Transcript
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Today's class is dedicated
by Federico Sal
in honor of a refuah shleimah, complete
and speedy recovery for Paddy ben
Linda.
Amen. A complete and speedy recovery and
many long, happy, healthy years. And
thank you
very, very much.
There's a fascinating
juxtaposition,
which means connection,
in the Torah between parshas Shlach
followed [snorts] by parshas Korach,
last week's portion and this week's
portion.
The primary story of parshas Shlach,
everybody knows, is the story of the
meraglim, the story of the spies.
Moshe sent 12 people, spies, to scout
the land
to go bring back a report
of the nature and the fabric of the Holy
Land. They come back and they demoralize
and dissuade the entire nation from
entering into the Promised Land.
There was mass panic and hysteria.
The nation is overtaken by fear. They
sob all night
and they cry, "Why did we leave Egypt?
Why can't let's just go back to Egypt?"
They cry how all their wives and
children are going to die by the sword
when they try to enter into the land.
And that's followed by the decree,
indeed, to remain in the desert. That
generation would remain in the desert
for 40 years and their children, the
youngsters, would go into the land.
That's the primary story that occupies
much of parshas Shlach.
The next parsha, parshas Korach,
continues with another fascinating story
and another tragic mutiny. And this is
the mutiny, the rebellion of Korach.
It opens up with the story how Korach,
who was an extremely prominent
individual, both in terms of
uh lineage, he is a first cousin of
Moshe Rabbeinu.
Literally, the Torah says, "Vayikach
Korach
ben Yitzhar ben Kehas ben Levi."
Korach is from the Levite tribe.
As the Torah says, his father was
Yitzhar and his father was Kehas.
Moshe Rabbeinu as well, they Moshe and
Aaron were first cousins with Korach
because
the father, of course, was Levi, the son
of Yaakov. And Levi had a son, Kehas.
And Kehas had four sons.
Amram Amram and Chevron and Amram and
Yitzhar and Chevron and Uziel.
And Korach Moshe and Aaron and Miriam
were children of Amram.
Amram was their father. And Amram was a
son of Kehas and Kehas was a son of
Levi, was a son of Yaakov Avinu. And
Korach was a first cousin. He was a son
of Yitzhar.
So, Korach is not just, you know, some
anonymous fellow who came out of the
shadows suddenly.
He's a person who's very well connected,
both in terms of lineage. And as Chazal
say, he was also extremely wise
and extremely
wealthy.
So, very, very influential person. And
he stages an unexpected mutiny.
You wonder where it came from. What's
the context?
But it's not just himself.
He gathers a whole group from the tribe
of Reuven, especially Dathan and Abiram,
the two brothers, children of Eliab, a
man named On ben Peleth.
And the Torah says,
he also gathers 250 leaders, 250
leaders. The Torah calls them nesi'ei
eidah,
leaders of the congregation, keri'ei
mo'ed anshei shem, men of renown.
People who were called to leadership.
And they all gather
and stage a major rebellion against
Moshe's leadership and Aaron's
leadership.
If we look at the opening of how this
rebellion is described, it says and it's
you see it in your second source sheet,
this is Korach tazayin gimmel, which is
Numbers chapter 16 verse 3.
This is the third verse of the parsha
after it says that Korach took all these
people, "Vayikahalu al Moshe v'al
Aaron." They all congregated. They
gathered against Moshe and Aaron.
"Vayomeru aleihem." And they say these
words to them, to Moshe and Aaron, "Lo
rav lachem." Too much for you.
Too much for you. Too much power.
The whole nation is holy. Beautiful
words. The whole nation is kedoshim. The
whole nation is sacred. And Hashem lives
among all of them. Why do you exalt
yourself? Where did you get this
superiority complex, this haughtiness,
this arrogance, the sense of audacious
aloofness and sublimity to raise
yourself, "Tisna'asu," like the word
"lisa," right, to lift yourself up, "al
kehal Hashem," on the entire nation, the
entire congregation of Hashem?" Very
One one one can one can see the
the power in these words.
At the sur- That's what they say. That
those are the That's the the sole verse
that begins the rebellion. At the
surface, what they're saying is, "Where
where Why these distinctions? You're the
leader." Moshe Rabbeinu was the leader,
he's the prophet, he's the king. Aaron
is the kohen gadol, he's the high
priest. This exclusivity that you and
Aaron have, that Moshe and Aaron have,
is senseless. This is the nature of the
rebellion. What happens is, "Vayishma
Moshe vayipol al panav." The first thing
Moshe does is he falls on his face.
Before saying anything, Moshe falls down
on his face. Also a very interesting
response.
And then he speaks to Korach. The next
pasuk, "Pasuk keiv vayidaber el Korach."
He speaks to Korach, who's the chief
the chief uh rebellion uh
the Yeah, the the instigator and the one
who was representing this rebellion. And
he speaks to his whole congregation,
meaning all the his entourage.
And he says to them, "Boker."
This, obviously, was probably in the
afternoon, late in the afternoon.
"Boker, tomorrow morning, in the
morning, veyoda Hashem es asher lo."
God will let us know who belongs to him.
"V'es hakadosh v'hikriv elav."
The one who is kadosh, the one who he
designated to be holy, he will bring
close to him. "V'ish asher yivchar
yakriv elav." The one who he chose
or he will choose, he'll also bring
close to him. And that's when Moshe
offers them the famous experiment with
the katoris, that everybody who wants
can bring incense tomorrow, one of the
most sacred work services in the in the
sanctuary, in the mishkan and later in
the Beis Hamikdash, which was done every
single morning and afternoon, was the
burning of the incense. They had 11
different spices, herbs, that were burnt
on a daily basis early in the morning in
the mishkan and in the Beis Hamikdash,
which created an incredible aroma,
both a physical aroma and obviously also
a spiritual aroma by these 11 herbs that
we the morning of davening we recount
what these seven 11 herbs are every
morning, "Tzari tziporen." They were
ground to powder. And then when they
were ignited with coals in
on the altar in the mishkan and the Beis
Hamikdash, it generated
an extraordinary extraordinary
fragrance.
And Chazal say in Yerushalayim, you
didn't have to use perfume because of
the
the smell of the katoris.
That's how powerful it was. And it was
also a unique chemistry. There were
experts who made the katoris. So, Moshe
Rabbeinu offers them all to do this
service, which was reserved only for
kohanim. Not everybody was allowed to do
it. Only kohanim would do it. Only a
kohen was allowed to do it inside the
sanctuary every single morning and
afternoon. And Moshe Rabbeinu offers all
of them to do it the next morning, all
these 250 all these 150 rebels. That's
That's how Moshe responds. In the
morning, God will tell us the truth.
They were Levi'im. That's why they
weren't allowed to do it.
Yeah, that's why he offered it to them.
Then he says something else to them.
It's very interesting how it's built.
Pasuk ches, "Vayomer Moshe el Korach."
Moshe now says something else to Korach
and his group. He says, "Shim'u na benei
Levi." Children of Levi, they're all
children of Levi. Moshe is also a child
of Levi. Remember, they're all
descendants from the one tribe of Levi.
He says, "Shim'u na benei Levi. "Hama'at
mikem ki hivdil Elohim Yisrael eschem
me'adas Yisrael hakriv eschem elav
l'aveid avodas mishkan Hashem. V'lamah
lo chem lifnei eidah l'shareis es
Hashem? Vayikrav eschem kol adas Yisrael
benei Levi itchem, uvikashtem gam
kehunah?"
I don't understand you. Is it not
enough? Hashem has already segregated
you. He has already designated you from
everybody else to bring you close. You
are the ones who do the service in the
mishkan. You are the ones who stand
before the entire nation to serve them
as representatives in the sanctuary. You
all have become close. All the children
of Levi you had a special job constantly
in the mishkan. There were different
jobs that kohanim did and Levi'im did.
Now, why do you ask for kehunah, too?
Like, you already have a tremendous
position. "Lachein atah v'chol adascha
hanoadim al Hashem." You should know
that all of you
are not fighting against Aaron.
This is a war against God. "V'Aaron mah
hu?" What is Aaron? "Ki salinu alav."
You're rebelling against him. You have
to know who Aaron is. Aaron is not a
power monger. He's not a He's not a
dictator. He's not a tyrant. You're
attacking the wrong person.
Aaron did not choose himself. Aaron is
not interested in power of anybody. He's
like, "I know Aaron, you know, he's my
bro- He's my older brother. I grew up
with him." I mean, he doesn't say those
words, but obviously he knew Aaron quite
well.
You You're You're address is the wrong
address. That's what Moshe Rabbeinu says
to them. At this point, Moshe decides to
seek maybe peace with the other group,
Dathan and Abiram. So, the next pasuk
is, "Vayishlach Moshe likro l'Dasan
v'Aviram benei Eliab lemor, 'Lo alinu
lahem.'" He calls. He sends a message to
Dathan and Abiram, "Let's talk."
"Let's talk." They say, "We're not
coming up to you. We will not come."
And then they say something. "Hama'at ki
he'elisanu me'eretz zavat chalav u'dvash
l'hamisenu bamidbar ki sisu alenu gam
historer?"
It's not enough that you took us away,
you you brought us up from Egypt. Egypt,
they say, is a land that was flowing
with milk and honey.
They forgot about the other parts of
Egypt. But Egypt, as far as they're
concerned, was a land flowing with milk
and honey. And what did you do? You
brought us to kill us in the desert. Now
you want to rule over us? In other
words, you already our life once. Now
you're going to take ownership, too?
You're going to become the leaders, too?
You couldn't even bring us to the land
that you promised, the land of milk and
honey,
and give us at least a portion and
inheritance with a field, with a
vineyard. We have nothing. All your
promises were futile. You took us out of
one country which flowed with milk and
honey. You promised another country, and
you couldn't even deliver. All you can
do is kill us here, have us all die in
the desert.
Even if you want to blind us, you want
to very sharp words, you want to poke
out our eyes,
which is of course also a metaphor,
perhaps. You know, you want to block our
vision, you want to make us blind, you
want to make make believe we don't see
reality. We're not coming up to you.
