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Rabbi Akiva Tatz- Free Will at the Project Inspire Convention 2019
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
So, this is a complicated subject and a
very challenging
both intellectually and
also philosophically.
So, let me try to explain the the issue,
the problem
and see if we can
get it right together.
That's good to say, isn't
Is that okay? Do you mind?
It's fine.
Okay, so let me Sorry. No, I'm back here
again. No, the just the noise was
bothering me. Thank you. Um
So, the subject the problem is like
this. Do you have energy for something a
little challenging? Sure.
That's why we're here. Yeah.
All right, so let's see if we can do
that. The The problem is Let me state
the problem and then we'll take a tour
through
the issues that that that examine this
issue.
The problem is that we discussed free
will a couple of days ago.
My free will means I can do things
completely unconstrained
within the parameters of within the
borderline the the borders of where free
will operates, but I can do things and I
can certainly do things that I think
myself.
So, if I do something dangerous and get
hurt, that's natural. Right? A person
could even kill himself. I mean, you
could
If you if you if you do things that
benefit you, then you'll have a benefit.
If you do things that harm you, you'll
be harmed. I have no problem with that.
The problem is how can I harm you? How
can I use my free will to affect you
in a way that you don't deserve?
This is the clash between behirah and
hashgacha, meaning
Like I can I No, I don't don't
You can ask questions, but just give me
a few seconds to
If I use my free will, let's say, to
hurt someone
and that person does not deserve to be
hurt. That person has hashgacha. God is
Hashem certainly taking care of you.
He's doing you giving you what you need,
right? He's certainly not going to let
you come to any harm that's
inappropriate.
No?
That's hashgacha. Hashgacha means divine
providence. He's taking care of you.
If If you not If you If he doesn't want
to intend it, it's not decreed, so to
speak, that you'll be harmed, then
surely you cannot be harmed. And if it's
decreed that you will be harmed, then
nothing you can do to get out of it.
Right?
I'm not talking about chuva, I'm talking
about in the para-
So, how can I
Let's make it brutally clear. Mr. A is
walking down the street, and God does
not intend him to die. God has not
decreed death upon him.
I'm not talking about what Hashem knows.
That's another sub- You think this
subject's difficult? That's tiger
country. Right? And if you want the
reference for this, by the way, I wrote
a book called
Will, Freedom, and Destiny, right? That
is a book about free will, and it has a
detailed section, and you can maybe Can
you hold up a copy?
Here
Here Here Here's the book. This is an
excellent book. You got to buy at least
at least two copies.
And thank you. That's a great book. And
if you don't want to If you don't want
to read the book, you can email me, and
I'll download you the the references,
the chapter, whatever you want. So,
there you'll find the complex background
and details, but I'll try to give you an
overview of the subject. Mr. A is
walking down the street.
You in- Could you close the door,
please?
You interview Hashem. Hashem, how do you
feel about Mr. A? He says, "No, he's
cool, Mr. A. No problem with him."
Hashem, do you decree that he die today?
God says, "No, no decrees."
A- Again, please, I'm not talking about
Hashem's foreknowledge. That's You can't
That's inscrutable, beyond us. I'm
talking about a divine decree, which is
a concept that needs understanding, but
there is such a thing.
God says, "No decree upon this person to
die."
Hashem, how long would you like him to
live for? "Another 25 years. I've got
plans for him."
Okay. And at that point, Mr. B turns the
corner and tries to kill Mr. A.
Now, we're in trouble.
If B cannot kill A because God does not
want it, then you're limiting the free
will of B.
And if you say can kill him, what
happened to Hashem's such gocha? That
was not appropriate for A to die. Do you
see the problem? This is a serious
problem.
It would seem
That's another
That's another amazing problem.
Are you Ashkenazi or Sephardi?
Well, if you're a Sephardi, I would send
you to Rabbi Hillel. And you know, even
as Ashkenazi, you can read it anyway.
Rabbi Hillel has an amazing article
called Yesh Yesh Nisba B'lo Mishpat,
that that people could die without
justice, like a mistake that you're
talking about. An amazing amazing
article.
And if you read my book, you'll find it
quoted. And if you email me, I'll
download it to you.
But just hold the questions.
Okay. It's going to be a long day. It's
going to be a long day.
It's not your phone?
It's what?
It's what? I stepped That was my phone.
Yeah, could you just stand on it? Put
your heel on it and crush it.
Let's try again.
We need all the help we can get, right?
So let's let's switch your phone off.
It would seem that there are only two
ways to handle this problem. Either you
could say
that
if A kills B,
you have to say, it would seem, that B
must have been decreed to die that day.
That's one way to handle it, right? He
must have been decreed. The only
interpretation, as walking on the
street, B kills him, the interpretation
must be that B was meant to die. A A As
one B kills him, A was meant to die.
Right? Which means that B used his free
will, but he never perpetrated anything
in the world that wasn't going to happen
anyway.
He killed him, but he was going to die
anyway. He can turn around to his widow
and say, "Lady, your husband wasn't
coming home anyway. What do you want
What do you got to do with me?"
That's a little strange. That means you
never affect a change in the world that
wasn't going to happen otherwise.
Right? The other The other The
alternative is, of course, you hold him
accountable for pulling the trigger. No
one No one denying that. One second. One
second. He's going to go to court for
this. He's going to pay. In a society
where he's a death sentence, he's going
to get a death sentence. There's no
question about that. But ultimately, the
person would have died.
You're guilty for your free will
action in the world, but you never make
a difference to what happens in the
world. That's one way to handle it.
The other way to handle it is to say
that he wasn't going to die, and this
person used his free will and killed
him.
That's very distressing.
Agreed?
So, whichever way you go, you're in
trouble. Either you say that you never
really make a change in the world,
that's very difficult to hear.
Or you say,
you know,
I see blank faces. When you pull out of
here today, you get in your car, you and
some idiot backs into you and makes a
big dent in your car.
You get out and you start yelling and
screaming. Well, you're you're Project
Inspire from Jews, you'd get out and say
good morning.
You say to the person,
You say to the person, "Look what you've
done to my car."
The guy says to you, "You're You're a
religious Jew, aren't you?" You say,
"Yes." He said, "Well, you must believe
you had it coming."
What do you want from me? No.
The world doesn't look that way to us.
That's one way to handle it. But, that
way That way I'm not talking about that.
When a person is the agent of someone
else's harm without free will, we use
that principle. I'm driving down the
street, someone runs in front of me, you
know, no way I could have stopped. No
way, completely exempt, completely
exonerated, right? Why was I chosen to
be the agent of that person's
misfortune?
Okay, I'm talking about when you
deliberately do something.
First of all, before we move on, do we
see the problem? Otherwise, we're going
to get nowhere.
So, we have a problem of the clash
between and
How can I You you worked in late, right?
How can I use my free will to harm
someone else or help them if it's not
decreed on that individual?
Okay.
So, that With that question in mind,
let's take a trip through this amazing
area.
I'm warning you, it's a distressing
subject. You're probably not going to
enjoy this.
And not only that, most people who've
thought about it, I think think about it
wrong. Most religious people think that
indeed you cannot affect someone else,
and I think that's wrong.
So, let me try to to prove that.
Let's Let's Let's back up a couple
hundred years to the time of the Pesach
Turah. The Pesach Turah was one of the
great later commentaries on the code of
Jewish law. It was a marvelous
commentary with many fascinating things.
And here's what he says. He was sent a
question by a Jew
who found himself in a very interesting
situation. This man was a serious Talmud
Chacham, one of the great I don't know
what his name was, but one of the very
competent rabbinic figures of his
generation.
And he found himself at a commercial
exposition somewhere, I think it was in
Leipzig.
At the time where people come to buy and
sell.
