously his grandfather is
Rabbi Akiva Eiger, so Torah wasn't
lacking.
So, the father is confused. "What did
you find over there
that you don't have over here?"
And the son says
"I learned over there
that Hashem runs the world."
Father says, "What?
Hashem runs the world? That's what you
learned? That for a whole year that's
what you learned?"
"Yes."
Father calls the maid servant.
"Simple woman, come come here for a
second.
Excuse me, ma'am.
Who runs the world?"
"Hashem does, sir."
"Who created the world?"
"Hashem does, sir."
"Who gives us everything?" "Hashem does,
sir."
"Thank you."
He looks back at his son.
"You're telling me that you spent a
whole year transforming yourself to
learn what the cleaning lady knows?"
And the son says, "No.
She
says it.
I live it.
She knows that this
exists.
I live it.
It's a different thing.
One of the many amazing stories
that Rabbi Nissim Yagan told about
himself
he was one of the
last Baalei Mussar
that
would teach Mussar
mamash from
from the
foundations of Mussar
looking at different parts of life and
learning how to
learn Mussar from it.
Most people when they
teach Mussar usually it's
quoting
the great ones before them.
But he was one of the few that was still
able to
bring new insights into day-to-day life
that comes from the original foundations
of Mussar.
If you understand what I mean.
And Rabbi Nissim Yagan
would tell stories about his own life.
And those were some of the best stories
because
you not only learn
about the lesson he's trying to teach
you
but you also learn about who he is.
So, Rabbi Yagan says, "You know, there
was one time I was with my son
and we were walking.
And all of a sudden we hear this people
are screaming.
We look
and we see that two
huge pitbulls are loose and they're
running free
in our direction.
Now, these dogs
could easily tear a person to pieces.
And there's no way we're going to outrun
them.
And both my son and I don't know what to
do.
And these dogs close in on us quickly.
And as we're literally feeling like
we're about to get attacked, THEY JUST
RUN BY US.
They run past us.
Miracle.
And then I started crying.
My son
initially thought I'm crying because of
the miracle that just happened.
But he saw that my tears weren't happy
tears.
They were sad tears.
So, my son asked me
"Abba
why are you crying so much? I mean,
uh something good happened. They didn't
they didn't bite us.
They didn't kill us."
He says, "Yeah.
I'm crying about myself.
"Why?"
"Because I'm asking myself
why am I not scared of a Kadosh Baruch
Hu like I was at least scared of these
dogs?"
When a person
has trouble understanding that
it's okay. Doesn't mean you're a bad
person.
It just means you're not there yet.
But a person that does understand that,
the more you understand it, the more a
person reflects
and the more a person could literally
look into their own heart and see
ayayay, I'm
I can't believe
I can't believe where I stand and how
far I am from my goal.
This was the way of all of Gedolei
Yisrael.
From the ones that lived in previous
generation
like our grandparents
or even if you go as far back as David
HaMelech saying "I need to learn
I'm a worm but not a man."
Or Moshe Rabbenu says "We are nothing."
Or Avraham Avinu saying
"I am
I am dust and ashes."
The greater they were, the more they
understood how far they are from where
they could be.
On the other hand
you see sometimes people that
are far from being great.
In fact, many times they're far from
even being good.
But yet they think they're the best.
They think they are so good that they're
Messiah.
That Hashem must have chosen them to be
Messiah.
Every other day there's another
psychopath that thinks he's Messiah.
In our generation sometimes it's a
female, too. She thinks she's Messiah.
This all comes from
deep-rooted arrogance to the point of
people simply losing any sense of
reality.
On the other hand, when we look at the
great sages, we see that their
perspective was very different.
They looked at things very different.
Rabbi Isser Zalman Meltzer, a lover
shalom
was the rav of Rav Shach
and many many of the other Gedolim that
were his talmidim
was known even as a young man to have a
very very weak body and weak heart, so
much so that the doctor
told his
future wife
that his heart is so weak, he's probably
going to die during the Shiva Brachot.