And this is basically how the rebellion
is staged.
Moses still attempts a few times to
speak to to make peace, to create an
understanding, but it's all
it's all futile.
Now, here is a very fascinating thing.
And that is when did this mutiny happen?
When did it happen?
The Torah doesn't give a date. Some
events are there with a date. This
doesn't have a date. It just says Korach
Korach did this.
It could have happened, as far as we're
concerned, at any point in history of
the desert of the Jewish people in the
desert.
But the juxtaposition in Chumash is very
interesting. It's right after Parshas
Shlach.
It's right after Parshas Shlach. And
that's why Chazal
say that it happened one after the
other.
Meaning the story of Korach happened
right after the story with the spies.
This is your first source, Seder Olam
Rabbah Perek Seder Olam Rabbah is a
fascinating safer which chronicles the
early history of the Jewish people.
And chapter eight, and this is quoted in
Rashbam and Tosafos Bava Basra kuf yud
tes, the Daf Yomi,
and those of your family who learned Daf
Yomi, they just started this tractate
Bava Basra 119.
Ach meraglim machlokes shel Korach u
Bnei Yisrael.
The fight, the dispute, the machlokes of
Korach happened after the story of the
spies. That's when the machlokes was and
the swallowing up of Korach.
Proof is Dathan and Abiram told Moshe
Rabbenu "Af lo eretz ovas chalav u dvash
havei'enu." You couldn't even bring us
to a land of milk and honey. In other
words, you failed us. That must have
happened after the story of the spies.
Before the story of the spies, they
didn't know that they're going to stay
in the desert. They couldn't say "You
didn't deliver. We're on the way."
Right? So, even though you would think
it could have happened earlier because
Moshe Rabbenu was already a leader from
when they went out of Egypt, that Aaron
was appointed a kohen gadol much before
the spies.
Nonetheless,
they're complaining that you did not
deliver your promise. Obviously, this
happens after the story of the meraglim
when there was this decree that the
Jewish people are going to remain in the
desert, and Dathan and Abiram realized
they're not going in. They're staying
here. So, now they tell Moshe "You took
us out of one country, you can't bring
us into another country. All you did was
have us die in a desert. Now you're not
going to rule us, and even if you poke
out our eyes, we will not come to you,
we will not approach you, we don't want
to see you."
The question that we have to ask is
what happened after the story of the
meraglim?
Why did this mutiny happen right then?
What was it about this story
that created this type of rebellion
against Moshe
and against Aaron?
Obviously, it's clear. As Chazal say,
one happens after the other.
So, there's something about the story of
the spies that triggered this rebellion.
Again, if it was just about the
leadership of Moshe and Aaron,
that could have been any time, and it
could have happened much earlier.
Remember that the spies were sent
a full year after the Exodus of Egypt
and a few months.
Because they left Mitzrayim on Pesach.
A year later, the Mishkan was built, and
a few months later on the end of Sivan,
the 29th of Sivan, the meraglim left.
They came back 40 days later.
And in the month of Elul, so this is
almost a year and a half after yetzi'as
Mitzrayim. After all that, the rebellion
happens.
So, there's obviously some very profound
connection between what happened by the
meraglim
and the mutiny of Korach.
[snorts]
The Torah doesn't say clearly, but we
have to pick up the clues. What is it
about the story of the spies that
triggered this type of rebellion of
Korach?
[snorts]
Names in Chumash are very interesting.
Names in Chumash are extremely
interesting.
The name of Korach
[snorts]
is also a very interesting name.
And uh we discussed this also last year
in the class of Korach in another
context.
Korach is made up of three letters, kuf,
resh, and ches.
Kuf, resh, and ches is the word kereach.
[snorts]
What does that mean? It turns out that
there's a meaning in that word, huh?
Ice. Kereach.
Kereach is ice, yeah, that's true.
Kereach is ice. Bald. Bald.
Bald.
We have it one more place in Chumash.
And a very interesting thing, it turns
out
that this was an ancient pagan practice
during the times of the Torah, when the
Torah was written, an ancient practice
of the Amorites, which were one of the
tribes in the land of Canaan.
And it was a way of expressing grief.
Korach actually means a bald spot.
And this was a practice by some pagans
where they would intentionally tear out
hair of their head in order to create
intentionally and deliberately a bald
spot as a sign of mourning, sadness,
anxiety, and grief.
So, this was an intentional practice,
and it represented the deep sadness or
pain or suffering that they were
experiencing.
Where does the word Korach come up again
in Chumash?
In the next the next in the next book,
Sefer Devarim,
if you'll take a look
in the third to the last source on your
source sheet, Parshas Re'eh Perek Yud
Daled,
let's do Deuteronomy Devarim chapter 14.
Banim atem la Shem Elokecha. Moshe says
to the Jews, "You are children of
Hashem.
Lo sis godedu.
Lo sis godedu means don't scrape off
your skin.
Don't tear off your epidermis, your your
your skin from your body when you're
grieving. Velo sisu simu kar'cha
beneichem la mes.
When someone when there's loss, when
someone dies, chalilah,
don't create a bald spot
anywhere between your eyes, which refers
both between the eyes or the eyebrows or
the head, etc.
Why? Ki am kadosh ata la Shem Elokecha.
You're a holy nation to Hashem. Bachar
Hashem le'os lecha am segulah mikol
ha'amim asher al pnei ha'adamah.
He chose you to be a treasured people
from all the nations that are on the
earth.
This is the reason why you shouldn't
follow this practice of lo sisu kar'cha
beneichem la mes.
You're children.
Now, you might say what in the world is
the connection between Korach and
kereach? I mean, it happens to be, you
know, by mazel that he has a name that
also has another Hebrew Hebrew word or
Hebrew connotation.
But
in in Lashon Kodesh, in the holy tongue,
and in Torah, everything is meticulous
and precise.
Somehow this is connected to Korach, as
we will see.
Uh my dear colleague, Rabbi David
Foreman, pointed this out, and he said
it in fact
if you look even deeper into the
pesukim, you see that there's more than
one one similarity.
Very good, yeah.
You see how he starts off "Banim atem la
Shem Elokecha." Don't make a bald spot,
and he gives a reason, "Ki am kadosh ata
la Shem Elokecha."
Because you're a holy people, that's the
reason. And then he continues, "Uvachar
Hashem and you were chosen
le'os lecha am segulah mikol ha'amim
asher al pnei ha'adamah." to be a
treasured nation from all the nations
of the world.
Now, if we take a look at the comparison
between this these two pesukim
in Parshas Re'eh in Devarim and Korach,
we see
what was the first thing Korach and his
people said to Moshe and Aaron?
Right? Remember that first source,
"Rav lachem ki kol ha'edah kulam
kedoshim."
[laughter]
Literally, everybody you're talking
about a holy people. This is not a
mundane people.
This is not a secular people. This is
not just an earthly people an earthly
people.
This is a holy nation. Kol ha'edah,
everybody, not you. You also, but
everybody. Like Rashi says, everybody
stood at Har Sinai. Everybody heard God
speak. Everybody saw Hashem face to
face.
Kol ha'edah kulam kedoshim. Uvetocham
Hashem, Hashem is among them, among
everybody. U madua tisnas'u al kehal
Hashem?
Why do you lift yourself over everybody
else? Why do you exalt yourself over
everybody else? Everybody is holy within
Hashem.
So, Korach is making reference to the
holiness of Klal Yisrael.
And what does the pasuk do right here?
"Banim atem la Shem Elokecha." It's
Eloheinu, Adonai Echad. He's
and Aaron. Moshe is telling this to
everybody. You're all children. I'm
kadosh atah.
Literally, kol ha'edah kulam kedoshim.
Right? He's almost It's not literally
verbatim, but almost paraphrasing what
he himself heard from
40 years earlier. Everybody is holy. I'm
kadosh atah Adonai Eloheinu,
Eloheinu. Everybody.
Everybody is holy. That's exactly what
he's saying.
And right after he talks about Korach,
right after he talks about this bald
spot that you shouldn't be making.
Ki am kadosh atah Adonai Eloheinu.
Now, right after Korach tells Moshe that
everybody is holy, he has an argument.
Madua titnatsu al kol Hashem? Why do you
lift yourself up? Why did you become THE
CHOSEN ONES? WHY ARE YOU HIGHER? In
Yiddish, it's called besser a mensch'n,
you know?
In English, it's called fine schmachers.
That's an English word, right?
Or maybe that's French or Mandarin, I
don't know.
Where did you become better than
everybody else? I don't understand this.
Titnatsu. You're not greater than
anybody else.
So, that's his argument. Everybody is
holy. What's madua titnatsu al kol
Hashem? It turns out we have a very
similar phrase and concept right here in
Devarim. Right after he says, you know,
lo tasimu Korcha, do not make this bald
spot. What happens? I'm kadosh atah
Adonai Eloheinu. And then u'vachar
Hashem li'ot
am segulah mikol ha'amim
asher al pnei ha'adamah.
Hashem has treasured you from all the
nations in the world.
So, there is
you
from the many.
He's not Moshe is not saying this as a
complaint. He's saying this as a truth.
But there is an eerie similarity here in
the word Korach.
So, the Torah is really telling us that
if you want to understand Korach
or if you want to understand more about
Korach, you have to understand what this
ancient practice of these pagans were.
What was it about? [snorts]
And what does Korach have to do with
grief or with with bald spots?
Last week Last year in our shiur in
Korach, which is on the Yeshiva of the
Night, we spoke about one of the Tana'im
whose name was Rabbi Yehoshua ben
Korcha.
Rabbi Yehoshua, the son of Korcha.
And according to many, this was Rabbi
Akiva, who was called Kireach in Talmud.
He's called Kireach
because of baldness. And the question is
how did that So, we were discussing
there the Rabbi Akiva different
diff-different angles. It's all
ultimately connected.
