Transcript
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Okay, today we're going to talk about
Israel, the heart of every Jew. And what
we're looking to do is understand the
connection between the land of Israel
and the people of Israel. To understand
the spiritual connection because a
little bit of a disclaimer here to start
off, today we're not going to be talking
about anything politically. A lot of
times people talk about Israel or
Jerusalem and quickly the conversation
turns to politics or Israel advocacy,
but this is not my topic. My topic here
today is to understand the spiritual
connection between the land of Israel
and the people of Israel. Now, in order
to understand the spiritual connection
between the land of Israel and the
people of Israel, we're going to have to
understand what is the essence of land,
what is the essence of people, and what
is the essence of Israel. If we can go
ahead and understand that clearly, we'll
be able to ultimately come out with an
understanding of the connection between
the land of Israel and the people of
Israel. So, in order to understand the
essence of land, people, and Israel, we
need to understand how do we understand
the essence of anything?
So, there's a couple of ways to do that.
Uh one way is by understanding
uh any word that shows up in the Torah,
in particular the first time it shows up
is considered to be kind of like the
center of understanding what is that
word as its essence.
So, that's one way to do it. We're
actually not going to do that here
today. What we're going to get do today
is go with a little bit of a cabalistic
hack, and that is to look at the word
what that word is called, the name of
the thing because in the name of the
thing lies the essence of the thing,
right? How do we say name in Hebrew?
Shame, which is related to the Hebrew
word sham, which means there because in
the name of the thing lies the there of
the thing. In the name of the thing lies
the the purpose, the destined the the
destiny, the goal, what that thing is
really here for, what it's really all
about. So, if I want to get to the
essence of something, I'm going to go to
the name of the thing.
So,
we're going to start off with people.
What do we mean What do we mean by a
person? And we're going to look at the
word of
for for a person, Adam. Adam
breaks down to aleph dam, which which
aleph, which is one in Hebrew uh
numerology, and one in Judaism is God.
And then we have dam, which means blood.
And so, this essentially is what a
person is. What a person boils down to
is flesh and blood with a spark of
godliness. This is the essence of what a
person is. Now, let's understand it also
a little bit deeper compared to what is
beneath quote-unquote beneath the person
and quote-unquote above the person.
Beneath the person you have an animal.
An animal in Hebrew is called a behema.
Behema breaks down to ba ma, in it what
is there?
It's a rhetorical question, meaning what
you see is what you get. That animal
standing in front of you, that body
standing in front of you, its physical
instincts and its emotional nature and
its emotional instincts, that is the sum
total of what it is going to do. There's
no higher potential to do something
more. There's no higher soul that brings
with it free will and a consciousness
and a self-awareness that's able to go
ahead and choose higher than its
physical instincts and its emotional
instincts.
Now, above the person you have um what
you might call a malach, an angel.
Right? Now, whatever your picture of an
angel is, maybe he's got some wings on
his back, a circle over his head, that's
not our point here today. Right? Just to
think about an angel as a purely
spiritual being. It always It knows what
it is. It knows its role. It's clear on
God, and it knows what it's supposed to
do. And it doesn't have any pull against
that because of it is so clear.
And so, it always does the right thing.
And so, in this manner we see this is
the concept of an angel. Angel in Hebrew
is malach, which breaks down to maleh
and then the letter kaf. Kaf is also a
word meaning a palm, like in modern
Hebrew kaf is a is a spoon or kapete is
a spoon.
And so, literally the word malach breaks
down to maleh kaf, that its palms are
full, meaning to say it is in a constant
state of self-actualization. It is
constantly doing what it's supposed to
do. So, the behema has has there's no
higher potential to do more. The angel,
the malach, it's automatically
actualized. Standing in between those
two, you have the person, which is aleph
and dam. It has a godly side to it, the
spiritual side to it, if you want to
call it that, and the dam, the flesh and
blood side of it, the animal side of it.
And this is also seen
from the fact that the human being is
created from the dust of the earth and
also called on the dust of the earth,
Adam coming from the word adamah, which
means earth. So, can you hear the idea
that if a person is has the same name,
meaning the same name as the word dirt,
and it was also created from the dirt,
so can we hear the idea there's
connection, a foundational connection
between the ground or dirt and the
person?
