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>> Okay. Hi everybody, thanks for coming.
Um, as always, our shar is dedicated
praying for the protection of AmIrael,
the lasting unity of AmIrael, which will
eventually lead to victory and for all
of those whose health has been affected
by uh terror. Rafu Schma
Bas Israel Sura and Tarav Dove Benosana
and Aliat Shama Binyam Israel Ben
Schlommoi
on his fifth site on Thursday yud Tamos
dedicated by his parents Carol and
Ronald Ger again all all of us remember
Byam we davined for him and uh I know
that he's in a wonderful place in Olaba
and we appreciate uh your sponsorship
ship and may may it be an additional
zukus for his nishama. And finally, a
maz to Barbara and David Kaplan. You're
in the wrong seats. I didn't know where
you were, but on the birth of a
granddaughter to Isa Kaplan
may be much much.
Okay. So uh we are once again we still
have the
discontinuity between and Israel. So I
apologize to whoever init
uh is listening uh because you're one
para uh behind. Uh but the para we're
reading in Israel is parasal
and uh once again this is occurring in
the 40th year. Again you have to have a
sense of when this is happening. This is
shortly before. No, Aaron already died.
Miriam already died. Moshe is going to
die in a few months. Uh, and right
before we enter Erit Israel, we have
this very strange encounter with uh, a
man called Bam. But the para is not
called Bum. It's called Balok because
Bullock is the king of Moab who hires
Bam. And he's mentioned first. Now Moav,
again, you have to remember the nations
here. Moav as well as Ammon are the
descendants of Lot. You know, after the
destruction of Saddam, uh Lot's
daughters got him drunk. Uh they slept
with their father and he impregnated
them. And the older daughter's son was
called Moav, which means from daddy,
from father, and the other is Ammon,
from my nation. And these were the
ancestors of the nations of Ammon and
Moav. And their territory was east of
the Jordan River, east of the Jordan, uh
southeast, kind of southeast, imagine
the Dead Sea. And south and slightly
east of the Dead Sea is the land of
Moab. And uh in the book of Devarim, we
actually read
that the Jewish people wanted to ask
permission from Moab to cut through
their land. Now again, the Torah gives
you one story and not another story.
Meaning
the Torah records in last week's para
that we first requested the As
to go through their lands and Asup said
no.
However, we know from the book of Judges
that we made a similar request to the
Moabites to go through their land and
they also said no and God said you shall
not wage war against the Moab. So we had
to go around. That's how we wound up but
because otherwise you might ask a very
obvious question. We crossed into Erat
Israel from the east. We went from the
east and we crossed the Ardane into the
west. Now, if you're coming from Egypt,
you know, why would you be east of the
Jordan River? The answer is because we
had to circle around the Moabitete and
the Edomite territory till we were north
of them. And that put us opposite
Jericho. Jericho was on the west and we
are on the east. And when Moshe dies,
we're going to cross the Ardane right
where Eureko is or near where Eureko is.
So this gives rise to a question. We
were actually commanded
not to wage war with the Moabites. And
if the Moabites don't authorize us to go
through their lands,
>> we don't go through it. Unlike Seon, the
king of Amori, when he said not to go
and he started a war, we fought and we
conquered that territory. And that
territory became the land of the two and
a half tribes, Ruven and God and half of
Manasha. But with Moab, don't touch
them. So this gives rise to a very
difficult question. The kish begins.
Balak the king of Moab
was very very frightened of the Jewish
people and he said this nation shall lap
us up shall eat us up the way an ox eats
up all of the grass of the field. We got
to do something about it. We have to
disable them. We have to take away their
power. And as a result, he hires Bum.
And we'll talk about Bum shortly, but I
want to start off with a preliminary
question. Given the fact that the Jewish
people were commanded not to wage war
with Moab and they were commanded not to
go through their land, which is exactly
why we are where we are.
What is Bolo afraid of that he has to
hire Bum to somehow curse Ben Israel?
What is the pad? What is the mo? There's
a commandment. do not wage war against
the Moabites because they are the
descendants of Lot and at least until
Mashiach comes Lot's property is going
to be in violic
authors gives a beautiful beautiful
interpretation.
Balac is not afraid that the Jews are
going to invade his country. He knows
they're not going to do that.
Balak is simply afraid of the Jews
reaching Erit Israel. And the purpose of
the curse is not to protect his nation
but is to prevent the Jewish people from
coming to Erit Israel. Why is Balak
afraid of the Jewish people coming to
Erat Israel if they do not if they do
not pose a military or security threat
to him? The answer says the Sha Mish
rests on an idea that we've already
discussed a number of times in other
contexts. So certain ideas come up again
and again and that is the difference
between the spiritual life of the Jewish
people in the desert and the spiritual
life that they're going to have once
they cross the yard and they're living
in Arit Israel. The desert was truly a
glorified spiritual cocoon. We were
living a supernatural miraculous
existence. The man was coming down
Minashamayim. There was a traveling
source of water. The well uh temporarily
stopped when Miriam died, but then Moshe
got it back again. Albeit by the sin of
hitting the rock, but nevertheless, we
got it back. The clouds of glory we also
lost temporarily when Aaron died, but we
got them back as well.