If you look at the arguments of Korach
and his people against Moshe and Aaron,
you could see three different arguments
emerging,
which is usually how fights happen.
Starts with one thing, it evolves into
something else, it evolves into the
third thing. The first thing they say to
Moshe and Aaron is everybody is holy.
Everybody's holy.
We don't need leaders. Why are you
better? We don't Madua titnatsu?
Everyone is in the same boat. We are all
a sacred people. We are all equal.
In fact, sounds like a very idealistic
argument. Why is anybody different than
anybody else? Why is there this concept
called superiority? Madua titnatsu? Why?
It sounds very very idealistic because
it's really calling for equality, for
love, for unity.
In our times, a generation ago, one of
the most powerful movements that swept
the world, including millions and
millions of Jews, was this vision of
socialism, which morphed into communism.
Karl Marx in his manifesto, and he was
also Jewish,
came from a
Sayder was a rabbi even, and then they
were baptized. And Karl Marx envisioned
this idea of socialism, which ultimately
morphed into the communism that overtook
the Soviet Union, and millions of
people, including Jews, were
intoxicated
by that vision. Kol ha'edah kulam
kedoshim, right? Everybody is equal.
Moshe falls on his face.
The first thing Moshe says in the
morning, God will know let us know the
truth. That's the first thing he says.
Do the ketores.
But then Moshe says something else. He
says, "I don't understand. You already
have amazing positions. You're all
Levites. You're all serving in the
Mishkan. Why you looking for kehunah,
too?" One second. That's not what Korach
said. Korach said Korach didn't say I
want to be a priest. He didn't say I
want to be the kohen gadol. What did he
say? He said, "I don't want any
leaders." He didn't say I want Moshe is
responding The retort of Moshe seems out
of sync. Korach didn't say, "I want to
be the leader. I want to be a kohen. I
want the position. We want to be
kohanim." So, Moshe is like, "You guys
have an amazing job. You have an amazing
mission. U'vikashtem gam kehunah. What
do you want kehunah?" He never said
that.
Obviously, Moshe identified in Korach a
deeper a a another level of the
argument, you know, maybe another level
of consciousness. On the first level, he
was saying, "Nobody has any power.
Everybody's equal. I don't want any
leaders."
But if we can quote uh
uh George Orwell in Animal Farm in the
vision of communism, right? Everybody is
equal,
but some [laughter] people
are more equal than others.
So, the way to gain power is by saying,
"Everybody is equal." When everybody is
equal, nobody has power besides the one
who's screaming and responsible and
ensuring that everybody is equal.
So, there is really a motivation for
power. On one level, I may be screaming,
"I just want everybody to be equal." But
it's really my own demons or my own ego
or my own narcissism or
self-centeredness that wants full
unbridled power.
And we see indeed that Moshe First, he
says one thing, but then he responds
about this.
He's like, "Embrace what you have. You
don't need to be kohen. U'vikashtem gam
kehunah."
But then Dathan and Abiram talk about
something else. Dathan and Abiram talk
about the fact you told you're going to
bring us into a land. You never did.
You have failed us miserably. We lived
in Egypt. You took us into a desert. You
said we're going to another land. Nobody
has a field. Nobody has a vineyard.
Nobody has anything to call their own.
This is a whole new argument that Korach
didn't discuss.
So, here is a third level of the
argument.
And that's indeed, right, the final
conversation in terms of the rebellion.
This is about the colossal failure of
giving us a future.
Which if this is the case, we understand
very well the juxtaposition between the
story of the spies and the story of
Korach.
Because what happened by the story of
the spies? What happened was there was
tremendous grief.
The Torah says in Parshas Shlach, after
Moshe Rabbenu told them that they're
going to stay in the desert,
so the Torah says
and it's a very very moving pasuk in
Parshas Shlach, Vayisa'avu ha'am ha'eid.
The nation went into a veiless. They
went into mourning. They went into
grief.
This was not what they expected.
You know, they wanted to have the cake
and eat it, too. You know, rebel when
they want to rebel,
and then say, "Don't worry, it's going
to work out." And here was really This
was serious business. You don't want to
go into Eretz Yisrael, you're not going
to go into Eretz Yisrael.
Huh?
It looks like there was some level of
teshuvah. The next morning, they wake up
and they say, "Hineni olim." They
already start marching up the mountain.
We're going. Moshe Rabbenu said, "Don't
go. It's not going to work."
They said, "No, we're going." And
indeed, you have this whole group called
the Ma'apilim,
who go up.
Now, we could understand the nature of
this grief. This was a change in
trajectory that was not just a small
little change.
This was obviously an entire vision was
transformed. The vision of life, leaving
Egypt, coming into the desert, and a few
days later going into Eretz Yisrael was
completely transformed. They would
remain in the desert for four decades.
And anybody between 20 and 60 would pass
away, would perish in that desert. Only
the younger generation and the women
would go into Eretz Yisrael.
So, there was a tremendous
pain and brokenness.
And here we see a fascinating thing. You
know, they speak about people's response
to grief.
Usually five stages.
When a person
confronts loss, and loss can happen in
many different ways and in many
different forms. But chalilah, when a
person confronts loss,
there is denial.
Denial, that's the first coping
mechanism.
It never happened.
After denial often comes anger. It did
happen. And there's a lot of anger, a
lot of upsetness.
Then there's often what's called
bargaining and negotiating.
Okay, you know, we could compromise. I
won't get 100% I'll get 80%, 50%, 40%.
And then there's the realization that
no, the bargaining is not going to help.
It's like the reality hits the person in
the face. And then there's often a
tremendous sense of sadness or
depression.
And then there's the stage of
acceptance.
These are very natural common stages,
although sometimes in a different order
and different elements are emphasized.
But denial is the first way of coping.
It didn't happen. That's almost It keeps
me safe. If it didn't happen, it didn't
happen. I think it happened.
Anger is another way of coping. It's
It's It's It's I'm angry. It's It's a
way of confronting it through anger.
And then there's bargaining. Bargaining
is, you know,
I'll lower my standards, you lower your
standards.
When one realizes, however, the truth of
the reality, Until a person can come to
a place of acceptance. And what
acceptance is, acceptance is very very
profound cuz acceptance is not
eliminating the pain or eliminating the
reality. Acceptance is creating space
for the truth of the reality and really
allowing an entire shift of
consciousness and how the person lives.
That's why it's so hard to get to that
space because
it's going to sometimes challenge every
fiber in your being.
You know, those of you sitting here or
watching or will watch this later who
experienced this in your own life in
different forms. You know, we sometimes
have a dream of what life is going to
look like.
And that dream is lost. That dream is
shattered. That dream is broken.
It could happen for sure through
physical loss, you know, through a
death.
But so many different types of loss, you
know, loss of innocence, loss of
relationships.
Loss in our relationships with our
spouses, with our children.
Loss in terms of our own inner you know,
what we find out about ourselves.
And in the beginning there is very
often, you know, denial. It's not real.
It's just, you know, just a little
phase.
And then there's very often a lot of
anger. A lot a lot of anger.
Anger towards God, anger towards the
world, anger towards other people, anger
towards ourselves. There's always the
stage of bargaining, you know, okay, I
won't have this but I'll have this. And
then when all of that is gone, the
person is confronting a real void.
And there's a natural natural deep
states of sadness.
And acceptance, which is usually a very
very
evolved state.
Acceptance is really a tremendous uh
moment of deep humility and the ability
to change my paradigms in a very very
powerful way.
It's almost like the the the the
metaphor of the Balatanya, very powerful
metaphor. If you have a seed,
that seed will never morph into a tree
if the seed is not completely
decomposed.
As long as the seed retains its
identity, it's amazing, it's beautiful,
but it remains a seed.
It's by burying the seed where it
becomes invisible.
And then ultimately, the seed decomposes
and opens up. And now,
you know, there's a a seed has a coat
and the seed has a little embryo and the
seed has the part that's called
endosperm, which is what feeds the
little baby, the little baby plant. And
all of that is transformed. The coat of
the seed is removed. The embryo develops
into
you know, feet kicking downward which
are called the roots and and and hands
kick moving upward which are called the
shoots and the little sapling comes out.
The endosperm is completely eliminated
cuz once you have leaves, it's it's
getting food from the sun. It turns
sunlight into glucose into sugar called
photosynthesis.
But the original seed is gone.
So I can hold on to the seed,
but it never becomes a tree. So it's the
decomposition of the seed that is very
very scary in a person's life.
The way the spiritual masters call it is
between one yesh and another yesh,
there's always an iron ba'emtza.
Between one state of existence to a
completely different state of existence,
there's what's called iron. There's
there's a sense of of nothingness in
between. That's the bridge.
Nothingness is called nothingness, but
really the word nothingness is
no-thingness.
No-thingness, not nothingness.
Because when the seed is in the earth,
it's not nothing.
It just loses the thingness, the
previous image of itself, the identity
that it had, it loses. But now it
actually becomes something
completely different and unprecedented,
but it's not an easy transition. You
know, with a seed it's something we're
all used to. When it comes to a person's
personal life,
you know, going through that iron,
whatever that means, is in many ways a
decomposition
and a death.
A death.
It's a form of death of of of my ego, my
expectations. And some of these dreams
and expectations may also have been very
noble and very sweet and very good. The
seed is not a bad creature. It's not
like you're getting rid of bad things.
And it's that iron which actually allows
a completely new yesh to emerge.
So when we talk about acceptance,
acceptance is not so much acceptance
that I become a passive
creature where I'm just now a victim.
I'm not in denial. I'm not even angry. I
just don't have emotions. That's not
acceptance. That's another form of of
of death, of detachment.
We're talking here about
an empowered self which really opens
itself up to a mystery of infinity. You
get what I'm saying? It's a very big
difference between passive acceptance,
I'm just another carbon and carbon
nitrogen, I'm just a bitter, resentful
person, which is also very human, yeah.
No, I'm not sure.
Integration.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
First of all, it's not for sure to
correct me. That's number one.
That's number one.