And in that place, there was a procedure
that when there was financial litigation
between any two Jews, they would
constitute a Bet Din, right? They would
make a Bet Din. Three people co-opted
onto the Bet Din as we do. They would
hear the case, and then they would make
a decision. In fact, even the non-Jews
they used to subject themselves to the
same form of arbitration. And on this
occasion, this rabbi was there, whatever
business he had to do, and two Jews had
some problem. So, the local people
co-opted a Bet Din. They put two people
on the Bet Din, and to the third one,
obviously they chose him. He was a a
known rabbinic figure.
And and they put him onto the Bet Din.
And here's what he says. He says, "I
found myself sitting there with two
other individuals that they had chosen
from the community, and the case began
to be heard, and it became immediately
apparent to me that the other two judges
were lying.
Completely. They had no intention of
voting for the truth. They were partial
to one of the individuals.
Clearly, they were going to vote in the
wrong direction. Money What Money would
change hands in the wrong direction, and
I'll be to a miscarriage of justice."
In a Bet Din, a minority opinion, right,
is not even allowed to disclose that he
was the minority. If the three of us are
on a Bet Din, and we judge his case, and
you outvote me, I'm forbidden to go to
him afterwards and say, "You know, I was
on your side, but they outvoted me." Not
allowed to do that. Not even allowed to
do Not like in America when the court
makes a thing, there's a learned
dissenting opinion, and the judge writes
why they are wrong.
In Jewish law, not allowed to do that.
Why? Because a Bet Din is a unitary
body, and any decision of the base in is
a fiat that comes down from the from the
the majority constitutes a totality and
you're absorbed in the majority. You've
got no opinion at that that point. Is
this clear?
So, what do I do? I sit there They got
Can you close the door, please, ladies?
Thank you.
I am going to be outvoted by these two
liars. I'm going to be carried along in
a miscarriage of justice. There's
nothing I can do.
So, he thought to himself, there's one
thing I can do. I can say I don't know.
I can say I don't know. Voting against
them is not going to help. They're going
to outvote me. But if a judge says I
don't know in base in, the case is
closed. You He's recused from the case.
You start again. You call up another
judge. The The case at this point is
closed. Why? Cuz in Jewish law, you can
never have an even number of judges in a
base in.
Right? There's always to be an odd
number of Why American jury has 12
people, I've never figured out. But
anyway, you need an odd number of people
so you can never have a hung decision.
And if one judge says I don't know, the
case is closed. So, he said, I can say I
don't know. But the problem was to say I
don't know, he would have had to lie.
Cuz he did know.
So, so, so, so his question to himself
was like this. Is it better to say the
truth, vote for the truth, be outvoted
and become party to a lie, or is it
better to say a lie to achieve the
truth?
What amazing question.
One second, you have to enjoy the You
have to You have to enjoy the questions,
that's what I
Do the end justify the means in Yiddish
law?
No.
You know, it's such a pleasure to speak
to Americans. They've all got opinions.
You know?
I live in England now. You speak to
them, you don't know if they're alive or
dead.
You know?
In Israel, they throw things at you
before you begin, you know? But
Anyway, we can't all be South African.
If he recuses himself Yes. It's a lie.
It's a lie. It's a lie. I say I don't
know. That's what you have to say. The
Dedeen is the Dinus to say in any of the
I don't know. If he says I don't know,
but he'd he'd be lying. He didn't know.
He knew where the money should go.
So the question is it's a fantastic
moral question. Does Judaism
Can he dig down to the place where he
doesn't know?
Like really, really
are you are you are you a Yeah, yes,
yes, yes.
Are you a therapist?
No, it's from the Itchkus.
Woo! Let me Let me say this. If you dig
down deep enough, you get to the
absolute truth.
There's no There's no There's no not
knowing there. If you get into your
dice, you know everything.
Anyway, this is your It's a It's a very
creative audience. Now,
listen. I'm I'm a Lithuanian, yeah. Are
you allowed to lie when when you're
doing it for the right purpose? That's
exactly my question. So stay with me.
Just give me a chance. Give me a moment.
Give me a moment.
Do you say a lie to achieve the truth or
do you say the truth and have a lie?
What is the truth in Halakha? Is it the
naked legalistic meaning of the words or
is it contextual?
You're sitting at home, the phone rings.
Your wife picks it up. From her tone of
voice, you realize this is someone you
don't want to speak to. So this is this
is this is this is what you do.
I'm not in the room.
I'm not home.
And your wife says, "I'm sorry, he's
out."
Is that a lie or the truth? You're
outside the door.
What would you say?
Is it truth or a lie?
A white lie. So our authorities that
speak about this say that's false. The
meaning of the question is not which
side of the door is your husband
standing on. That's not the meaning of
the question. And you can't you can't
get away with it. Right? That's not the
case. You're running for the bus and
someone says, "Have you got a pen?" And
you say, "No." And you have one in your
pocket. That's okay.
The meaning of the question is do own a
pen? That's not the meaning of Is this
clear?
And therefore,
what do you say in the situation? Am I
supposed to say the correct answer and
yield a false legal result? Or should I
say
Should I say the a false answer
and have a greater good? So he thought
to himself, "How can I solve this
problem?" And then he thought, "I have a
precedent. I have a precedent. The
Gamorah talks about such a thing."
The Gamorah says, "What happens if the
Sanhedrin is voting?"
The Sanhedrin is voting, right? With the
great Sanhedrin, 23 judges or 71 judges,
and let's say it's a capital case.
Someone this this person's on trial for
his life and the best thing. Now, let's
assume that you are all members of the
great Sanhedrin in Jerusalem. I'm sure
you're all fully capable.
Black belts.
And we're about to judge. Now, you know,
they sat in a semicircle so they could
all see each other, and they voted from
junior to senior, right? They would vote
from junior to senior. That's how the
order of the voting would go. What the
reason for that would be?
So that a junior should not be
intimidated by a small senior opinion,
and that's how they'd vote. Now, they
would vote and count the number to see
if there's a majority. The Torah has
some extremely peculiar laws when it
comes to capital judgment, unlike all
other due process. And that is that
to to convict someone of a capital
crime. Today, we can't do it at all,
but but even in days when it could be
done, to convict someone of a capital
crime in Judaism is almost impossible.
Almost impossible. There are procedural
issues that are so demanding that
they're virtually impossible to fulfill.
For example, a majority is good enough
to acquit, but a majority is not good
enough to convict. You need more than a
simple majority. You need a majority of
at least two. They are also The
witnesses get cross-examined in a way
that's almost impossible to fulfill. By
the way, for homework,
when you go home, I hope it keeps you up
all night tonight.
Why does the Torah have so many death
sentences and make it almost impossible
to apply?
The Torah death sentences for breaking
Shabbos and death sentences for all kind
of things. Death sentences, stoning,
beheading, strangling, burning, and make
the same Torah makes it virtually
impossible. To have Yaakov One Books
spoken about so that's very wonderful
subject. But nevertheless, and here
comes one of the quirks. Listen
carefully.
There's one particular majority
to convict that paradoxically acquits.
There's one particular proportion. You
count up the votes and the one
particular proportion that says he's
guilty that if that proportion occurs,
he's innocent. What is that?
If the 100% of the judges agree he's
guilty, he's freed.
Is that logical?
They all agree guilty, he's freed. The
Rambam says if it's a murder case, he's
not freed, but he's dealt with in
another fashion. But any other death
sentence is completely freed. Why? This
is not our subject directly, but just to
mention,
a reason is this. If the judges all say
that he's guilty, nobody argues in his
favor at all, we suspicious they didn't
examine his case well enough.
First of all, all Jews agreeing,
that's definitely miraculous. I mean,
there's something wrong with that,
right? All Jews agree, that's for sure
wrong.
So, if they all agree that he's guilty,
then he's innocent, right? That's That's
the din. That's the law.
At least one, by the way, there's a
wonderful
dramatic piece that was written about
this. Fantastic. If you teach the
subject in Kiruv, you should definitely
use that. It's a wonderful play, old old
play called 12 Angry Men. It was made
into a movie in 1953 with Henry Fonda.