Everything is supernatural. It's going
back to Mitraim and Cassamsov and Mimei
and the 40 years of the desert.
So God's presence was open, perceptible,
obvious. The Jewish people did not
really have any physical needs that were
not being met. Even they're traveling
you know on one hand we say well they
traveled in the desert after the sin of
the spies for 38 and a2 years but Rashi
points out at the end when at the last
para bidbbor when it enumerates the
different stops
basically it's not like they were
traveling every day there were stops in
which they stayed for 20 years there
were comparatively few uh movements
throughout the 38 years of so-called
wandering most of the time we were in
place. So the midbar represents the type
of existence which is totally spiritual
devoid of any physicality or gashmas
that could distract you from your
mission. Now that sometimes became
uncomfortable. The Jewish people
rebelled and they were punished. But one
of the things you notice in the midbar
is how immediate is cause and effect.
You do an aa 14,000 people die. You make
one misstep because when you're in the
presence of God in an open and revealed
way
then
all curtains are removed. There's
immediate reward immediate punishment.
Even the man the man was a daily report
card. You know this idea the teaching of
that um where your man fell every
morning was a function of your spiritual
level. If you were a righteous person
the day before you found your man right
outside your door. If you were not so
righteous you're looking around and
looking around and you don't know where
to go and you keep on wandering around
till you find it. So I always ask the
question well so take somebody else's
money. I mean uh the mun is not by my
door. So why can't they take your mun?
So my answer is you didn't see it. Mun
is such a spiritual food. You only saw
what you were supposed to take.
So if you were not if you did not merit
to have your man next to you, you didn't
see it. So you're walking around miles
and miles and miles till you find the M.
It was a daily report card. How
righteous were you? By the way, I once
heard a Roshiva was talking about the uh
custom that guys in yeshiva, you know,
for good good reason. They like to eat
out, right? Yeshiva food is normally not
so good. So they go to this restaurant,
that restaurant, etc. That's a feature.
So he said he compared it to the man
that sadikim their man is right where
they are, right? So the saddic, you
know, eats in yeshiva, the food is right
there. He says,
you got to go looking looking for your
food other places. So he compared it
compared it to the m but okay but be it
as it may that's the life of the desert
pure
pure spirituality the presence of god is
open revealed obvious
we come to Israel life is going to be
very very different of course visit
eric israel certainly is filled with the
unique divine providence of the almighty
but as compared to the desert
It's going to be a much more natural
life. You're not going to have a
traveling well. You're going to have to
dig for your water. Uh you're not going
to have clouds of glory. You're going to
need an army. Uh you're not going to
have the mud falling from heaven. You're
going to have to dig ditches and plant
and harvest and thresh and build cities
and build plumbing systems. you know to
use more modern analogies meaning to say
once you come to Erit Israel you're
going to be living a much more
materialistic
existence and that's going to create
unique challenges because that makes it
much easier to forget about Hashem. The
Torah itself warned us a number of times
that when you come to the land and you
achieve such success, you will say
it is my strength and my might. Right?
The Torah warns us, do not be arrogant.
In fact, although we're not, none of us
can make statements about this. But I
remember after the six- day war 1967. So
there were two different reactions in
Israeli society. Some people said only
God could have done such a miraculous
victory. And that actually was the
foundation of the chuva movement. Both
Osamehatra,
they all started basically in relative
proximity to the six- day war because
the six- day war created a massive
return to Chuva in one way or the other
simply because the Yad Hashem was so
obvious that there must be a God. That's
reaction number one. But do you know
there was a reaction number two and the
reaction number two is hey we are so
tough and we are so good that anybody
who messes with us is going to get their
well I I want to be polite they're going
to get it whooped one way one way or the
other. Uh now some say and again I I'm a
little reluctant to say it because it
sounds like I'm being a prophet here but
some had said that the kipper war which
was 1973 relatively few years after the
six- day war and we know that the kipper
war unfortunately had many many
casualties for Israel and uh it was not
as successful as prior wars had been. uh
some say it was kind of reminding us
that when we attribute all of our
success to us then Hashem shows us that
we're not so capable. Now this fast
forward you know 50 years or whatever
and uh we find a little bit a little bit
of the same type of of issue uh with
Iran. And I don't want to be too overtly
political, but we kind of thought, you
know, Iran, we're going to finish them
off and there'll be regime change and we
will finally eliminate them as a threat
in the Middle East because we have the
technology and we have the army and we
have the military strategy and we have
the security systems and we have, of
course, the great support of the United
States of America and the president who
did so much for Israel. And then all of
a sudden, you know, all of a sudden,
Mamesher,
like over like a 24-h hour period, all
of a sudden there is this wimpy
agreement memorandum of understanding,
which kind of goes back to what Obama
and Biden had negotiated, might even be
worse in some ways, which Trump had
spoken out against all the time. Again,
I I I am absolutely no expert in this
and I'm sure many of you can give a
better analysis than than me, but it
just highlights in in a general way the
idea that when we become arrogant and we
become overconfident
shows us that without his dishaya
everything can fall apart in a mo in a
moment in a minute
like for no reason at all no logical
reason at all just just falls apart.