If it would be, it would be would be
pretty sad after what I'm explaining
about growth. You understand? I wouldn't
be open to correction. Number one, but I
didn't take it that way anyway. Exactly.
Acceptance itself comes with many many
different
aspects of growth. Acceptance and as you
say integration is really where the
acceptance is not in a powerless and
passive way. It's where the person opens
themselves up to something much deeper.
It says in Zohar that
is made up of two words,
ma.
wisdom
is ma.
What does ma mean? The of what? What
does that mean? ma. So the Tanya
explains that it's the ability of
curiosity.
The prerequisite to all wisdom is
ma. It's the ability to say what? Just
what? What means I don't know. I can't
control. I don't have it figured out. I
can't put it in my box.
It's it's elusive. It's transcendent.
It's opening myself up
to things that I don't need to control.
I don't I could say ma.
And that's really, you know, when
speaks about Aaron, he has an expression
and he says to uh
to to the Jewish people, he says Aaron,
ma who? Who is he?
What is he? So literally it means like,
what do you think he is? You think he's
a power
monger? You think he's a monster? Who
What is he? He's not the man. He was
chosen. Like what do you want from him?
Go to God.
There's a deeper explanation. Aaron, ma
who? You know who Aaron is? Aaron is the
ultimate embodiment of ma.
Ma.
And ma, mem hey. And also earlier says
earlier ma. What are Again, it means
like, what do you think we are? We're
trying to control you and I never wanted
this job. Like I'm not I'm not
interested in this job. Like I didn't
need this. I was happy to be a shepherd
in the desert. Trust me.
This is not about trying to control
anybody. I would be the first one to
retire.
I'm really not here to control anybody's
life. I'm a conduit.
It's hard for to understand this. This
concept of ma is opening up a person to
a place of what?
Which is where the person's curiosity
is so profound because they're open to
something that's transcendent.
And really, every loss is on a deeper
level a transition to a transcendent
experience.
This is
in many in no way minimizing the impact
or minimizing the grief.
[snorts]
It's just allowing a person to operate
with their full presence and depth and
not giving up at the most precious
commodity we have at every moment in
life. And that's the self.
Your soul being your best friend.
Your soul being the most amazing thing
in the world.
The Jewish people confronted such a loss
right after the story of the spies.
That's what they confronted.
And what's the first thing they do the
next morning?
Denial.
We're going UP. WE'RE GOING UP. NOTHING
HAPPENED. YOU SEE, IT'S FASCINATING.
Therapists think they developed these
five stages in our generation.
But if you look in
the first response is the next morning,
denial. It never happened.
And says like, no, it happened. I'm so
sorry, but
don't go up. The plan changed.
Wow.
They didn't listen. Many of them didn't
listen. They went up. They were struck
down.
As it says, they were called the people.
But we can appreciate where they were
coming from. Let's like let's just
rewind the tape recorder a little bit,
right? Just press rewind. What's the big
deal?
We made a mistake. Let's go back to
yesterday.
But you can't go back to yesterday.
That sober
that sobering experience is not an easy
experience.
But that's the first reaction.
The next reaction is a further denial.
At the end of
there's a guy chopping wood on
What
Where did he pop up?
Where did he come from? Where did this
guy come from?
It's so interesting these
juxtapositions. He's basically denying
everything. He's like, I'm done with the
system. What does represent? represents
that there's a creator, there's a
creation, there's a purpose to life.
Right? He's like, we're done with this.
Yeah. Yeah.
It's where denial and anger come
together and almost denial of
everything.
doesn't have the audacity to say that.
But anger is not against God like this
chapter of the wood. He's going to go
against He goes against the leaders and
Aaron. Now and Aaron are not to be
blamed for for happened with the spies.
It wasn't their fault.
Moshe was not the one to be blamed.
Moshe didn't decide this. Moshe is the
one
who sent the spies, that's true.
But with a completely different agenda,
with a completely different perspective.
But in the nature of anger, what happens
is people's impulsiveness takes over and
they sometimes, as a person once wrote,
people destroy what they love most.
When a person is dysregulated and I'm
completely overtaken by my anger, by my
ire, by my fury,
by my hysteria, by my panic, my world
was just destroyed. And there is a
lashing out of anger. That's what Dathan
and Abiram are telling Moshe Rabbeinu.
You could poke out our eyes. You are a
disaster. You destroyed us. You took us
out of Egypt. We're all dying in the
desert. You promised us Eretz Yisrael.
You did not deliver. First of all, Moshe
Rabbeinu is not the one who promised
Eretz Yisrael. Moshe was a messenger.
Moshe is not the one who didn't deliver.
But it's irrelevant because this anger
is not based on a rational explanation.
It's based on a terrible, very profound
way of coping.
If this is the case, we can understand
very much how this connects
to Parshas Re'eh, to Sefer Devarim,
chapter 14 in Deuteronomy. What was this
pagan practice all about? Why were they
tearing out
the hair of their head? How is that
going to help?
What happens so often is when a person
loses themselves in anger,
there's no dignity that's left. And
that's why the Torah says over there,
"Banim Atem LaHashem Elokeichem."
You're children of God.
"Lo Sasimu Korcha Benei Neichem LaMeis."
Korcha and Korcha are very much related
because Korcha's mutiny
was essentially on a collective level
what this practice was. Why are you
going to your head, by the way? Why are
you tearing out the hair of your head?
Everybody's going to see it.
[laughter]
The Amorites didn't wear sheitlach.
Everybody's going to see it.
And the answer is I don't care if
everybody sees it. You go to the head,
to the to the leader of the body,
the head of the body and they tear out
their hair. It's almost a sign of
hopelessness. It's not just grief, it's
a sense of hopelessness.
They're gashing, they're they're doing
gashes in their skin. Lo Sasimu Devarim,
they're literally scraping off their
skin. It's painful. It's when people
physically self-destruct, physically
harm.
Their pain is so demoralizing, it's so
profound. I mean, unfortunately, we know
about this. You know, people who cut
themselves and make gashes in their body
and literally scraping off their skin.
Almost to divert their attention from
the real pain.
Either it's a form of help- helplessness
or another form of of of physical pain,
which basically doesn't allow me to
think about the emotional pain I have to
confront.
But there's a sense of helplessness in
this grief that is so so deep.
And the Torah is warns against it. The
reason the Torah warns against Anything
the Torah warns against is part of the
fabric of human nature. It's part of a
coping mechanism. If it wouldn't be a
coping mechanism, you wouldn't have to
warn against it. Right, when the Torah
says, "Don't do something," it means
that it's part of human behavior.
It says, "Don't steal," because people
could steal. "Don't lie," because people
lie.
You know, don't betray a relationship
because this is These are our coping
mechanisms.
And this is one of the coping mechanisms
of a person. And he says, "Ki Am Kadosh
Atem LaHashem Elokeichem." You're a holy
nation.
God has chosen you to be an Am Segulah
MiKol HaAmim Asher Al Pnei HaAdamah.
What does that mean? Never ever question
your holiness.
Never allow that template that I may
have inside of myself that everything is
lost. There's nothing here. The core is
destroyed.
You know, that's the core that a person
owes to themselves and deserves to
always have. It doesn't mean that the
grief is not real. It doesn't mean that
the pain and the suffering is not real.
But it means that the grief and the pain
is within a context
of a self that is rooted and anchored in
infinity.
"Banim Atem LaHashem Elokeichem." And a
child is an in-
separable part of a father and a mother.
There's nothing one can do to say, "I am
not your child anymore," or "You're not
my son," or "You're not my daughter."
Unfortunately, even if they're not on
speaking terms and unfortunately, even
if there's a lot of pain in between
them, but the connection is essential.
It's non-negotiable. It's intrinsic.
That's why the pain between parents and
children
is such a profound pain because it's not
just a relationship that you could say,
"Okay, we were friends yesterday. Let's
not be friends anymore and we're going
to move on."
A child is a physical and spiritual
continuum of the father and the mother,
even when they're independent.
That's the paradox of childhood. They're
completely separate, but they're
completely one. "Banim Atem LaHashem
Elokeichem."
"Banim Atem LaHashem Elokeichem" means
that even in the greatest pain and
difficulty, your relate the relationship
is never ever challenged. There is a
divine, loving embrace
that is eternal and you're rooted in a
place of infinity. Again, it doesn't
minimize or or devalue or delegitimize
or make light of the pain that's going
through. Moshe is not saying it's not
painful.
What Moshe Rabbeinu is saying is, "Don't
allow that pain to tell you that
yourself is valueless.
That your life is just a mistake. It's a
random mutation. That the pain is a sign
of how bad you are, how hated you are,
or how evil you are, or how much God
hates you."
Because that notion of God hating you is
the deepest form of self-hate.
Self-hate really means that at the core
of everything, there's no self that has
value.
In fact, in Sefer Devarim, Moshe tells
the Jewish people that when the spies
came back, the Jewish people went and
they said, "BiSin'as Hashem Etzanu." It
was God's hatred to us that caused them
to take us out of Egypt. The moment I
feel deep down that Hashem hates me,
that's a profound tragedy.
Cuz certainly then I must hate myself.
There's no self even that has value.
And once there's no self that has value,
so there's no anchor in the tsunami of
life,
there is always a self, a
a divine self that I must always cherish
and come back to.
And as I said, I think last week in the
class, you know, when somebody
has a real love for themselves, and real
love for themselves is not self-centered
love. It's a love
of of truly understanding that my soul
is a piece of the divine
and my journey is sacred and myself is
sacred. The self is sacred.
So then even with adversity and
criticism,
you know, I can have a thousand people
criticizing me.
It may be constructive and I should
learn from it. It may be not
constructive and they're just doing it
to criticize. And at the end of the day,
it doesn't matter so much.
Or it doesn't matter at all.
But if I hate myself, I can have a
million people complimenting me and it
also doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter because it's coming to
a self that the template of it is so
wounded, is so profound.
And that's the danger of Korcha. That's
what the Korcha is. That's what the bald
spot is. Here they attack the physical
head and here Korcha attacks the
spiritual heads of the Jewish people,
which are Moshe and Aaron.