And similar to what happened with Rabbi
Elyashiv, who was also told the same
thing
Rabbi
Zalman Meltzer lived to his 90s.
But his body was weak. His heart was
weak.
That wasn't a mistake. It was true.
Just the fact that Hashem decides who
lives and who dies is something that the
doctors didn't take into consideration.
Well, anyway, when he was already in his
90s
certainly even without this pre-existing
issue, somebody in their 90s is
certainly weak
to say the least.
One of his talmidim came to him
and said to the rabbi, "Kvod HaRav
I know that the rabbi is
weak and tired, but I please wanted to
invite the rabbi
to come to my grandson's bar mitzvah."
And Rabbi Isser Zalman Meltzer says to
him,
"Listen, you know I love you like a son.
But even if my own son would come to me
and ask me to come to
his grandson's Bar Mitzvah,
I would tell him the same thing, I
can't.
It's too hard for me.
I'm too weak.
Of course, the student said, "Okay, but
I still want to invite you, but I
understand. I'm sorry to
bother you, but
I had to ask.
But thank you so much."
Few days later,
the Bar Mitzvah is taking place.
And a little while after the Bar Mitzvah
starts,
to everyone's surprise, especially the
student, the grandfather of the boy,
he sees that Yisrael Zalman Zeltzer
enters the room.
One of Gedolei Yisrael decided to attend
in his 90s.
HE SAYS, "WHY?
I THOUGHT YOU WEREN'T COMING. WHY DID
YOU COME? WHY DID YOU burden yourself
with this? You didn't have to.
And especially you didn't tell me you
were coming, so it must have been
difficult for you to come. An hour and a
half, I could have arranged something
for you."
And Rav Zeltzer says to him,
"You're right.
It was very difficult for me to come.
But I owe you a hakaras hatov.
I owe you a big favor for what you did
for me."
He says, "What I did for you?
What did I ever do for you?" He says,
"What did I do?"
He says, "When you came to me
a few days ago
and invited me to the Bar Mitzvah,
I said no.
But after you left,
I thought about it for a few minutes.
And I realized that
it seems like it was just
just yesterday
that you gave me the good news that
the boy was born.
He was just born.
And then I looked at myself, I says,
"Look, Zalman.
Look how quickly 13 years have passed.
Gone.
And you still are the same Zalman. You
still have not DONE TESHUVAH.
HOW MUCH MORE TIME ARE YOU going to
waste
with stupid
How much time?"
And after crying to myself and
realizing, "Oy,
how did I waste so many years, 13 years,
and I haven't taken advantage of doing
teshuvah?"
I started. I started doing teshuvah.
SO EVEN THOUGH IT was very hard for me
to come here,
I owe you a great gratitude
for reminding me
that I must do teshuvah.
Of course, the average person is asking,
"What teshuvah does the rabbi need to
do?
What What did he do
that
he actually even needs to do teshuvah
for?"
But the reality is about that
is that the greater
somebody was
in their relationship
the more dedicated they were
the more committed
they were
the more they realized
they can do more.
Now,
a person that
is still
young in their years of doing teshuvah
in their conversion and their
relationship
that already thinks that they can think
this way, they can do all of this
and
has to
understand that this is not something
that happens overnight.
By the same token,
the
book is telling us
this
is the difference
between the tradition
and reason.
There are certain things
that we must rely on tradition, on the
tradition. Why? These are laws that are
divine laws. God said so, regardless of
whether we understand or not, we must
do.
But when it comes to
our servitude of God, our understanding
that we need to work harder to pray
better, we need to work harder to be
more generous, we need to work harder in
order to have more fear of God, we need
to work harder in order to fix the flaws
we have in our character,
we need to stop pretending that we're
humble when in reality we are arrogant.
We need to stop pretending
like we are more righteous than thou,
but yet acting in a way as if the whole
world is full of wicked people and we're
the only righteous person alive.
We need to start realizing that we
ourselves need to do teshuvah.
The more a person delves into
themselves,
the more they'll understand that there's
more work to be done.