All black and white movie. You can show
it to people. It's 100% kosher. There's
not a woman in in the whole movie.
You know, it consists of 12 men in a
jury room where a crime was committed
and the jury has heard the evidence. A
young fellow killed his father. There's
no doubt about it at all. They walk into
the courtroom, they all vote guilty
except for one. He says, "I think
there's room for doubt." And they think
he's crazy. As the play evolves, it's
very beautiful dramatic piece. As the
the play develops, he tries to show them
why there may be room for doubt even in
this case. Fantastic piece of drama.
So, I was used to tell the people in the
old days, this is the last DVD you buy
and you show it on your TV and then you
kick the screen out and use it to keep
your Gemaras. But anyway,
that's Kiruv. Um but the point is that
um
if they all judge guilty then he's
innocent, clear? Now watch carefully.
This person's on trial for his life. You
are members of the Sanhedrin and here's
how the voting goes. The Ramam talks
about this. The voting goes like this,
guilty, guilty, death, execute, guilty,
guilty. They all vote guilty until the
last member of the Sanhedrin, the great
10th day in black belt of the
generation, right? The The Muflesha of
the Sanhedrin. He's the genius leader of
the generation. He's the last person to
speak and he knows that the man's
guilty.
Now what does
Now Now what does he say?
If he says guilty, this If he says
guilty, this guilty man walks free.
Should he say not guilty to get a true
conviction?
Or should he say guilty and have a false
acquittal? What should he say? Is the
truth the naked legalistic technical
meaning of the words or is it the
context? If it's the context, he should
say innocent cuz he knows he's guilty.
But it's a lie.
At what point does the base and shamble
I'm asking the questions.
What would you say? Guilty.
The Ramam says he has to say guilty. The
dinner of the day and he says the female
ain't a boy says to judge according to
what his eyes see. Guilty, guilty, walks
free, that's his problem, not ours.
Is this clear? Okay. So he thought to
him that's what the law of is there for
in the Torah. Therefore he said to
himself, oh, so I'm sitting on this base
and with these two individuals, they're
both lying.
I should say the truth.
And he wrote that to Piskei Teshuvos.
Look, it says that in the Ramam and he
brings down this halacha from the
Gemara. If they all the judges, the last
person has to say the truth even though
a clear falsehood results.
And therefore that's what I have to do.
Piskei Teshuvos says wrong.
That's a wrong precedent. You're making
a wrong comparison. That case of the
Sanhedrin is exactly not like your case.
Now let's think about it.
Isn't learning Torah amazing?
Huh? What would you be doing on a Sunday
morning? Playing golf? What would you be
doing up here? Huh?
Golf is playing an inning.
Let's go back to our subject.
Can you ever affect anyone in a way that
wouldn't happen otherwise, right? That's
the famous question of the Ra'av Haiim.
Could you do something to someone that's
not decreed? I'm not talking about go
going against the divine decree. I'm not
talking about going against Hashem's
knowledge. I'm talking about the
specific situation in which Hashem has
not made the decree on someone
and you try to kill him. That's That's
the particular context.
So, it seems again that there are two
ways. Let's go through it again. There
are two ways to handle this question.
Either you cannot do it because you
can't affect anyone else's hashgacha.
You can pull the trigger and you'll be
accountable, but he was going to die
anyway.
The other option is that you could
actually kill a person, go so far as to
kill someone who was not decreed to die.
Is that fair on them? No, but that's
free will. That's what free will means.
Most people in the religious world, if
you talk to them, they think clearly
it's the former. Definitely, you can't
do something to somebody who was not
meant to happen to him. Definitely. Why
are you guilty? Cuz you took action and
you used your free will, but the result
would have happened. And I think that's
wrong.
I think that's wrong. And I'd like to
share with you some sources for this. In
fact, the truth is I can tell you a long
list of sources that say you can affect
someone when it's not their due
their due dispensation and I don't know
a single source that says the opposite.
People will try and tell tell you
sources, but I don't think it's correct.
And what I'm telling you is the way Rav
Moshe Shapiro used to present the
subject. Rav Gurwitz also, they both
used the same the same words. They said
"Ze pashut kakh." This is clearly the
way that it is and I don't know any any
sources to the contrary. And if you read
my book, you'll find 20 different
sources. The Ra'av Haiim is wonderful on
this.
And there there are many other classes,
but let me try to present you a few
proofs
for the very distressing notion
that you could do something to someone
that was not destined to not not not not
decreed upon them.
First proof.
This is a classic. I actually heard it
originally from Rav Yaakov Weinberg.
I when I was living in Israel, his son
used to live
close to where I was and one Shabbos
afternoon I took a walk with him
and I asked him this question and here's
how I put it.
We say by Yoman David Al Gad, David said
to God, "Niphlah na b'yad Hashem, let us
fall into Hashem's hand ki rabim
rachamav cuz he's very merciful. Uv'yad
Adam aleh phola, let me not fall into
human hand." Ooh, that's very telling.
Here's what happened. Hashem came to
David and said to him, "David, you have
sinned. You need suffering.
You need suffering. Now, I'm giving you
a choice. What kind of suffering would
you like? Would you like a war where the
enemy Philistines attack and you'll have
to deal with a war? Would you like a
disease epidemic among your people where
many people get ill? It's up to you."
David said, "Hashem, I'll take the
disease cuz that comes from you and you
are merciful. And I know that everything
that comes from you will be exactly what
I deserve and what we deserve. But
there's no trusting a Philistine
soldier. They could do more than I
deserve."
That's a very powerful proof. If you
believe that every bullet has your name
on, every Philistine sword has your
name, flip a coin. Hashem, it's up to
you. What is the difference? I'm only
going to get what I deserve. Uh-uh, he
didn't say that. He said, "I'll take the
disease cuz that comes from you. But war
involves human beings, not animals, not
bacteria. And human beings have free
will and therefore ki rabim rachamav,
your dealing with me is merciful and
I'll get a merciful deal from you cuz
you judge that appropriate for me. But a
human may give me a non-merci I may get
worse pain from a human even though this
is a decree from Hashem. It's going to
be worse one way than the other."
That's a very powerful proof.
In fact, I don't see how you can
interpret that any other way.
But isn't there a distinction between
means and ends on that? I'm talking
about the means.
I'm talking about the means. You be the
dispenser.
I'm talking about that. I'm afraid that
by man by man's hand it'll be dispensed
in an improper fashion. That's right,
worse.
Not worse. He said worse. Rabim
rachamav, from you there'll be rachamim,
from them there may be no rachamim."
I'll get a kind from you and cruel from
them. You have to know the difference.
I don't
see a difference.
Let me say it again, you okay? This is
incontrovertible.
David said, "Hashem, I'll see a disease
cuz it comes from you. That will be with
rachamim, rabbim rachamim, but not a
human being, there will not be rachamim.
So, the pain will be less from you,
there'll be rachamim with it. From the
human being, it may less more more pain,
less rachamim."
Do you hear what I'm saying? I I hear
what you're Give me a logical A disease
comes, it hits him, it gives him a 102
temperature, 105 temperature.
No. Man comes and and he smacks him with
a a punch or a a sword a hot sword.
Yeah. The temperature is 104°. The
results of that temperature is 104°.
So, it's worse.
So, it's worse from man. It'll be 102
but isn't that what he's answering?
Yes, he's I'm I'm bringing you a proof
that from Hashem is not as bad as from
people.
Why should the decree change by the
means? Well, it's the same difference
between when you say when misha's best
than misha's misha's misha's misha's
Maybe. Yeah, but misha's best than you
can't do chuvah.
Indeed. Maybe. Misha's misha's misha's
you can, so it's not the same.
Maybe. Maybe. Thanks for giving me a
proof.
I'm glad you're on my side.
So, it that that's a very elegant and
succinct proof. But let me tell you the
classic. The classic is the Orach Chaim.
