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[music] the yeshiva.net.
>> I want to welcome everybody who's
gracing us here with your presence.
Thank you for coming. And those of us,
those of you who are with us virtually,
please know that next week I'm away in
California. So, next Tuesday there is no
class. The Tuesday afterwards we will
resume. Please share that with friends
or relatives who attend. Next Tuesday
there's no uh class. Today's class is
dedicated
[cough]
by Leorasi
in honor and tribute to her daughter
Shira for a healthy and joyful birth and
blessings with everything and in loving
memory of the labba on the occasion of
his yardite coming up on the third day
of tamos gimmel tamos.
May we internalize his love and
inspiration and wisdom inspiring a
generation dedicated also in
my honor in honor of my birthday on the
29th of Sven. Thank you very very much.
[laughter]
I appreciate it with uh we really
appreciate it Mrs. Laski and uh all the
blessings to you. Today's class is also
dedicated by Pamela Suffren in honor of
Schlim a complete recovery for yoyel ben
bluma and today's class is also
dedicated in loving memory of basin
in honor of her yard site ongiml the
23rd day of
and thank you very very much
last week's class
about Uh
has uh have we changed our standards of
Judaism
um in the name of love? Have we uh put
uh our children before God?
Really uh inspired a lot a lot of
feedback [laughter]
on many levels.
But I want to share with you before I
begin the class, I want to share with
you two pieces of feedback that I got
which were just very very moving. Okay.
One was an email of a father who wrote
to me as follows. I quote an email he
sent me. I listen to your classes daily,
sometimes live and sometimes I listen to
the recordings and sometimes recordings
from past years. They always enrich my
day. But I want to tell you how much I
appreciated the women's class on paraso
last week. I listened [snorts] to it
three times and I gave much of it over
at my shabas table last Friday night.
One of my daughters is graduating high
school this week and heading to seminary
in Israel next year. She's always had a
hard time benching. She's not
rebellious, but for some reason,
benching has just been something that
she has struggled with, and she has let
me and my wife know that when we ask her
to bench after a meal, it only makes her
less inclined to do so. She doesn't
bench. Friday night, she was very
attentive when I gave over your class
about how to connect, about what
attachment is. Afterwards, she commented
that the administration at her school
would hate what I gave over. They would
despise the class. She said that the
idea that the true perspective of is the
degree to which it positively affects
the listener is clearly not the view and
the philosophy that her educators
follow. You rebuke and you rebuke and
you say what you want to say and what
you need to say. It's irrelevant how
it's taken and how it's affecting the
person. And after that, she took a
bencher and she benched with us
completely, singing every single word.
My wife and I glanced at each other and
smiled. We didn't say a thing. How do
you know the man is serious? I made a
donation to the yeshiva.net in gratitude
for your p for your powerful words. It's
a very very simple story, but it's not
such a simple story.
And it shows us how very often when I'm
just busy expressing myself and my anger
and my frustration, I'm actually
distancing myself and my children from
the deep spiritual goal that I'm seeking
for. Another message, this came from a
mother, right? If you recall, I read a
letter last week from a woman who went
to Kesha Navshi and said that she was
very very upset and actually nauseated,
especially when she heard about the
woman who spoke about her girl who had a
boyfriend and instead of throwing her
out of the house, she invited the
boyfriend into the house. What a
desecration of Yiddeshkite.
This woman reached out to me. She heard
the class. I was blown away. Amazing,
incredible, so true. Every word. I just
want to tell you the end of the story.
And that is that this girl today keeps
shabas and this girl told me that now
she wants to get married to this
boyfriend Kadas Mosha v Israel.
So those who put God before their
children understand that if you really
care about God, it's always about
attachment and connection. Attachment is
not in lie of God. Attachment is what
allows the real God to be brought into
the hearts of our children.
I also want to mention one thing. We
have here I see Mrs. Rita Goldstein and
I want to express on behalf of myself
and the entire class in the community
our deepest condolences on the loss of
her husband Raben. What was the day of
the art site? two weeks ago Tuesday
right
on the 10th day of seven [snorts]
ben Goldstein
he was a dear beloved neighbor and a
friend a true uh colorful personality
for those who knew him one of the most
curious inquisitive people I have met in
my life who was interested in the
development of mosquitoes ants
engineering cosmology astronomy,
geology, uh of course biology, besides
learning and learning and being in love
with learning, a very uh fascinating
fascinating uh human being with a big
soul, a big mind, and a big heart. Um
we've grown uh close over the years and
had very good times together and I am so
so sorry uh for the loss. I actually
went to visit him just a few weeks ago
in the hospital and even though it was
very hard for him to communicate. We had
a very nice Fabangan. This was the last
time I saw him just I think a week or a
week and a half before he passed away.
And I want to express uh our heartfelt
condolences to you and the entire family
on the loss
and may Hashem give you all the strength
that you need for you and your loved
ones. And we are really very very sorry.
Yeah. He will be missed. He is missed.
And may his soul and his uh wisdom and
his
fascinating personality continue to be
an illuminating presence um for all of
his loved ones and for all of us and
is for you and your entire family with
revealed blessings.
Amen. Okay.
I'm going to share with you an
experience
that I had in my life. I was only 16
years old, but I could still remember
the experience vividly
because uh you know when we're young,
we're more like wet sponges and we
absorb things. And this was a moment
that I uh I can't say I completely
understood it at the time, but it was
something that I knew that I'm hearing
something. I'm observing something that
is so profound and life-changing and it
stayed with me over the years.
This happened in the year 1989. I was 16
years old. It was Shabas
just like this year. Shabas is right.
>> Yeah. Right.
>> Yes. Shabas. 28th day of
1989. Toughen me in the Hebrew calendar.
It happened to be a day before my
birthday.
And uh I remember that Chabas vividly
in many ways. I would say it also
impacted me in a very profound way both
intellectually, hashkuffically
and emotionally. I grew up in the
continent known as Brooklyn, New York.
This is pre the mass migration of
[snorts] Jews to Rockland County and
Florida and so on and so forth. Right?
Somebody's once said he wants to go see
the Amish in their natural habitat. He
goes to Pennsylvania. He wants to see
the Jews in their natural habitat. He
goes to Miami. Maybe not this time of
the year, but this is before the mass
migration. I grew up in Brooklyn on
Montgomery Street where my mother still
lives,
508 Montgomery Street between Brooklyn
and New York. And every Jew I ever met
at some point was living somewhere in
that neck of the woods, whether it was
in the 40s or the 50s or the 60s and so
forth.
The labavatba who lived a few blocks
away came in as he always did shabas
afternoon for a fabangan which was 1:30
in the afternoon an hour or an hour and
a half after davening made kdesh on the
wine ate a little bit of mazinus the
crowd broke out in a song and then the
rebba began his first his first address
I was standing right there 16-year-old
boy and uh a few minutes into the talk
the rebu was so to speak threw out a
bomb of a question as you would say in
my mind's eye. could still see the this
I could still see the moment hear his
voice experience the dearing question
and the passion with which he asked the
question it was a very very simple
question and I was surprised that I
never thought about it you know
sometimes the most simple questions you
just don't think about because they're
so simple they're so obvious I want to
share the question that the labba shared
that chabas and I could literally like
still like I could still hear it in my
mind's eye see it in my mind's eye and
how mesmerized I was by the question you
have it in your source sheet it's the
first source sheet the opening words of
parl [snorts] is numbers 13 chapter 13
these are the words very famous words
spoke to mo saying what did hashem say
send out I'm going to do the literal
translation because the English is not
always accurate
which means send to you men. It's an
interesting expression or send on your
behalf. Send on your behalf people.
Let them uh inspect, let them take a
tour, let them range through and
scrutinize the land of
which I am about to give the Jewish
people.
send one person for each tribe.
You should send every leader among them.
In other words, take one leader of every
tribe, which would be 12 leaders from
the 12 tribes, and send them to scout
and range and scrutinize the land. The
next verse is very simple.
Alpia Kulom
Moshe sent them out from the Poran
desert based on the mouth of Hashem on
the instruction of Hashem. All of them
were men of distinction, leaders, heads
of the children of Israel, each of them.
And the story continues listing the
names of all the 12 people, the 12
scouts, the 12 mira, the 12 spies who
went and their return and everything
that happens in the aftermath of their
return. Granted,
Rashi is bothered as usual by one word.
What does it mean? He should have said
told Moshe send men
means send like the word
means men. By the way, the clea writes
here the reason he says an says because
God said if you ask me I would tell you
to send women. [laughter] That's what
the clea writes. If you ask me you
should send women and do not send men.
But you really want men. Well you could
send men but I'm telling you send women
it'll be much wiser. That's what the
says like my opinion is different. Rashi
says what's you don't you're not sending
them to you. You're sending them from
you. You're sending them on your behalf.
