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The Mitzva Mandate | Rabbi Yonatan Udren May 28th 2025
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long overdue because we've been working
on this since before Corona back and
forth and Corona changed the world. Um
it's my pleasure to introduce uh my very
I don't remember 20 something years ago.
Uh my my dear and old friend Ravan.
Jonathan Yudrin is a a very very popular
educator here in specifically for new in
their early 20s and
and he's doing phenomenal work for the
past 15 years for the past 15 years in
Hebrew University for the Rabbi Ruven
Gri program which started Hebrew
University has now expanded here working
with not only university students but
but young professionals here in greater
your um and it's good to finally have
you an opportunity to have you here with
us and so uh you're in for a
treat welcome. Thank you very much, Ros
Sam, my dear friend and mentor really
for over 20 years now. It's just good to
be here with all of you. The students
that I work with, the young people that
I work with, they're usually sleeping
during this time. Uh they don't get the
earliest I will do a class is at noon.
So this is already, you know, very very
early. If we fall asleep, it's your
fault.
We'll all be caffeinated. I saw some
some coffee out front. All the supplies
are necessary. So uh it's good to be
here with all of you in during this
special week of
celebrating. Appreciate all of you
coming out early in order to learn and
hopefully we'll be able to do some
preparation for shuvot which is almost
upon us. Very very exciting this Sunday
night. So that's what I wanted to talk
about today. Um but first just to go
back a little bit I did most of my or
all of my yeshiva studies here in Israel
and I did my smika at yeshivaar now it's
called mahanaya but with rabbi uh Rabbi
Riskin Rabbi Schlommo Riskin sure he's
known by everybody here most people here
um so in order to get into the program
at Hamtar they have a test they want to
make sure you know you know enough to be
able to study the big books you know
they give you the small books for the
first couple years in order to get the
really big ones you have to show you
know what you're doing. So they gave us
this test and one section of the test
has a list of obscure mitzvot. So I
remember I was struggling with one of
them. I some of them you know
toet great I know that one
rashit
gaze. Wait a second. What does natural
gas have to do with the Torah? What is
the first natural gas line that we find?
We What what does this have to do with
anything? I was very very confused. Uh
the mitzvah is rashita gay. It's the
first shearings. I don't know if
anyone's ever had a chance to do the
mitzvah of rashita gay. Anyone here ever
had this? It's like pian. It's like one
of those things that you know unless
you're really out there in batt or
somewhere you don't really get to to do
these things. Um but the point is that
there are a lot of
mitzvot 613 to be exact though amongst
the foreshim we don't exactly know which
ones are in which ones are out that
itself is a whole limu that we could
spend a whole series talking about which
one is in which one is out if you count
fill in as two so then which one goes
out right it's a whole interesting
process but if we're talking about
celebrating commemorating experiencing
the giving of the Torah so what is the
Torah other than mitzvot Obviously we
have stories right say for ber sheet
those are a critical central part of it
but if you have to look at what really
the Torah is in one word you have to
really say that it's mitzvot so that's
great mitzvot are wonderful they allow
us to be able to do incredible things
here in this world however there's a big
problem with mitzvot that I'm going to
bring up today and maybe you look a
little scant me this is my first time
here maybe it will be my last time here
but the moral asked this question and he
was Jewish So, I hope it's okay. Okay,
think about this. Parents in the room
here, maybe grandparents even. Yes.
Yeah. Okay. Um, sorry. Great
grandparents. My goodness, this awesome
crowd. What's the fiot you have? My
goodness. Young at heart though and
energetic. That's what's important. Uh,
exactly. I thought I thought just new
parents with young kids. Um if you can
remember that time with young kids or
your you see your kids dealing with
young kids um trying to give a directive
to a younger kid. Okay. Um before you go
to bed I want you to wash the dishes.
This is my life. Okay. Familiar anybody?
Um
to your kids or to you to me giving a
direct Oh yeah. That's my wife also to
me.
O can we get personal here? Can I put
out the couch?
uh me saying to you know the kids one of
the kids here's your job right all the
kids have certain jobs in the house
everybody has something that they need
to do uh if I give each kid one
directive the chances of that happening
depending on the kid my friend over here
says not so good okay even for one
directive
yeah well it is like that you say yes do
it and it's it's not done okay Oh, good.
So, you're already helping me. What's
your name? Silia. Sylvia, thank you.
You're already helping me. Let's say I
give two
directives. What are the odds of both of
those directives being done? Does it go
down? Goes down. No, it goes it goes it
doesn't go down, it goes up. If I give,
if the more I give, I'm imagining the
less performance and chance I'm going to
get, right? And let's say I give 10.
Okay, I'm going away for the day. These
are the 10 things that I need you to do.
What are the odds that all 10 are going
to be I mean my kids are good barem
they're amazing they're the best
it's very very difficult let's say I
give the kid 613 tasks to do throughout
their whole life and then that's not
even enough I'm going to add rabbitical
right parental additions to make sure
those get done properly and they're
going to be from the moment that they
wake up in the morning the very second
before they even open their eyes they
have to do something mod then then when
they get dressed they have to do it in a
certain way when they get in the shower
they have to wash a certain way when
they go to bed they have say something
specific before they lie down and go to
sleep. Everywhere in between, their
lives are dictated by all of these
different directives that I've given
them. What are the odds that that's
going to go well?
