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Tanya (Part 18)
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Good morning. Good morning, Booker.
Welcome back to 10 minutes of meaning by
generously sponsored by our dear friends
at Marilyn and Michael Fedak. We're so
grateful for their generosity. Please
help yourself to thea station coffee or
slushie or pastry. It's wonderful to
have you here. So, back to Tanya. We're
in the middle of pair of gimmel of
Tanya. And just to tell you how much
Tanya is on my mind, when I was just in
a child this summer, I was at the mall
and I went to order a coffee and they
had three sizes of cups. And the what
it's called? The bar. What? who makes
coffee. What's the fancy name?
>> Barista.
>> The barista. I don't know if they call
that in Israel, but the woman behind the
counter in the mall in Israel, she said,
"Would you like a Benoni? Which size do
you want?" And I turned to her and I
said, "Halav benoni." And she looked at
me and she said, "What?" I said, "Yes,
Benon, please." So anyway, Tanya on the
mind
that we qualify that we can be called
that we're worthy of being benonim.
Whether you're offering ordering a
coffee or you're living life halavon,
we're simply trying to be a benon. We're
in the middle of parl. We spoke about
first what is the animal soul. Then we
spoke about what is the godly soul. The
different components that comprise every
of who we are. This tension, this
battle, the animal inside us that we're
not trying to slaughter or obliterate or
purge. the animal that we're trying to
train and elevate the godly soul and the
multiple parts that the godly soul is
made up of. Spoke about the tensos. We
talk about the intellect control the
emotion. And that's where we left off in
the middle of perk gimmel which is where
do feelings come from? We talk about the
feelings awe and fear of hashem, love of
hashem. We talk about the feelings we
have interpersonally with one another
and of course most significantly between
us and hashem. Where do those feelings
come from? Feelings in Torah, in
Yiddishkite, feelings are not just
ephemeral. They're not illdefined.
They're not just what swells up inside
us. They're not things that are just
feelings that can't be put into words or
can't be described. Genuine real
feelings, authentic feelings, meaningful
feelings, productive feelings emanate
from the intellect. They begin from a
place of thought and they're translated
and expressed. They manifest then
through feeling. And it's so important
and it's so important to realize that
this is a basis in the Tanya because the
movement in the world to think that you
fabang and you drink and you feel good
and you emote but there's nothing
happening up here. It's all about
using whatever substances using whatever
physical material things delicious food
beverage in order to be able to just
feel and emote and sing and dance and
laugh and love. Those are all wonderful
feelings, but they have to begin. They
have to be nurtured. They have to be
seated in the intellect.
The divine soul's intellect, which is
the power to understand all things.
We began this last time is the first
and
the balat is introducing this
philosophy, this world view, this
paradigm, this existence, this identity
is not the name of an organization that
puts filling on people and make sure you
have kosher food wherever you go. Isma
and it's a worldview. It's an identity
and the first because these aren't
simply synonyms
is
it is a fusion of the two words a
contraction of the power the potential
of ma of inquisitiveness of curiosity of
asking what is the power to say what is
this I want to understand more I've been
exposed to I have some spark of light
some flash of light that something's
happening here is the it is the power of
potential of living a life of ma I want
to know the wisdom and the being wise
enough to say what's really happening
what's the depth what's the profoundity
what's going on over here I was talking
tovki
this morning who was talking we call
a zakma
aim is somebody a zak is somebody who's
reached the right ripe old age who
doesn't say I know everything I have all
the answers I'm good to know to be a to
be a wise elder is to have acquired
is that no matter how old you are, no
matter what you've experienced, no
matter how much you've read, no matter
how much you've learned, you're still
asking the of you're still curious.
You're still inquiring. You still want
to know
we call we call an expert.
The expert is the person who doesn't say
I've achieved perfection and expertise.
I'm done. I'm the authority. What makes
someone an expert in Yiddishkite? What
makes someone a giddishkite?