Like what's the point? So Rashi says
something very fascinating and he's
quoting here the meds
do this with your own consent according
to your own.
I am not telling you to do this.
Basically, in simple English, I'm
staying out of this.
It's your decide. Somebody asks you,
should I do something? And say, I'm not
telling you to do this. If you want to
do it, it's based on your own. You have
to decide. I will not telling you to do
this. If you want,
I guess if you don't want, don't send.
But don't mix me into this. And Rashi
gives a whole explanation.
The Jewish people in the background of
the story which doesn't say came and
said let's send people
later when at the end of 40 years
repeats the story of 40 years he adds a
detail that we don't know here and that
is you came to me and asked me to send
them
over here it sounds like Hashem
initiated the whole process says you
came to me
So consulted. The Jews want me to send
spies. Omar says,
I told him it's a good land.
I told him it's a good land. I'm taking
you from Egypt to a beautiful country.
Therefore, I swear that I will allow
them to make an error. I will allow them
to make an error so they don't inherit
it. So Rashi says based on the med
what's
a very important word means you're doing
it on your behalf not on my behalf.
This is not a mitzvah that I'm telling
you to do and you're fulfilling it.
You're executing my command. No this is
this is project.com.
This is not God's project.com
on your behalf. says
now is bothered by a big question in it
says
Hashem. He sent them based on the mouth
of God. That means in the whole what
does that mean? Based on whose
instruction? God. Alashem.
Just like in the first.
So what's says
by the mouth of God does not mean he
told him to do it. It means he gave him
permission.
Alp means with the permission of God's
mouth. He didn't stop it. He could have
said no. He didn't say no. He also
didn't say yes. We see clearly that
Rashi here is determined to explain that
Hashem did not tell him to do it. It was
with his permission but without his with
his consent but without his instruction
or commandment or even suggestion
this would be a good idea. No, no, no,
no. It's your
and here the Rebba asked an astounding
question and the question you know now I
think about it's a very very obvious
question and that is
this is not the first conversation mob
is having with Hashem this is parishu
appeared in the parish we went through
the whole safer we went through the
whole saf of we went through the first
three sections of midbar and in Each
para mobenu is in the front, middle,
center as the prophet and the messenger
of hashem. In every single situation
until this moment, everything that
Mosher Rabenu did in connection with the
Jewish people was basically fulfilling
an instruction or a commandment of
Hashem. If there was something that he
didn't know, there was a doubt, he asked
and he got an answer. most cases. Who
decided he should do the 10 plagues? Who
decided he should be chosen and go to
parro? Hashem told him to go. 10 plagues
Hashem told him to go. Split the sea.
HASHEM TOLD EVERYTHING, every detail,
every mitzvah. When he didn't know, he
asked. For example, last week's par
there's a story that they did. They made
a carbon p the second year after they
left Egypt and there were Jews who were
impure and they couldn't bring the
carbon on the 14th of Nissen and they
came to Mosha and they said, "Ligorah,
why should we lose?" And what happens?
Moshe said, "Good question. I'll ask
God." Imdu, "Stand here. Let me see what
Hashem says." And he asked Hashem. And
Hashem gave him an answer. And Hashem
said, "No worries. They will have a
second chance, a second opportunity in
one month from now, which today we call
Pesak Sheni, the second PES. granted
either he got an explicit instruction
and if not he asked and he got an answer
from the day he was chosen back in
schmiss to become the leader of the
Jewish people every step of the way as
they say in Hebrew
every step he was given direct guidance
mentorship instruction from Hashem what
to do how to do when to do where to do.
He was what we call what the Torah says
an EV Hashem in the full full
meaning of the word
to fulfill the will of his creator in
difficult times in good times before the
exodus of Egypt afterwards before the
giving of the Tyra after giving of the
Tyra before the sin of the golden calf
afterwards
suddenly now for the first time in his
life
he asks a question and Hashem says
Sorry. Sorry. It's not my cup of tea.
I'm mixing out of this.
This is not my business.
Mosha should have smelled.
This is trouble. This is not good. He
should have run away from this situation
like you run away from a from a
horrendous catastrophe that's that's uh
looming.
He should have escaped and fled from
this situation immediately. Just imagine
if you had an instructor, a teacher, a
life coach, a guide, a reba, a parent, a
really great person who has guided you
in every step of your life. And if if
you had a question, they answered you.
And as a result of that, you have seen
results that were incredible, amazing.
And then one day, you suggest something,
you ask advice. Is this a good idea?
Like, oh, no, no, NO, NO. I'M NOT
GETTING involved in this one.
You could decide yourself. Probably you
would avoid it. Now here you're not
talking about just a life coach or or a
guru or a good teacher or a good parent
or a great guide, but you're talking
here about the creator of the world,
Hashem. And in first time in their
entire uh relationship,
Hashem says something that he never said
before. And that is I do not want to
answer this question. I will not answer.
And sometimes you know you push for an
answer. TELL ME WHAT YOU THINK. I am not
telling you. I am not telling you.
Hashem doesn't say go be successful or
no way don't do it. Shouldn't of this
should should have this not sounded
generated all the alarms in Mosha's
brain smelling catastrophe. Didn't he
shouldn't have not realized that this is
simply a recipe for something really
really not good? What happened here?
WHAT WAS THOUGHT PROCESS? Now if you
read through parl most commentators
struggle with the story but they focus
on another part of the story and that is
how did the spies end up in such an
abyss. That's the big question. It says
clearly they were all people of
distinction. Rash says
Hashem told him take leaders. He took
the leaders. In other words, these were
not just rael rousers. These weren't
lowly individuals. These were people the
itself says anushim people of great
distinction of renown
chose them and picked them personally.
He handpicked them each one of them.
This wasn't just a go anybody goes. How
is it that they went through such a
transformation? Instead of returning and
encouraging the people, they actually
dissuaded the entire nation from
entering into the land. They created
mass hysteria and as a result, everybody
stayed in the desert for the next 40
years. What happened to them? How did
they get so overwhelmed by anxiety and
fear that despite the promise and
despite the the the divine involvement
in their lives and despite everything
they have seen on their own eyes just
with their own eyes just a year before
as they left Mitsayim they fell into
such a profound uh abyss of denial of
fear of dread of anxiety that's the big
question that everybody asks and it's a
great question And then there's a second
question. How did the people fall prey
to their panic? I understand sometimes
it happens to 10 leaders that they
panic. But how is it that the entire
nation stood sat a whole night and wept
and turned to Mosha and Aaron and said,
"We should have all died in Egypt. This
is the craziest thing ever. This is
absolute insanity that we left Egypt.
Why couldn't we just stay there and die?
Let's go back to Mitsim than rather go
into this land and be doomed. our wives,
our children will all be killed that
those are two very very important
questions. But this was the first time I
heard another question and that's the
question on Moshe himself besides the
spies besides the people moisha who's
the hashem who hashem just said at the
end of he told Miriam and bi
he is loyal in my entire home. How did
he fall in to this gigantic trap? How
did he fall in to this situation? Didn't
he get here the most explicit hint that
one can get from God that this is
something that can only create problems?
Now you'll say, "Well, what do you
want?" Rashi himself says that the Jews
demanded it. The Jews said, "Send
people." Great question. It says in
clearly invar you came to me and you
said, "Let us send people to scout the
land." That's true. But nonetheless,
Mosha Rabenu wasn't a coward.
He didn't suffer from mediocrity and
hesitation. Mosha was not an insecure
person. We have seen how he stood up to
par. We have seen how he stood up to the
worshippers of the golden calf. We have
seen how he stood up to every revolution
and every rebellion. Later, we're going
to have the story of Kai. Misha was not
somebody that if PEOPLE ARE SAYING IT, I
HAVE TO FALL INTO THE TRAP BECAUSE THEY
WANT IT. SO THEY WANT IT AND YOU tell
them raising
this is not good. I LOVE YOU TOO MUCH.
I'm not going to let you do this. Every
good leader, every good parent knows.
There are moments you say this cannot
happen. This is going to be
catastrophic. It's not like Mosha was
frightened from what the people are
going to say. If he would have been
frightened and had to follow everybody's
opinion, the whole thing though, his
whole leadership would have been a
disaster.
Now he goes to Hashem and Hashem says I
am not telling you to do this.
Nonetheless
Rabenu goes ahead and he does it.
Especially Rashi says that Hashem
responded to him and said I already said
it's good. I swear that this is creating
I'm giving them a room to error. So
you're hearing here you're literally
hearing so much what would seem to be
such a negative prediction. Now you'll
say well God could have said no. Okay,
he didn't say no. But even if he says,
isn't that enough to sound alarms in
Mosha's head? Now, we have another
instance. For example, Hashem did not
tell Mosha to break the tablets. That's
true. He didn't say, "Go break the
tablets." Mosher Rabenu did this on his
own, but Hashem did not. He did not
consult. And Hashem said, "Whoa, whoa,
whoa, whoa, whoa. I'm not getting
involved in this here." consulted him
and he told him there's things that
Mosha DID ON HIS OWN. OF COURSE, THERE'S
things Mosha did on his own, but Hashem
did not hint to him that I don't want to
give an opinion. Mosa felt this is the
right thing. Even though there was no
mitzvah, he went ahead and do it.