Tears the community against each other.
So it wasn't even about what they're
going to say, you know, what's going to
be the excuse. It's a form of
hopelessness, of anger, of
demoralization
that causes people to self-destruct. And
this is what happens after the spies.
And that's the connection to the Korcha
Benei Neichem LaMeis.
That's on one level.
But I want to take this also to a a
deeper level.
With this juxtaposition between the
spies and Korcha,
it has even also other profound
spiritual significance. On the first
level,
it's a warning.
It's a it's more than a warning, it's a
lesson.
It's a lesson in a person
understanding that all pain, all pain
that we experience in life,
we must be able to contain and hold
space for it with empathy.
And even the thought that comes in to
delegitimize me in the process and
destroy whatever is left, turn the Iyin
instead of into a journey into a
destination.
It's where the decomposition of the seed
is the ultimate destination.
It's everything is over and it's over
and my life is cursed and I'm a loser
and everybody hates me and the world
hates me, which are all very normal
human emotions. If there's somebody who
feels that way, trust me, you're not the
only one.
[snorts]
These are all human emotions. But that's
part of the Iyin. It's welcoming all
these thoughts and feelings as part of
the process of decomposition, which with
curiosity and deep humility opens me up
to a much deeper place of integration,
which yes, will not look like the place
where I was before. It's true. It's a
different person.
It's true. The seed was never going to
look like it did.
Yosef is the one who was thrown into a
pit, not once, but twice. His brothers
threw him into a pit and then his master
Potiphar threw him into a second pit.
So he was the man.
He was the man.
What happened was
he wasn't buried, he was planted. And
the person who emerged afterwards was a
completely different person. It was not
the same person. You couldn't recognize
the Yosef, the innocent Yosef from his
home to the new Yosef who was a viceroy
of Egypt. And he could have easily sat
and said, "You know, my life could have
been different." It's true, it could
have been different. And there's a lot
of pain in that.
It's not like Yosef doesn't cry. It's
not like Yosef doesn't grieve. Moshe
Rabbeinu is not saying somebody died,
oh, just move on, you know, nothing
happened. No, a lot happened. In fact,
something so profound happened that
maybe everything I was holding on to, I
can't hold on to because it was all
taken.
All the rugs I was stepping on maybe
were removed from me.
So it's not like in I can't hold on
maybe to anything of the old paradigms.
It's almost like letting go, you know,
letting go literally. There's a pasuk in
Parshas V'Zos HaBrachah, very profound.
Moshe Rabbeinu at the end of his life,
he speaks to the Jewish people and he
says, "Mi tachas z'ro'os olam."
So, Reb Nachman of Breslov says, "Below
literally means below the world there
are arms." Mi tachas z'ro'os olam. Under
the world, tachas, under the world there
are arms. And he says there are people
that feel very grounded on our planet.
You know, they just
you can even see how they walk, you know
what I mean? You can even see their
gait. Like they feel stable and
established. They have two feet on the
ground and nobody is going to challenge
that. That's one type of people. There's
other forms of people that emotionally
they feel like they're falling off the
planet. Anybody relates to what I'm
saying? Like they don't have a place on
this planet. There's There's like a a
deep a deep
emotional vulnerability.
So, so that he says, "Moshe Rabbeinu
says, 'Mi tachas z'ro'os olam.'" For
those who fall off the world, they fall
off the globe, there are arms under it
that will catch them.
A very What a What a profound
observation.
And then he says,
"But it's only those who fall off the
planet that can feel the embrace of
those arms. Because if my two feet are
standing right here, I'm good. I don't
need your hug."
It's mi tachas z'ro'os olam, you know.
David HaMelech could feel Hashem
ya'asveini because avi v'imi azavuni cuz
he didn't have that firmness that others
had.
So, it's these arms. So, there's a
paradox here. Because it's not
minimizing the experience, but it's
really letting go of almost everything.
That's what it means ayin. That's what
ayin is.
And that ayin morphs the person
into the yesh. But there's two types of
ayin. There's an ayin that is a form of
death. There's an ayin that's a it's a
death sentence on a person. And then
there's an ayin that remains curious.
You see the difference? Death is a
sentence. It's a destination. It's over.
Curiosity is I don't know.
But my not knowing is with a seeking.
It's with a longing. It's with an
openness.
The heart remains open. And when the
heart remains open, that's the key. Cuz
when the heart remains open, I'm open to
the light that's going to come in. And
there's going to be light that's going
to come in because banim atem la Shem
Elokeichem. You're not lost. There's no
such a thing. You're an eternal child.
You are divine. God is indestructible.
You're indestructible. God is infinite.
You're infinite. God is eternal. You're
eternal. Chaila ad v'kayam lanetzach.
Banim atem la Shem Elokeichem. A child
means that at the core of everything,
you know, go to that DNA and you're
going to find the father and the mother.
You're going to find your father and
mother.
You are divine. You're a chelek Eloka
mima'al. We could strip away everything
and you're going to find infinite light
over there. You're going to find an
infinite embrace. And sometimes I have
to strip away everything in order to
find that.
Because if I don't strip away
everything, then I rely on more
superficial things to hold up my ego, to
sustain me. It's when I'm stripped from
everything where I can actually find out
who I am. Now, nobody invites themselves
to do that. It's not something we say,
"Al t'vi'eini lidei nisayon."
But that's That's really it's a it's a
completely It's a paradigm shift in
acceptance and as you say, number six,
integration.
There's also number seven. You didn't
mention that. Transformation.
That's also deeper. But But these are
all stages that have to be done with
humility and without jumping ahead of
oneself. Because when I jump ahead of
myself and I'm like, "I'm already at
stage seven."
I'm not at stage seven cuz what happens
is when I'm at stage seven before I went
through the steps, often I'm amputating
parts of the self. I'm I'm I'm I'm not
I'm not honest about what's happening.
And these other parts
will make to use a model in IFS, these
other parts may come back with a
vengeance. Thank you very much. Huh?
Yishar koach.
They may come back with a vengeance. So,
that's why there's always the empathy
for all the other parts and all the
other perspectives.
But let's now go one step deeper in this
process. I don't know, deeper, another
step in this process.
And see the story also as a
juxtaposition, but really Korach
responding
to a very profound message that came out
from the story with the spies.
And this [snorts] is where
the mystics in the works of Kabbalah and
Chassidus Machshava,
the story of the spies and the story of
Korach are seen in a very very sublime
way. At the surface, it looks like these
are a bunch of rabble-rousers,
ungrateful, bitter Jews who will not use
lose as Abba Eban once said about
Israel's neighbors, they never lose an
opportu- They never miss an opportunity
to miss an opportunity.
This was Abba Eban's quote, I believe.
They never miss an opportunity to miss
an opportunity. You could say it about
certain people, you know.
[laughter]
They're good at it. Some people are very
good at it.
At the surface, you know, when you read
the psukim at the surface without
understanding deeper, it just looks like
it's a bunch of ungrateful, bitter Jews
who will do anything to make another
revolt. If it's not Monday, it's going
to be Thursday. And Moshe could never
get it right.
But there's really, like everything in
Torah, there's layers upon layers upon
layers. Korach was actually saying
something very profound according to
this interpretation and responding to
what happened with the spies.
The Baal HaTanya Likutei Torah
says something very powerful about the
spies. And the Sfas Emes discusses this.
And the Maharal also intimates this in
other s'farim, that the meraglim really
had very high neshamos. They had very
high souls. And they had an argument.
Their argument was we got to be crazy to
go into Eretz Yisrael.
The way they said it in parshas Shlach
is "Eretz ocheles yoshveha." This is a
land that will eat up those who live
there. What do they mean it's going to
eat up? Literally, it means it's going
to kill us all cuz there's giants there.
But there's something deeper.
The physicality
of the land is going to consume our
souls.
We're going to become What happens when
you eat something? It becomes part of
you, right? We are what we eat. It's not
just a cliché.
I eat carbs in the morning and the carbs
are part of me and that's why I get into
a bad mood, right? I eat some sugar and
the sugar becomes part of me. I eat kale
in the morning and the kale is part of
me and then I'm just
a free spirit.
[clears throat]
Eretz ocheles yoshveha. This is a land
an earth that eats up its people. What's
it mean it eats up the people? The
people now become part of the earth cuz
the earth eats them up. They become
earthly people. So, the meraglim are
saying, "Look how Look at our life here.
We're in a desert. But what type of
desert? It's not a livable place. It
wasn't a place that was habitual that
that could be habituated by people.
It was a dry, parched land. There was no
growth. There was no water. How you
going to feed a 4 million people? We
need produce. We need water. And the
answer is they lived in paradise. They
lived heaven on earth. They weren't
living on earth. Physically, they were
on earth, but they were in heaven.
Literally.
Pun intended. You know, clouds of glory
enveloping them. Literally in God's
embrace all day. Moshe as a teacher.
Aaron as a high priest.
Breakfast, lunch, and dinner is manna
from heaven. Which as you know, it's the
only food that Gemara says lo hayu ba'im
b'tsilus. They didn't have to go to the
bathroom because it was food that was
completely nutritious and integrated
into the blood. No part of it had to be
dejected as in other foods that we have,
earthly foods which are a mixture of tov
and ra, toxic and non-toxic. The manna
had no toxicity in it. You know what
that does to people?
You know, when when a person eats even
for 40 days or for a few months cleaner
food, you know what that does to people?
Imagine 40 years eating this type of
food. In fact, the Medrash says that the
Torah could have only been given to the
generation that ate manna because their
bodies were so cleansed that they could
be receptive to divine wisdom. It's a
fascinating idea.
Because when a person, we know if I
stuff myself with food, I can't even
understand abstract concepts, never mind
feel them. We become numb. We become
dull. We become stuffed, plugged.
And this was not that they eat ate
fruits and vegetables cuz even people
who eat fruits and vegetables still have
to do what they got to do. They were
eating manna which had nothing
nothing that was psilus, nothing that
couldn't be integrated into the body.