And not just a little bit of work.
Not even just a little more than
the guy that has to do a lot because he
just started.
In fact, if he just started
doing teshuvah, if he just started
keeping Shabbat,
HE HAS LESS TO DO than we do.
Why? He knows less.
The obligation is lesser upon him.
But we that we know more, we've already
been religious for 5 years, for 10
years, for 20 years,
the reality is
the obligation is also bigger on us.
So instead of judging the world harshly,
we look for ways to help them because we
feel bad for them.
And at the same token,
we feel bad for ourselves
that we actually need to help them
in order to improve ourself.
The more a person delves into this
with reason,
the more they'll understand how these
Torah giants,
whether it's Yaffe, Yegan,
Zeltzer, Kanievsky, all of these giants
that we hear about,
how they got to where they are.
But before we jump
too far,
we have to begin
with an understanding
that just like a baby first has to crawl
before they walk,
and they have to walk
before they run,
this doesn't only apply
to
physical babies.
This also applies to spiritual babies.
We have to realize that just because
we're good at
dressing modestly,
we're good at
dressing like a religious Jew,
we're good at going to synagogue, we're
good at
learning a daf,
we're good at giving tzedakah, we're
good at a few things.
Doesn't mean that
we're all set.
There's still a lot of work to do.
And the more a person delves into where
they stand, the more they realize that
there's actually a lot more than what
they thought.
The more they delve into their own
heart, the more they realize that
there's a whole segment segment of it
that's completely empty.
And that's why the book
is saying
that scripture is telling us
to reflect
in our own mind and to use our intellect
in these matters, but first
learn from tradition.
Why?
If we're going to get
to understand where we stand
only by reflecting deeply, meditating
over it, understanding that really it's
not humility that I have, I'm actually
arrogant pretending to be humble, which
is the worst form
of arrogance.
HE WALKS LIKE THIS. YOU KNOW, I'M SORRY.
What can we do? We know that I'm going
to help us.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. But in reality,
he's thinking in the back of his mind,
Did they see how I said it?
They saw it.
You guys You guys saw how how I had the
money over there? You guys saw it?
Uh okay.
HE'S LOOKING FOR ATTENTION.
HE'S LOOKING FOR ATTENTION AND HE'S NOT
really
What happened? You You lost your money?
Yeah, you know,
Hashem gives, Hashem takes.
Hashem, Hashem, you know, everything.
They heard me. You guys heard I said
Hashem? You guys heard said I I had the
money over there?
He says the things he says because
he wants attention. He says the things
he says because
he gets more pleasure from
the
way people look at him
than anything else.
So, a person has to understand
that even though
you'll need to use your intellect
in order to dig
deep into your heart to understand where
you stand,
don't even
try it
until you have learned
the tradition.
Until you have learned
and accepted
all of the commandments of the Torah,
all of the principles and the details,
and then examine your mind.
Because if a person
goes straight to
meditation, goes straight to what people
like to call it what they do,
he just started keeping Shabbat 3 months
ago. He's already spending an hour AND A
HALF A DAY IN THE middle of the woods
during it what they do. No, I'm talking
to Hashem.
He makes his Hashem his friend.
Instead of going into
the woods for an hour and a half,
you could do it 5 minutes during your
prayer and spend the other hour and 25
minutes learning Torah, learning the
tradition,
learning the basics.
Why?
You do not have the spiritual skills
yet.
You do not have the spiritual skills yet
in order to know how
to use your intellect.
Meaning, you haven't grown up yet.
You don't have the ability to understand
yet.
Just like the frustrating little kid
is frustrated
because everybody keeps telling him,
"You'll You'll understand when you get
older."
JUST LIKE THAT, THAT'S WHERE YOU STAND.
WHY?
Because just because you're good at
doing a few things, you're good at
keeping Shabbat, you're good at this,
you're good at that, doesn't mean that
you have
the ability to understand
how to
investigate
your own heart, how to measure where you
really stand, how to understand the
words of the sages properly,
that it means more than one thing.