There's no mitzvah to break the tablets,
but Misha felt that was the right thing.
And Rash explains why he actually wanted
to save the Jewish people. It was like
tearing up the tearing up the marriage
contract and say, "I'm not sure they
were completely married. There's no
tablets to prove." And Hashem said,
"Thank you for doing this. We have those
instances a few instances where Mosha
decided things on his own but Hashem did
not tell him don't mix me into this I do
not want to get involved in this
there's also something else that's
difficult and that is
and are two parts of Yiddish there's the
written there's the oral tradition now
even though the ter is a commentary for
we usually can find the sources of it in
terab at least in a hidden way here. The
lack the disparity is very very blatant.
If you would wouldn't learn Rashi and
you would just readim what would be
anybody's honest impression who told
Mosha to send these spies Hashem alimu
speak to the Jewish people. I'm sorry.
Hashem spoke to Moshe and said send on
your behalf people and let them scout
the land. and Moshe sent them based on
the mouth of God.
Anybody who reads it clearly you get the
impression this was a commandment from
Hashem. Rashi has a word. It says so
from the we say there's a whole other
story that's going on. Okay. But why
does the give us such a different
impression? It is so ambiguous. There's
a very blatant disparity between the
written text and the commentary of the
text. In the written text, it sounds
like this was God's idea. He told Mosha
what to do and Mosha was just fulfilling
his command like he did everywhere else
from the word our sages deduced a whole
different picture a whole different
perspective. Now it's true that invar
does say you came to me and asked me for
it. So we see that the Tyra itself gives
another story but it's interesting that
HERE WHEN THE STORY ACTUALLY happens the
Tory emits that detail and it just makes
it sound like it was Hashem's plan. It
was Hashem's initiation and the
disparity between the two is so
powerful. Even when IT SAYS ALI HASHEM,
RASHI IS FORCED TO SAY ALI HASHEM
DOESN'T MEAN hashem said it means he
didn't stop him. Now usually when you
say somebody did something based on the
mouth of somebody else it means they
spoke to you and you did it. Here it
MEANS NO HE DIDN'T STOP HIM. So that's
what rashi says obviously it happened
that way. But how do we explain why does
the Tor is so so ambiguous where in the
text it seems like this was a complete
plan of God and yet in the mafia
it says no Hashem was actually very very
nebulous very very uh uh um what's the
word ambiguous extremely ambiguous not
only ambiguous he told Rabenu clearly I
am not getting involved yeah
>> good question
very nice question the first commandment
from Hashem to the first Jew is
right. Nobody says over there means if
you want. I'M NOT TELLING YOU if you
want to stay with knock yourself out. If
you want, it's a suggestion, right? Like
so rabbi once told his congregation,
doesn't we don't say it's they're called
10 suggestions. They're ten
commandments. They're not suggestions.
I'm suggesting don't steal, don't commit
adultery, don't murder. No, they're ten
commandments. we all say as a
commandment and Rashi explains why it
says great question. Why does it say
Rash says
it's for your benefit? The exact
opposite. So there are other ways of
dealing with the word this only
increases the question, RIGHT? WE COULD
say could mean it's for your benefit,
whatever it is. But over here we take
the and we say it does not mean at all
what it sounds like. It means I'm
actually not telling you to do it. So it
says in the text, I'm telling you to do
it, but the word is saying, I'm really
not telling you to do it. I'm allowing
you if you want to really really do
this. Okay, I'm not going to stop you.
You know, sometimes in life, we hear a
question and uh I'm going to there's an
expression,
right? My sin I'm going to mention
today. As I was standing there as a
16-year-old boy and I hear the Rebba
asking this question, he asked it with a
lot of passion like a lot real lot of
passion. I can almost feel the pain in
his in his heart and the question when
he said should have smelled should have
smelled that something is so off and ran
ran ran miles away from this in he was
speaking in Yiddish and a thought
creeped into my mind and that is
I don't think there's going to be an
answer that's going to be as good as the
question. [laughter]
You know sometimes you hear a question
and then you hear an answer but it's
like uh with all due respect the answer
was much better than the question right
we all know there are questions in life
and pe uh I'm sorry the question is
better than the answer we all know there
are questions in life we sometimes seek
answers sometimes we get answers and
we're like okay but I like my question
better you know SOMETIMES PEOPLE ASK WHY
DID THIS HAPPEN TO me and some of will
tell you why it happened to and you're
like, "Sorry, but my question was much
better than your answer." Right? In
fact, probably the biggest questions in
life, it's much wiser not to answer
because the answers will usually fall
short.
So, when the Reb asked this question,
I'm like, how are you going to get
around this? Like, this is too of a good
question. Like, just imagine you're for
the first time in your relationship. FOR
THE FIRST TIME, Hashem says, keep me out
of this. I am not coming at this trip.
You know when somebody says I'm not
joining this. YOU WANT TO GO GO. I'M OUT
OF THIS LIKE RIGHT AWAY. I'M ALSO OUT OF
THIS. Mash is not his own person. He's
not his own man. He's not have his own
agenda. HE'S AN EVASHEM. HIS WHOLE mits
is his whole reality is a servant OF
HASHEM. YOU'RE OUT OF THIS [screaming]
GOD. YOU KNOW WHO ELSE IS OUT OF IT? I'M
OUT OF you come to a brilliant. come to
a brilliant, brilliant investor, a
tycoon, a money maggle, somebody who's
really been successful in business and
you offer him a tremendous investment
that you're doing. And he thinks and
he's like, I'm not going there.
[laughter]
And the guy has 50 years of experience.
You know what? I'm also not going there.
[laughter]
I'm not going. That's it. Hashem said,
I'M NOT GOING THERE. YOU ALSO don't go
there.
You don't express
a cup in a cranking
>> bet.
Don't put in a healthy head into a sick
bed. It's a problem bed. Just find
another bet.
And then the Reba gave an answer. He
suggested an answer. It was a very very
uh profound profound answer which I
could still remember. And I want to
share one point of that talk which as I
told you has impacted me very deeply at
least the way I understood it. The way I
understood it the qu sometimes you can't
answer the question because the question
is better than the answer unless you
reveal one truth that the question
itself is the answer
which are usually the deepest answers in
life. when the question itself becomes
the answer. And it's true in many areas.
The greatest answers to our deepest
questions only happen when the question
itself becomes the answer. Meaning as
the BMP once said
it says it's a time of distress from her
from it they will be helped. So the said
from the itself from the question itself
you find a salvation. And the name word
s is the same letter as like soar. Sor
means a problem. So means a window. When
the challenge becomes a window. It opens
up a vista to a new depth. That's a
different type of answer. You're not
answering the question. The question
itself brings you into a place where
like ah it's a different type of answer
here too. The question itself is really
the answer. Of course Moshe realized
that something new is happening. He
realized it immediately. It's the first
time Hashem ever told us this to him. We
don't have a precedent where Hashem said
means it's based on your Mosha knew that
there's something revolutionary
happening right now. That precise
question, why are you going into this?
You realize this is new. This is
suspicious. That itself actually
provides perspective. He heard
immediately that Hashem was saying
something new that was never said
before. But not only did that not not
that did that not discourage him and
strike fear into his heart on the
contrary it [snorts] brought him to a
very deep place of gratitude and joy
there was a deep bliss a deep sim in
what he heard. Why? Because Mosa
perceived and as we will see he
perceived correctly. He perceived
correctly despite the circumstances,
despite the aftermath that Hashem was
actually charting a new path. There was
actually something new being taught
here. This is not just a story of
catastrophe and doom and failure. There
is that part of the story. There's the
part of the story where there was a
catastrophe, there was doom, failure.
But like every other story, there's
different parts to a story.
There was also something very positive,
very powerful happening here. In fact,
this was an age, a moment of deep
maturity, of deep evolution, of deep uh
expansion, not just of tragedy and
despair of Hashem saying, "Oh my God, I
am out of this. How could you do this?
What is this about?"
When Moshe heard the words
literally means this is based on your d
your mindset your perception. You know
what he heard for the first time? God
said
now I trust you.
Now I trust you. You're going to make
the decision because I trust you to make
decisions. Let's understand what this
means. There's two dimensions in a
relationship. One level of a
relationship is I tell you everything
and you obey. It's beautiful. It's
sweet. It's adorable. It's certainly
predictable. It has so many advantages.
But everybody understands is an
inequality.
