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Now, that the afterlife is very
mysterious, we don't have a lot of
details about it, but does Judaism say
anything about whether we're going to be
with our families or with our loved ones
in the world to come?
It depends. [clears throat] If you're
talking about going to hell, certainly
they'll be with you.
There is a
connection with family, parents,
brothers. There's a strong connection
between people that are close to each
other, but there's also the concept of
reincarnation and a bigger connection,
soul connection that we have in a
broader sense to souls. And past again,
the the story's much more layered.
There's you've been here maybe 20 times
or maybe we've been here so many times.
So, it's a multiply layered type of
story when we get there. We're not just
It's not like me and my brothers. It's
It's It's brothers that you you had in
many lifetimes, brothers and sisters and
relatives and you accomplished things
and part of you accomplished this,
another part of you accomplished that.
It's a very very fascinating as we learn
more and more Kabbalah and the writings
of the Arizal, we're becoming more and
more aware of this. And when Messiah
comes, we'll be even more aware of it.
Well, I mean, there's not much more to
add to that. There are there are
different worlds. There's Olam Haba.
There's There's the days of Messiah.
There's, you know, the all these like,
you know, five or six different worlds
that we're going to be coming to. So,
what's going to happen when Messiah
comes in the different levels of the
days of Messiah. And of course, all the
famous questions, which body are you
going to stand up with from different
reincarnations? And you know, how is it
going to look? And are you going to be
your soul back in your body? Is it going
to be a total soul world at the end of
days or are we going to go back in our
body? Which body are we going to go back
into?
All these questions will as the sham be
found out
soon enough when Messiah comes. Now,
it's a really fitting for this occasion,
which is the
the passing of my brother in a car
accident at 21 years old.
We do know that on the day that a person
died, he's judged every year that same
day.
And it's not a judgment because God
forgot something the first year. It's a
fascinating deep idea. I'll share it now
because it fits for the occasion that
we're here.
There's many levels of truth and if
they're all true.
It's It's really depends on how
how much you want to focus on and how
how macro or micro you want to look at
things.
A general judgment that will you'll get
when you when a person dies is going to
going to decide whether he's how what
was considered bad on that first look
and deal with it. But, it doesn't it
doesn't go to the essence of everything
they did bad. They would destroy the
soul if he was judged for everything he
did bad in one shot. So, every year he's
rejudged with a bit more scrutiny. Let's
use a lens as an example. You can have a
wide lens and you can have that lens but
whatever one focal point narrow it until
you get to the very very narrow lens.
Every year you're you're you're judged
with more scrutiny.
And ultimately, what's the point of this
multiple judgments that the person's
going to be judged and punished and
passed to fix for every single year
forever. So, the Arizal mentions a
person that was being judged for
something he did going back maybe a
thousand years. This is a of judgment.
Because we go little by little.
And it's ultimately in order to bring
the soul to the most perfect, truest
sense of completion and purity and
holiness that it can be as close as
possible to the purest of good God
himself and and and in the highest level
of spiritual bliss.
And so, the the work and the judgment
and the and the rectification that we
have to go through over and over again
is almost like a I don't want to listen
to a joke, but a Groundhog's Day of of
judgment. You're judged every single
year again and again and again. But, we
want to be judged every year again and
again and again because that that the
the where we where we wind up after the
judgment is in a better place. And so,
God is just constantly bringing us
closer and closer, higher and higher to
a better and better place until
ultimately Mashiach when we will all
return to the most perfect place we
could ever imagine is is is Mashiach.
When a person wants to take steps
towards controlling their eyes,
like a lot of times that people are
faced with is you know, once they go 1
week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks and they're
really working on this,
they've consumed so much impurity, they
fill their mind with so much nonsense
that
they have images, flashbacks, they have
these kind of these kind of things that
plague their minds, it circulate around,
which can cause temptation, it can lead
the person back to sin, but it also can
lead a person to think, you know, am I a
lost cause here? Like am I ever like it
like my mom like how how are these
thoughts ever supposed to leave my mind?