And therefore,
you don't have enough
of the tradition in your belly
in order to be able to delve into using
your intellect.
You see, my friends,
if a person, for example,
learns the Talmud every day,
but
he doesn't have a rabbi,
the Talmud says, "God hates him."
Wait, but he learned the Talmud every
day.
Yes.
He learned it,
but he didn't apply it.
The Torah is not just there
to learn it
for mental gymnastics.
It's there to apply.
So, there are people that learn,
but they don't do.
And there are people that don't learn,
and they do whatever they
think they know.
In order for a person to truly grow,
they have to
learn
and do.
And while they're learning and doing,
they have to constantly
double-check
with themselves
of where they stand in comparison to
what they're learning
and with their rabbi,
who's also measuring where they stand in
comparison to their learning.
If they feel like they've learned
everything they could from this rabbi
and they need to graduate and go to a
different rabbi,
then more times than not,
they have not reached anything other
than arrogance.
Why?
Because they forgot
that even though they've been learning
from this rabbi for a year, for 2 years,
for 5 years, and they grew tremendously
in knowledge over those 5 years,
the rabbi grew much more than them
during those 5 years.
Why?
Isn't 5 years for him, 5 years for me?
No.
Because he has a much bigger
foundation.
His growth is exponentially higher than
the students.
So, the moment a person thinks that they
know more than their rabbi,
automatically, they should conclude,
and hopefully they have enough
understanding to conclude
that they're actually further
than they even thought.
But many times,
a person misuses their intellect
to replace the tradition
and uses the tradition
to replace
the intellect.
Meaning, they use things in the wrong
place in the wrong time.
They care more about the tradition when
it comes to customs
than they do
about when it comes to the actual laws.
They care more about
the laws
that don't really pertain to them
because they're either not of that
custom or it's not
something that's applicable at that time
because there's no better mid-day show
things like that,
but
they don't know how to
do what they're supposed to do
because they're still new.
What the
word is telling us
is that
yes, you have an obligation
to eventually use your intellect in
order to delve into your heart, in order
to measure how much you have, you have,
how much love of Hashem
you want, how much trust in Hashem you
have, how much
in Hashem you want,
how much of a connection to Hashem you
have, how much you want.
Yes, you need to delve into your heart,
but you also have to know that
the current spiritual tools you have
right now
could only understand so much.
And therefore, you have to continue
doing it again and again, meaning the
same exercise of measuring how much you
have, you have, measuring how much you
have, you have, measuring how good your
prayer is or how terrible it is or
whatever it is, you have to keep doing
that same exact exercise over and over
again
for the rest of your life as your
understanding of the
as your understanding of the actual
foundation of the Torah increases,
meaning the
intellect never replaces
the tradition.
It complements it.
And the more a person knows about the
foundation of the Torah, more he knows
about the tradition,
more he knows about what the Talmud
says, about what the
say, about what is and what
is, and what
is in the heart and what is in the
kitchen.
The more he knows about the
within and the outside,
the more he's going to be able
to utilize those spiritual tools
to investigate
where he really stands.
At the same token,
the more
he's going to desire to learn more
Torah. Why? Because he realizes that the
more he learns,
the more he's lacking.
It's not like food where the more you
eat,
the more satiated you become.
Quite the opposite.
The more you grow in Torah, the more you
realize how little you know because you
keep discovering that the Torah is
bigger today than it was yesterday.
You just discovered that the Talmud
exists.
You finished tractate and then you
discover how big the Talmud is.
YOU FINISHED ALL SHAS AND YOU REALIZE
THAT
it's not the only Shas.
There's the Talmud Bavli, there's the
Talmud Yerushalmi.
There's the Shas Mishnayot.
And even if you finish all of them, you
realize
that you haven't even scratched the
surface.
Because
even if you read them 100 times,
you still haven't learned everything
that's in them.
In fact, you still haven't even
scratched the surface.