I'm waiting for commandments. You tell
me what to do and I execute. It's like a
master and a servant. You say and I
follow. But there's a much deeper
relationship. It's also a much more
complex relationship. It's a much more
nuanced relationship. And that is I will
not tell you what to do. You know why?
Not because I don't have opinions. Not
because I'm afraid. Not because I don't
want to afterwards you should blame me.
Actually, because I trust you. I really
really have trust in you. I have
confidence in you. which says into
right says I have trust in you and
sometimes Hashem says
and I trust you you got this you got
this I know you got this inside you you
have an inner knowing in the first case
I tell you everything it's great but you
know why I have to tell you everything
because I don't really trust you in the
second case I know that you have the
inner resources the capability
to be able to figure this out. I trust
you. I know that you know what to do in
Pyavas. There's two fascinating
expressions in the same Mishna which
bring out these two levels of the
relationship
chapter 2 Mishna Mishna 4 in your next
source. Who are you? The son of used to
say
and then
first he says make that his WILL SHOULD
BE YOUR WILL AND THEN HE SAYS NULLIFY
YOUR WILL BEFORE his will. Which one is
it?
And the answer is there's both. There's
two phases. There's two experiences. One
experience is
battle comes from the word to nullify. I
surrender. I submit my will before his
will. And that's a tremendous tremendous
moment. There's a tremendous connection
there. There's a tremendous trust over
there. There's a deep authentic
relationship. I nullified my will before
his will, before God's will. But then
there's something even deeper.
means make his will your will.
YOUR WILL ITSELF is an extension. It's
an embodiment. It's a manifestation.
It's a projection of Hashem's will. And
the reason is because deep inside you're
divine. Deep inside your soul is a
mamish. So if you can remove your
blockages and your cleo and your layers,
you have an inner knowing.
You know they say that uh there was
somebody I heard this joke from my
brother-in-law. Somebody was uh went
into a Barnes & Noble store and goes
over to the woman at the counter and
says, "I'm looking for the self-help
section." And she says, "If I tell you,
it will defeat the purpose."
THERE'S THIS SELF-HELP SECTION OF
JUDAISM. [laughter]
You got this. I trust you. You know why?
Because you have an inner knowing. You
have a divine soul.
Of course,
I have to work with myself. I have to be
able to distinguish between parts,
between my blockages, my kipo, my
shells, my husks, my insecurities, my
cover-ups, my brokenness.
But I can also reach that space where my
emotions, my instincts, my knowing, my
feelings, my desire become a reflection
of God's desire. THE PERSON DESIRES WHAT
HASHEM DESIRES.
We know this in every relationship. Take
for example a relationship of a
marriage. There are two types of
marriages. There's a marriage where
you tell your husband what to do and
he's like, "Yes, dear."
And what's next? and you tell him what
to do and he's like, "Yes, dear. Yes,
yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes."
You're thinking, "Havai, halai, hello.
I've been trying for 35 years." Okay.
And no, nobody should minimize the value
of a spouse who's like, "What do you
want me to do?" Okay. Takes notes. You
ever see in uh Wesley Kosher the men on
Friday and they're like checking their
notes and they're like looking, right?
It's like they're learning gam because
they know that if they make a mistake
and they bring BACK THE WRONG TYPE OF
DICED TOMATOES, they will be diced with
the tomatoes that they brought back.
Yeah. And then they start calling. They
start calling. And you're like, "Oh my
god, I knew I should have gone myself. I
should have gone myself." It's a bigger
nightmare to tell him what not to get.
Right? He's on the phone. The poor guy
doesn't know what hit him. He doesn't
know. Right? So we should [laughter]
I'm talking from experience. I'm not
Yeah.
There was a woman. I was in Wesley C. A
woman comes over to me. She said, "Maybe
I can help you. What are you looking
for?" So, I told her about foods I never
heard about. And she helped me. It was
amazing.
My wife was shocked. I came home so
fast. I didn't want to tell her there
was a woman helping me.
Binisha.
>> Huh?
>> Oh, yeah. Yeah, that's true. He wasn't
talking about shopping but yeah
different type shopping for the country.
Yeah.
No, nobody should minimize a
relationship where somebody asks the
other person what to do. They find out
and they do it. But we all understand
that a much deeper relationship is when
we start developing there's a trust. A
deep trust. A deep trust requires two
things. It requires number one the
ability for me to be able to really back
off. The ability to foster independence,
the ability to not need to control,
which for some of us is not easy. Let's
face it, being a control freak has a lot
of advantages in life. Makes you
miserable, anxious, but there's
advantages because it seems like life is
predictable, which is why some of us
develop the template of being in
control. It keeps me small, safe, and in
control, at least in my own dreams and
perceptions. I control things. I control
outcomes. And of course, the one you get
most angry at is God or the people in
your life who usually do not allow
predictabilities to follow through. So
that's one thing. Surrendering that need
to control. It's also something else.
It's really trusting that the other
person is capable, has within them an
inner inner soul. And some of us lack
one of these things. either I can't let
go or really I don't really see the
dignity or the light in the other. So
this is a great moment in a relationship
where there is real trust and trust I
can't force you can't force trust can
say trust me trust is something that you
need to feel in your nervous system we
all know or we don't know when you're
feeling trust in your nervous system
there's a relaxation you relate to what
I'm saying yeah you ever have it once in
a while right there's a relaxation that
sets in you know when we talk about it's
not an intellectual concept completely
Not intellect is fine. It's ideas. It's
actually something you feel in your
body. There's like a bliss that flows
through the veins and it's unmistakable
like you can't mistake it. It's like an
inner trust that it's not intellectual.
It's not like I learned and says I
should trust. Okay. Anxiety.
Trust is something very very deep. It's
organic. It's not where I am. It's
something internal. It's like a a a
playful child in a sandbox giggling.
Your nervous system has this relaxed
giggle and it comes from an inner place
of trust that I can't impose. I can't
force it.
>> Safety I would say safety.
>> Huh? Yeah. Yeah. Shi said from the word
to be able to really really trust. So
now when we speak about a relationship
it's like when people are capable of
having that deep inner trust in a
relationship in Hashem we have the same
two concepts
one of the most beautiful prophecies
about the time of isa
chapter 2 your next source hashem says
God says on that day YOU WILL STOP
CALLING ME BALI. YOU'LL START CALLING ME
ISHI. What's the difference in Hebrew?
How do you say my husband?
>> BALI. GOD SAYS, "NO, NO, NO. THERE'S
GOING TO BE A GREAT DAY. YOU'RE NOT
GOING TO CALL ME ANYMORE BALI. YOU'RE
GOING TO CALL me Isi." WHAT'S WRONG WITH
BALI? MY HUSBAND. BALI.
>> HUH? SO, let's look at Rashi.
You're going to serve me with love, not
with not with fear.
Bali.
The word Bali is like the word. What's
the master of the home, right? It's like
the AT&T salesman who comes to the
house, rings the bell. The guy comes
out, says, "Hi, I can help you." He
says, "I have a great deal here, but I'm
looking for the master of the home." And
the husband says, "Wow, you came exactly
the right time. Wait here five minutes
because this question is being decided
in the kitchen right now. Right? Bali
comes with balus ownership. The master
of the home
is says
it's the love of youthfulness of two
youthful people who are funloving and
just want to connect with each other in
a very very calm childlike way but in a
beautiful way.
is youthfulness. The vivaciousness, the
freshness, the trust of youthfulness.
The word ishi comes from the word you're
my fire. Isos
is connection, intimacy,
>> personal.
>> I ishi is also ishi is like it's
personal, right? Is a personal. It's
like from person to person. It's a
different flow. So, Hashem says, "You're
going to stop calling me Bali." What?
You're God. YOU'RE THE BOSS. I know I'm
the boss. But there's going to come a
day in the relationship where there's
going to be a oneness. You're going to
look at me and say, "Ah, you're my fire.
You're my passion. You're the love of my
life. It's great to be here." I'm not
like, "Oh, here we go again. The big
boss is bullying me." And even if you're
not calling it bullying, but ultimately
there's an element of submission and
therefore there's an element of fear.
This rashi, it's fascinating. The of
Lublin, the SE of Lublin was a student
of the mag of rich and he writes that he
heard from Anipoli, the Rebush of
Anipoli. He says, "I heard from him that
it says in Mishn at the end of the signs
before Mashiach comes
at the end of the gull before Mashiach
comes." One of the signs is going to be
a lot of
daughters will speak about their mothers
daughters-in-law about their
mothers-in-law. Does that happen? Okay,
it's a good sign. And then one of the
signs is People
will be repulsed by those who fear sin.
Literally, everybody understands that
the world will be degenerate, immoral.
So, somebody who fears sin, they're
going to be disgusted. It's going to be
like WE WANT MORAL RELATIVISM.
EVERYTHING GOES. That's the literal
meaning. Says, I heard from
that there's a deeper meaning. In a
classic twist, he says, actually, it's a
very good sign.