And that is that just like the ground
uh is something There's something very
unique there, that the ground on its
own,
right? If you on the ground, if you go
ahead and do the proper plowing, proper
seeding, proper watering, give it light,
you can grow all sorts of fruits and
plants and uh vegetables and all sorts
of things. However, if the ground lays
there barren, not being worked at all,
so that the that ground, you don't see
growth from that ground. Similarly is
the story of the person. If a person
puts in the proper plowing and seeding
and watering, the proper midot character
refinement,
and uh education and inspiration
and Torah, so you can you can grow
beautiful fruits and wonderful things
from that ground. You can grow beautiful
fruits of self-actualization.
However, if a person doesn't make those
moves, if a person doesn't do any
plowing and seeding and just stays how
they are, so then for it can lay the
person can quote-unquote lay personally
barren. So, this is the idea of what a
person is all about. What a person is
all about is a being of
self-actualization,
looking to grow, looking to gain,
looking to grow into who and what it
truly is. This is what a person is all
about. Now, the question becomes
where is that growth happening? Where is
that journey happening? This is the
concept of land, eretz. Eretz breaks
down to aleph ratz.
Aleph again, one. What's one in Judaism?
God.
And then ratz, which literally means to
run.
So, it's the journey, a godly journey.
Running, that is the location where
we're involved in that godly journey
of the human being.
Now, contrast this with
the heavens. In Hebrew we call that
shamayim. That breaks down to sham,
which we said means there, and then with
a yud mem at the end, which is plural.
Meaning to say Meaning to say that in
life we have many destinations in the
journey of life. We have many things
that we need to do, places we need to
go, accomplishments we need to make.
But then there's the destination
of all destinations. What's the
destination of all destinations
in life? Of course, is when a person
leaves this world and goes to shamayim,
goes to the heavens, there in plural.
Now, let's understand uh
at the core the difference between eretz
and shamayim is eretz is this place of
journeying, shamayim is the place of
experience. We see this in a teaching
from the rabbis in Pirkei Avot, Ethics
of the Fathers, where it says,
"One moment in the next world is greater
than all the moments in this world, and
one moment in this world is greater than
all the moments in the next world." I'm
paraphrasing. Now, let's understand
though I If we want to you know, this
situations and teachings like this that
have kept the rabbis in business all
these years.
So, how do we make sense of this? From a
religious perspective, that first part
makes sense. One moment in the next
world, one moment of limitless, uh
barrierless basking in the glory of the
infinite is greater than all of the
moments of expansiveness and enjoyment
and experiences that we have here in
this world. That makes sense. However,
let's understand the other side. One
moment in this world greater than all of
the moments in the next world, or to get
a little bit more specific, what it says
is one moment of teshuvah and maasim
tovim, one moment of making real change
and good deeds is greater than all the
moments of the next world. How is that?
Very simple, because when we get to the
Whatever our experience is on the other
side, so to speak, where
because of the clarity of that, there's
no place for growth, or not certainly
not like there is here.
Right? So, what this world is all about
is this world is about the journeying.
That's the opportunity of the
non-clarity of this world is that when
we go ahead and strive, when we go ahead
and push forward, when we go ahead and
do something positive even here in this
world where where that's a struggle, so
then we are going ahead and gaining and
expanding of ourself. That is the
advantage of eretz, of being right here.
So, eretz is that place of the journey,
shamayim is that place of the
destination, shamayim is that place of
the experience. That's land compared to
the heavens. What about land compared to
the sea?
Land compared to the sea, we would have
to say land has the quality of
permanence, and the sea has the quality
of wavering. Now, in order to understand
this, we we have to develop and explain
another idea in Kabbalah, and it's also
mentioned in other areas as well, that
there's a philosophical principle called
tzurah and chomer, which means form and
material. That everything here in this
world is made up of both form
and material.
So, for example, this table here,
assuming it's a wooden table, so this
table has is the the material is wood,
and the form is the tableness of the
thing, which means that there is a
certain direction, that a certain mold,
if you want to call it that, a certain
direction of the concept of that's the
concept of form, is direction, the
destiny, the goal, the path it's going
in, and then the material, the wood is
the vehicle by which that is brought
out. It is the the way it is ultimately
manifested and expressed to actually be
a table. So, that concept of tzurah,
that concept of direction, vision, form,
that is the concept of spirit That is a
concept of spiritual. Right? Matter of
fact, the Maharal of Prague would say
that this is the concept of
stubbornness. That stubbornness is a
spiritual quality. Now, you would say,
"How is that?" The answer is like this.