This is said not only by People think
it's Orach Chaim. The Alshich says the
same thing. The Malbim says the same
thing. The Netziv says the same thing.
So, it's a very very broadly accepted
idea. But
in fact, the Zohar says it.
Unusually, the Orach Chaim doesn't quote
the Zohar.
But it's a clear Zohar.
And here's what happened. And if you
don't know this, you don't know the
subject. This is the professional, so to
speak, core of the of the issue.
When Yosef approached his brothers, they
decided to kill him.
You know the story.
They said, "Hinei ba'al hachalomos zeh,
this dreamer of dreams approaches. Let's
kill him v'nireh and see may Yemach
shemo let's see what becomes of his
dreams.
That's what they said. The Achime
explains, they weren't being childishly
sarcastic. Let's see what becomes of his
dreams. This is what they meant.
Yosef had dreams that we would bow down
to him. That's completely illegal and
illicit. He's a He's a He's a He's a
imposter.
And he deserves to die. How brothers
could make a bet in on a brother? There
are many questions here. But he's a
rodef. He's an aggressor on us, and
therefore in the future history of the
Jewish people in the world, he has to
die. So they made a bet in and they said
he's going to die. Then they said to
each other,
can we be sure
that our judgment is correct? We're
humans.
We may have been making a mistake.
And then they said to each other, of
course we can be sure. Cuz if he dies,
it will be immediately apparent that his
dreams were false.
Here's Joseph, he's born Joseph. 17
years old, he has dreams that we'll bow
down to him in the future. Well, if we
kill him now, there ain't going to be a
future in which we'll bow down to him.
So his dreams are false.
Not only will justice be done, it'll be
seen to be done.
Is this clear? He predicted that
there'll be a time when we bow down to
him. And if he's a prophet and they're
prophetic dreams, they must come true.
But let's kill him, and then we'll see
immediately that his dreams are false.
And I ain't going to bow down to him
ever.
So we rest assured that what if we do,
we kill him. If he does,
then Reuben stepped forward and said,
"Gentlemen, you're making a serious
askafic mistake.
Human free will is so important
that if you decide to kill him, even
though he had correct prophetic dreams,
and even though he's right, Hashem will
let you kill him anyway.
Against all divine
decrees. Why? Because free will,
Hashem's going to say hands off. I
created the world for this. I'm not
interfering with free will. And he will
die, and you'll think you're right, and
you'll be wrong. Cuz that's the power of
free will.
So they said, "Well, what should we do?"
Reuben said, "Don't touch him. Throw him
in this pit full of snakes and
scorpions, cuz no self-respecting
scorpion
is going to touch you unless it's
decreed, cuz he's an animal, he's got no
free will. Don't touch him with your
human hands. So they throw him in the
pit. The moral says the pit was not full
of snakes and scorpions cuz then you'd
be guilty. The missioner says if you
take a person and throw him onto a pile
of snakes and scorpions and he gets
killed, you killed him.
There's a fascinating discussion in the
Gamoran Sanhedrin.
The Yad Rama goes into how proximate
does your act have to be before it's
considered not your act. If you hold
someone's head underwater and say I
didn't kill him but it was just a lack
of oxygen.
You're guilty.
So there's a discussion and the
missioner says if you throw someone to
snakes and scorpions, you could kill
him. But there were enough snakes and
scorpions to be a dangerous place.
And therefore, let's see if they kill
him. If they kill him, then it's from
Hashem because then they all act under
orders. But if we kill him, then all
bets are off. And that's what they did.
That's what they did.
By the way, the missioner says they set
their dogs on him first cuz dogs have
got no free will and they didn't kill
him. So then they threw him in the pit.
This is Orach Chaim. The Zohar says the
whole story in great The way the Zohar
puts it is it says, listen to this. The
Zohar says you need a more miraculous
intervention to be safe from humans than
from animals. More s'chus because to be
safe from a human, you could be safe
from a human but that's called
miraculous. To save from an animal is a
small miracle.
Because human free will is so important
in the world that
Hashem deals with it differently. This
is the classic source. It's the Orach
Chaim.
It is in fact the Zohar and in fact
nobody says Orach Chaim's wrong. Nobody.
From the days of Orach Chaim to today,
nobody has argued with Orach Chaim.
Nobody says he's talking nonsense. It's
wrong. How can he say such things?
Right?
That is the proof. The truth is Can you
just clarify this? You said the snakes
and scorpions weren't in the pit.
Snakes and scorpions would You said they
weren't in the pit. They weren't by the
side. Sure. It wasn't full. If the pit
was full of snakes and scorpions, there
were enough to be dangerous.
You can't throw a person onto a pit of
snakes and scorpions and say you didn't
kill him. Animal
So
that's the proof. And there are so many.
Once you start seeing this, you see it
everywhere. Everywhere. One example.
One example.
When the Egyptians tortured the Jewish
people, the Rambam and the Ramban both
ask
all commentaries ask, why were they
punished for doing something that was
predicted?
Why did the Egyptians get punished for
something that Hashem predicted would
happen?
They should
They should be rewarded.
Not only not only is was the thing that
Hashem knew, that's one problem. The
Rambam has two problems. One is when
Hashem knows in advance something will
happen, how can there be any free will
at all? That's a classic problem. Read
my book, you'll see it. But here, one
second, one second.
How can if Hashem knows something in
advance, how can you have free will?
But this is Rambam says that the worst
problem. If Hashem knows something in
advance and announces it in the world as
a prophecy, then for sure it can't
change. Hashem says to Abraham, "You'll
be enslaved in a strange land and you'll
be" Hashem announces that as a prophecy.
The Egyptians walk in, fulfill the
prophecy, and then you punish them?
Hashem, reward us. We fulfilled your
prophecy.
This is this is a
That's not what they No one gives that
No one gives that answer. No one gives
that answer. No one gives that answer.
But doesn't it make sense? The Rambam
The Rambam does not agree with you,
neither does the Ramban. So, stay with
me.
Stay with me. The Rambam has a version
of your answer. Just just one second.
This is the classic problem. And there
are many answers to this. Just to
satisfy you, otherwise you won't you
won't sleep tonight.
Just one second, one second. Yes, yes,
indeed, indeed. What you learned in base
Jacob?
So, here here's an answer to your
question. The Rambam says, there was no
decree on any individual Egyptian.
The decree was on the Egyptians, not on
Ahmed and Mahmoud and and therefore when
he hurt a Jew, Hashem said, "Why you?"
Okay.
But nevertheless, there are many
answers, but listen to this. Listen to
the Ramban.
There are many answers, but listen to
his answer.
The Egyptians were not punished for
enslaving the Jewish people, not
enslaved, not punished at all cuz it was
decreed. They were only punished for
doing worse than was decreed.
They didn't have to torture them and
kill their children.
And so since they and they were only
punished for doing the worse than they
were decreed. Oh, so you can do worse to
people than is decreed on them.
It's clear.
When the Egyptians enslaved the Jewish
people to the extent that was decreed
and necessary, you can't punish them.
They're doing the decree.
But they hurt them worse.
Ah, so you can hurt people worse than is
decreed. Is this clear?
There are many other answers. One other
answer is they did what was decreed, but
they enjoyed it
and they did it out of a malicious
motivation not to fulfill decrees. So
they get slammed for that as well.
This is not our subject today. There are
many but the answer I'm trying to bring
out is only this. The Egyptians hurt the
Jewish people worse than decreed and he
punished them for the worse. So you see
you can do worse than is decreed. You
can hurt a person more than I shall
would have hurt him.
Okay, once you see this the whole thing
I'll stop for questions.
Once you see it you see it everywhere
and if you read my book you'll see 20
examples. I'll just give you one one
more.
When Daniel Daniel was serving in the
Persian court, right? I think it was
courage was the king or or Daryavush.
Darius the second
who might have been a son or grandson of
Esther.
But when he was king Daniel
was still alive and like many Jews
throughout history he was an advisor to
the government.