There's going to come a time that the
Jewish people will be allergic to a
Judaism that's based on dread, on fear,
because they're looking for a
relationship of love and connection. And
this is what Rashi says. Now, you would
say, but one second is a mitzvah.
There's a mitzvah to love God. There's a
mitzvah to fear God. How could you be
disgusted by that? The answer is there's
two types of fear. As Famous writes,
there's two types of fear. One type of
fear is I fear you and that makes me
want to be distant from you. It's like
I'm allergic to you. I have no choice. I
have no choice. You may be my boss. I
need my paycheck from you. You're the
teacher. You're the principal. You're
the parent. You're the person I'm
involved and I have no choice. I'm
afraid of you and I submit. I surrender.
But deep down I wish I can get rid of
you one day. You know those people who
are in a relationship but every time
they walk away they whisper, "God, get
me out of this. God, when am I gonna am
I gonna say baraka? And even if we're
afraid to say it, we feel it. And even
if we're afraid to feel it, our nervous
system feels it. And even if our nervous
system has been beaten enough to be
afraid to feel it, our subconscious
feels it. And if you tell me your
subconscious doesn't feel it, you don't
know what you're talking about because
you don't know your subconscious.
But then there's a different type of
fear. It's a different type of fear.
This is real hashem. It's fear of
ruining and losing such a powerful and
blissful relationship. When you have
such an amazing relationship, you're
afraid to do something that will damage
it. This is the most beautiful and I
should say romantic fear in the world.
This is too good to be true. I'm not
going to surrender to a temptation for
five minutes and ruin something I built
with love, sweat, blood, and tears,
dedication
over 25 years. I'm not I am afraid to
lose such a powerful connection. So said
there's going to come a time where
people will be allergic to a Judaism
that's simply based on negativity, based
on dread and fear. God is bigger than
you. He's stronger than you. And wait
till you see his gehenna. Can it beat
people into compliance? Yeah, it can.
Some people their yiddish is based on
that. Some people their yiddish is based
and you know what? If it keeps them away
from doing terrible things, but to say
that there is a bliss in the
relationship, there's an ecstasy in the
relationship. There's a regulation in
relationship
is this is my fire. This relationship
gets me excited. It's like a husband and
a wife when he's coming home in the
evening, he's looking forward to open
the door and see his wife or the wife is
looking forward. It's like, "Wow, thank
you, Hashem, for this relationship."
You're like, "Rabbi, why? Which planet
are you living in? And which house are
you talking about?" But I I just want
you to to to appreciate this because it
starts inside of us. It starts inside of
us. Is my heart expanding when I think
of the relationship or is my heart
actually becoming contrite and tight
when I think of the relationship?
That's what we say in the
may God dance over you like the is
dancing over his. IT'S LIKE OH WOW how
special
and it's it's not just a it's knowing
that Hashem is dancing around you like
the is dancing around the kala. He's, if
I could use the word, obsessed in a
beautiful way. Infatuated,
completely immersed.
Chapter 10 describes this type of
relationship. So, you're not going to
call me Bali, YOU'RE GOING TO call me
ishi
because the truth is that ultimately
when the doors of perception are
cleansed, everything appears as is
infinite. You remember that when the
doors of perception are cleansed,
everything appears as is which is
infinite.
Everything is part of oneness. The true
desire of everything in creation is the
divine desire. It's not two separate
things. It's not Bali, it's ishi. We are
all channels for divine energy. We are
all manifestations of divine energy. So
in your deepest place, if everything is
cleansed and removed, if you can get in
touch with your core self, self with a
capital S, if I could be able to
distinguish between the different parts
in me that are sometimes exiling me or
protecting me or blocking me. If I can
go beyond the hester, the hester, the
anaster aster, the ano, the eye, which
is a which is concealed. It's not two
separate desires. There's what Hashem
wants and there's what you want.
When you start doing the work, you will
see your deepest passion, your deepest
desire, your deepest craving, your
deepest yearning in life is the divine
desire because you and him are
completely one. Your all completely one.
And then the Reb said these words and my
heart literally melted when I heard
them. They still melts. And he said when
Mosha heard the words
he actually felt like he wanted to start
dancing. He was overjoyed. Why? Because
he heard not what we're hearing. We're
hearing
get me out of this. I'm like I'm out of
this. I'm not interested in this. I'M
LIKE, "OH MY GOD, I'M also not
interested in this." He said, "Actually,
Mosha heard something very, very
powerful, very, very new. But it didn't
cause him to despair. It caused them to
celebrate. You see, till this point in
the development of the Jewish people,
Yiddish was based on path number one.
It was based on the path of submission
and surrender, which is the beginning
venishma. Because when I am stuck, when
I am a slave, when I am in addiction,
when I am in anxiety, WHEN I AM IN
TRAUMA, WHEN I AM IN BROKENNESS, I do
need guidance. I'm stuck. I do need
guidance. I can't trust myself. I'm too
blocked. I'm too dark. I'm too much
darkness in me. There's too much
craziness in me. Right in the 12step
program, the first step is
I surrender because I know how powerless
I am. That's a liberating moment. When I
know how powerless I am, then I can
actually look up to the source for real
power. It's a very, very important step.
It's the ability to be able to say, you
know what, I have a lot of cravings that
are messed up. I have a lot of voices
that can take me to very dark places and
I have to be aware of them. And that's a
blessing that I can be aware of them and
say, I know that this is the wrong thing
and therefore I'm going to submit.
That's a blessing in life. It's a
blessing when I can distinguish between
the two and therefore understand the
need for it.
Till this point the MODEL OF JUDAISM WAS
AS WE say
we are your servants and you are our
master. Bali balabas
here moenu hears a new phase ink is
unraveling where hashem says
I'm not commanding you what to do.
You're going to decide this with your
own mind. I want you to choose. The way
the Reb explained it is Hashem wasn't
backing off. He was actually getting
involved because to give people choice
is a deeper form of intimate
involvement. When I tell you what to do,
it's actually a very limited
relationship. It's like I'm really doing
the driving AND I'M JUST TELLING YOU
EXECUTE. ALL you can do is to be an
executor. when I'm actually backing,
when I'm actually withdrawing, it's
because I'm much more involved. It's
because there's real trust because I
knew that I know that you could find the
truth inside of yourself. In other
words, our connection is much much
deeper. It's an empowerment. When Hashem
says,
he's giving you a mitzvah. The mitzvah
is I'm giving you a new mitzvah. You
know what the new mitzvah is? Misha,
trust yourself. That's the mitzvah. the
mitzvah is then I'm not giving you a
mitzvah. You got this. You own this. I
know I can trust you. This is a new
level of maturity of development.
It's not just
it's
we are your spouse and you are a beloved
one.
We are your treasure. You are our
treasure. There's an element of deep
kinship of of intimacy, of passion.
It's the ability to be able for you to
know that God believes you have an inner
knowing. You have a very very deep trust
in yourself. In the first one, it's more
bitten
felt that at this moment, Hashem is
inviting him and the people into a
partnership into a camaraderie. It's
like say Hashem sometimes makes us
he makes us a partner in the work of
creation in parish it says
called God
says
what does that mean what does that mean
how do you say that
send him my regards
in we say an amarti
My dream is
I see IN YOU THE DIVINE.
YOU'RE CHILDREN OF THE I TRUST YOU
BECAUSE I KNOW THAT YOUR INNER
PERSONALITY IS SO RICH. WE'RE PARTNERS.
WE'RE IN THIS TOGETHER. YOU GOT THIS.
YOU HAVE THE LOVE. YOU HAVE THE WISDOM.
You have the infinite connection. YOU
HAVE THE CONFIDENCE.
Why now? Why here at the end of Bahala?
At the end of Bahala, there's a moment
where Hashem tells Mosha, "Appoint 70
prophets."
This is right before the story. And
there's two prophets, Elder and Maid,
who are very humble and they don't want
to prophesy and they don't want to join
the group. And suddenly there's a rumor.
Somebody runs to Misha and says,
"There's these two new guys who are
prophesizing, Elder and Maid."
And Yeshua hears it. And what does he
smell? rebellion, right? It's called a
breakaway minion, a breakaway,
how do you say it? A breakaway.
It's like two guys who are not
submitting to authority. So Yahusheshua
who was a servant of Mosha, good
servant, a loyal student says,
"You got to arrest them. You got to
incarcerate them. You got to put them in
a base. Kella is a prison. Clo you got
him in prison." And what does Mosha tell
Yhua? He tells him one of the most
glorious lines in the whole of Tanakh if
I may say so. It's your second to the
last source. Moshe tells Yhua these
words.
You're jealous for me. Really? You're
jealous for me. Like these two guys are
prophets. LET ME TELL YOU WHO YOUR
TEACHER IS.