Okay. The point I'm making is the midbar
once again God's presence is obvious and
ever perceptible in Eric Israel there is
the
of
that we might attribute as the Torah
warns the Torah warns us more than once
do not attribute your success in life as
a nation to your abilities and your
talents in fact even October 7 itself I
mean people still under and we don't
have a good answer. Israeli military
intelligence is the really the best in
the world. How did October 7 happen? How
did kamas get through security fences
and have whatever it is 6 hours uh
before the army even even arrives? How
did it happen? It actually is
impossible. I mean in some ways I mean
we don't we don't want to use the word
miracle for that but in some ways it's a
negative miracle almost that such a
thing uh could happen once again
this is kind of the conse consequence of
that okay but be as it may although Eric
Israel therefore creates a great trial
it is also a great opportunity and the
great opportunity is to take the
physical and material material world and
elevate it and sanctify it. That
holiness is not only when you disengage
from physicality.
Holiness is when you can take the
creation of a state, the creation of a
society, the creation of a country, the
farms, the industries and you follow
them. Alp the Torah in an ideal world
which we're we're not in of course. So
that is even a higher level of kaduca
because instead of sanctifying the
spirituality by withdrawing from the
material you're taking the gashmas
gashmas is the material and you're
elevating it and consecrating it. That
is a tougher job. That is a hard harder
job. But that becomes a greater job in
that way. You're mad.
Anyone who studies knows that actually
one of the great themes of is the notion
of aodashm
sanctifying even the physical and
material aspects of life. So says the
shame is this is balak's fear. Bullock
is perfectly happy to let the Jews stay
in the desert because that's not going
to be a rebuke to the immorality of his
society because they'll say, "Yeah, the
Jews serve God, but they don't have the
normal problems of life. They don't have
fields. They don't have to have
political alliances. They don't have to
have armies, so to speak. So yeah, they
can serve God, but God cannot expect us
to become his because we have real
problems in a real world. But what is
bubb afraid of? Once the Jews come to
Erit Israel and theoretically they
create a society
which is still predicated on the Torah.
At that point they become a rebuke. They
become a muser to all the nations of the
world who can no longer make the excuse.
Well, they can serve Hashem because they
don't have the problems of ordinary
life. But what does Hashem expect of us?
Well, if they come to Israel, they show
what Hashem expects. So therefore, the
Sheamishes
is that Bolak is not afraid
that the Jewish people will conquer him.
They're not allowed to do that. Bulock
is afraid that a Torah society will be
established in Erit Israel which would
be a rebuke and a to
the um Saul who live by degenerate who
lived by degenerate standards. Now this
the shemov is actually answers another
question that the mafor asked and that
is if bullock is afraid
why does he hire somebody to curse the
Jews
shouldn't he hire somebody to bless
his people
like why focus on cursing the other side
get a bra for victory so the says
kind of a simple answer. The way operate
is they always look at the negative.
Meaning instead of looking for the
benefit for them, they want to destroy
the other person. That's what the says.
But like the we have another answer.
Balak doesn't need a braha because balak
is not afraid anything's going to happen
to him. Bulock's whole point is the
Jewish people should not reach Israel.
So he needs to get them cursed, right?
He needs to pull them down because the
whole idea is to pull them down. That
would be Mash of Dasha. Okay. So this
explains Balak's
strategy or Balak's concern. So what
does Balo do? So Balak
hires a very famous person apparently.
The person's name is Bum. And bum is
known as have curse will travel uh for
various ways. He was given and we'll
talk about this a little bit more a
power to curse. Actually Balok says he
also has a power to bless. Whoever you
bless is blessed. Whoever you curse is
cursed. But again Balok is interested in
the cursing aspect more than the
blessing aspect. And he's willing he
wants to hire bum for a considerable
price. We don't know exactly what the
price was, but the Torah indicates it
was considerable that bum should curse
the Jewish people and as a result they
would either be destroyed or they would
at least not enter Erit Erit Israel.
First of all, Bam is a very very
interesting character. Some suggest what
what nation does he come from? We really
don't know. We know that Bolock is the
king of Moab. And we know that the
Midionites were collaborating with the
Moabites. And again, just to put things
in perspective, the Moabites are the
descendants from Lot.