And I think that concept applies to a
lot of things. The person wants to start
keeping kosher and they already they've
been eating non-kosher their whole
lives. We say that you know, the concept
is like kosher food like it like
destroys the soul in some eternal way.
Like how would you encourage someone to
say that they can get past that, they
can become better, they become something
like in a what what what what
encouragement would you give to that
concern? So, I want to just make two
points.
Uh
a person could be lost, but there's
never a there doesn't exist a they live
a lost cause. Every person is
redeemable. You're lost in order to to
find your way back. Another thing,
anything that's broken is actually
broken in order to be fixed. The concept
of broken is God instilled in the in the
fabric of creation. It's because through
falling and rising, we reach a true
level of where we stand. Without falling
and rising, we don't even have that
level that we're standing. We think
we've accomplished something. A
self-made millionaire is a millionaire.
Someone who inherited money is just a
guy with a lot of money. And so, we fall
to rise even stronger to a higher place.
What's broken not only can be fixed, it
must be fixed. And when you fix it, it
reaches its perfection. And so, lost and
found is what life is all about. We're
sitting here in our simcha and everyone
here is coming to do teshuvah. How does
one not be fooled into his past? How
does one not fall into despair of what
he's done? This is the question that
we're dealing with on a daily basis over
here. Hashem made one of the most
beautiful things, if not the most
beautiful thing that Hashem made in this
world before the world was even created,
was the idea of teshuvah.
Teshuvah is not that Hashem says, "If
you say I'm sorry, I'll forgive you."
Whatever. It's really rectifying your
past. It's really truly
not only in a way destroying what you've
done in your past and destroying it in a
good way, but rectifying it, though
bringing it up.
So, this is what it says,
the makam shiva t'shuva omedin, in the
place where a baal t'shuva stands, a
feel tzadikim gamurim, even real
tzadikim, in ya chalamer, are able to
stand there. Why? Because they never had
that temptation. Exactly because of this
question.
Exactly because someone who's never had
a challenge in a specific area
doesn't really know what he's missing
out on. Doesn't really It doesn't really
a challenge for him to grow from that
place. He never was there.
But a person who was there
always naturally will have in the back
of his mind that's a possibility.
That world of eating cheeseburgers, that
world of not being careful with my eyes,
that world, that place exists and it's
real.
And I know that it's real because I've
been there.
And it's because of that challenge that
we're constantly faced that we have to
believe in ourselves. You have to
believe that when you come closer to
Hashem
and you're trying to do t'shuva, Hashem
is going to help you. And you have to
believe that the t'shuva is real. And
you have to believe that when I do
t'shuva and I go through the steps of
doing t'shuva, that place has become
rectified.
And part of the challenge is by
believing that. Part of the challenge is
truly believing in ourselves. And of
course in that way we will no longer
have the temptation or we will help
ourselves not have the temptation to
fall back there because we know that is
not us. We don't identify with that
anymore. Just as Hashem doesn't identify
us with that past, we don't identify
with that past. And that's the challenge
of the baal t'shuva, to truly believe
that where he stands now is no longer
where he was. To truly believe that
where he is right now and the place
where he was no longer exists. And he's
a new entity, he's a new briah.
And this is the beautiful thing of
t'shuva.
I want to
I want to take a different direction and
approach to what we've been speaking
about.
It is an important idea, very famous
idea and it's one that most people don't
want to appreciate is that someone who
was a sinner
and
you know, changes his ways and stops
sinning, so we don't look at him as the
as this Jewish hero. We have stories of
Sadiq and that never sinned that do the
entire Torah backwards and forwards
before they even bar mitzvah. And so how
do we compete? How do we compare?
It's it's almost like a non-starter. I
mean, I I lost before I even started. So
why am I here? Why am I even in this
world to begin with? If I can never come
close to the the the likes of Moses,
Moshe Rabbeinu. It's it's it's it's just
a non-starter. So why why start? Why why
did God create me? In the big picture
with all these great great world
figures, Jewish figures that were such
Sadiqim, it makes me feel like a real
big loser. I'll be honest with you.