MY DREAM IS I WISH Hashem would make his
entire nation prophets and confer his
spirit ON THEM. YESHUA, YOU THINK I look
at these two guys, huh? Here's my
competition. SILENCE THEM, IMPRISON
THEM, SHUT THEM UP. Mosa says, Yeshua,
you see these two guys? I would like
another four million like this. I want
another FOUR MILLION PROPHETS.
THIS IS NOT MUSH incororated.com501c3
uh forprofit nonforprofit for taxes
purposes.
Huh?
>> Very good. Nonforprofit. Very good.
YESHUA. YOU KNOW WHEN MY DREAM WILL BE
FULFILLED WHEN I'M GOING TO LOOK around
and see everybody as a prophet.
Everybody knows they're channeling GOD'S
SPIRIT. THAT'S MY AGENDA. YOU THINK I
WANT ELDER? I WANT EVERYBODY TO BE
NAIVE. And this is what Yeshua had to
hear from his teacher for him to become
the next leader.
This is what happened right at the end
of
this was his m and here in a powerful
paradoxical way that's what Hashem tells
me
as the leader of the Jewish people.
We're opening up now a new element, a
new deeper spiritual core that you can
exercise, a muscle that you can discover
and that is the profit inside of you
says
he says now
this is something you can decide. You
should decide I am not walking away from
this because I'm abandoning you. I'm
walking away from this because the
relationship must mature to a much much
deeper place. So
is overwhelmed with excitement. This is
ultimately the purpose. The purpose is
I want to dwell inside of you, in your
heart, in your instincts, in your
nervous system, IN YOUR CONSCIOUSNESS.
THAT'S WHERE IT'S AT. THAT'S WHERE IT'S
AT. OF COURSE, WE need submission. Of
course, you need ble. Of course, we're
human. and we have a and all these
things but ultimately it's
now
here's the big glaring question you're
making it this so beautiful Rabbi why we
know the end of the story this was like
a national disaster is that your
question no even a better question go
ahead
>> beautiful
yeah the whole story of pesi is really
that that's why this comes after bal
It's people who didn't submit. They were
impure. They couldn't do the pes. They
came to said,
>> "Yeah, it says and they were that's
you're saying an in both cases and they
say and hashem says, you know what,
they're right. They create a new pes.
They literally created a new holiday, a
new pes, which is fascinating. A month
later, you can bring a carbon pes." Then
Moshe in the same parish expresses his
desire that everybody becomes prophets.
And that's essentially what Mosher Raenu
is hearing over here. He's hearing this
tremendous tremendous powerful powerful
ability for transformation in the
deepest sense of the word. Now
what happens? So Moshe decides, Hashem
said, "I trust you." And he trusted it.
He trusted him and he decided. Now look
at the end of the story. Like the whole
end of the story defeats the entire
premise. IT'S LIKE LOOK WHAT HAPPENS
WHEN YOU TRUST PEOPLE.
I ASKED THEM TO MAKE COPIES. HE COULDN'T
EVEN MAKE THE COPIES STRAIGHT.
THEY CAN'T EVEN CHANGE A LIGHT BULB. You
know, people who don't trust anybody to
change a light bulb because it cracked.
So, you fix the door knob. You Alain
Alain Alain Ala Ala. I do everything
yourself. You're a super SUPERWOMAN
COMPETENT. JUST DON'T delegate to
anybody ever and everything will come
out impeccably and flawless. The only
problem is you're very uptight because
of it.
SO WHAT HAPPENS? WHAT HAPPENS HERE? IT
DOESN'T SEEM LIKE it seems like the
DEFEAT OF WE TRUST it and the whole
thing ends up as a disaster. Better not
to trust.
But let's go one step further. And here
this story becomes so nuanced because it
tells us exactly what it really means to
trust yourself.
You know, we must look at this in a very
very sensitive and delicate way. Should
people trust themselves? Let's face it,
many people growing up in a religious
community have learned very early on
never ever to trust themselves. In fact,
I sometimes receive letters from people
who accuse me and say, "Your classes are
encouraging people to trust themselves."
And that's bad news because they're
going to make the wrong decisions.
They're going to walk out on people they
should not walk out on. They are going
to become narcissistic,
selfish, self-absorbed.
Don't let people trust themselves. Tell
people there's a higher authority
telling you what to do at every moment.
It gives them anxiety.
BETTER ANXIETY AND DO THE RIGHT THING
than serenity and wreak havoc. And we
know there's other philosophy.
This is sometimes what people feel.
Yeah.
>> There's a prerequisite to trusting
yourself and identity and knowing who
you are. But the first one is missing.
The second one is
>> very good. You can trust yourself if you
know who you really are. But the person
who wants to find a way to trust
themselves can sometimes be callous AND
SAY, "AND NOBODY'S GOING TO TELL ME who
I am cuz I know who I am better than
everybody else who wants to beat me into
compliance." and they're going to tell
me who I am. Nobody's going to tell me
who I am. These are important questions
and that's why we have to see exactly
the continuation of the story because
that becomes the litmus test of what it
really means to trust yourself and what
it does not mean. What happens in the
continuation of the story? Mosha is told
by Hashem, make a decision. Is there
room for error? Yeah. When Hashem said,
there's room for error, he didn't get
scared. Of course, whenever you make a
decision, there's room for error. I'm
not God. If you're trusting my decision,
I'm making a decision. I may make a
mistake. And yet, yet I know in my own
life for many many years I didn't trust
myself. Many years I didn't trust
myself. I still struggle with it. But I
realized recently that if I have an
inner knowing, I would rather do
something and then say to myself, I made
a mistake. I'm sorry. I learned a
lesson. then my entire life never
trusting myself and not being me, not
just being a copy, literally imitating
others and never making a mistake
because it's always their mistake.
There's we sometimes in life we confuse
confidence with certainty. It's not the
same thing. Confidence doesn't mean
certainty. Nobody has certainty.
Confidence is despite certainty. Of
course, I try. I want to know. I want to
know the variables. I want to know the
facts. Of course, I don't want to be
blind. But confidence also means that
tomorrow I could say I made a mistake. I
learned a tremendous lesson. That itself
is an opportunity for growth. I'm not
looking forward to make the mistake. But
that is part of the process. When Hashem
TELLS MISHA, I SWEAR TO YOU THAT THIS IS
ROOM FOR A MISTAKE. Of course, that's
what is you got this.
And then the question is what I do with
my mistake. Do I become defensive? Do I
cover it up? Do I start lying? That's
the lack of confidence. is the ability
to be able to say, "Okay, this was a
humbling experience and I'm going to
grow from this." But at least there's
somebody to grow from. There's somebody
who is a reality or there's somebody
who's an entity. It's not somebody who's
simply just a copy of everybody else.
Like somebody once said, "We're all born
originals, but many of us die as
copies."
And if I'm a copy, nobody can ever BLAME
ME. I JUST COPIED YOU. I just copied
you. RIGHT? IT'S A BEAUTIFUL THING TO BE
A COPY, but it's very pathetic. But you
can never blame the copy. The copy is
not the original. Yeah. Somebody once
said, "IN OUR HOUSE, WE only ate
leftovers. We're still looking for the
original. We're still looking FOR THE
ORIGINAL MEAL THAT OUR MOTHER MADE."
RIGHT? IF I'M A COPY, YOU CAN NEVER
BLAME ME. WHAT DO YOU WANT FROM THE
COPY? I WAS JUST COPYING THE ORIGINAL.
GO TO THE GUY WHO MADE THE ORIGINAL.
THERE'S something very safe in being a
copy. [laughter]
You stand up, I stand up, you sit down,
I sit down. And sometimes in life, it
becomes a tremendous template. We walk
around copying the world. And those of
us who are brilliant know the cues right
away. We understand how to say it. We
look around and we learn from other
people what it means to be normal.
Anybody does this ever? We learn from
other. Oh, this is normal. Okay, she
looks like a normal woman. Little do you
know what's going on in her life. But
okay, she looks LIKE A NORMAL WOMAN. LET
ME JUST COPY HER AND I'LL ALSO BE A
NORMAL WOMAN. And my whole life I'm just
trying to be normal based on somebody
that is normal like I'm a frog. But
could I actually learn who I am? trust
myself, make a mistake and take
responsibility and say no, this was not
a copy, but I was being sincere. I was
being authentic. I was being loving. I
was being openhearted. I am not God and
I'm learning and I'm growing. You'll see
the difference in that. Now, what
happens here in the story of Mosha? He
sends the spies and he gives them a
mission. What's the mission? The mission
is I want you to give us back a report
of the nature of the land. And the
mission is to be able to figure out what
is the best way to enter into the land
to conquer the land to settle the land.
What's the what are the situations? What
are the circumstances of the land? That
was the mission. That was the mission.
That's what I appointed you to do. Give
us a report of the nature of the land
and what is the best, most effective,
most strategically sound way to get into
this place.