The Midionites,
Mosher Rabenu's own wife was a
Midionite. Yes. Uh is descended from
Aram directly. After Sora died, Ara took
a wife whose name was Cura. According to
Kazal Coutur is none other than Hagar
who became a righteous woman and among
the Benet Coutura
is Mijan.
Okay. So it is interesting that both
Moab and Mijan are connected to the
Jewish people. Moav via Lo and Mijan via
Coutura who was Ara's wife Benura. Mij
um so we know Moab we know Mijan but
where does Bum come from? Bam is not
from Moab and Bum is not from Mijan. The
Torah just describes that uh he was in a
city called Pour,
but we don't know where where that is
really. And uh after he finished it,
well, he he didn't complete his job, but
after he recognized he was not going to
be successful, he went back to his city.
But the Torah specifically does not tell
us where he's from.
Some have said that the word bum
actually is a contraction for biom.
He had no nation. He was a hired hand.
He used his power to whomever paid him
the big the best price. Had Moshe hired
him. Okay, that's unthinkable. But had
Moshe hired him to curse Balak, Bum
would have cursed Balak. Had Bulock
hired him to curse Ben Israel, he'll
curse Ben Israel. Bleam, they use the
expression for lawyers. Again, I I guess
I could say this because I'm a lawyer,
too. Uh lawyers are hired hands, right?
Uh although they don't have to be a
hired hand, but uh they'll represent
anybody no matter no matter what it is.
Uh and Bum was a hired hand, right? By
Kazal also say that Bum
had tremendous powers of prophecy.
that were akin to those of Mosha Rabenu.
Rashi brings a medish
that the nations of the world would have
complained to God and they would have
said, "If you would have given us a
prophet as great as Moshe,
we too would have been righteous. We too
would have been good." How can you blame
us for not living up to standards of
holiness if we never had a prophet as
great as Mosher Rabenu?
So to forestall that Tina that argument
Hashem gave them a prophet who was as
great as Mosher Rabenu
and the prophet is none other than Bum.
Bam is considered to be
in a sense
shakosh.
Now this medish though is very
perplexing.
If the nations of the world are going to
make the arguments, hey, it's not fair.
If you would have given us a ni like
Mosher Raenu, we wouldn't sin.
So, Hashem gives them a prophet Baham.
So, they could still say, "You gave us
Bum. You didn't give us Moshe.
What is the point? We still have our our
whatever question they have is still
there. If you would have given us a
righteous person, we wouldn't sin. So,
Hashem is getting out of that problem by
giving him a Russia.
Hold that question because I'm going I'm
going to come back to it. Just something
to think about. The greatness of bum,
the greatness of bum that gets
perverted,
twisted,
destroyed. It's going to be somewhat
similar to our discussion of korak.
You know, we'll use the word Greek
tragedy. You know, the notion of Greek
tragedy, which is really borrowed from
Aristotle's definition of tragedy.
Uh, tragedy is not stam when bad things
happen to a person.
If a building collapses
and a mother and her 10 children are
killed, we'll commonly call that a
tragedy, but not in the aristoilian
sense.
That's a very sad event. Certainly,
tragedy as Aristotle defined it. Now
again, this is not
but the word we're talking about a Greek
tragedy. Aristotle defined tragedy is
when a person is destroyed
by a negative force that is within them.
So if you're destroyed by an outside
force, that's sad.
But tragedy is when there's greatness
and side by side with that greatness,
there is a flaw that destroys you from
within.
That is tragic because there was so much
greatness
There was so much potential
in some ways. We're going to see Bum is
a tragic figure. Let's go back to the
question I just raised. The umosam say
if you would have given us a prophet
like Mosher Rabenu, we would be
righteous.
And Hashem gave them Bum
who in prophecy was as great as Mosher
Rabenu. So the question is well they can
still say if you would have given us a
righteous prophet we would have been
righteous.
The answer is Bam and Moshe
started the same way.
Hashem didn't give the Jewish people a
righteous prophet and give the nations
of the world an evil prophet.
He gave us Moshe who could have used his
powers
in good ways or bad ways, but Moshe
chose
to use them in good ways. And he gave
the same powers to Bum who could have
used them in good ways or bad. So it's
not Hashem's fault at this point.
Meaning they can't go back to Hashem and
say, "If you would have given us a
righteous prophet, we would say this. I
gave you the same thing I gave the Jews.
I gave you supremely gifted people.
One person chose
to use his talents only for kaduca
and the other chose to use his talents
for tuma. God can honestly say not my
fault.
I gave bum and Moshe. They are the same.
Which is a different perspective. the
idea that Bum himself might have been
the Mosher Abenu of the nations of the
world in a positive sense
but it got perverted
and we'll come back to this. Now
Bam
initially
doesn't want to go without God's
permission and God in fact tells him
don't go
but they keep on upping the ante. So Bum
asks God again, can I go? So God sees
where Bam is and he says, you can go,
but only say what I tell you to say. And
three different times, Bum tries to
curse the Jewish people. Three different
times. And he keeps on moving from here
to there to there to there, figuring
maybe the place will be different.