The The reason why we think negatively
about stubbornness is because usually
people are stubborn about the wrong
thing. Let's change the word for a
second. Imagine I would tell you someone
is principled.
Ah, that sounds good. Right? But, that
just means you're stubborn about the
right things. Right? It means you have a
certain vision, and no matter what,
nothing is going to push you out of that
vision. No sea is going to come storming
and push you away from that. No winds of
change are going to blow you off of your
path where you see something clearly
that needs to get done. This is the
concept of tzurah. This is the concept
of form, and this is a spiritual concept
because even though naturally we could
be pulled one way or another, so the
concept is I can go above that. I can
get spiritual, and I go above what comes
natural, and do something higher than
what comes along naturally. This is the
concept of tzurah, the concept of form,
the concept of vision.
And this is the concept of land because
the water can come up, the water can be
wavering, but it stops at the land.
Speaking of which, water is the greatest
example we have of material.
Right? Because water doesn't have a
specific direction, doesn't have a
specific form. Water takes on the form
that it is put into. Right? Matter of
fact, you see this in the Hebrew
language. How do you say water in Hebrew
in singular?
There is no way to say water in Hebrew
in singular, right? Water in Hebrew is
mayim, which is plural with a yud mem at
the end. And even if you want to say,
"Okay, I saw water company that's called
the may eden."
That means waters of Eden. That's a
grammatical thing.
And so, the point is that water doesn't
have singular direction. So, water is
the ultimate example of what it means
material.
So now, when was the heyday of water in
all of history? When was the time when
water took over even
where land usually is?
So, if you want to get biblical, of
course, you would say the time of the
flood, during the time of Noach.
Right? And what does the Torah say about
the time leading up to that?
It says, "Malecha aretz chamas." The
world was full of distortion. Uh what's
supposed to be down is up, what's
supposed to be up is down. There's
thievery, there's all sorts of different
immorality. People are going with
animals.
Basically, a total loss of direction, a
totally loss of vision, a total loss of
form. So then, that's what's going on
spiritually. What comes out physically?
Water overflows even where land is
supposed to be and normally is. Let's
flip it around for a second. What is the
time that was the heyday of land?
When is the time when we find land even
in a place where water usually is?
So, for that, again, getting biblical,
we would talk about the splitting of the
sea. Why did the sea split? According to
one approach, we read it in the hallel
prayer, where it says in Psalms,
It says that the sea saw
and then it fled, it split. And so, the
rabbis ask, "Well, what exactly did the
sea see that implied that inspired it
and caused it to move out of the way and
allow for land to show up?"
And so, the rabbis teach that the sea
saw the bones of Joseph.
And then, the sea split.
So, why is that? What is it about Joseph
that inspires or causes the sea to
split? So, if you think about it, it
actually makes a lot of sense. Joseph in
Kabbalah in in Kabbalah, Joseph in the
Zohar is the example of what it means to
be a tzaddik. The example of what it
means to be a refined person. Why? If
you think about it, Joseph was the that
one who was
sent away from the holy enclave of the
Jewish people or of the Jewish people
of the Jewish family, sent away from his
father's house or from Yaakov's house,
sent away from the the tribes and the
brothers and that whole situ- cocoon
of holiness that they had set up over
there. And he's sent to Egypt, and in
Egypt he's put in the He experiences the
lowest of the low. He's put in the jail
in Egypt, and we all know what could
happen there.
All sorts of not exactly the most moral
of places. And then ultimately, he also
gets raised up to be basically running
the show in the entire Egyptian
civilization. So, he has all sorts of
options in front of him, all sorts of
possibilities in front of him to do
whatever he wants, whenever he wants.
And on top of that, I heard he wasn't
bad looking either.
And yet, we find that Joseph stands
strong in all of these different
situations and scenarios. And so, he is
the example of what it means to be a
tzurah personality, a person of form, a
person of principle, a person who has a
particular direction, has clarity, and
follows through it even in a world where
seas could be storming inside of him,
and he has all sorts of options to do
all sorts of other things around him all
the time, 24/7.
He is the example of what it means to
blaze a trail within himself to for
holiness. And so, in his merit, when the
Jewish people show up at the sea, the
sea, the water splits and moves out of
the way in order to allow for
land going through, and the Jewish
people ultimately merit to go through.
So, this is what we find land to be
about. Land is about principles. Land is
about permanence. Land is about what
direction are we going in? So, what
comes out? Land
is about the journey,
and it's about spirituality. Land is
about journey, and it's about
consciousness and direction.