What happens? Something happens. They
come into the land and they're
overwhelmed by what they see. The
grander of the cities, the fortresses,
the walls, and the thing that impresses
them and overwhelms them most is the
giants. The giants.
And they're struck with tremendous fear.
THEY COME BACK AND what do they say?
There's two lines that they say that
give us now the full picture. If you
look at the last
>> [snorts]
>> The people who went up, the 10 spies who
went up with the other two, Yeshua and
Khaliv, who came back with a positive
report. But these 10 people, what did
they say?
We can't. We can't. We're incompetent.
We can't
because the nation living in the land of
Kanan is stronger than us. And really
means stronger than he as Rashley says
from Kazal. It means even stronger than
God.
When we were there we saw the nefilm
means those who FELL FROM HEAVEN. BANAN
THE CHILDREN OF GIANTS
FROM THOSE NEFILM. The last time we
heard the word nephilim is at the end of
parish beraceious the generation pre the
flood was filled with nefilm. It's
almost they're making that association
for the Jewish people. This is going to
be a situation similar to the flood.
In our eyes, we we saw ourselves as
grasshoppers.
When we LOOKED AT OURSELVES IN contrast
to the people, we were grasshoppers in
our own eyes. Imagine you look in the
mirror. This is before France Kafka
metamorphosis. You look in the mirror
and you see a grasshopper.
And then they add one more thing. They
also saw us that way. Interesting. You
hear what they're doing? THEY'RE NOT
ONLY TALKING ABOUT THEMSELVES. I LOOKED
AT MYSELF. HERE'S A GRASSHOPPER. AND by
the way, when you look at me, I see that
you see a grasshopper. Is that true? YOU
SEE A GRASSHOPPER.
The Gmorra says
they WERE LIARS. HOW DO YOU KNOW WHAT
they were thinking? [laughter]
Huh? Yeah. Yeah. How do you know what
they were thinking? The med says,
"Hashem said, actually, when they looked
at you, they said, you're malim you're
angels." That's what they said. All you
can see is that they're grasshoppers.
YOU WENT TO THE LAND TO GIVE A MEASURE
OF THE LAND. THEY ENDED up giving a
measure for themselves. YOU WERE SENT ON
A MISSION TO FIGURE OUT THE LAND. YOU
CAME BACK SAYING, "I learned for the
first time. I'M A GRASSHOPPER. NOT ONLY
AM I A GRASSHOPPER, and I know it, you
all know it. I KNOW THAT WHEN YOU WENT
HOME TO DINNER LAST NIGHT OR YOU'RE
GOING TO GO TO DINNER AFTER THE CLASS
and you're going to say, "Right, why is
a grasshopper?" Are you? Are you?
That line, that line tells you the whole
story.
And it's so important to understand what
happens here because
Mosher Raenu never told them to decide
whether they're going to solo. They're
not going whether they can or they
can't. That was not the the mission was
not if
the mission was how
we're going into the land. This is our
destiny. The creator of the world sent
us here. THAT'S NOT UP FOR QUESTION.
We're sending you to FIGURE OUT WHAT'S
THE BEST WAY TO DO IT.
HOW, NOT IF, NOT WHETHER.
At some point, they changed their own
mission. Our mission is not how. Our
mission is if. And they decided we
can't. They come back lo.
We're grasshoppers. Grasshoppers can't
defeat. Sorry giants. It's not going to
work. It's like a colony of ants decides
to stage a rebellion against humanity.
Like, you got to be foolish. It's not
going to happen. Yeah. Imagine President
Roosevelt sent General Eisenhower to
Berlin
to figure out how to defeat Hitler and
he comes back and he says, "There's no
way to defeat Hitler.
We're not. It's impossible. America,
Britain, the Allies, the Soviet Union
have to all surrender TO ADOLF HITLER.
WE CAN'T HAPPEN. What happened at that
moment was the mira extricated
themselves from being the ofenu.
They saw themselves in a new way. They
were not his emissaries anymore. If I
send on a certain mission and deviates
AND SAYS THERE'S ANOTHER MISSION, YOU
DON'T SAY ANYMORE.
You're like the person who sent YOU WHEN
YOU ARE THEIR WHEN YOU'RE DOING THEIR
WORK, WHEN YOU'RE AN AGENT representing
their goal, their mission, their agenda.
You're doing it in your own way, with
your own mindset, with your own
strategies, with your own initiatives
and instincts. But if you decide you
have a different mission, opposite of
Moshenu's mission, they left that
identity. They can't was now. This was
not anymore the plan, the vision of
Mosha. They had a new plan, a new dream.
Mosha's
was ali
their had a completely completely
different agenda.
So now now we bring it back to us
[sighs]
and say how do you know when you trust
yourself?
How do you know when you can trust
yourself?
And here we see both sides in the story.
Hashem wants people to trust themselves
very deeply.
You're divine.
But the moment you're feeling like a
grasshopper, [snorts] the moment you're
projecting that into other people's
minds, you think I'm a grasshopper. The
moment what I'm feeling inside my bones
is, I can't. This is impossible. There's
no way I can do this. There's no way.
It's impossible.
There is this spear. We're going to die.
Our children are going to die. We're
going to be defeated. We're going to be
destroyed. That's the moment I know that
other voices, more external voices are
taking over. So here's the deal in life
practically. How do you know when you
have an inner knowing and you say, you
know what, I can trust this. I can go
with this. And [snorts] the answer is
first let's see how you know not to
trust. If what's being communicated is
something with a lot of fear. There's a
lot of fear.
There's a lot of anxiety. There's a lot
of urgency. There's anger. there's
negativity. There's the need to control.
Then usually these are voices that are
coming from survival templates, defense
mechanisms, coping mechanisms that we
developed over life in order to be able
to survive in a very very dark world. I
need to control you. I need this
outcome.
If you are feeling the voice of your
divine soul, this is what you're going
to feel. calmness,
regulation,
openheartedness,
love,
a certain amount of joy, bliss, and
connection.
It says in we say it every day.
In Hashem's space, there's confidence
and there's joy.
I may have a certain vision for my
family. I may disagree with my wife
about something. I may disagree with my
husband. I may feel something strongly
about my children, about my work, about
a certain relationship going onward,
about certain decisions I need to make
in my life. Sometimes I just want other
people to decide. You tell me. I go to
experts. Some people their whole life
they're going to experts,
but sometimes God says, I hate to break
this to you, you're going to be the
expert.
You're going to be the expert. This is
you. You have this.
I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING. I DON'T KNOW
ANYTHING. I'M A GRASSHOPPER. OKAY, SO we
got to work on this. The moment I'm
feeling disregulated, there's like an
urgency. I have to get it done right
now. I have to get it. I feel like I
have to manipulate. I have to exploit.
There's a transactional relationship.
How do I get it my way? This is usually
coming from a defensive place. This is
coming from a posture that is insecure.
It's not coming from a part of me that
is literally in flow with Hashem.
Because when I'm in flow with Hashem, I
don't have to be defensive. I don't have
to get angry. Why am I getting angry?
You're not threatening me. If my wife's
different opinion or my husband's
different opinion is threatening me, I'm
in a place of ego or insecurity. This is
so important.
Somebody could tell me something and I
feel differently, but I don't have to be
angry at you. I'm in flow. If I am angry
at you, if you're triggering me, that's
because you're triggering a wound.
If I was in divine flow, you're not
triggering me. I could say, you know, I
see it very, very differently. And with
a very open heart and a very loving
space, I said, "This is what I really
feel I need to do and should be done."
And I trust God. And if I really made a
mistake, I know I did what I could with
my heart and I could fix to the best of
my ability. There's a calmness the
moment IT'S URGENT RIGHT NOW. RIGHT NOW.
AND YOUR nervous system knows that
you're anxious. Don't call this divine
flow. This is not flow. This is we have
animal consciousness, a nepha bahamas
like it says in Tanya that learns to
survive and develops modalities and
templates and coping mechanisms that
allow it to navigate a world. And I have
to be able to say that's where I am. I'm
anxious. I'm overwhelmed. I'm a
grasshopper. You feel like a grass. What
does it mean? You feel like a
grasshopper. What does that mean? It's a
very visual say of I feel like no
control. I feel so small. I feel
defeated. I can't do this. So now I'm
coming from a place of despair, of
helplessness. That's not a place of
divinity. It's not a place of flow. This
doesn't mean it's not a crisis. It may
be a crisis. And if it's a crisis, I may
not not be in the mode where I can even
look at myself, where I can even make
any decision. And we have to respect
that. And if I make then decisions, I
can't blame and God because what you
want to trust is your truth, your
authenticity. Those of you who have done
inner work know that when the blockages
are removed. There's a self that comes
out that is very holy. It's very sacred.