And each time Hashem turns
the blessing, the curse of Bum
into a blessing.
And then finally, Bum gives a fourth
speech where he just praises the Jewish
people in the famous verse mu to this
very day. Uh in every sitter, this is
the first thing. I mean, most people
don't say it today, but it is the first
thing that one is supposed to say when
they walk into shvu.
Mishka Israel,
how beautiful are your tents and your
dwelling places, Israel. Those are the
words of Bum, right? Those are the words
of Bum in which he saw the goodness of
the Jewish people. Three times he tried
to curse us. Hashem changed it to a bra.
Now
there is a garanos
that says
what was bum's talent why why was he
able to curse people and it was so
effective so the garan braos says
there is a fraction of a little second
every day
where god has tremendous anger on the
world
this is called a moment Moment of anger.
A moment of anger. And how long is that
moment? The amount. It's a rea. The
amount of time it says to say the word
reggga,
right? Reggga is a two-cllable word. You
can take your stopwatch. Reggga. That is
the amount of time.
And if you curse
in that moment of risk, the curse will
be effective. It's like pushing. It's
like your finger on the nuclear nuclear
button.
Bum knew exactly and that changed from
day to day. Bum knew exactly when the
Eden risk was
so he could time his curses
to be effective
exactly at the moment of the Edon
risk.
That's the lion of the garanus.
Bum knew exactly the right moment to
curse.
The Gomorrah says that there actually is
a visual sign and that is for that brief
less than a second
the red comb of a rooster turns white.
just red white clothes. So the gummor
gives a story that Rabbi Mayor had
enemies that he wanted to curse
and Rabbi Mayor wanted the curse to be
effective. So he tied a rooster to the
bed post of his bed and he kept his eyes
open watching the rooster to see when
the comb would change color.
Now the truth is I don't understand the
Gumar because if you're blinking you
might miss it. I mean uh you know okay
but he figured maybe it'll happen when
he's not blinking
and at some point he fell asleep.
So he missed it and then he recognized
that this is not the way God wants us to
behave. God does not want us to curse
people. In fact
was known in a positive way. His brahos
were the brahos of it
and his curses were effective too. Sadic
goes there.
And there were times when people would
ask the to curse
and the says I only do I don't do I'll
bless the Jewish people. I'm not going
to curse anybody. He said I'm not going
to curse people. This is not the um
ness. This is not the job of a Jew to
curse people. It is the job of you to
bless people. And if you bless people,
so those who try to hurt us
automatically are not going to have the
power. Okay, we'll talk more about that
next week. But Bum
was able to push that button. Now, let's
analyze this passage a little bit.
Number one,
what is the concept
of why there would be this moment of
severe divine anger?
My god gets angry let's say a half a
second a day
well why why does he lose it that half
second of a day so sure brings from
different
that that little fraction of divine
anger
is what creates the notion of fear of
evil
right sometimes a person wants to do
something that
but the fear of God may stop them.
Now granted the Rambam writes if a
person does mitzvos or or refrains from
a veros because they're afraid of
punishment that's an inferior spiritual
level to be sure it is inferior but
nevertheless
it's very very effective
and how vi we would have that as low as
it is
I remember myself I can give you an
example it's it's a trivial example
although wasn't a trivial at the time uh
when I was in law school quite a long
time ago. So, you know, law typical law
school classes, they don't give exams
until the end of the semester. Like
there's nothing. So, I figured as long
as I study the material, I I don't have
to go to class, you know, etc. So, I
took off uh for from um Yam Kipper to
Laughter Sukus. I didn't go to classoid,
whatever it is, uh which I could have
done or before even, but I didn't. I
figured I'll just keep up with the
assignments. Little did I know that this
particular professor was assigning like
daily assignments for that whole period
of time. So when I got back uh to where
to law school, I noticed there were 20
letters from this professor uh in my
mailbox. Each letter was progressively a
little more severe in warning me about
the consequences of uh like the first
one was, you know, you're late on your
assignment. Please turn it in tomorrow.
But since I was gone for three weeks, so
the last letter, I'll skip the
intermediate letters, but the last
letter basically said, if you do not
respond within 12 hours, I will initiate
disciplinary proceedings uh that will
result in your possible expulsion from
the school. Well, I I was scared to be
sure, you know. I went uh I went to the
guy said, "Well, you know, we have these
Jewish holiday." The professor happened
to be Jewish. So he pulled out a Jewish
calendar and said, "Well, I see yum
kipper and I see two days of sukus. What
about before, you know, between yum
kiper and sukus? What about kal?" I
said, "Well, you know, okay, whatever."