So, this was such a cleansed lifestyle.
Never mind financial pressures, physical
pressures were non-existent.
Literally non-existent. So, the meraglim
said, "Let's face it. You guys got to be
crazy to agree to this plan." What would
happen when they go into the land?
They have to become farmers. They have
to become military men. They have to
create governments.
They have to go out of the clouds of
glory. They have to nurture themselves.
They have to create a society. Eretz
ocheles yoshveha. This is going TO EAT
US UP ALIVE. THERE WILL BE NO SELF LEFT.
There will be no spiritual identity
left. We will become slaves to survival
instead of transcendent
creatures that are ambassadors of divine
love in this world.
This is how the Alter Rebbe in Likutei
Torah explains the sin of the meraglim,
right? So, almost when I read it the
first time, I'm like, "You know what?
[laughter]
Makes They're right."
We know what life is. We know what life
is.
Yeshua and Kalev scream four words.
"TOVA HA'ARETZ M'OD M'OD." THE ONLY TIME
IN CHUMASH WHERE IT SAYS m'od twice.
"Tova ha'aretz m'od m'od."
The land is good, very very.
We have tov m'od in Chumash, not m'od
m'od. Only time. WE HAVE B'CHOL
ME'ODECHA. M'OD M'OD TWICE, which means
infinity.
What Yeshua and Kalev were telling the
meraglim is, "You're right, but you're
wrong."
You're right because indeed, there is a
major concern with going into the land,
of course.
But you're wrong because this is the
whole purpose of creation.
The purpose of creation was not to
remain in heaven.
Trust me, the paradise you're having in
the desert
is not even close to the paradise you
had before you were born.
But the soul came down.
The
great uniqueness of the soul is the
power of integration, integrating heaven
and earth.
Indeed, Hashem's purpose was to go into
Eretz Yisrael. And there's something in
the earthliness in the Eretz Ma'id Ma'id
that touches the essence that is even
beyond the revelations
that are in the desert. The ambience in
the desert is holy, no question. Sacred,
heavenly, transcendent.
But Ma'id Ma'id, the pure infinity of
Hashem which is even beyond revelation,
you're going to touch only on earth.
Eretz Ma'id Ma'id. So, the Meraglim were
very lofty souls. Their sin from this
perspective was
that this was a rebellion against the
very cosmic plan,
which is I'm not supposed to detach from
my earthiness.
I'm supposed to integrate.
It's the ability to be able to create a
society on earth where yes, I could be
consumed by the earth. Eretz
but can I also create Eretz
Ma'id Ma'id?
And indeed, that generation
I don't know if you want to call it a
punishment, it may be a reward. They
stayed in the desert, you know, people
don't realize they were 40 years in this
paradise. They got exactly what they
wanted.
They lived 40 years with man, with a
cloud, with the rolling stone,
water that was completely supernatural,
with Moshe Rabbeinu as a teacher, which
with Aaron as a teacher. Really, life
couldn't have gotten too much better.
They had exactly what they craved for.
The spies actually fulfilled the
yearning of so many of the Jewish people
who didn't want to go into Eretz Yisrael
from this perspective.
Now, let's really understand what
happens in Eretz Yisrael that doesn't
happen in the Midbar?
The biggest part of it is Mitzvot
Ma'asiyos. In the Midbar, most of Hashem
was spiritual connection, intimacy with
God, divine bliss, which includes
meditation,
internal spiritual connection,
spiritual consciousness of divinity.
That's what they had.
In the Eretz Yisrael, you don't have so
much spiritual consciousness. I got to
work the earth. My kids need to eat.
Somebody got to do the laundry, and they
didn't even have washing machines in
those days.
Somebody has to clean the house,
somebody has to defend this country,
somebody has to clean up the garbage.
There's no clouds.
There's no clouds. We Everybody has to
do the work. It's so easy to get bogged
down, and then there's the
disappointments in life, and there's the
cynicism, and there's the grief, and
there's the pain, and there's simply the
struggle for survival.
But over there, you have what's called
Mitzvot Ma'asiyos. Most of the Mitzvot
that they couldn't do in the desert,
most of the Mitzvot connected precisely
with the natural life and the earth, the
Eretz Ma'id Ma'id happens in Eretz
Yisrael.
And what the Korach learned from this
was
something very profound,
that Yiddishkeit is not just about
spiritual connection. If Yiddishkeit was
about spiritual connection, the Meraglim
are right.
Yiddishkeit is actually about
connection in a very, very physical and
practical level, and that's with the
power of the Mitzvot.
The power of a Mitzvah is
not only a person's feeling that
accompanies the Mitzvah,
because if that's the case, the feeling
without the Mitzvah should count for
everything, but it's not the case. If
comes Pesach, and instead of eating
Matzah, I do some breath work, and I
meditate on emancipation.
It's a great thing to do, but I didn't
fulfill the Mitzvah. And if in the
morning instead of putting on Tefillin
or separating Challah or lighting a
candle before Shabbos or whatever it is,
I say I'm going to meditate on my
relationship with God, it's a beautiful
thing to do.
But the Mitzvah requires a physical
action, and the same is true with the
most of the 613 Mitzvot.
It's a Mitzvah Ma'asiyos. It's a Mitzvah
that requires physical action with a
physical body.
The Meraglim said, "Nah, that's just
symbolic." They made a mistake. Eretz
Ma'id Ma'id. There's something very deep
in that relationship.
To give another metaphor for this,
if a couple is sitting and they're
having an amazing evening together, and
it's truly loving and incredibly
bonding,
and then
the spouse, the wife turns to her
husband, she sees the clock, and she
says, "Oy,
my sister is coming to the airport, my
mother is coming to the airport. Can you
please go to the airport and pick up my
sister or my mother? I'm so exhausted.
Can you please do it for me?"
And the husband says,
"Absolutely not. I want to just be with
you.
I love you too much. I don't want to go
away from you. I don't want to go to the
airport and separate from you. I want to
stay here and just connect to you."
It's a beautiful, beautiful feeling, but
everybody understands that a deeper part
of a relationship is actually can you do
what I need.
"This is what I need. This is what I
want." No, but I want to be with you.
I know you want to be with me, and I
appreciate it, and it's incredible.
But that's connected to your experience.
And now I'm going to ask you what I
need. Well, one of the most powerful
things in a relationship, and it's a
very common mistake, is people
distinguish between their feeling of the
relationship and actually being there
for the other person on their terms, not
on my terms.
A couple once came to me,
somebody for his wife's birthday, he
took her on a hot air balloon journey.
The problem was she was scared out of
her wits, she hated it. But he wanted
the experience. So, it was amazing, and
he dreamt about it, and he prepared it,
and it's gevaldig, you know what I mean?
It's just she really disliked it.
So, very often, people mean well, like,
"Yeah, I want to be close, and I want to
and I want and this is what I want." And
it's amazing, and and it's important to
know what you want and what you need,
etc., and talk about it. But the
relationship I sometimes touch in the
deepest way when I actually ask not.
Ask not.
Yeah, that's what Kennedy said, but I'm
going to paraphrase it a little bit.
And ask not what she can do for me, but
what I can do for her. And that may be
stepping away from what I want to do at
this moment and really tuning in
to the music of the other person. You
know, somebody said, "What's the
definition of love? It's learning the
song in the other person's heart and
reminding it to them when they forget
it."
The song in the other person's heart may
be different than the song in my heart.
And that's what the Meraglim didn't
understand.
A Mitzvah is not just my own spiritual
experience. A Mitzvah is what Hashem
wants.
This is what my spouse needs. This is
what I want.
I WANT TO STAY. I WANT TO BE WITH YOU. I
WANT TO CONNECT. I JUST WANT TO
EXPERIENCE CONSCIOUSNESS. That's
amazing, and it's incredible. But
there's something about the Mitzvah
where you touch the other. It's touching
infinity. Eretz Ma'id Ma'id.
Even the deepest spiritual state of
consciousness is my experience. It's a
human experience. It's a profound human
experience, and it's also part of the
Mitzvah. There's a Mitzvah of Ahavas
Hashem and Yiras Hashem, which is all
about consciousness. It's about love and
awe.
So,
there's
Nafshicha, Me'odecha. So, sometimes in
that physical Mitzvah, that simple act,
you're calling it simple, but Hashem
says, "This is my will. This is touching
the pure infinity."
This Korach heard in the story of the
spies.
Korach said, "If that's the case, then
Moshe and Aaron are not greater."
This was Korach's profound response.
If Yiddishkeit is about Kavana,
internal spiritual states of
consciousness, I understand that Moshe
and Aaron were completely in a different
space. But if ultimately, the story of
Yiddishkeit is Eretz
Ma'id Ma'id,
so the action of a Mitzvah is the same
by Moshe, by Aaron, and by the simplest
Jew.
There may be a DIFFERENCE IN THE KAVANA
of the Mitzvah, the intent, the
mindfulness, the inner spirituality, the
bliss, the love, but the action is the
action.
The action is the SAME ACTION.
SO, KORACH SAID,
"EVERYBODY
HASHEM." EVERYBODY CONNECTS TO YOU.
HASHEM is in every Mitzvah,
in every soul." This was the whole
MISTAKE OF THE MERAGLIM. The Meraglim
took Yiddishkeit, and they saw it all as
a spiritual, transcendent journey. Now I
understand Moshe and Aaron's uniqueness.
Once it was established that they made a
spiritual miscalculation, and a profound
one at a at that,
they were failing to understand that the
core of Judaism is ask not
only about your own experience, but ask
what Hashem wants from me today.
Hashem Me'odecha. And the physical
Mitzvah, even though it may not be
accompanied with profound emotion or
deep spiritual intelligence, is still
very powerful.
As it says, "Ma'aseh Hu Ikar."
Again, you can have a person meditating
Pesach the whole night, not eating the
Matzah, they didn't do a Mitzvah.