Nothing to do with my weight. Just a
real big loser.
So, I think it's important to share an
idea from my brother in short
and you know, it should be a school for
the my brother that passed away also.
My older brother passed away young, but
my my twin brother, he has a beautiful
insight.
I think one of a kind gen, a gift from
heaven, insight.
He's aware of a teaching that God
couldn't have only made the world with
the strict attribute of justice and
judgment, punishment.
Gevurah.
So he he he had to partner up with this
measure of judgment and punishment with
mercy.
And my brother asks I think a question
of one of these great Sadiqim.
In this moment he was a Sadiq.
Right now he's not even that religious,
unfortunately struggling, but he's a
great has a great soul and he's he's
fighting. He's fighting as he's falling,
he's fighting. That's the real power
within a Jew that he never gives up on
himself, on Hashem ever.
But he said it's not true. God could
have made a world with only the strict
attribute of judgment because we know
that the tsaddiqim can live up to that
level of judgment. And when when Messiah
comes, we will all reach the level of
tsaddiqim and we'll all live on this
level of the pure judgment. We won't
need favors from God. We won't need
mercy. We won't need freebies.
So, he says, "You know, the answer is
because the tsaddiqim, only the
tsaddiqim, only the the purely holy and
righteous can live up to that level of
judgment. But the wicked [clears throat]
can't."
So, a very simple solution is offered
God. Just get rid of the resha'im. Just
get rid of the wicked people and you
have a world uh that's built only on
pure judgment and justice.
But you see, God did not want a world of
perfect people because that kind of
world he could have had. Just get rid of
the favors. Get rid of the freebies. So,
he made a world with mercy and freebies
because he wants those that are going to
need that.
And and so, we matter. We matter. The
The not-so-perfect people, the
not-so-perfect heroes matter as much,
maybe more, if not more than than the
perfect people.
And I want to tell you the story of the
baal teshuvah, the one who changes his
ways. The reason why he stands in a
place where the perfectly righteous
can't is because getting up from a fall
is much harder than just, you know,
staying standing.
And what a baal teshuvah accomplishes is
infinitely greater than what a righteous
person can ever accomplish. If you've
never tasted sin, then you know what You
don't know really know what it's like to
beat sin. You've avoided this sin, but
you didn't beat it.
And so, the baal teshuvah
is is a is a giant.
It's what it's really all about. But
it's not a pretty story. I'll tell you,
I'm 53 years old and I feel that I
started my path of teshuvah at the age
of 20.
Maybe 18.
Now, I You want to know who what a
person really is? Everyone knows
himself. It's one thing to correct
behavior and that's that's important and
that's everything. In law and in
practicality, changing your behavior
your is is amazing and it's what it's
all about. you can face the test of the
things that are forbidden eating on
kosher maybe behaving with women in a
way that's not a proper the proper. If
you can separate yourself from sin and
no longer
act in the way you acted before
You you you you you you're a hero.
But that's only a one level to control
one's emotions and thoughts and dreams.
You know dreams we have to deal with.
It's not easy and that's
another dimension and perspective I want
to bring out in the bal teshuvah. The
bal teshuvah suffers and fights on so
many levels but let's understand what it
means to be strong what it means to
conquer.
There's a conquering that you can do by
being perfect your whole life and never
even tasting sin but then there's a
conquering that you can accomplish
within a spiritual conquering
in defeat.
If someone is losing a battle
and he gives up that's giving up but
there's a fight within the
defeat within the the drawn back when an
army draws back but they continue to
fight that's a very interesting kind of
energy. You're losing and you're giving
up and you're pulling away but you're
still fighting.
And this is what we call a
reversed type of light that we can tap
into in in the defeat but we don't let
go. Even this even feeling bad that you
had a bad thought that came from nowhere
that is giving something to Hashem that
is precious.
And so we have to embrace who and what
we are and realize
it's just all for the sake of being real
as real as we can ever possibly be and
being really with Hashem. And we come in
all shapes and sizes and we have
millions of stories and they're not
pretty stories they're real stories and
they're valuable and precious to Hashem.