And there's deep regulation and calmness
there. There's no agenda. You don't have
to get angry at anybody. And you're not
overwhelmed. You're present. And there's
a lot of trust. Because when you're in
flow with the source, you know that
ultimately everything is source. Anoid
moade. There's trust. And when there's
trust, I could trust also the trust
inside of myself. But when I'm starting
to what are you going to say and what
are you going to say? I'm busy with how
people are going to think of Y why
Jacobson what's this one going to say
and how this and oh whoa whoa whoa whoa
this is not inner knowing [laughter]
this is simply simply terrible pressure
that we live with this is not this is
not you now I have to say you know what
I'm very I'm I'm in a difficult place
now it's
so when Hashem tells trust yourself it's
not WE DON'T GET ADVICE ANYMORE if
there's an arrogance In this you lost
the plot. Anybody who walks around I
used to ask people advice but now I
don't ask anybody like the guy who told
his wife I never made a mistake in my
life. He tells his wife. You find that
funny right? His wife didn't find it
funny. SO SHE SAYS NEVER. HE SAYS YEAH
ONCE I MADE A MISTAKE. What was it?
She's excited. He says well once I MADE
A MISTAKE. WHAT WAS IT? And he says I
thought I made a mistake.
You get it?
I have an inner knowing and therefore
everybody around me is miserable. Well,
I told you somebody sent me a clip
before pes he says the meaning in our
family is that it's not a mitzvah to be
anxious on pes but it's a mitzvah to
make the people around you anxious right
if I'm walk if I'm walking he says
that's the meaning in our family some
people have a minute to themselves and
some people make sure everybody around
them is to remind them that it's if this
comes across and therefore what other
people think I don't care I have the
inner knowing becomes an arrogant
expression of insecurity this is not
inner knowing. That's why you have to
look is this inner knowing bringing the
people who are closest to you closer to
you or further than you. When suddenly
you're a hero to the world but a villain
to your own children, you have to ask
yourself what's happening. If you become
an enlightened spirit to the whole world
but to your own spouse who's a good
person, there's suffering, there's
there's this there's pain, what's
happening? These are important litmus
tests. When there's an element of
superiority or judgmentalism, that's not
when I'm a grasshopper or I'm seeing
what other people are thinking about me
or my conclusion is there's distress,
this urgency, this anxiety, this lack of
trust and calmness and joy and bliss
then
and this is a very very sensitive
duality in every single person and we
fluctuate we vacasillate.
Now it's important to understand that is
why the terrorist says Hashem told
Mosher Rabenu to do this. When Mosha
said he's doing this as a betrayal of
God
the greatest vote of confidence that God
can give you is to tell you you do it.
THAT IS MY COMMANDMENT to you
is not abandoning God. HE'S NOT LIKE OH
MY GOD I'M STAYING OUT OF THIS. THAT'S
WHAT HE SHOULD SAY AND INSTEAD HE DOES
THE OPPOSITE. that he rebelss.
This itself was a mitzvah. Belief in
yourself is a mitzvah. IT'S A VERY VERY
POWERFUL MITZVAH, BUT IT'S A divine
mitzvah. It's not a mitzvah of
arrogance. It's not a mitzvah of
promiscuity. It's not a mitzvah of of
dis disregulation.
You also see if you go to the of parl
Yeshua 40 years later sends two spies to
before the Jews enter the land. And
everybody wonders, Yahushua, you saw
what happened. you saw the disaster. Why
are you REPEATING IT AGAIN? DON'T DO
THIS. NOW, IT HAPPENS TO BE IT WORKS OUT
WITH those two spies. It works out
doesn't say who it was say it was and
they met. We did once a whole class with
the very fascinating with the rope and
the window and the cord and the flax.
But the question is why you going into
this place Yeshua? YOU KNOW WHAT
HAPPENED? YOU CAME BACK UNSCATHED. THE
OTHER 10 SPIES
created a disaster.
[snorts]
But the truth is he understood that
after 40 years the refinement process
was profound enough that now he could
trust the spies. So he didn't learn from
the story to say we're NEVER DOING THIS
AGAIN. EVERYBODY WILL JUST BE A ROBOT. I
don't do anything on my own. He learned
[snorts] from the mistake of what
happened and he gave them the right
instructions to be able to do it. So
make sure that your leaita is based on
your divine connection, not on an ego,
not on an insecurity, not on a lack of
regulation. Now here, it's a fascinating
thing because when does Hashem tell this
to Moshe? Right before they're ready to
go into the land of Israel. Because here
life is going to change in the desert.
In many ways, they were in the bosom of
God. They were protected. Now they're
going into a land. They're going to live
with nature. There's going to be rain
and agriculture and an army. So the
preparation for that is if you want to
go into that space you have to be able
to trust yourself. And now here we see
also something very very fascinating and
that is
the keeps on saying
it explicitly doesn't tell us that it
was Mosha's own idea. It seems like it
was Hashem's idea, but now we can
appreciate it because what Hashem is
really communicating to us here is that
the mitzvah to be able to go into
yourself is as powerful as the mitzvah
to be able to surrender. They're both
mitzvah. Even though one has a very very
different format, one has a very very
different layout. And as they're about
to go into, they need to learn about
this. They need to learn about this. But
they need to learn that there's of
Hashem there of there's a very big
difference. The moment my independence
takes me to a space where I can't go
into it's over. I'm done. My life is
dead. I'm going to die. Everything is
worthless. Everything is hopeless. Now
there are other voices of darkness that
are taking over. You don't have to trust
every single voice. Life is about
distinguishing. That's what inner
knowing is. I could look into my heart
and say, "You know what? I am now
overwhelmed. Yeah, I am very
disregulated. I am anxious. I am angry.
I would like to punch somebody in the
nose. I would like to break windows. I
would like to yell and scream. I am
losing it." And at that moment, I'll
say, "Don't decide to send anybody."
Now, okay, listen. Ice coffee. Okay.
Salt bath, massage, stretch, take a
walk, or the best advice is go to sleep.
Gay schluff, just go to sleep. Okay,
this is not a time for the dka because
you preffrontal cortex is offline. You
are in your amygdala. You are in your
limbic brain, which is fine. You need
sleep. It's fine.
I have to be able to distinguish those
voices. Can I feel
inside of me? The Gomorrah says in Mosha
says to the Jewish people,
what does Hashem ask of you only to fear
him? So the Gmorrah says really only.
SO SAYS IT'S A small thing asks the
Tanya chapter 42 for Mosh. He's talking
to the Jews says everybody has a little
Mosha inside of them.
Inner knowing is always the little Mosha
inside of you. open up and say, "Is it
Mosha Rabenu inside of me? How do I
know?" The answer is Mosha is the
humblest person in the world. There's no
ego, no defensiveness,
no anger, no anxiety. He's an evashem.
He's a servant. There's a clarity there.
That's the mosha inside of you. Then
trust yourself. A lot of good things
will come out when people trust
themselves. A lot of good things. Don't
be afraid. I can have all other moments.
I'm terrified. It's giants. I'm a
grasshopper. And then I need to be
careful. I need to be able to see where
my thoughts and words and behaviors will
go so they remain aligned with.
In many ways, this is such a powerful
message for our generation before we go
in to the final destination, the final
gula. Because what you see, what you see
today is literally the struggle for so
many.
We live in a time where Hashem says, "I
want you should stop calling me Bali.
Start calling me ishi." That means
there's a prophet inside of you. And
Moshe says, "I want everybody to be
prophets." And that's how you know it's
Mosha inside of you talking. If it's
Mosha inside of me talking, I want
everybody to be a prophet. I don't need
to be the sole prophet. I need to be the
prophet for prophet business. I don't
need to be the if it's Misha talking, of
course you're a prophet and you're so
happy when other people are prophets.
You know why? Because you could really
connect. It's fun. The divine in you and
the divine in me merge into oneness.
When I'm going to be the prophet and
nobody else is going to be a prophet,
it's fine. It's just called human ego,
human insecurity. So the inner moa
says it's inside of you. That's really
there's a prophet inside of you. That
prophet knows exactly what God wants
from you at this moment because you are
a channel. You are the channel. Do I
have other stuff? Of course I have other
stuff in me. They both exist. That
ability to be able to say
when Mosha heard it, he cherished that
gift. It's a gift to cherish. And it's
also important to cherish the knowledge
that if that gift is abused or taken
advantage of, if it becomes overtaken by
my skeletons and my ego, my fear and my
insecurity, that same gift can be
abused, exploited in negative ways. This
is not a call for an independence that
causes people to destroy lives in the
name of blissful independence. It's not
blissful and it's not independence. It's
just skeletons coming out in very very
interesting enlightened ways quote
unquote. Rather, it's the ability to be
able to humbly feel the prophet, the
energy of God flowing through you and
radiate radi radiating that to yourself
and the world. Have a beautiful week.
Thank you.
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