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No Effort is Ever Lost | Rabbi Yehuda Zev Klein
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Torah
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
The dynamic Mashpiah,
R’ Issamar Ginzberg,
shared this incredible story.
He said,
When I was growing up,
we had many Shabbos guests.
Anyone who needed a place for Shabbos
was welcomed into my parents’ home.
Many of them were Baalei Teshuva,
and my father would ask them,
What motivated you
to become a Baal Teshuva?
One time, my father asked a guest,
Tell me, what's your story?
And he shared this amazing story.
I was once on an airplane, he said,
and there was a Lubavitcher Bochur
walking up and down the aisle,
asking everyone,
Excuse me,
would you like to put on Tefillin?
And he asked me, as well.
And I said: No.
I had no interest at the time.
He continued down the aisle,
asking every person,
and I saw that not a single person
agreed to put on Tefillin.
But the boy did not give up.
A few hours later,
he went through the entire plane again,
asking everyone again,
Excuse me,
would you like to put on Tefillin?
And he asked me again,
and again I said: No.
And once again,
no one on the plane
agreed to put on Tefillin.
So I decided if he comes back a third time,
I would say: Yes.
The poor guy, he was trying so hard.
I figured I would do it just for him.
But he never came back a third time.
A few years later, I was somewhere else,
and another Lubavitcher Bochur approached me
and he asked me: Excuse me,
would you like to put on Tefillin?
And this time, I said: Yes.
He told me
no one had ever responded
with such enthusiasm.
But the truth is,
I said yes to the boy on the airplane,
all those years ago.
I was still doing it for him.
And today, I'm an observant Jew,
only because of that Bochur on the airplane.
We never know what
our efforts can lead to.
A father walks down
the street with his children
and something inappropriate passes by,
and he looks away.
And the children notice.
They notice everything.
We have no idea how far
the ripple effect of our actions can go.
You're driving with your family
and you avoid certain places,
even if it takes longer.
Imagine the impact
that has on your children.
In his commentary on Avos,
R’ Chaim Volozhiner
quotes a pasuk in Mishlei.
He who walks innocently is righteous,
fortunate are his sons after him.
He explains,
The character traits that
a person works hard to acquire,
eventually, they become part of his DNA,
and then he passes
that on to his children.
So if someone toils on Shmiras Einayim,
those victories don't end with him.
Fortunate are his sons after him.
His children inherit that character trait
with far less struggle.
So no effort is ever lost.
Every act of self-control,
every time you choose
what's right over what's easy,
you are planting seeds.
You may not see them sprout right away,
but they are growing.
That Bochur on the plane
thought that he failed.
No one put on Tefillin that day.
But in Shomayim,
it was a tremendous victory.
One that would change a life forever
and impact many generations to come.