Another person ate the Matzah, maybe
they weren't interested in eating the
Matzah, weren't in the mood of eating
the Matzah, they did the Mitzvah.
The same is true with shaking the Lulav
on Sukkos. The same is true with hearing
Shofar on Rosh Hashanah. If I meditate
on the concept of the cry of the Shofar,
but I don't blow the Shofar, I did not
do the Mitzvah. So, some people
dismissed it.
Nah, what's the big deal? It's just
symbolic. It's just a physical tangible
way. It's not the main thing. This was
the mistake of the Miraglim.
Korach saw no, they were wrong.
Spiritual consciousness is good if it
accompanies the need and the desire of
your spouse, of the person you love. In
this case, it's Hashem's mitzvah to
bring in godliness into the physical
body, INTO THE PHYSICAL WORLD, through
the physical mitzvah. If so, Korach
says, "Kol ha'eidah kulam kedoshim."
That kedusha connects to everybody
identically. That's the whole point
here.
So Korach's actually was a very
fascinating rebellion
because of what happened with the spies.
And yet Korach made the opposite
mistake.
And what was the opposite mistake?
Korach dismissed the other part of
Yiddishkeit.
And that is when we talk about the need
to integrate
and to be in the physical world and to
do the mitzvah on a very physical level,
on a very practical level.
And even when it's stripped from deep
emotion or intelligence or consciousness
or inner work, it still has tremendous
power. Just like if my wife needs
something and I actually do it for her,
that's a very real connection.
And the fact that you're not in the mood
of it,
as they say, "Who cares?"
That's what Korach said, "Who cares?"
You know, you have two fathers, right?
They both come home from work. Kids want
to spend time with Daddy. One father
says, "You know what? I'm going to go to
my closet. I'm going to go to my office
in my room. I'm going to meditate on my
love for my kids."
[laughter]
And I'm going to lock the door.
And the other one says to himself, "I'm
exhausted and I'm really not interested
and I would love to get into bed or just
lie down on the couch or whatever it is,
but I think this is what my children
need now." And he gets down on the floor
and he plays with them or has a catch
with them.
Right? Who actually connected to their
children more?
The other one maybe worked on themselves
and is dealing with their process and
it's important.
But the actual connection happened with
the one who sat down on the floor and
tuned into what my child needs. The fact
that I'm not IN THE MOOD, OKAY, FINE.
You're not in the mood.
SO I'M NOT THERE. MY HEART IS NOT FULLY
THERE. OKAY, YOUR HEART is not fully
there, but you know what?
Your values were there. Your soul was
there. Your desire was there. Your
choice was the right choice.
Somebody once said, you know,
everybody knows an x-ray is very very
important. If you want to know what's
happening inside, you need an x-ray.
But I never saw somebody hang up in
their living room or dining room the
pictures of their x-rays.
Right? You ever see you want to see your
children's teeth, what they look like,
so take ask a dentist for a picture of
the mouth and the face and hang it up on
the wall. It's much more real than the
other pictures you have on the wall. The
other pictures are just cosmetic,
outside where you put on a nice suit,
cute face. Come on. Let's get the
x-rays. Let's see what the bones look
like.
Nobody does that. Why not?
Why not?
The answer of course is x-rays are
important to be able to know what's
happening inside, but the person is the
person that we see.
That's not the fake person. That's the
person.
And that was the mistake of the
Miraglim. Right? A person's machshava,
dibbur, u'maaseh, my thoughts, my words,
my actions, my external being, that is
who I am.
It's true an x-ray is important and
that's why
"Ohr itzma'i d'ma'i." So the action of
the mitzvah, that father who was there
for the child practically, there was a
real relationship. There was a real
bond. So Korach now takes it to the
other extreme. He says, "So there's no
difference between Moshe and Aaron and
anybody else. Everybody's holy."
What was Korach's mistake?
Korach's mistake was
and [snorts] that was the first thing
that Moshe told Korach. The first words
that Moshe tells Korach is,
"Boker v'yodea Hashem es kol asher lo."
In the morning God will let everybody
know.
So Rashi says,
"What does this mean?" The second to the
last source. Moshe said to Korach,
"Hashem made boundaries in this world.
You can't turn morning into night. You
can't turn night into morning.
Vayehi erev vayehi boker." They're both
created by him, but there's a difference
between them. And the same is true the
difference between Aaron and everybody
else. Aaron is a Kohen Gadol. You're not
going to be able to change that. It's
part of the DNA of creation. You want
morning should be night, night should be
morning. IT'S TAKEN FROM THE SAME GOD,
BUT there's a demarcation. This is
called night. This is called day.
Nothing you can do Nothing you do will
change that.
According to this perspective, there's a
very spiritual the very profound
response here.
And that is there could be two types of
relationships. It's true
that the mitzvah itself
is the most powerful thing in the world.
But a mitzvah that's stripped
from love and from a spiritual
consciousness is like the difference
between night and day,
between sunrise and sunset.
To use a metaphor, you can have a
diamond and the diamond is covered with
mud. It's covered with filth. It's
covered with dirt.
Will it sell for cheaper? No.
Does it have the same inherent value?
Yes.
But in terms of looking at it, it's
harder to look at it because it's dirty.
It has to be cleaned up.
A person can sometimes do a mitzvah. Can
learn Torah. They're serving God on the
earth.
"Ohr itzma'i d'ma'i."
But if I don't work on myself,
if I don't refine myself, if I don't
cultivate my own inner consciousness,
what often happens is the diamond I
have, but the diamond could be bedecked
with with dirt, with filth. As the
Gemara says, a person could learn Torah
and it becomes poison for them. A person
could do a mitzvah,
but there's so much ego in it. Is the
mitzvah there? The mitzvah is there and
it's very very powerful, but it could be
bedecked with klipah. It could be
bedecked with darkness, with mud. The
Medrash says that the purpose of
creation was Hashem wanted a dirah
b'tachtonim. He wanted we should make a
home for him where on earth, in the
lower elements of reality. But having a
home includes two things. You could live
at home with somebody you cherish and
you're there tremendous dirah and you're
there and you're both there and you're
there with with your true being, but one
thing, the home is dark
and the home is dirty
and the home is disorganized and there's
clutter and chaos. You're there. It's a
home.
"Aba sinish kan lichtika dirah." It's
not a gishmaka dirah. There's no
brightness. YOU DON'T ENJOY THE presence
because it's all dark.
There's no windows. There's no light. A
Jew can do mitzvahs,
but there's no kedusha in it. When
there's no inner spiritual conscious,
which means when I don't learn about my
soul, when I don't open myself up to the
different parts of me and open myself up
to my own spiritual connection with God,
we're living in the same home. I MADE A
DIRAH B'TACHTONIM, but it could be a
dark home.
THE KING IS HERE. HASHEM IS HERE.
BUT THERE'S NO EXPERIENCE OF KEDUSHA.
AND THAT'S what Moshe tells
KORACH, "BOKER."
OF COURSE. OF COURSE IN THE LEVEL OF the
mitzvah we're all identical. Everyone
is.
But there's a concept called boker.
There should be light in THE WORLD.
"V'YODEA HASHEM." A PERSON SHOULD
EXPERIENCE INTIMACY with Hashem.
I could go to the airport because my
wife asked me to go to the airport and
I'm angry and I'm bitter and I'm
resentful and I did it. I did it. And
it's
I'll probably get a FEW POINTS.
BUT SOMETIMES people are doing the right
thing, but the pleasure is not there.
The love is not there. The bliss is not
there.
And these are two different mistakes
people make in Yiddishkeit. There's the
mistake of the spies. There's the
mistake of Korach.
And they're both very profound mistakes.
The mistake of the spies is,
"IT'S ALL ABOUT MY FEELINGS. It's all
about my inner consciousness. That's
what it's about."
That's not true.
It's about what God needs from you.
It's about what my children need from
me. It's about what my wife needs from
me.
It's about what my soul needs from me.
Yeah.
And sometimes I need to step out of my
own inner emotion and step in
to fulfill the purpose
or part of the purpose of my life.
Yeah, maybe my soul wants all
spirituality, but God wants me in this
world.
So now there could be the opposite
approach. And that is I could become
robotic. Okay, so it's all about
actions. I show up, do what's needed and
I'm not there anymore because who needs
my emotions? Who needs my consciousness?
And then I make Korach's mistake. Moshe
and Aaron represent
a part that's equal with everybody, but
what's the uniqueness of Moshe and
Aaron? They were in complete alignment
with Hashem every moment. Yeah, when it
comes to to to experience of conscious,
everybody needs a Moshe and Aaron. Moshe
and Aaron represent full spiritual
alignment. Aaron was the Kohen Gadol.
Moshe Rabbeinu was the Navi Hashem.
That's what they give. And the
relationship with them opens up a person
to that place.
These two errors are so powerful because
we see a constantly an ongoing
conversation among the Jewish people
today
between two different streams of
consciousness.
You know what I'm referring to?
There are those
who criticize a lot a new generation of
Jews who are focusing a lot on emotional
healing,
emotional well-being,
learning about themselves, how they're
showing up to life,
what type of nature,
what what are my relationships made of?
The relationships in marriage, the
relationships with children, your
relationship with Hashem, your
relationship with yourself, your
relationship with your family.
And some people mock it. They either
mock it with cynicism or with
dismissiveness.
And some of them even very
idealistically. It's like this whole new
generation that became consumed with the
self.
Somebody was telling me the other day,
he's like,
"What do you think? Parents and
grandparents and great-grandparents,
they stayed married. Do you think they
were all happy?
They stayed married.
[laughter]
They were soldiers.
[laughter]
They
You get married, you build a family, you
put one foot ahead of another foot, and
you do what you have to do.
And you don't go and analyze, I'm
feeling this and I'm having anxiety and
I'm I'm not having anxiety and today I'm
having real anxiety and I I'm not open
and I'm repressed and there's a lot of
bitterness in me and I'm dealing with
wounds and who am I and who I'm not.
DO YOUR JOB AND MOVE ON and you don't
have to feel so much. You know, make
Shabbos.