So I have to say that uh my highest law
school grade was in that course and the
mo was income tax and the motivation was
entirely fear. I was so afraid that I
was going to get kicked out of law
school to my eternal disgrace that I
still dream about it sometimes that not
really that it motivated me. So going
back to the rnas here
fear of God
I know it's not popular to talk about
today you know we like to talk about
loving hashem we like to talk about
higher madreos yeah and that's true we
should aspire to the higher levels but
the truth is plain and simple fear of
god can keep people away from a lot of
bad behaviors
okay so how does a person feel fear of
god because there's That one fraction of
a second in the day in which God's anger
comes into the world and the nishama
feels it
and that's enough. That one little
second is enough to fuel fear of God
for the whole day. So that's the
of the
it creates fear of God. Not just among
Jews, even among the nations of the
world, there is not always, but at least
there is a concept called fear of God.
Okay. But now let's ask another question
about the Eden risk. And that is the
Eden risk is so short.
What curse could you possibly pronounce
in the risk? You tell me Bum's curses is
good because he curses in the Eden. By
the time he says anything, it's already
finished.
Toss to
that bum knows the risk and therefore
he's able to curse. What curse could you
say in the Eden risk? So Tossos gives
two answers.
Answer number one is the way it works is
as long as you begin your curse on time.
Like it's getting into the bank, right?
As long as you get into the bank
building before closing, they they they
will service you, you know, even after
closing. But you got to be in the
building, right? They'll lock the door
at 1:00, whatever it is. If you're in
the building, you're okay. If you're not
in the building, so the same thing here,
as long as you got the beginning of your
curse in, it's going to be effective. By
the way, brings that some
use this. It's kind of crazy, but they
use it as a
justification
for missing zaneshma and zuman. You
know, one of the big criticisms of some
some groups is that the Torah gives says
you have to read the schma of the
morning by a certain time, the first
fourth of the day. And the davening
should be um I'm sorry, the first three
hour. Yeah, the first fourth of the day.
And dabing should be within the first
third of the day 4 hours right chakras
and among many
uh they might they might read the schma
after
and they might even
after sometimes even after the middle of
the day which is your absolute last time
to denis and what's the heter of that so
the partial justification they gave
although it's not it's not really a
complete answer is as long as you begin
on time. Because if we see that even for
a curse, as long as you begin your curse
on time, you can finish it.
When it comes to a mitzvah, God is going
to be more generous. And if you begin it
on time, you'll be allowed to finish it.
But that's only an answer if you began.
I mean, that's an answer. If I began
schma before this month expired and then
it expired, that's not going to be an
answer if I began after this month. The
truth is uh there is a shi that says
what is this
is whenever the sadik so there there
actually is a mei that supports the idea
that sadik can make their own zant okay
uh but be it as it may that's first
answer as long as you begin the curse
within the risk you can finish it. But
Tossmos gives a second answer that Bum
could get in a curse in the Eden itself
and his curse was
lame.
Destroy them.
Is the same number of syllables as the
word. If the Eden risk is reggaem
can be said in the time that it says to
say rea. So bum's curse would have been
that that's how it would have worked. So
these are the two answers of toos. How
could bum curse in the risk? One is once
he begins he could finish it. The other
is his curse is khaleim.
Theam cipher says a beautiful
explanation or commentary on what is the
curse of kalem. Khalem means destroy
them. But what's the significance of it?
And he says
in many many ways let's go back to bum
again. Bam
is a very very tragic figure.
Bam
is great in wisdom,
great in prophecy,
great in insight.
But Bum is destroyed
by the flaws within,
the jealousy, the greed, the lust, the
tya, the power.
All of you know the famous saying of
Lord Actton, a British political
scientist, power corrupts, absolute
power corrupts absolutely. It's hard for
us to understand, but if you think about
this, if you think about this, great
prophecy
can potentially be a corrupting
influence.
I mean, imagine Bum has all this power.
Bum can destroy nations.
He can bless nations.
He can go to your head
Now, Bum is smart enough to understand
that he's like a train wreck. Meaning a
man of supreme gifts
who is being destroyed bit by bit
by his jealousies, by his rages, by his
arrogance,
by his tya.
Bum did not even have the gift of
obliviousness.
Bum knew exactly who he was.
That made it more tragic. Right? If Bum
just thought he was great, that's fine.
But Bum is living with the agony
of a potential greatness
that is eluding him because of the
person he became by his choices.
So says theam
when bum wants to curse a nation
the biggest curse he could give them is
may you be like me.
May you live the tortured life of never
having an inner peace
because there's this constant
pull between your greatness and your
loneliness.
So says theam cipher,
this idea of bum's tragedy
is alluded to in the word calm because
khalem destroy them could be read as an
abbreviation.
The kuff
the cuff is caveed the liver.
The lame
is the le the heart
and the mem
is the moak the brain.
What's the association here? At least in
Kazal's
anatomy the caved the liver was a source
of all sorts of desires and for
pleasure.
The life
are the emotions
negative and positive. So anger, lust,
power, jealousy,
they are attributes of the heart coming
in the bad bad heart.