And in fact, the more you learn,
the more you discover other things. You
discover
the wisdom of the Rishonim, the wisdom
of the Achronim. You discover the
She'iltos v'Tshuvos. You discover the
Midrashim. You discover the all
different parts of the Torah and you
realize it's much bigger than you
thought.
When you first got in, you thought, "Oh,
it's Chumash, Rashi, Moshe Rabbenu, at
some point King David."
Cool stories.
And then you realize, "No, no, it's
bigger than that."
And then you get a little further and
you realize, "No, no, it's even bigger
than that."
And then you get further and you
realize, "No, no, it's even bigger than
bigger than bigger than that."
And if you're actually
measuring yourself during that time,
you realize that even though I grew in
knowledge of the Torah,
I actually have more work to do when it
comes to fixing myself
than I thought.
Even though I'm better than I what I was
when I first started,
I'm not beating up people in the
streets. I'm not stealing.
But now that I've learned more, I
realize that
there's actually more of an obligation
on me
than what I thought originally.
I thought, "Oh, I have to do is just
keep Shabbat, eat kosher, don't kill
anybody."
But now I realize there's a whole lot
more than that.
It's not just don't kill them
physically.
Don't kill them with words.
Don't insult them. Don't break their
hearts.
It's not just
don't steal their money.
It's also
don't steal
a lot of other things that a person can
steal,
including stealing somebody's mind,
which is a form of
deception,
making them believe one thing when it's
really something else.
The more a person delves into the Torah,
the more they realize that each one of
these categories has subcategories
and it's a never-ending ocean.
And he's obligated to do all of it.
But without having
his heart cleave to the tradition
and constantly measuring it
as he or she progresses,
they're not going to end up right.
They're not going to end up right. Why?
Because if a person thinks,
"I do good things now. I'm better than I
was before. And therefore, I could just,
you know, I'm okay."
The moment a person thinks that they're
okay and they're they're they're fine
where they stand,
it's usually the beginning of a
downfall.
It's usually the beginning of a
downfall. Why? Because once a person
thinks they're okay, usually they don't
try to become better.
And when a
neshama doesn't progress, it digresses.
It goes backwards.
All of a sudden, you got shamayim is not
as important to her.
All of a sudden, modesty is
not as strict
as what she was in the beginning.
All of a sudden, it's okay to
dress modest, but words, not so much.
A person has to constantly measure
themself
and understand
you don't get to become
the full potential of yourself
by simply passing a couple of tests.
There was a
guy that
was a teacher.
And I heard this story story from Rabbi
Biderman.
He was a teacher and this is something
like
maybe 50, 60 years ago.
And uh
right before his class started,
he
ran to
the phone in the
uh office
and he called his wife.
And he asked his wife,
"Did you
uh
throw out the jacket yet? The the old
jacket?"
She says, "Yeah, I threw it out."
"Okay.
Is it still in the garbage or the
garbage people already came?"
She says, "No, they already came. They
took it."
"Okay. All right. Have a good day."
Hangs up the phone
and he goes back to the class.
Goes back to the class.
The principal
was
a little bit confused.
He couldn't wait
till after the class or after school
to find out if his wife threw away his
old jacket?
Like it had to be done now?
So he pulled him to the side after class
was over.
He said, "Let me ask you something.
What was that all about?"
He said, "No, I had to
find out if my wife
uh threw out the uh jacket or not."
She says, "Why? She just throws things
out?" He goes, "No, no, yesterday she
told me she's going to throw it out.
So I knew she's going to throw it out."
"All right. So why did it come up now?"
He says, "Because yesterday when she
told me,
I had I agreed and there was no problem.
I mean, the jacket's ripped and you
know, I don't need it anymore.
But right before
I got to the class today,
I realized
that
I hid $50,000
that we have as our life savings that
we're saving for our kids' wedding.
And since I didn't have any other place
to hide it in the house, I figured the
best place to HIDE IT WAS INSIDE that
jacket.
So that's why I asked her if she threw
it out. And when she said yes,
I asked her, "Is it still in the garbage
or the garbage people already came?" And
she said yes.