And this is where a person
is involved in their journey for
self-actualization.
Okay. Now, what do we mean by Israel?
So, the Talmud teaches, "Chochma bagoyim
ta'amin, Torah bagoyim al ta'amin." If
someone comes along and tells you that
there is wisdom among the nations, yeah,
believe them. Believe them, it's true.
It's true, every nation has something to
contribute. Every nation has a gift to
bring to the world.
But, if someone comes along and says,
"Torah bagoyim al ta'amin." If someone
comes along and tells you that there's
Torah among the nation, that there's the
spiritual purpose among the nations,
that there's a spiritual clarity of what
is the correct thing to do and what is
the right way to go, that al ta'amin,
that don't believe because that is the
country That's the contribution that is
the gift that the Jewish people bring to
the world. And we see this in the name
for the Jewish people. One of the names
for the Jewish people is Yisrael, which
breaks down to yashar El, straight to
God. Meaning to say, every other nation
has something to contribute, something
to bring to the world, but the Jewish
people, their role is to attach that to
godliness,
to get attached that to its purpose, to
its higher point, to what it's really
really here for. And this is what the
Jewish people are supposed to do for the
world. And this is why the Jewish people
the natio- the national goal is to be an
or lagoim, a light unto the nations.
What does that mean? It means to attach
the nations, to attach with and also to
attach with the nations bring to its
ultimate goal, to its ultimate purpose
in in order that Hashem, God, should be
revealed through through them and
through all of us and through
what they bring to the world. And we
even see this in the word for light.
Light means in in Hebrew or
breaks down to aleph vav resh. Aleph,
again, one. What's one in Judaism? God.
Vav is in Hebrew a letter that's
attached to a word in order to mean and
or or.
So, it attaches two sentence fragments
into one sentence. So, it's the concept
of connection connection, attachment.
Also, vav itself is a word in the Tanakh
in the Jewish Bible. Vav vav, which
means
That's how it's spelled, vav vav, which
means a hook. Again, something that
attaches two things together. And resh,
resh is a word that's in Aramaic, which
is a bounce off of Hebrew from the word
rosh. Rosh
in Hebrew means
the head. So, we have aleph, God, vav,
connected, resh, to the head. God
connected to the head. God
consciousness. This is what the word
light means, or, which means God
consciousness. Cuz what is or? What is
light? Light reveals what is there.
From a spiritual's perspective, what is
What is there? What is here?
Godliness. This is the concept of light
in spirituality. This is the concept of
light in Kabbalah. And this is what the
Jewish people are here to be, an or
lagoim, to bring to clarify what is
really here in this world. And what is
really here in this world? Hashem, God.
This is the concept of light. This is
what the Jewish people are here to
bring. Let's flip that around.
And what about darkness?
Darkness is the concept of in Hebrew,
choshech, which is the same letters as
the word shachach, which means to
forget. To forget God, to forget your
purpose, to forget what you're really
here for, to forget what life's all
about, to forget that you're a soul and
not just a body.
And we also see the same principle of
what we're talking about here also in
another word for for Jew, which is
Yehudi,
which comes from the word Yehudah.
Right? Yehudah breaks down to yud and
hey and vav and hey,
>> [clears throat]
>> the name of Hashem, with a dalet. Dalet
in Judaism is a letter that
the that means implies poverty because
dalet is from the word dal, which means
poor. Also, the way you spell it out as
a word is dalet lamed tav. Dalet dalet
lamed tav, which it spells also the word
for a door, dalet, a door, because a
poor person, a dal, needs to go from
door to door. And so, the idea is, what
is the Jew?
The Jew, from the word the Yehudi, from
the word Yehuda, is the one who's to
bring the yud and the hey and the vav
and the hey to the dalet, to the one who
is poor of that, to the one who does not
have that on their own intrinsically.
Again, this is the role of what the Jew
is here for. So, the person is here for
growth. Yes, the Jew is here for to go
ahead and to attach that which is higher
to all of humanity. This is what the
Jewish people are all about. This is
what Yisrael is all about. Take
everything Yasha El straight to God.
Sorry, one second.
And so, we have a principle
in the ancient book of Kabbalah, the
Sefer Yetzirah, that says that the world
was created in three dimensions, olam,
shanah, nefesh, space, time, and being.
That which exists in one exists in the
other. And so,
similarly, that's the word.