The moak
is the intellectual and moral sense of a
person.
So calm is when
the mem the moak
is subordinated
to the emotions
the lusts and the tyus.
You use your mind
to further
the baser
instincts within you and that's called
destruction. Destruction is when you
take the moch, the greatest and the most
noble part of yourself
and you use it to advance
the clot or the ket and the life. Think
about for example, you know, uh let's
think about the entertainment industry
for a moment.
We have billions maybe trillions I don't
know at least billions of dollars are
spent in devising all sorts of
entertainments
and
filled with drugs and sex and and all
sorts of things. Now the people who do
these things are absolutely brilliant
people.
They are so smart. They figure out how
to do all of these different things.
But they've taken their minds and
they've taken their brains
and they use them to serve
the baser instincts of human beings.
That's called khalem. The ked and the le
rule over the moak.
And therefore, Bum's curse of Talem
is effectively
cursing the nation. Be like me.
Now the opposite of Khale just reverse
the letters says theam so
is melik.
A melik is a king.
What is a king?
So the truth is a true king is not a
person who rules over other people.
A true king
is one who rules over himself.
Peravo says
a zu gibbor
who is a mighty person
not one who controls other people but a
kovesh
esit.
He conquers himself
and this is really a mish
fact the grass says that the source of
the Mishna Navos is a mish
he who rules over his spirit
is greater
than the one who has conquered
a
And theavos
brings a mush that a general was coming
back from a very successful military
campaign
and there was a big parade to honor him
and a wise man whispered to him and said
you have come back from the small war
now you must fight the big war the big
war is the war within yourself
so that's a melik
Moak
the moral and intellectual sense is
number one and that directs the le the
emotions
and the tyas. So instead of khalem where
the intellectual sense of a person is
subordinated to the emotions and the
lust
in mo in melik the moak directs. Now
again I I do want to make it clear that
this is not suggesting
that you know a a inevit Hashem should
be an automatan a robot devoid of
emotion. When I say the mind rules over
the emotion, remember in the Tanya there
is a famous phrase that the alterb uses
a number of times
shlet
alv.
The mind
must control the heart. That's melik.
But what does again I think I think that
that expression could be misunderstood a
little bit. What do we mean when we say
the mind
should control the heart?
Sometimes people view that in only a
negative suppressing way. Meaning, I
have feelings, I have emotions, but if
they're against the Torah, I just
control myself.
That's one way of reading it. In other
words, you look at emotions as wild as a
wild uncontrollable animal that has to
be chained
because it's dangerous.
But I actually do not think the alterb
means that the alterbi is dealing with a
much deeper idea and maybe even a more
difficult idea.
Not that the moch, the intellectual and
moral sense, chains and holds back the
emotion,
but rather the emotions themselves
are educated and directive directed
by the thoughts.
In other words, you're not suppressing.
In other words, what is the goal here?
The Torah says, I you know, I shouldn't
tr people, right?
So here's the goal that I walk by you
and even though I'd love to strangle
you, I just hold myself back. Well, that
is a madrega. I would give credit to
that. But that's not the ultimate goal
here. The ultimate goal is that my mind
should channel my feelings and emotions.
So the feelings and emotions are going
to be positive rather than negative.
Now, we sometimes think that's
impossible. We sometimes think well you
can't change your feelings maybe you can
control yourself but how do you change
your feelings but the truth is we don't
accept that and even modern psychology
recognizes
that the mental reframing of a situation
this is this is part of what is done in
good therapy the mental reframing of a
situation
can change your emotional feeling and
the Torah has said this all the Okay. So
I would suggest that there are two
different meanings in
the lower meaning is the intellectual
and moral sense controls and restrains
negative emotions. We'll call that the
lower level of the statement. The higher
level of the statement is the moak
redefineses
the emotions so that the emotions
themselves are working in accordance
with God's will.
So you want to do the good thing and you
can train yourself in various ways,
right? Um I mean you see this all the
time in human relationships, right? I'm
so angry at somebody because I feel that
they treated me with disrespect, they
insulted me, they hurt me and even
though I'm a sadic, so I'm not going to
express my anger, but it's burning
inside of me. That is a madrega. I'm not
disparaging that madrega too. But then
you have to ask yourself, is there
another way of looking at it?
Can I perhaps view their actions in a
different way? Can I analyze why am I
reacting in that way? Could I be
reacting? Right? So the point is the
idea that emotions are not educable,
that emotions cannot be transformed,
I believe is an idea that even modern
psychology
has has rejected. You know, Freud kind
of did work with the idea. If you go all
the way back to the beginnings of modern
psychology, Freud kind of said, you're
kind of stuck, right? You're stuck with
what you are, then we got to figure out
uh the best way to to work with it, etc.