Not only was an advisor the king
worshipped him.
He was a prophetic individual. His
friends Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah
survived in the fire.
The king worshipped him.
And as often happens, the other
courtiers in the court told the king
that Daniel was a traitor.
They wanted him killed.
So they told the king that he was
treacherous and the king should kill
him. The king said, "I don't believe
you. I think he's a loyal servant. But
you know what I'll do? I'll put him into
a lion's den.
Famous story.
I'll put Daniel into the lions' den and
see if the lions eat him.
I'll starve the lions till they're
hungry.
I'll put Daniel in the lions' den. If
I'm right and he's righteous the way I
say, he'll survive like his friends
survived in the fire.
That's how holy he is. If you're right
and he's a traitor, he'll be eaten by
the lions.
So, here's what happened. He threw
Daniel into the lions' den. Everyone
knows the story, but they don't know the
next possuk. The next possuk says the
king came and he sealed the mouth of the
lions' den with a big rock.
Why? It says cuz he was concerned that
those who hated him would kill him with
their spears or their or their arrows
and then say the lions killed him.
Oh, you're not afraid of hungry mountain
lions
killing him. You're afraid that the
jealous people might kill him. That you
have to protect him against.
Because humans could kill you even if
you don't deserve it. Listen what's
going on. The king knows that Daniel is
such a such a kodesh that he's going to
survive in a den of hungry lions and
they won't touch him. He's completely
confident. But when a human being tries
to kill him, there'll be no proof at
all. That you have to protect him
against. So, you see that a human could
do us something even to a person who
merits to be protected from
but no self-respecting hungry lion
is going to touch you unless it's
decreed on me cuz he's got no free will.
So, once you start seeing this, you see
it everywhere and there are so many
proofs to this to this to this theme.
And I don't know any that prove the
opposite. And therefore, it is a
distressing subject.
Just one second. Let Let me finish and
then I'll stop for questions.
But it's clear from all our sources
that there's people bringing to mind
here and there's
this from
but actually they're very late sources
and even if they do disagree, it doesn't
change the overwhelming
majority approach to this and I I think
that actually people are
misunderstanding those sources, too. So,
the conclusion we come to is that you
can do something to someone that's not
decreed upon the person. I'm not talking
about where Hashem decrees the opposite.
And Hashem always has to to Let's get
that clear. When the person does
something to someone else, Hashem has to
agree to that. He has to allow it.
Listen to the the way it's the right way
to say this. And if you really read of
Chaim Friedlander's volume, right, he
has a
Chaim Friedlander has um
He has a volume on Hashgacha and
Bechira.
And the way he puts it is like this, and
this is the right way to say it. You can
use your free will to put someone in a
situation of danger
that they wouldn't have been in
otherwise. You put them in the danger.
And in that situation of danger, Hashem
has to have to make the decree do they
deserve to be saved or not. The Zohar
says it takes more miraculous
intervention to save him from a human,
from animals less. So, you can't kill
somebody that Hashem does not want
killed. Let's get that clear.
But you can put a person in a situation
of danger in which Hashem has to open
the books and see whether the person
does it.
Not unlike your own situation of danger
that Mishna says when a woman's in
childbirth, Hashem opens the books and
sees she's in danger. Person's going
through an operation. You walk under a
leaning wall or a dangerous place,
Hashem opens the books and says, "I You
want my protection? Do you deserve it?"
So, here's what we're saying. You can
put a person in a situation of danger
that they wouldn't have been in
otherwise, that Hashem would not have
caused. But now that you've caused the
situation of danger through your free
will, now there'll be an assessment of
whether they deserve to survive or not.
And if they don't deserve it, they could
die, which means you put them in the
situation in which they died, which they
wouldn't have died otherwise.
That's how far it goes.
Yes, what you just He says it.
Listen to what he says. It doesn't get
clearer than this. The Zohar says it
takes more miracle. The Ruach Chaim says
this. He says Vayatzel Listen, this is
beautiful.
He says Reuven Vayatzel omiadam. Reuven
saved Yosef from their hand. Miyadam.
Miyad habechiri. That's what he says. He
didn't save Yosef from his fate or from
the scorpions or from what He saved him
from the hand of human free will.
I would say that he doesn't say that.
No, he doesn't say that. Yeah, he
doesn't say that.
He and many others say that. Many others
have They all say the same thing and
verify it. Yes. What what else is there?
It could be time of judgment. You can
kill him.
Nobody says that. No one says you can
kill a person against the decree of
Hashem. And everybody's clear that
Hashem has to agree has to allow it.
Well, we we don't need to go further
It's bad enough already. We don't have
to go
Does this hold true in monetary
situations as well? Why not? And not
only that, it also helps in mitzvahs.
When you help someone
you could put a person in a situation
cuz you gave them that stock, huh? That
wouldn't necessarily have happened
otherwise. Most people think, "Well, he
had it coming anyway cuz of his
hashgacha. Had it not been you, it would
have been the lottery or his aunt would
have died that he never heard about."
According to this, you could put a sit
Hashem Hashem could stop it and say he
doesn't deserve it.
Right? And therefore
It's always like that. You about when he
went to was sold, he was in the in the
the wagon had the
good smelling food. Yeah, mhm.
The phone
Yeah, fine.
So, this is the subject. Let's take one
one further step.
Is it Is it clear You don't agree with
me? Just to understand what's being said
here.
Okay, let's go one step. Yeah.
As
to clarify that there's a difference
between what a person can
impose on somebody else and then Hashem
will still have to decide that
situation, but
um but the degree of
pain in a way Everything Everything.
Consequences, pain, every detail. Every
detail. And then you have person A and
person A and B and B come around the
corner wanting to shoot him. Yeah.
Where How does that factor into that?
That's the point. He can shoot him, hurt
him, help him, hurt him a little bit,
hurt him a lot. It's like a new din that
our time is like a new din. I want to
shoot him. Yeah, sure. It's like an eye.
If someone Okay, now.
It could be. It could be. It could be
that he was going to lose it anyway. No,
the other person that gets it. Yeah.
What about
He did that anyway. from somebody else.
All of a sudden now he has a million
dollars. Yes. What if I
He got it through an aveira. He's going
to be punished for that.
Of course. Okay, let's let's take one
step further.
Are we saying that you can do anything
to anyone under all circumstances? No.
The bechira that you can use to put
someone in a situation is seriously
limited. And let me speak out some of
the limitations. And by the By the time
we finish, you'll see the two original
positions are not that far apart. It
could be that most times what people do
to other people is going to happen
anyway. Could be.
But in certain unique circumstances, you
could do something to somebody that
might not have happened. So So let me
speak out the details.
The first and by far the most important
By far the most important is that the
victim must lack s'chut.
We're saying this. A tries to kill B. He
can only hurt him to the extent that B
lacks the s'chut to be protected.
If he's protected If he has enough
s'chut, enough merit, he'll be protected
under all circumstances. If he has total
s'chut, there's nothing you can do that
can possibly touch him. And if he dies,
it was certainly decreed on him.
But the classic example is Mordecai.
Mordecai was
impervious to Haman. Why? I'm not going
to go into that now, but he knew that.
And therefore he sat in the place where
Haman was walking past to drive him to
such an anti-Semitic frenzy that he
would self-destruct. But that's very
dangerous.
The principle in Jewish history is eretz
nitnah b'yad rasha. That's the
principle. It's a pasuk in Iyov. Eretz
nitnah b'yad rasha, the world is
controlled by the wicked, in case you
hadn't noticed.
They The world is controlled by people
who kill you for far less than a vote.
The politicians running the world are
not out there worrying about your
beneficent you know well-being.
The world is run by the wicked. And
therefore the strategy in Jewish history
from the time prophecy ended until the
end of history is not to come into full
frontal battle against the wicked. The
shoe's on their foot. The strategy is to
walk between the raindrops and use your
head.