So, an obvious example of this is, just
like we have that this is the role of
the Jew,
so also, this is the idea of Eretz
Yisrael. Eretz Yisrael means again,
Eretz, aleph ratz, a godly running, a
godly journey, in particular attaching
to Hashem, Yisrael, Yasha El. This is
the nature of Eretz Yisrael, the land of
Israel. It's in the words. This is what
it's about. This is the nature of the
land, just like this is the role of the
people, Yisrael.
This is the nation of the land, Yisrael.
This is the nature of the land,
Yisrael. This is the concept of Eretz
Yisrael. And the truth is, we find that
every land has its own energy to it.
Every land has its own climate to it.
For example, if I were to take an orange
seed
and try to plant it in New York. If I
would do the proper plowing, seeding,
watering, etc., could I grow an orange
tree out of an orange seed in New York?
The answer is yes, you probably could.
However, if I were to take that same
seed and take a plane down to Miami and
plant it over there, do the same
plowing, seeding, watering over there in
Miami as I did in New York,
most likely, I'm going to grow that
orange seed is going to grow into a
fuller version of itself in Miami
than it did
than it would in New York.
Well, why is it? You're doing the exact
same thing. You're doing the same
planting, the same plowing, the same
watering. The whole thing is the same.
What's the difference? The climate of
the place.
On the other hand, if I want to grow
potatoes,
better I go to Idaho.
What's the point?
The point is
that we see that every land
has its energy to it or has its climate
to it.
And so, just like we have this
physically, that is a parallel to what's
going on spiritually.
There's a principle in Kabbalah that one
of the reasons why Kabbalah is referred
to as Kabbalah, of course, Kabbalah is
from the Hebrew word lekabel, which
means to receive. We're receiving the
deeper teachings or being received by
the student from the teacher.
However, there's another idea, which is
that Kabbalah is from the Hebrew word
makbil, which means parallel, because
one of the foundational principles of
all Kabbalistic thought is that
everything here in this physical world
is a parallel to a deeper spiritual
reality.
And so, similarly, just like we have
different climates physically, that is a
parallel of the spiritual reality that
there are different climates spiritually
to each land. And so, that means, in a
very similar way, if I was going to
plant a Jew
anywhere, in Australia, in in in Europe,
in the US, I could plant If I were to
plant a Jew there and give him the
proper plowing and seeding and watering,
give him the proper midot characteristic
refinement and education and
inspiration,
could I grow a good Jew in the USA?
Yeah, it could be I could. However, the
principle is, if I take that same Jewish
seed and that same Jewish soul and plant
them in the land of Israel,
chances are much stronger that I'm that
Jew is going to grow into a fuller
version of himself or herself, a fuller
fruition of himself or herself in the
land of Israel than outside the land of
Israel. Could other things happen? Could
other big things play a role and play
factors? Yes, that is possible. But just
if everything else stays the same,
chances are extremely high that the
climate of the place will be mashpia,
will have an impact on that Jew. Just
like it says in the Talmud that the
atmosphere of the land of Israel brings
wisdom.
And so, this is a spiritual reality. And
this also explains the connection
between the land of Israel
and the people of Israel.
Because the people of Israel, their role
is to be that one who brings that
inspiration down and elevates everyone
up. And this is the nature of the land
of Israel. We see this also in
particular by the Beit Hamikdash. The
Beit Hamikdash, or also known as Zion,
is referred to a couple of times in
Tanakh as the neck of the world.
What does the neck do? The neck,
for example, of a person,
we have the physical body,
which is very similar to the animal, but
then you have the head. In the head is
where you have the things that separate
the person from the animal, different
things that have to do with the soul.
For example,
consciousness, self-awareness, free will
choice, complex speech,
complex thoughts, all of that is
head-oriented stuff.
The neck is that place where we go ahead
and connects
the spiritual side of ourselves with the
physical side of ourselves, bringing
down spirituality, elevating
physicality. This is the concept of the
Beit Hamikdash. What the the area of the
Beit Hamikdash is about is that place,
according to the Kabbalah, that place
where
heaven and earth meet, that place where
creation originally started. So, it's
that bridge from from physicality
and to spirituality
and from spirituality to physicality.
And this is what the Jewish people are
looking to do as well. The Jewish people
are are here as a as a nation
to be able to bring spirituality into
this world and elevate
and elevate physicality
to bring it towards spirituality.