Okay. It's a chance. It's a big Yeah,
exactly. What's your name, sir? What?
What's your name? Jay. Jay. Jay says
like this. Okay. Exactly. It's a big
Sorry. I don't agree. You don't agree?
Great. All right. We already got a muk
loaded. Good. We have a big midash. Yes.
answer to your question. Sorry. Look how
we behave in answer to your question.
Look how you behave in answer to your
question. Say sorry. Say again. We do
many mitzvah. We do many mitzvah. Okay,
so we're in Okay, good. Um, we don't do
them all. We don't do them all. Good. We
will get to that for sure. We can't do
them all, by the way. Right. That's
important to know. We'll get to there.
Sorry, but say again. We don't have to
do all. We're not a co-en. We're not a
co-en. True. Absolutely. What's your
name, ma'am? Leah. Leah. Leah says,
"Well, not a code. We don't have them
all to do." Let's say even Leah, the
ones that we're supposed to be doing,
okay, that are relevant for a woman at
your stage, right? All that is upon you.
I pick on you, but for anyone at the
stage where they're at, the mitzvot that
we're supposed to do at the stage we're
at in our
lives, there's a lot to do. And not only
is there a lot to do, but there are a
lot of places to fall to the extent that
maybe we ask a question, Hashem, why so
many
mitzvot. Would it not have been better
just to give me one? Hey, 10. How about
that idea? You ever hear that? 10
commandments. Doesn't that sound
perfect? Seven. Seven. Okay, seven. Even
better, right? Less. Seemingly, it would
be the less
mitzvot the better because I have a
greater chance of doing what it is that
God wants for me. Nevertheless, the
Torah seems to take an opposite approach
and khazal all the rabbis get on board
and by the time they're done I've
actually never seen this I don't know if
you ever seen a number of total mitzvot
including all the Torah mitzvot and all
the rabbitic mitzvot maybe throw a few
minhagim in there we're talking about
thousands I assume right I mean I don't
know anyone ever heard this before the
count of total mitzvot it's a lot okay
fills up lots and lots of books so the
question I want to ask and really I want
to ask through the lush of the mahar
because he asks it he asks he asks it in
a very direct and important way to think
about what is it that mitzv about
mitzvot that are
now well and merit what is what's so
good about more mitzvot okay yes do I
get a credit for not doing negative yes
I go a whole day without talking lion
horror
get a mark at the end of the day a plus
if you kind as far as I understand if
you had a desire to speak lashhara and
you withheld yourself so then yes but
the mitzvah of doesn't apply every
second you don't kill someone Jay unless
you have a very evil heart and looking
at your smile I can't imagine that's the
case
okay very good okay so now this is if
you look at number one where where does
this come from where do we dive into in
khazal this discussion look at what
number one the good makot this is the
most at least the most or one of the
most mumbled lines in all of the time
you go
to right that's what happens this is an
actually very beautiful and deep
sentiment that are
expressing he wants to God wanted to
give merit to
us therefore how did he give us merit
here to increased to mitzvah God had
this idea so to speak more the better.
Why? Because every mitzvah is a it's a
merit for us. So therefore I'll increase
them and the more the marrier so to
speak. Okay, that's the assertion of
Kanekashia. Now if you go to number two,
yeah, I would think it's more that we
are made in the image of God that we are
doing. Okay, beautiful. So these things
are really on a deeper level of
reflection of our true essence and we're
aligning oursel with our highest self
with our godly self. I like that very
much. Okay. But before we get to um that
facet of the discussion and the
spiritual kind of outgrowth of what
we're saying here, we still have a
problem and the moral is going to
articulate this first. Okay, look at
number two. Wait a second. The moral
says I got a big problem here with this
statement.
Uh, how can you say that?
It's how can you say
that? This is antithetical to
logic again. The says this. Okay. So, we
can say
it. He should have lessened mitzvot.
Maral was a father. He understood,
right?
in order so they wouldn't have to do so
many. Make it easy on us, Hashem. Give
us a few and then we can manage. It's
kind of like what happened is they came
out of they were only given they were
only given a few in the beginning. Yeah.
And that didn't even go so well,
right? Yeah. Well, you know, if that was
the test case, right, then then we're
off and running uh and we're a little
concerned. God should have known this,
right? Uh so the moral asks this
question, we have to understand why it
is that mitzvot are zahoot. I believe
they are zahoot. We just have to
understand what that means and that's
what I hope to do for the next how long
do we have rev
1010. Okay, great. That's a good amount
of time. Can I trouble you for a glass
of water or whoever is really appreciate
it?
Okay, so let's start with Rashi. He
always has what to
say. Okay, look at number three.
Rashi, let's look at this. Should we do
the Hebrew every time or English? How
what's easier for people? Hebrews.
Hebrew. Uh people are happy with Hebrew.
Okay. So, we'll do Hebrew and English.