He's standing in front of Haman
deliberately so that he won't stand up
and bow down to him so you'll make He
knew he could destroy him that way. But
he knew he was protected, impervious to
him. His free will could not touch him.
If you have full house of nothing could
touch you. The trouble is maybe you'll
be vulnerable. Maybe you yourself was
not perfect. Maybe you yourself had done
something that made him less than
perfect not to decree death upon him but
made him vulnerable to human free will.
And therefore that's the most important
limitation. We're not saying you can do
something to anybody under any
circumstance. Saying that you have to be
first of all about the hero. This does
not apply to a 14-year-old Arab. That
they put a bomb on his back and send him
into a bus. That does not apply. This
applies to somebody who's about to hear
that
the brothers of Joseph you have to be
about to hear that. And then you have to
be attacking somebody who lacks this.
Serious limitation. By the way, doesn't
have to be his house. Could be his
wife's.
It could be that he does not deserve to
be protected but his wife doesn't
deserve to be a widow and that will
protect him. Could be his mother cuz a
human being doesn't take that into
account but our sham's does. So this
person saying no good nick.
But his wife's a righteous.
And therefore he won't die. By the way,
this is why some people don't take out
insurance.
Why?
Now you should take out insurance. It's
very important.
My son sells insurance. You should see
him. But
some people have the logic like this.
Mr. A is walking down the street and he
has no insurance policy and Mr. B tries
to kill him. Our sham's going to look
down and say you don't deserve to be
saved but your wife doesn't deserve
you the person who brings home the bacon
or whatever you bring home and therefore
she needs you and I'm going to But if
Mr. A is walking down the street he's
got a hundred million dollar life
insurance policy and B tries to kill
him. Our sham's going to look down and
say your wife's okay.
I know some wives would be better off.
And this is the logic some people that
you should make yourself so
indispensable to so many poor families.
Support so many poor families
single-handedly when you Mr. A is
walking down the street somebody Our
sham's going to say you know what it's
just too complicated. I'll put up with
you in the world a bit longer because I
have to rearrange too much else."
It's not the best motivation for stock
and but it's kosher.
And therefore, we're talking about
schuss of yours or someone else.
That modifies the power of someone to
affect. That's first one. Second one.
Alshich says it applies only to an
individual targeted specific, not a bomb
thrown to a group. Not groups. Groups
have different kind of as an amazing
thing where you he discusses, let's say
a ship is sinking with many people on
board. Our group.
Why are they all about to die at the
same time? Are they all people who had
the same destined moment of death? And
Hashem invited them on the same cruise.
That's called mazminim le pun da echad.
Or are some of them due to die and the
others are just in the wrong place at
the wrong time? That's called rosh
u'shcheinav. And the difference is if
it's the former, trying to escape is not
going to help you. You invited there for
a reason. If it's the latter, get out of
there. You're just in the wrong place at
the wrong time and attached to somebody
else's destiny.
So, that's another example. A third is
war. War is completely out of this
discussion. Milchemes Hashem is a
completely different dispensation. Four,
mass destructions.
The Gemara says when a mass destruction
occurs against the Jewish people,
there's no discerning between tzaddik
and rasha.
Keivan she'nitin reshus le mashchis,
when Hashem gives the reshus to the
destroyer to destroy, shuv einu mavchin.
He doesn't discern between those who
deserve and those who don't. Amazing
concept. Needs another discussion.
That's also off limits. And finally,
somebody who has major political power
has no bechira at all.
Lev melech be yad Hashem.
So, when a person is elected president
or king or a mayor of a major city, he
is a puppet.
He makes his choices. He's accountable.
But there's nothing he can do to the
population that they don't deserve. The
irony in our society when a man is
elected president, he thinks he has real
power.
In Jewish terms, he just became a
complete puppet at that moment. His life
is in Hashem's hand. Lev melech be yad
Hashem.
And then, by the way, this means that
it's useless voting.
The reason you have to vote is cuz
you're to make a
like in anything else. You should vote.
It's your job as a citizen. But it's
going to make no difference to what you
get.
That's
what you need you're going to get.
Does that apply to Yes, of
course. Of course. Of course. Of course.
Of course. More to them.
Okay. So, those are some of the
limitations. All right. Let me come back
spend a few more Is this all clear?
Okay, are you ready for one more level?
But more challenging?
Yes? Yes.
Okay. There's one place that seems to be
a contradiction to this. One place in
the Hinuch.
The Hinuch spe- speaks of you know the
Hinuch the the great work on the
mitzvahs who classically not only gives
you all the parameters of the mitzvah,
but also the reasons. Why would I want
us to do this mitzvah, right? That's
called mitzvah.
It's very embarrassing that the Hinuch
was written for a 12-year-old.
Right? Written 800 years ago for his son
becoming bar mitzvah. Yeah, it's a great
classic, but
a little humiliating.
You can learn By the way, you should
have the Hinuch on every Shabbos. You
learn one mitzvah. It's beautiful. Learn
the table, right? Learn one mitzvah in
the Hinuch and this
better than the English, if you need
that.
And share with your family the reasons
behind the mitzvahs. It's a wonderful
classic work.
The Hinuch talks about one person's free
will affecting another in two places and
appears to contradict himself.
So, this is demanding. Stay with me. And
there's no way he can contradict himself
on a major principle like this.
So, let's understand.
In
noon aleph and
base, he says that the Torah has a
prohibition of taking revenge and
bearing a grudge, right?
Not allowed to take revenge, you're not
allowed to bear a grudge. What is taking
revenge? Doing something to somebody
that they did to you. Right? So, you go
to your friend's house and you say, "Can
I please borrow your I don't know magic
mix?" What do you use in America? Can I
borrow What do you call it? What? A pot?
What? KitchenAid mixer. KitchenAid,
great. Can I please borrow She says no.
Next week she comes over to you and you
you no, you're guilty of a Torah
offense. You're doing to her what she
did to you.
What's bearing a grudge? Letting the
person have it, but reminding. You Can I
please borrow your KitchenAid? No, she
comes over and you can't. You say,
"Sure, I'm not like you."
That is bearing a grudge.
If you're a observant Jew, you have to
give it and say nothing.
Right, they tell a story about a man
crawling through the desert dying of
thirst.
And another man rode past him on a
horse, looked at him and just ignored
left him to die.
Miraculously he survived, and a few
years later turned out to be the
president of a big business corporation,
when one day a man came in begging for a
job, and he recognized the face of the
man who left him to die.
If he refused him the job, he's guilty
of taking revenge. If he gave it to him
and reminded him, he'd be in it. He said
nothing, he gave him the job.
Of course, if he was applying for the
job to be a tender, gentle caregiver of
frail little old ladies, you could
probably refuse him.
Do you understand? That's not revenge,
that's just common sense. If she If this
neighbor breaks KitchenAids,
then you don't have to give it to her,
you understand?
So, she's going to mix concrete, you
know,
um
So, so that's it. Okay, now now listen
well, says the Chofetz Chaim. Listen
very carefully. Why would Hashem not
want us to take revenge? What's the
reason?
And it's a very powerful human
motivation.
It's a very sweet feeling when you do
something to somebody else that they did
to you. He says this, this person hurt
you?
Don't don't don't lash out at him. You
know why? Cuz if it happened to you,
you must have had it coming.
He's only the agent.
When a man hits a dog with a stick, the
dog turns around and bites the stick cuz
it's a dog.
So, if somebody hurts me, look to
Hashem.
Isn't this a contradiction to everything
we've said?
This is a contradiction. This means that
it it's not his free will, he's only an
agent. I got what is coming to me.
So, let me let me tell you where he
contradicts this. Now, this takes a
little sophistication.
The Chofetz Chaim says in tough half
dollar then there's a mix of eating
something without going into all the
background in Jewish law there's a
peculiarity of two witnesses
contradicting two other witnesses. If
this person is on trial for his life and
two witnesses come in and say that he
committed the murder and two others say
that he didn't. That's a stand off and
the case is closed. But if these two
witnesses say that he killed and these
two witnesses come along and say we
don't know about the murder but you
couldn't have seen it. You witnesses are
lying. You were with us at a different
place at that time. That's a unique
situation. They don't impugn the
evidence. They
They don't speak but they impugn the
witnesses. You guys are lying.