So you don't go around being a mass
murderer. Uh but I think as psychology
has matured,
there is really an insight that indeed
one can change one's whole perspective
about life. And all I can tell you is
that maybe modern psychology has gotten
here fairly recently, but this is indeed
the authentic view of the Torah going
all the way all the way back uh from the
very beginning. And that's what a mel.
So the point I want to underscore is the
statement that the mind controls the
heart is not meant only in the negative
way of controlling it, holding it back,
but in redefining it and re-educating
it. And that's why we find that much of
Bum's braos have the word melik in it
because theam says the tyra lion is god
reversed bum's curse to abra. So it's
beautiful bum would curse with the word
calm and hashem changed the curse to the
word melik. That's the meaning of
changing Bum's curse from a kala to a uh
to a to a braha. So again though when
you contemplate this you see tragedy the
tragedy of a great person
that has a serious flaw. I mean you see
this in the political world other world
you see this in the rabbitical world
sometimes again I don't want to uh be
mar but but we've seen it even among
spiritual leaders that these things can
sometimes happen and it's a tragedy it's
not only a tragedy for victims it's a
tragedy for the perpetrator himself that
there was something so good that just
got destroyed from within truly a Greek
a Greek tragedy so that's the story of
Bum. Now I just want to point out that
um there was a there was a an approach
in many many Rishim
that much of Bum's prophecies
are not just general blessings but they
are messianic in nature that they are
referring to the days of Mashiach
remember in one of Bum's prophecies he
talks about a star has arisen from Yakov
and it shall smite the corners of Moab
uh and it shall defeat the Adommites.
Well, remember that when Shiman Ben
Kuziva
was uh we call them but but it was was
leading a revolt against the Romans
after the destruction of the second
basikt.
Rabi Yaka
gave Shiman Ben Kuziva the name Bar
Kohba that's a nickname the son of a
star because Rabi Akiva thought Bara was
Mashiach and he applied to Barba whose
name was Shimon Benuza the pukov.
Okay. So it was well understood that bum
and that's why bum says I see them and
not now. I gaze at them but it's not the
immediate
of
all of that is messianic messianic
prophecies. Now the issue of barok
revolt that that itself is a fascinating
issue. We're actually approaching uh
destruction of the base of mikas 3 weeks
etc. Uh well, you have to say that the
Barba revolt which ended in 135
uh around uh 65 years after the
destruction of the second temple
was more catastrophic for the Jewish
people at least in terms of numbers than
even the destruction of the temple
itself. The Barma revolt was utterly
catastrophic.
I mean the Gammorra gives you numbers
which are probably an exaggeration but
tens of millions it probably was not
that much but that is how devastating
the tragedy was perceived
and you know even after the temple was
destroyed Jews were allowed to do
mitzvos and teach Torah after the bar
revolt all of the anti-Roman legislation
anti- rather Torah legislation was
promagated that's when Rabi Akiva was
tortured to death that's after Barba
and Jews were banned from Jerusalem
for almost 200 years.
That was after Barma Alia Capalina.
So one of the questions that really
really bothers people and maybe it's too
delicate to even bring up is well is
Rabi Aka responsible for this? Rabbi Aka
backed the wrong guy. Rabbi Aka said
Bara was Mashiach and he lent his
tremendous prestige
to the Barba revolt which resulted in
catastrophic devastating losses that
were even greater than the Ba Mikdash
and gazeros against religious life that
didn't even happen after the BA mikdash.
So what do we say about exactly?
So this is a a difficult issue. But one
of the ways that this is sometimes
explained is that barba indeed was a
potential mashiach. He was not a false
messiah.
He was a failed mashiach.
And there's a very big difference
between a false messianic figure
and a person that is a messianic figure
but the generation was not worthy or
whatever it would be. Meaning the fact
that Barba was killed and the fact that
the Barba revolt resulted in such a
massive catastrophe
does not disprove what the potential
might have been.
It doesn't prove it. I'm asking him to
that. We have to give Rabbi a benefit of
the doubt here that indeed barba might
have been
see unlike let's say Jesus right Jesus
was will describe as a false mashiach
barba was a failed msiach and that is a
very false mashiach but barba was could
have been the real thing but you also
need the generation to be worthy the
generation to be deserving of it and
things can go wrong which is a little
scary because that suggests the idea
that even if Mashiach shows up,
there's no guarantee it'll be a success
because you're telling me now that
Mashiach could could fail in his
mission. Well, I don't want to leave
people depressed, but that that might be
one reading of the Barba the Barba
story. And as I say this barba was
prophesied in bam nua as the dak of
makov the star of Jacob shall shall
arise
we are in the month of tamas we are
approaching 17th of tamas we're
approaching the three weeks uh this is a
time when we should be thinking about
the basis the whole year but especially
this is the period of time where we're
especially focused on it uh May it be
Hashem's will that we should be indeed
to the mikdashu.
May we see the may we see shalom Israel
and shalom and the whole in the whole
world.
You
see your
tomorrow