And there's a Shiva brachos tomorrow
night.
[snorts]
And other people, you know, mock that.
It's like, oh, these traumatized people
who are not ready to face themselves and
don't want to deal with their emotions
and are just escaping from themselves in
the name of religion.
AND THERE'S OH, WE'RE TRAUMA. EVERYTHING
IS TRAUMA, TRAUMA, TRAUMA. THERE WAS NO
TRAUMA FOR 5,000 YEARS. IN THE LAST 20
YEARS, A NEW GENERATION DISCOVERED THIS
TRAUMA. NOBODY EVER HAD TRAUMA UNTIL
TODAY. YEAH, THE MOST LUCKIEST
GENERATION that suppress the kind that
spoiled brats have everything.
Right,
they don't even know what Pesach used to
look like, yeah.
[laughter]
Or sukkas or whatever, even Chanukah.
You know, you remember when you had to
make your own your own wick and let's
learn.
And put out bread for bitter chametz
that you had to take bread and cut it
into 10 pieces and find paper and put it
in, you know.
Etcetera, like whoa.
And squeeze oranges and macaroons were
worse than bacon and eggs and
It's an ongoing conversation.
And what I want to say is
that in a very very deep and spiritual
way, it's these stories in the Torah
parshas Shlach and parshas Korach.
[snorts]
Because there is a very profound truth
in each of these perspectives.
And when we approach it with humility
and with true yirah shamayim without
ego,
we realize
the search for authenticity
never
becomes judgmental and egotistical in
one way or in another way. It's always
done with curiosity and humility.
The mistake of the spies is the mistake
of really focusing only
on my internal emotional self and
there's nothing outside of that.
And that can lead to a form of
self-centeredness and also spiritual
self-centeredness. The meraglim were
very lofty souls, but ultimately, there
was a spiritual narcissism there and I'm
saying a spiritual one. Spiritual
narcissism means I want to be in Gan
Eden. I get it. And I understand it. We
all understand it.
Like, who doesn't want to be?
But this was not the purpose of
creation. The purpose was to go into
Eretz Yisrael and they failed that. They
were they they they failed that vision.
They didn't believe in the power of the
soul
to transform earth, to transform the
physical and that's with the power of
the mitzvahs.
But now, there's the mistake of Korach
and the mistake of Korach is he
completely delegitimizes inner work.
Who needs inner work? You don't need
inner work. I don't have to deal with my
emotions. I did the mitzvah. I put one
foot ahead of another foot. I did it.
Where I am in the relationship? Who
cares where you are in the relationship?
Do what God wants. I don't care where
you are in the relationship.
It's a big mistake, Moshe told them.
There's a concept called kedusha.
There's a concept called experiencing
the relationship. Experiencing the
relationship only comes from a lot of
inner work. I need to clear up the
rubble, the clutter. I need to clear up
my inner dirt, my filth. Yes, I have to
deal with my wounds. Just ignoring them
and saying, "I'm doing the right thing."
What is often happening is there's a lot
of repression.
And one can experience the lack of
bliss, the lack of pleasure.
Sometimes, a person who in the name of
doing the right thing mocks people who
are working on themselves,
you will see in their lives a lot of
anger,
a lot of bitterness, a lot of passive
aggressive aggressiveness. Sometimes, my
coping mechanism of not dealing with my
stuff is just blaming God and saying,
"We're soldiers, we don't need to feel,
we put one foot ahead of another foot."
And it's using beautiful words, but
sometimes it justifies my inability to
be introspective, my inability to say,
"You know what? Maybe you are capable of
a much deeper relationship."
You know, somebody came to see me and
they were just
slandering this whole generation.
And I'm like, "Excuse me, I completely
disagree with you. I'm going to give you
a different interpretation. Maybe today,
people are feeling that they want from
their marriage something much deeper
than what your generation felt. Maybe
it's a compliment. Maybe they say, "You
know what? I don't want a robotic
relationship. I don't just want to feel
I'm doing it as duty." Maybe they want
to feel bliss in the relationship. Is
that such a bad thing? Maybe it's
actually a sign of geulah and there's
going to be complete devekus between us
and God.
There's a nevuah in Yeshayahu, the
prophet Yeshayahu. We say it before
Shavuos about Midbar. Hashem says
there's going to be a day you're going
to stop calling me my master
and you're going to stop start calling
me my husband.
V'haya bayom hahu lo sikruli ba'ali ela
sikruli ishi. What's the difference?
Ba'ali is my master. You're above and
I'm on the bottom. Ishi is from the word
ish, you're my fire. You're my passion.
You're my bliss.
This doesn't eliminate yirah shamayim.
It's real It's yirah shamayim that's
based on I don't This is too good. I'm
afraid of breaking such an amazing
relationship. It's a different type of
fear. It's not a fear because you're so
big and strong and I'm just a slave.
It's a fear that comes from something so
powerful and positive, I'm afraid to
break it.
So, what what is that nevuah about? That
nevuah is about devekus. You can't
camouflage that. You can't make believe
you're in bliss when you're not in
bliss. We know when there's a good
marriage, there's a good marriage. You
can't fake it.
The marriage where everybody just does
their civil, they're nice people, they
do their thing, but there's nothing hap-
there's no there's no energy. And then
there's a marriage with this real energy
where people look forward
to see each other, to be with each
other. It fills their souls. You can't
fake these things. Maybe people are
looking for that today. Why are you
denigrating it?
Maybe they're not just self-centered uh
emotionally
consumed with their own egos. No, maybe
they actually want an authentic
relationship. And maybe with God it's
the same way. Maybe there's a generation
that wants a real relationship with
Hashem. Maybe by davening, they actually
want to experience what it is to have a
relationship with God.
I grew up in a yeshiva. It was a fine
yeshiva. I don't remember one teacher
ever talking about what does it feel to
have an experiential relationship with
God.
Not what it means philosophically.
Philosophically, I heard a lot.
Experientially, what does that feel What
does it even mean? What does it mean?
What does love mean?
Because of course, for this you have to
deal with what does love mean. Do you
know how to love yourself? Do you
experience love to yourself? Experience
love to other.
This is a language today that everyone
is searching for. I don't think it's
self-centered. It's not self-centered at
all.
As a preparation for Mashiach, what do
you think is going to happen when
Mashiach comes? Going to be complete
intimacy between Hashem and us. What
does intimacy look like? Intimacy
doesn't look like I'm just doing what I
have to do and I'm overwhelmed and I'm
angry. Yes, and I'm repressed and I
don't deal with my emotions, but I'm a
soldier. That's not intimacy.
Intimacy is devekus. It's oneness. For
this, I need to BRING ALL MY PARTS INTO
THE RELATIONSHIP. To bring all my parts
into the relationship, I have to have a
conversation with all my parts with
empathy. But a conversation with all my
parts. THIS WAS KORACH'S MISTAKE. THIS
was Korach's rebellion. And therefore,
what happens to Korach? He gets
swallowed up into the earth. What does
that represent spiritually?
You see the mistake? The meraglim said
what? NO EARTH. NO EARTH. HEAVEN. CALEB
SCREAMED, "TOVAH HA'ARETZ ME'OD ME'OD."
WHAT HAPPENS to Korach?
[snorts]
He gets consumed by the earth. What the
meraglim said, "Eretz ocheles yoshveha."
The earth is going to eat up. Who did it
happen to?
It happened to Korach.
IT LITERALLY HAPPENED TO KORACH. CUZ
KORACH PULLED it exactly the opposite
direction. He said, "It's all about
earth."
IT'S ALL THERE'S NOTHING BESIDES the
food. This is what HASHEM WANTS. NO
PROBLEM. WHY ARE MOSHE AND AARON
DIFFERENT? KEDUSHA, TRANSCENDENCE,
SUBLIMITY, BLISS, internal love, a
relationship of pnimiyus? WE DON'T NEED
THAT. WE COULD HAVE STAYED IN THE DESERT
FOR THAT. WE WENT INTO Eretz Yisrael.
Moshe said, "No, it's about integration.
Of course, the mitzvah is the main
thing. Hama'aseh hu ha'ikar. My wife
asked me to go to the airport. Go to the
airport.
[laughter]
I KNOW YOU WANT TO SIT AND DRINK wine
and eat cheese. It's very nice and talk
poetry, but she wants you to go to the
airport. Get into the car and go to the
airport. On the way, you could listen to
a class by Rabbi YY Weiss. You'll get
some spiritual inspiration, BUT IT'S NOT
LIKE SITTING WITH YOUR SPOUSE.
OKAY, YOU COULD MAYBE CALL.
Don't do a Zoom cuz you're supposed to
be looking on the road, not on the
screen.
Of course, lo hamedrash ikar ela
ma'aseh. But you want the ma'aseh to be
a lichtike ma'aseh. You want the the
diamond to shine. You want the home not
just to be a home where we actually
live. You know, we could live in a
basement and we have an apartment. But I
don't have to explain this to this
class. There's something called about a
beautiful home. A home you come in,
there's an ambiance, there's an energy.
Davening is filled with love. Learning
is filled with love. A mitzvah is done
with passion.
There's a There's an energy and that
could come only come when a person is
present. To be present, I NEED MY HEART
THERE. I need my soul there. And
therefore, I need to work. I need to
know who I am. I have to bring in my
parts. THIS IS NOT a delegitimization
of mitzvahs. It's not a delegitimization
of yirah shamayim, of kabbalas ol. It's
the ultimate sublimation
of all of Judaism because all the
mistakes in Chumash ARE NOT JUST
MISTAKES that bad people made.
They're part of the journey of learning
about truth. So, the spies
catch on to one truth and we have to
understand it and yet be cautious.
Korach holds on to another truth and we
have to understand it and be cautious.
And it's in the polarities and in the
juxtaposition that we ultimately learn
about the tremendous opportunity and
privilege of integration.
With all the pain that comes with it,
but also with the greatest opportunity
of complete and true and authentic
oneness. Have a wonderful week.