So there's two quirks here in Jewish
law.
One is we believe the second rather than
the first.
We believe that the second are telling
the truth and the first were framing the
the right which is not logical. Maybe
they're framing them.
So that'll keep you up tomorrow night to
think about it.
And that's a logical logical question.
That's one. But there's something much
more peculiar. Listen carefully. The
Torah says that the second two witnesses
are believed and what you do to the
first two witnesses is what they tried
to do to the victim. If they made him
pay money and now it turns out they're
lying they've got to pay money. If they
wanted to have him killed and it turns
out they're lying they get killed. So
they get what they're trying to
they get what they're trying to do
but only if they were not successful.
Not successful.
If they were successful they get no
punishment at all. Is that weird? Let's
get this clear. This person is on trial
for his life. These two witnesses come
along and say that he killed. These two
witnesses say right and they say he
killed. And then they take this person
out to execute him.
Just before they kill him two others
arrive. Wait wait it's a miscarriage of
justice. Stop stop stop. They bring back
the accused. They hear the witnesses. It
turns out the first two are lying. The
accused is freed. The witnesses are
killed.
They're killed
because they tried to have him killed
but did not succeed. But if two
witnesses testify that he killed and
they take him out and kill him dead.
And then two other witnesses just us
they're lying no problem. They go on
free.
Hey, what is going on? They tried to
kill a man and failed, they get killed.
They tried to kill a person and
succeeded, no problem.
Okay, this is a famous question. The
Gemara deals with it.
But and the Maharal is a famous expert.
Listen to what the Listen to what the
Chinuch says. The Chinuch says, I will
give you ketzas ta'am, a partial reason,
somewhat of a reason for why, listen
carefully, it's amazing.
I will give you a partial reason
for why
if the person died
the people who accused him
are not killed.
And here it is. Cuz if he actually died,
he must have had it coming.
Cuz a person could never die unless he
had it coming. Now, does this agree with
our thesis or is it against it?
Contradicts. Contradicts. And here's
where it turns around. Listen carefully,
this is very, very beautiful.
The Chinuch gives one more line.
And he says, if the witnesses testified
that the person killed and they killed
him, he must have had it coming. You
know why? Cuz this is a bet din.
Cuz there's a possuk that says, "Elokim
nitzav ba'adas kayl, Hashem sits with
the dayanim on a bet din." And
therefore, since Hashem is sitting with
the Sanhedrin and he died, it's
guaranteed.
Cuz Hashem, the Rambam says, the only
reason you can administer human justice
is cuz Hashem sits with you. Who knows
you're right? Hashem says, "Don't worry.
Follow the rules, I'll take care of the
justice."
And look, he quotes the verse like this,
"Elokim nitzav ba'adas dayanim." Hashem
sits with every court.
And therefore, it could be non-Jewish
courts as well.
Hashem sits with a court, with a bet
din. And therefore, if you died, he had
it coming. Now, listen carefully, we do
what's called a de'uk.
We make an inference.
Oh, he only got what's coming cuz this
is a bet din.
That's what he says. Which means if it's
not a bet din, it's just an individual
pulling a gun in the street, then the
all bets are off. Then something could
clearly happen that Hashem did not
intend.
Because if what the if Chinuch means is,
you always get what's coming to you, he
wouldn't have to quote the verse about
it based in Hashem being there.
If he means you always get what's coming
to you, then it's a principle. He
doesn't say that. He says he gets what's
coming to him cuz this is a Sanhedrin,
and Hashem guarantees the outcome of a
Sanhedrin. That's why we know it's true.
Inference, if it's not a Sanhedrin, a
person in the street acting on his own,
then there's no guarantees that it's
true. Or if it's a base in with two
liars.
And that's what the Piskei Teshuvos
says. The Piskei Teshuvos says, if this
is a Sanhedrin and they vote and the
last judge votes and it's all according
to the din,
cool, he's going to get what's coming to
him. If he's acquitted, Hashem wanted
that.
But if you're sitting on a base in with
two jokers who lying, this ain't no base
in.
And therefore say I don't know.
Is this clear?
Glad you came, huh? It's nice stuff.
Okay, so let's start with some
questions. So that in summary, in
summary what we learned today,
and therefore the Hinuch agrees like
everyone else that you can't
do anything to anyone that didn't come
in a base in situation, but very Oh, so
why does he not want you to take your
revenge?
Because you should have had enough to
protect you against that individual. You
were vulnerable. If you deserved it, he
wouldn't have been able to touch you. Of
course it comes from Hashem ultimately.
Not only that, even when he put me in
danger, Hashem opened the books to see
whether I was deserving. And had I
deserved it, he would have protected me.
So don't be immature and lash out at the
proximate cause. There's always Hashem
behind the scenes.
And therefore it turns out that to the
best of my knowledge, all Jewish sources
agree that you could under certain
limited circumstances with certain
specified limited individuals
put a person in a situation of danger.
And it's
how mature is the person, and how big a
bal bechira is it, what are his merits,
etc. etc. But in great cases and clear
cases like Yosef and the brothers, it is
clear that they could do something to
him. They could have done something,
right? That might not have happened
otherwise, and therefore don't touch
him, put him in the pit. That is the
power of human free will. Any questions
before we close? Yeah.
That That lion had a question and wanted
an answer. Maybe I didn't pick up on the
answer was Did he say I don't know? Yes.
Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Listen carefully.
The You look it up in the
You're It's in question about you dress.
He writes this. If the You tell me that
you're sitting with two judges that you
disagree with,
argue. Vote. You voted out
But if you think they're not wrong,
they're lying, this is not a legitimate
base din. Don't say a word. Get out of
this. Lie. Say I don't know. Have a
sudden gastroenteritis. You know
Because they're not a base din. There's
no guarantee. This is what I shall one
say to all. That's what he says.
Yes.
I think you came in a bit later. I
discussed this. There's a question how
they could make a base din in the first
place on a brother. Not only that, they
were sent out of to the base din. Very
weird.
So So it's a very strange situation of
base din. And despite that, despite the
din of being a base din, Reuben said to
them, "You could kill him unjustly."
Much more probably they weren't
Jews. Yeah. Question. Quick
example. Yeah. Theoretical example. So I
understand what Reuben is saying. How do
you reconcile this with the Torah? Quick
theoretical example. Yeah. Healthy child
goes in for surgery.
Doctor comes in drunk. Yes.
Child is a simple surgery. Yeah. Doctor
comes in drunk. Yeah. Child rendered.
So does the mother say?
Nothing.
Hashem. Yes, indeed. Of course. Of
course Hashem at least allowed it. First
of all, we're talking about malicious
using your deliberately to harm. That's
the first question. You're talking about
a accident or misadventure
situation, right? We're talking
Of course. Yes. Of course. Of course. Of
course. He's accountable.
He's accountable for his malpractice and
his damage. And absolutely, no question
about that. This discussion doesn't
change one bit the responsibility duty
person acting. So a person can inflict
harm on another. Only in the unique
circumstances where he's about to hear
it acting maliciously against an
individual. The individual is vulnerable
and doesn't have enough or his mother
doesn't in your case. Plus, it's not
war, plus etc. etc. Under those unique
circumstances, you could put him in
danger. In the danger, Hashem's going to
open the books and say, "Does this child
deserve to be saved? Do his parents
deserve it?" etc. And even then,
there's going to be a judgment. Yes.
Yes, speak.
So, so in
specifically within the confines of our
faith, if we meet somebody who's not
religious, and they always ask us the
same question, "Why do bad things happen
to good people?"