The Zohar says that one who crushes his
desires for for evil for bad creates a a
greater than any light that's ever been
seen.
And that's what we're here to do.
Do the Do the rain have any advice on
how what a person need to do to help
make a canyon on Torah learning tell to
really acquire it? Well, I thought it
was a very basic idea that I said
everyone knows this is that learning
without review is is not called
learning. It's like planting
seeds and not coming back to get the
fruit that grow. So, we have to always
train ourselves. It's not as fun as
learning something new. It's going back
to what you've learned. It's it's a
discipline. Review is what all real
learning is built off of. Okay? Number
one. Number two, I think choose what you
like, what you're excited about. The
more you interested you are in what
you're learning, the more you'll be
happy about it and more you'll be
excited about it and the more you'll
retain it. Also,
you know, when you
repeat in words, when you speak out what
you've learned by teaching, really
talking out and teaching, explaining,
sharing what you've learned with others
also helps it become more internalized
and will help you to certainly remember
it. Writing out your thoughts will help
you to remember it and and and and
internalize it more.
When you come to the Yeshiva, we have a
great desire to learn, a great desire to
grow.
So, I'm not accusing you of this, but I
am going to say that it's natural for a
person to think that no matter what he
did, it's not enough.
No matter what he's done,
he hasn't be hit the market he that he
thinks he should hit.
And it coming from a good place in here
because a person's also has a drive.
Without a drive, you won't push himself.
But there has to be a balance. There has
to be a balance at the end of the day in
this world that yes, you push yourself.
Yes, you could There are ways to retain
information and there are different
methods and different like I said,
there's books that you could that you
could read to how to study effectively.
But at the end of the day,
the main thing that a person has in this
world that can make him connect to
learning and that will help him learn
and it will help him
retain this information, it will make
him proud of who he is for learning is
learning with simcha, with joy, and
being proud of what you've done. But, if
your whole thing in life is, "I'm not
doing it well enough. I'm not doing it
good enough. I need to figure it out
more. I forgot. I don't remember this. I
can't believe I just learned this. I'm
upset." What I see over here is that
it's not the guys forgetting this that's
the problem. It's that the guys are
forgetting and then they feel bad about
it, and they put themselves down, and
they are not happy or prideful with with
where they have come from.
And I think that is much more important
than I would have put than retaining the
information. That should be a focus. And
with that simcha, with that joy, your
heart will open and your mind will open,
and that you will have the ability to
retain much more than if you're coming
from a place of pressure and intensity
and putting yourself down.
I'd like to conclude with this verse.
Hasidic interpretation of of the verse
that the Torah of kindness is on your
tongue. Torat chesed al lishona.
And what they interpret it as this. God
was kind to share his wisdom, his divine
wisdom in Torah, with us. It's a
kindness. The way water falls from a
high place to a low place, God gives us
his his supernal divine wisdom. He gives
it to us. It was kindness that he did
for us to give it to us. We have to be
kind and share it with others. Torat
chesed, the Torah of God's kindness
should be on your tongue to tell over to
others. You learned, now teach others.
The the Lubavitcher Rebbe says famously,
"If you know aleph, then go teach aleph.
If you know bet, go teach bet. Because
there's someone out there that doesn't
even have that." Rebbe Yochanan ben
Zakkai says a beautiful idea. He says,
"If you've
learned a lot of Torah, if you've been
able to learn a lot of of godly wisdom,
don't think that you're a good It's just
such a great person. Al tigzi tovah
l'atzmecha. Don't consider yourself so
great. But, the drash, the words can be
read, "Don't keep the good to yourself."
Well, don't tigzi, don't hold on to the
good for yourself. Ki lekachta Torah,
because why did God give you the ability
to learn his Torah? It was to share that
good, cuz Torah is called good. Share
that good Torah with others. Again,
Torah
the Torah of God should be on your
tongue to teach it to others the way he
allowed you to learn it from him.