So when she said yes, I said, "Okay,
thank you." And that's it. I went back
to the class.
So now the principal
is even more confused. He said, "Wait a
minute.
You're telling me
that you just found out
you lost
your entire life savings of $50,000,
which is not only a lot of money today,
it was a lot of money even more money
back then.
You just lost everything?
And you just said, "Okay, have a good
day." And you went back and
taught the kids in this class?"
He said, "Yeah."
"How?"
And the Jew looks at him and says,
"Well,
isn't that
what we're all supposed to be doing?
Isn't that what all of this is for, for
these times?"
Meaning,
your Judaism, YOUR AVODAS HASHEM, YOUR
LOVE OF HASHEM, YOUR YIRAS SHAMAYIM,
YOUR EMUNAH IN HASHEM
IS NOT MEASURED WHEN you win the lotto.
It's not measured WHEN YOU JUST GET
MARRIED TO THE LOVE OF YOUR LIFE. IT'S
NOT MEASURED WHEN YOU HAVE KIDS and
they're healthy and they're WONDERFUL
AND THEY'RE HAPPY and and and they
already come with millions of dollars
with them.
NO.
ALL OF THAT IS MEASURED
during those times.
During those times
where something
COMPLETELY AWFUL
HAPPENS.
You just lost everything.
That's when it's measured.
Do you still have a moon and a sham when
you don't understand why he took the
$50,000?
Do you still have beat THE HORN AND A
SHAM when you don't understand why he
made you forget that the $50,000 is in
the jacket?
DO YOU STILL HAVE FEAR OF A sham when
you realize that you now have no way of
paying for your kids wedding?
Do you still have love of a sham
when you realize
that in the best case scenario
you might be able to do a wedding
in your house
for your kids because there's no way for
you to be able to afford anything else.
Do you still love a sham?
You see what I'm telling you again.
Many times people
forget that all of these showing that we
learn together
they're not just for mental stimulation.
They're not just for
inspiration for today.
They're not just to inform you
about different insights that the sages
have taught us or different stories from
the different parts of the Torah.
But rather these are all spiritual tools
that each and every single person has to
do everything possible
to try
to not only
take those tools
but to put them in a very safe place
where when they need them
they're readily available.
When will they need them?
Not during the celebrations.
Not during
the
extraordinary success.
But rather during the times where it
seems like everything failed.
It seems like everything is not working
out.
It seems like
life
has become like
the rules of the Torah that
we have to rely on tradition because
there's no way for us to understand
them.
THERE'S NO WAY FOR US TO UNDERSTAND THAT
WHY THIS BLOOD is pure and that blood is
not. THERE'S NO WAY FOR us to understand
why the red heifer purifies the impure
but the pure becomes impureified.
There's no way for us to UNDERSTAND WHY
THE GUY THAT HAS A SMALL MARK OF tsaraat
he's tameh but the GUY THAT HIS ENTIRE
BODY BECOMES IT HE'S PURE.
So we say tradition. We rely on
tradition as the only way for us to
understand that part of the Torah.
What our sages are teaching us here
about today?
Is that
yes
you have to learn that tradition.
But part of your
learning has to be
applying that same
tradition that same thinking
to your intellect.
As it develops
make sure it develops
with the same rules, the same guards,
guardrails, the same principles, the
same makeup
as our tradition.
Make sure that when
all fails
you don't fail.
There are people
that
they only believe
what they see.
And the Barbanel
explained the
plagues in Egypt
in a very rational way
based on
the
different parts of the weather, the
different order of the plagues.
And the Malbim
didn't like this.
And said, "Why? Why are you making the
miracles that a sham made
seem smaller by explaining them in a
scientific way, in a rational way?"
The reason why is because although
we believe
that the Torah
is the Torah.
It's divine.
It's not something
that any human on planet Earth has the
ability to completely understand. A
Kadosh Baruch Hu, if we understood him,
we would be him.
But yet a Kadosh Baruch Hu gave us
different tools.
The more we develop those spiritual
tools, the more we will become in line
with what these rules are, with what
these statements are.