Yes. So, we basically
I'm not talking about that. I'm talking
about human malicious action, not bad
things in general. I'm not following
you, but I'm just saying, if something
if something occurred in their life
Yeah. that's not correct, that's not
right, that's evil, whatever the story
is. Yes. So, if you answer them that the
the other person had the fear of God
Yes. or the Jewish person Yes. had the
fear to do it, and or you didn't have
the wisdom to, it's going to happen
anyway.
Does that make sense? No. No. The person
has to know. Let's say this person has
suffered harm at the harm of an abuser.
An abusive spouse, whatever it was,
right? Maliciously with all the
conditions. They've got a claim against
them, absolutely. First of all, they're
going to claim against them anyway, even
if you don't agree with what I'm saying
today. Because the person because the
person you because the person did
something illegal. Again, if somebody
harms you, you have a claim. Financial,
whatever the damages are.
But I'm going further than that.
You should know, to the extent that the
conditions are fulfilled,
the person did something, put you in
danger that you might not have been in
otherwise it's possible. Do we know
exactly how far that goes? No. No. But
you certainly
Hashem judged your situation
in the in real time at that at that
and therefore you would have been
protected had you been deserved to be
that way. But it's certainly But let's
get one thing clear. This does not
exonerate people who hurt other people,
no matter how you approach the subject.
You're responsible The guy pulled the
trigger is 100% accountable. It doesn't
change anything. It's only an argument
in the background how you understand the
subject in Torah. Yes. That's not my
point. is, so sorry. I mean, the point
is is that if you answer them
specifically, it technically wouldn't
happen anyway, whether it's the person's
choice or whether it's the person's
choice or whether it's the person's It
helps them to know that I got what I
needed is all from Hashem. Of course, it
helps him. It's just not true.
thing. It's just not true. It's not
true. We don't want People are very
comforted to know that whatever happened
to me is going to happen anyway. This
person died in an accident, whatever, is
going to happen to me. Unfortunately,
it's not always true. That means they
might have been put in danger by
somebody else, but it does not apply to
accidents and to children. This applies
to one person maliciously targeting
another one specifically under all these
limited conditions. You need this to
explain Joseph and his brothers. Yes.
Yeah, exactly Joseph and his brothers.
We I think we think of Joseph and his
brothers as the start of the whole
Exodus, you know, going out of Egypt and
coming out of Egypt and all that.
Started with Joseph and his brothers.
So, that example What's your question?
This is all predetermined by Hashem.
This is what we needed.
Right. So, it's what we're saying that
maybe with Joseph But, the Egyptians
treated us more
Yes, indeed. They affected
I said that. Indeed, indeed. Yes. I just
want to make sure I'm encapsulating
properly because some people said like
all this goes against base Yakov. The
question is always is there a
contradiction between Hashgacha Yes. and
and Bechirah. Yes. And the answer we
always learn is like there isn't. They
both go together. You're just explaining
how it That's right. But but but you
should know that when they teach
children that issue, there is a truth to
it. In other words, it's all a modeh
that Hashem wanted this meaning that at
the final moment of effect, he did allow
that to happen and he would have
prevented it otherwise. Yes.
By the way, let's get one thing clear.
You can clearly do do things that Hashem
doesn't want. That's for sure. You can
do aveiros.
You can hurt yourself. He clearly does
not want that. He tells you, "I don't
want this." But, he allows you to do it.
That no one argues. You can hurt
yourself terribly, right? No one argues
with that. What about Hashgacha? No,
free will means you can do things and
Hashem says, "I do not want you to do
this." I don't want aveiros.
And you can do them.
We're saying one thing further. You can
even do things that involve another
person. Yes. Yes, please.
I just want to know how this all applies
to shidduchim. What? A shidduchim?
When you choose a shidduch victim
Right.
to marry, you
You're accountable.
But Hashem is putting that person your
way, making it possible, the fact that
you were born in this particular place
and these opportunities and all that is
tremendous hashgacha in that. But you
use your bechira to choose. You can meet
your bashert and refuse to marry them.
You can meet them and marry them and
then
not behave correctly in the marriage.
There's all sorts of possibilities in
this.
This marriage is certainly an act of
free will.
What's the problem with it? That it's
all from Hashem and he's he's
everything. Yes.
Yes. Yes, yes, yes, because Hashem is
ultimately everything. From his
perspective, there's no bechira at all.
But that takes us into the thorny
territory of yediyah and bechira. That's
rather You have to invite me another
time for that.
That's a much more much more difficult
subject, much higher subject.
Is it
Yes, any other questions before we
close?
When the brothers decided to sell him
Yeah.
Why didn't they accept over there that
that Hashem in the ground didn't kill
him, so we So on that on that I think
Let me remind myself of the the Rabbeinu
Bachya says that when they saw that he
wasn't hurt
When they saw that he wasn't hurt
they rationalized
He he has an explanation of that. He
says they said to themselves
Oh, they said to themselves, he must
have had an unusual scos that even
though he's guilty, Hashem protected
him. He's guilty and we have to do it
and therefore we can't kill him, we're
selling him.
Because people rationalize any situation
to justify what they thought.
So they said, "Look, the dogs didn't
kill him. Let's put him in the pit. The
scorpions didn't kill him. He must have
had a special scos
because how he treated his father, he
did certain good stuff in the world,
therefore Hashem unfairly protected him.
But we have to carry out the din.
Yes, that's how people That's how people
think. Yes.
How does that apply to a de Hava de bola
So if a de Hava de bola
how responsible am I for the days to go
in my head? You're not responsible for
thoughts that occur in your mind.
You the that's dependent on what what
you've been doing before, what you've
exposed yourself to, your hinukh.
I Did you come to my other talk on free
will? I spoke about that. I know I did.
Okay. So
free will only operates in a particular
zone, and things that arise in your
mind, right, and how you find the words
to say them, there's a large degree to
which that's not amenable to But I
explained that in the other talk, and
you can listen to that recording. Or if
you go to simple to remember.com you can
or read my book I'm sorry. you can
download or tell me you have a free will
talk of mine or the previous one?
So you can listen to the previous It was
not on Shabbos, that talk. When was
that? I think it was on Shabbos. But you
can download a talk on free will and
understand that subject. Yes, any final
question?
Yes.
Cain and Abel.
What's the question?
Because you can commit murder. What's
the question?
You could kill somebody. The Torah is
clear with that, isn't it?
Who says he didn't deserve?
So in our
in terms of today's discussion, you
could put a person in a situation of
danger, and in that situation Hashem
will assess whether he needs to die or
not, and he have a will.
Hashem decided that he was not to be
protected at that time.
Like any murder, yes. So this is Rabbi
saying that really it's like all roads
will end up the whatever road a person
takes or onto
can be chosen by him or by someone else,
but he'll get to him. That's true as
well. So let's end on that note. That's
a good note That's a good note to end
on. Very comforting.
There's no bechirah at all with regard
to the final situation. How you are
going to reach your perfection, and the
world as well, is totally guaranteed.
The only bechirah we have is which road
we choose to get there. The final
project you can rely on him is going to
succeed. Like when you have a child and
you say to your child, "I'm going to get
you to your perfection. Now, let's work
hard together. You'll do your homework,
etc. Or I'm going to beat the daylights
out of you." What do you do? Your
mothers use here in America? Probably
electric cattle prods or
monkey monkey wrenches. I don't know
what you use, but you're going to say to
your kid, "No matter how much it hurts,
I'm going to get you there cuz I love
you."
The child only has the bechirah how hard
they want to make it, but you are not
going to tolerate their non non-success.
And Hashem says to us, "You will reach
your perfection no matter how many times
we will have to bring you back to the
world, no matter how many marriages I
have to put you through,
gilgulim. I'll do whatever's necessary.
You will reach perfection, even if you
have to go through all of Gehenna."
And history will reach its perfection,
the Jewish people in the world. That's
not up for grabs. The only option you
have is how much you want to help him or
obstruct him. Thank you very much. Thank
you.
Finally night after we had