What makes someone
that we admire and attach ourselves to
inhite in Torah is that they have
they still have the
is potential like the potential that is
inco
through meditating in the mind to
clarify idea its full richness and its
depth.
So is the
is I have a flash of light that says
there's something here. There's
godliness here. There's wisdom here.
There's something here. It's that flash
of light. Now the analysis, the
boundaries, the borders, the
contempliveness to understand, to give
the cognition what's happening here.
That's called
to analyze, to compare, to contrast, to
try to go. The classic classic example
of this or metaphor for this is I want
to build a building. This is a great
spot. This is a great piece of land, a
great property. We want to expand. We
want to build a building. That'sma is
what are the architectural plans? And
then is the materials and the details
and how we're going to make it happen.
These mental processes of are the father
and mother that give birth to love of
God, awe of God and fear of God. You
can't wake up in the morning. You can't
have a few and say, "Oh, I have such a
hashem and you're asem." It begins not
with a few. It begins not with some
feelings that well up inside you. It
begins not through a faban or a tish. I
love and I enjoy and invite me to every
one of those things but it begins in the
and that then translate and express and
manifest in the feelings. The feelings
have to be born
in his commentary won't get into it. He
has pages and pages talk about these are
the father and mother. Their inter
relationship and interaction resembles
between a father and a mother and
procreation. Bina receives from
As the father provides the seed, the
nucleus, the bean of the mother develops
into a many faceted entity. The koma he
develops exactly the metaphor and the
parallel in procreation and conception.
A father, a mother, what they
contribute, how conception happens, how
gestation occurs are the union, the
fusion of and that give birth to genuine
feelings. So the feelings have to be
founded in cognition and the intellect
in a
they can't come. They don't simply come
on their own. Again, he has pages and
pages and it's worth seeing. But those
are the authentic feelings, not fleeting
feelings, not feelings that disappear as
soon as you sober up from the fabin. But
a feeling that really transforms you. A
feeling that really lasts is the feeling
that the balatanya describes is born
through the and the procreation process
that gives birth to that genuine and
that real and that lasting and that true
feeling that comes from that combination
of the and the beina. He also describes
so also has a beautiful description and
metaphor absorbs the full picture in a
flash. This picture includes a full
array of objects and relations but as a
single indivisible point. The picture
perceived by is unintelligible.
Intellect in the common sense of the
word begins with bina. The difference
between is analogous to the difference
between sight and hearing. Writes sight
takes in the entire picture all the
details in a single instant. Right? So
when you see you see the panorama of the
room or of the picture. There's chairs,
there's tables, there's people, there's
a camera, there's a microphone, there's
a clock we're not paying attention to.
There's a lot that's going on in the
room. And you see it all as one
indivisible one picture. Hearing is very
different. Hearing cannot grasp a thing
as a singular all-inclusive whole as a
series of points present in a in a
specific order and structure. If you're
all talking at once, it just creates a
lot of noise. Hearing has to be honed in
focused one by one. By the same token is
the mind's direct sight of a concept.
The all embracing picture of all of its
principles and particulars. The picture
then passes from by the way of the 32
paths of wisdom that tell the story to
Bina. Bina not only receives its
information secondhand, receives it in a
form that is essentially different from
the manner of reception as a stream of
particles rather than a snapshot image.
So is like sight and bina is like
hearing is like sound. Obviously there's
a lot here. Every line of Tanya, every
perk could take us a lifetime. We're not
making much progress, but we at least
aspire to. So that's why we're not going
to go more into its depth. But viter a
little bit in the Tanya. We really want
to finish up or head towards finishing
up the third perk. So in order to have
genuine really lasting transformational
feelings, they have to begin in
meditations, the intellect, cognition,
and these meditations are about the
greatness and the majesty of Hashem.
It's the picture of a cosmos, of a
world, of a creator that then through
bina is honed in through analysis,
through concepts, through understanding.
And the cognitive powers of your divine
soul focus deeply on the greatness of
Hashem. And here are the three things
that should focus on says the number one
that all existence is saturated with
Hashem. This comes from a zawir that he
fills all worlds.