The more they'll make sense, the more
these puzzle pieces will fit different
parts of our neshama.
But there are certain people that
they're not there yet.
So Hahamim like the Barbanel
who believed
the same exact thing as the Malbim, the
same exact thing as the Rambam, the same
exact thing as all of the great sages.
What they did is
says, "In order to get these
philosopher-minded types of people on
board
first have to explain to them things
in how they're capable of understanding
them.
That the weather and that the series of
things and the timing of things to
because they're not good they don't have
the spiritual tools to understand
the tradition.
They don't have the spiritual tools to
have blind faith.
They don't have the spiritual tools to
simply believe that just because God
said so, therefore it is it.
So in order to get them in, I'll explain
to them based on the limited amount of
spiritual tools they have.
And if they come with me
and they choose to develop it further
eventually they'll understand further.
They'll understand that the least of it
is the scientific aspects. The least of
it are the parts we understand
rationally.
But they're never going to get
to that level unless they get in.
So a person has to know
that sometimes
you simply don't have
the spiritual tools to understand that
what you're doing is wrong.
You don't have the spiritual tools to
understand that where you stand is not
exactly the ideal place.
And this is why we always have to look
at the great sages, at the great sadikim
in awe and admiration to realize that if
they
are still rebuking themselves
are still looking at themselves as if
they've have not done teshuvah, there
must be something to it. They're not
doing it to impress anybody. They're not
doing because they think somebody's
going to tell their story 50 years
later.
If they're still
at a point where they see that there's a
lot more work to be done, then surely
we at least have to understand that we
have a lot of work to be done even if we
don't know what that work is.
And we have to accept the fact that
sometimes we just don't have
the spiritual tools to understand what
we're doing wrong.
And the only way we're going to get
there
is by building further on top of the
tradition
more and more of it, understanding it,
applying it
and little by little we'll be able
to collect some more tools
that
will allow us to understand the
tradition not only by simply being
spoon-fed what the tradition is
but also by being able to use our
reasoning abilities
to decipher one thing from the other.
But
we have to know
that this will come in time.
We can't force it because if you force
it
you're sure to be wrong and those
mistakes are dear.
So be that as it may
this too
will be another stepping stone that each
and every one one of us will use to get
closer to a Kadosh Baruch Hu
to work on ourselves further
to look at the people around us
that need to do teshuvah
not as lesser than us but rather as
opportunities for us to help them as
well as help ourselves.
To try to
be better today than we were yesterday.
Even if the world gives us a million and
a half reasons to be annoyed. Even if
the world gives us a million and a half
reasons to not like. Even if the world
gives us a million and a half reasons to
quit.
Because as long as we're continuing to
go forward in the way of Hashem in the
path of the law
great things are possible.
Even
turning a Nazi
into a lover of Jews
is possible.
And if that's possible
if you could change their heart
then certainly we could change our own
heart.
Thank you very much for learning with
me. Hashem bless each and every single
one of you to be able to apply all of
this to your lives. Anyone that wants to
support
could donate on our website bhtorah.org
or besader shem.org and certainly you
could donate on the campaign page
bhpesach.org.
And for those of you that want to sell
your chametz through our bet din in
Yerushalayim
make sure that you are
following us on the and joining our
WhatsApp groups because the links will
be posted over there in the coming days
and it's literally not just a
a great a great way to sell your
chametz. You're selling it through
a bet din but it's a very very efficient
way of doing things.
It's saves a lot of time. I'm very very
excited about this new development.
Baruch Hashem. So thank you very much
for learning with me and besader shem
we'll learn again later this week. All
the best and be healthy.
Shalom u'vracha rabotai.
We're finally here.
The new key remote box.
Opens up.
A nice little cushion here.
I got
Let's see if it's charged.
Now available at besader shem.com.org.
>> [music]
>> Besader shem.org get yourself 20 of
them, 30 of them, 50 of them.
Distribute them to all the people that
you care about.
And you'll get people to do teshuvah.