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How Will You Go Down | Rabbi Ari Bensoussan
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Torah
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We're coming up to the Parsha now,
soon enough,
where we're going to talk about the Eigel Hazahav,
the golden calf.
And as a kid, I always wondered,
How did they give in?
They were on such a high level.
They just had Hashem
speak to them from Har Sinai.
Moshe Rabbeinu tells them
40 days and 40 nights.
“Guys, don't do anything
that I wouldn’t do.”
And they laughed.
And Moshe Rabbeinu
went up the mountain.
And here you have
an enormous body of 600,000 men,
3 million Jews,
and a whole nation full of accountants,
and nobody can count 40 days?
They were off by 6 hours.
What happened over there?
We look back
and we can't help but think...
What fools...
It was sitting right in front of them.
What fools, that they couldn't
just stand the challenge.
We look at the story of Korach
and we think - how could they go
against Moshe Rabbeinu like that?
To speak so negatively
and to fight against him so brazenly,
until Hashem himself went
and opened up the earth?
We look at the story of Billam,
when he tells Ballak exactly what to do
with the midyanim as they come in,
and how the Yidden sinned
with so many of the women of Midyan,
to the point that there was
a plague of 24,000 Yidden,
and we wonder -
How could they?
How foolish were they?
The challenge of
our generation, my friends,
is Shmirat Einayim.
It's what we look at,
and it's sitting in our pocket.
That challenge is just right there.
And the future generations
may look back at us,
and they may wonder -
How foolish were they?
How could they not see
as clear as I can now,
from the comfort of the future?
Rabotai, we're in the
challenge of our lives.
There's so much riding against us.
There's a world today that's demanding
freedom to look at
and freedom to think
and freedom to be able
to have no boundaries set
on anything whatsoever.
We are meant to be the ones
to stand staunch against that.
We are the emissaries of Hashem
to be the ones,
to try to teach the world about purity,
about holiness, about control.
That's our job.
And the place in which
we're challenged the most
is with that cellphone
sitting right now,
the one in your pocket
or the one you're watching me on.
And it's the one in which
you're going to have to ask yourself -
Will I go down in history
as people in the future wondering
how foolish could I have been?
Or will I show restraint?
Will I show control?
Will I be a proper
emissary of Hashem?
It's your challenge.
And the next choice you make
will echo for eternity.