Hashem fills all of existence. There's
no place empty of him. Number two, how
all existence is engulfed in God. He
transcends all worlds.
And number three,
in his presence, everything is zero. So,
Hashem, the greatness of Hashem is
existence is saturated with Hashem. All
of existence is engulfed in God. And
existence is voided by God. Meaning
there can be nothing but him. He is so
great, so omnipresent, so omnipotent. He
has to constrict himself to enable and
allow there to be space for us. But in
truth and in essence, we are we're the
matrix. In truth and in essence, we're
an illusion. Really, all there is is
him. He allows the space for this
illusion to exist, this image of the in
his imagination to exist. But in his
presence, everything is nothing. So,
so when a person contemplates those
three things, if you meditate about
those three things, if you look at the
world and you feel every breeze and
watch the rustle of every leaf and you
hear every sound and you engage every
experience and you encounter every
seeming coincidence and you see through
the glasses the prism of those three
things that all existence is saturated
with Hashem, that all existence is
engulfed in Hashem and that there is
nothing but Hashem. Then if you
contemplate those three things then is
born of born and aroused a reverence of
Hashem's majesty the year
to rever God and to feel shame in the
presence of his greatness
which is without limit. Hashem is the he
is the limitless light. He doesn't have
a beginning. He doesn't have an end.
He's all powerful. He's all omnipotent.
He is all of existence. He's everything.
And when you think about that, you
recoil and you realize I am nothing. I
thought I'm something. I thought I I I I
work, I achieve, I build, I earn, I do,
I speak, I say, I think, I'm someone,
I'm something, I have a family. I'm
nothing. And you recoil with a very
healthy.
Now, there are two types of yer which
the Baltan is going to get into. This ya
hyroamus and ya of onesh, which is
called we use that same word ya. And we
ordinarily translate yra as fear. In
some ways, it's a mistransation because
the higher level of yer is not fear, but
it's awe.
All it's a word that's been corrupted.
The word awesome. Everything and
everyone is awesome. And if everything's
awesome, then nothing is awesome.
Because something truly awesome is
aweinducing. It's awe inspiring. You
feel a sense of awe. You get goosebumps.
You're in the presence of greatness. You
experience something great. You're in
awe. You're in awe. I had the privilege
to be in the Swiss Absol this summer and
laavdil much holier and more beautiful
to be in later this summer to be in the
holy Israel. See sightes of Tavaria down
from the Golan. You filled with awe.
Wow.
There is no rock like God say. There's
no artist like God. He's the ultimate
the greatest artist. And you feel this
sense of awe. And a real awe makes you
feel small. Makes you retreat. and makes
you recoil because you're in the
presence of greatness. That's awe.
That's awe. There's also the year that's
fear of Hashem that he's in charge. He's
in control. He's the judge. He's the
police
and he has expectations of me and he
holds me accountable. And if I don't
perform and I don't live up to them, I'm
in trouble. There's a consequence. So, I
have a you know, some of us still feel
every time a policeman passes you on the
highway, oo police, a cop, uhoh. So that
that's a p that's not an awe. You can be
in awe of the police. You don't even
know that particular police person that
policeman, but you might see the lights
in the car and say I have a healthy pad
right now. That's a fear of a if you're
going the speed limit, maybe you don't
feel that. If you're of a heavy foot,
maybe you feel it a little bit more, but
that's a so the higher level is the
sense of awe. So when you contemplate
and you see the world through these
three things, Hashem fills all of
existence. He is all of existence and
there is nothing but him. And you see
the world through that. You see events
unfold. You see nature. You see history.
You see your own life through the hashk
the providence that his interaction with
us. Then you feel this awe this.
And following the intellectual
experience of reverence. If you meditate
on reverence then not only do you feel
awe and the goosebumps of the greatness
of Hashem then you say uhoh.
Am I living up to his expectations?
Am I accountable for my actions? You
feel a healthy healthy sense of
and then after you feel awe then then
you have a good healthy fear and then
you feel love your heart will be ignited
with rapturous love
like a flaming fire. This is language
borrowed from
like a flaming fire a love and drawn
close to Hashem like a flaming fire.
This is the awe. We're living in a time
we are awe deprived. Awe deprived.
Research shows the capacity to feel awe
is really important. It makes people
more empathetic and generous and kind
and humble. All is an emotional response
to something that's vast and great. And
we in the information age and it's only
getting worse. We who have terabytes of
information at our fingertips. We who
through speech recognition can tell our
car to come pull up and pick us up. We
who now have AI and can create anything
in a moment, we're less impressed and
less filled with awe of anything. And
that's having a terrible terrible
detrimental effect on us. And we need we
need awe. We need awe of awesome things
and awesome people and we need awe
ultimately of Hashem to find our place
in the universe. It's so critically
critically important and it's missing
dangerously missing and it begins again
with the intellect with the meditating
with and the bina that then translates
into the somus that sense of awe. I'll
just end by telling you this story. I
once wrote this article the home of the
great composer Lewig van Beethoven has
been preserved. It serves as a museum in
Bon Germany. And one of the historical
gems in the museum that was his home is
his piano. Beethoven's piano where he
composed most of his works. It's
estimated to be worth more than $50
million and it's roped off in that
museum. I've never been there, but the
story told about a group of students
from Vasser College who were visiting
this Beethoven museum. And one of the
students came into the room and was so
tempted couldn't help it. Slipped the
guard, the museum guard some money to
say, "Could I play it for a moment?" And
the guard allowed himself to be
influenced by the generous tip and let
the young woman be on the ropes for a
few moments. and she sat at the piano
and she knocked out some bars of
Moonlight Sonata. And when she finished,
her classmates applauded and it was
great. She had played both Beethoven's
piano, right? As she stepped back
through the ropes, the young woman asked
the guard, "I suppose over the year the
great pianists that have come here have
played the piano. I suppose I just
followed so many of the great pianists
who played Beethoven's piano." And the
guard replied, "Actually, no, miss. In
fact, just two years ago, I was standing
in this very place when Paradeski
visited the museum. He was accompanied
by the director of the museum, the
international press, who had all come in
the hope that he would play the piano.
When he entered the room, he stood over
there where your friends are standing.
He gazed at the piano in silent
contemplation for 15 minutes. The
director of the museum invited him to
play the piano, but with tears welling
in his eyes, he declined, saying he
wasn't worthy to even touch it. And you
look at the contrast. A person who has
no idea really the greatness of
Beethoven or his works has no problem
playing around on his piano. But the
more intellect, the more understanding,
the more knowledge, the more the more
bina you have, the more you recoil and
say, "I'm unworthy. I'm filled with such
awe. I'm filled with such awe." And that
that story, that anecdote really is a
description of the challenge of our time
and our generation. What the balan is
telling us and encouraging us is that we
need awe of Hashem and that is that awe
is born. It's conceived and then born in
the meditative process of the intellect
and in
that translates into which then results
in
we are flamed with fervor and desire and
longing.
a a craving soul for the greatness of
that light. So, it's not a feeling that
comes out of nowhere. Certainly not a
feeling that comes only by having a or
singing a great song. Those things
enhance and they're beautiful and
they're nothing wrong. And I want to
iterate, reiterate before you send me
and bombard me with emails. I love, I
attend, I host, I go, I live off of
those tishes and fabans and getting
together. But it can't be superficial
and it can't be fake and it can't be
counterfeit for it to be genuine,
authentic and real. The Balatana writes,
it has to be born through the fusion,
the procreation of the meditative
process of the intellect of giving birth
to the saroma to that to that then
lights us on fire. the soul in us
wanting to draw close to the light and
the place from which it comes to the
point of close hes which we'll get up to
we'll pick up with next week and we'll
finish gimmel have a great day it should
be a day we hear Go in the hummus.