Okay. And the English is there too.
Rashi number three. This is uh on that
place in Makot. He's asking what does it
mean? What is the So, so the Rashi
says this is similar to what Jay was
pointing to. Okay, so we're going to get
from those things that we refrain from
doing.
wrote so that uh so we didn't need to
thank you Sam there wasn't a need to
command us right God didn't have to say
okay don't eat creepy crawies don't eat
a dead deer that was run over by a car
okay don't don't do that in general it's
also not kosher it's called
A
umim these eight uh creepy crawly things
that the Torah outlines. Don't eat these
things like an owl. Um all these
forbidden foods that we have catfish, I
don't know, kind of gross. All these
animals that we're told not to eat,
these things that are gross by Hashem
saying to us, "Okay, uh don't eat these.
We were not going to eat it anyway.
Who's going to eat a a deer that was hit
on the by a car on the side of the
road?" People eat lobster. That's true.
Right. Around like corona time, right?
People eat ants. That's true. Um I guess
Rashi in France was very refined and did
not eat it.
Oh, that's true. They I don't know if
they ate snails back in Russia. They eat
everything. That's true. They just put a
little butter sauce on it and it's
yummy. Right. Put butter sauce in
anything that's yummy. Sorry. What' you
say, sir? Say something. I missed it.
No, I No, he wasn't with Far East. I'm
familiar with the Far East. Yeah. Yeah.
When they eat bats or or you know
whatever, right? They have these things
markets, you know, stalls in the streets
where they Okay. So, I'm getting a lot
of push back. People really don't
appreciate Raji. Just to understand what
Rajie is saying. Raj is saying that the
Torah commanded us a lot of extra
mitzvot things that we wouldn't have
wanted to partake in anyway. And
therefore, if by not partaking in them
and not doing them somehow, we get scar.
Now, this is the question that Jay
asked. Wait a second. Do I get for just
not saying? I walk through the whole
day. Um, I'm not sure if it works that
way. I think there has to be like a live
for mitzvah, right? There has to be a
live chance to be able to do something
wrong, right? There has to be a lobster
in front of you in order to and say no
to it, right? Uh, but just to walk
through down the street of Shalam and
say, "I'm not eating, you know, raw
oysters." Um, I'm not sure if that does
it. But in any case, Rashi sees a lot of
the mitzvot as um, let's say, culturally
unnecessary, at least during his time.
Maybe cultures have changed now, things
are different. So because of the fact
that they're culturally unnecessary. So
therefore we get from those. Okay. But
already some push back from rashi. So
let's hope that there's more than just
not eating the dead deer.
Anyone ever eat venison? It's kosher.
Just not very not really around but you
can eat it. Yeah. What? Buffalo. I think
people It's delicious. Good. Buffalo's
good. Okay. They don't really serve it
around here. Giraffe. Anybody? Buffalo.
Yeah, sure. I'm They have some closure.
No, I know. I'm mentioning that just as
far as uh but they can't they don't know
where to where's the check. The neck is
very long here in the middle. Right.
They know where to but they don't have
uh Okay.
And anyway, let's see
a different answer. A very optimistic
answer. This is going to leave everyone
feeling good about themselves. Okay.
Look at number four. This is the
Rambam's parish of on this particular
Gora. The Rambam says as
follows. If a person, we have a masur,
we have one of our
fundamental fundamental beliefs in faith
that if a person does a mitzvah from the
13 613 mitzvot here are the the how does
a person do the mitzvah here? Here the
Rambam
says he does it as is appropriate and is
proper. I put
here and he doesn't add any kind of
advantages from this
world. A person does a mitzvah
completely for its
sake from a place of
love like I explained to you.
in that doing that performance of that
one mitzvah done
properly. All those
different all those different conditions
that are met, you get
your
Excuse
me. And therefore, person's not going to
go through their whole life and not do
one mitzvah properly and therefore they
will merit the world to come and the
dwelling of the of the nephesh in this
upper world through that one m. Okay,
just to speak it out and then we'll hear
from people. Ramom says, why are there
so many mitzvah? Why is it? Because if
you do one right, you get your ticket to
Okay, what does one right mean? I think
the word that best articulates this
totally altruistically. If a person does
a mitzvah, any of the 613, totally
altruistically, then you get your ticket
to Maba. Thank you very much. You're on
your way. That's very encouraging. That
is encouraging. I agree. Have the door
in one mitzvah, right? That way, but you
got to do
it, right? without any um anybody any
any kind of sense of I'm getting
something from this. Okay. So there are
a lot of challenges and questions here
we have to work through. Yes. Yes. But
the Rambity says that among men only
very few people will ever reach that
level. Okay. He says for women it's
impossible. He says for women that this
level is impossible. You'll have to show
that to me. I didn't see that. I didn't
see that
at this level. I don't remember that.
I've seen Chuva several times. You'll
have to show it to me. But in any case,
the Rambam doesn't differentiate here
between men and women. Uh I wouldn't
understand why there would be. However,
um if now here do do you hear there's a
there's a challenge there's an issue
here because you say the Rambam says,
"Hey, you know you hey Rabbi um Refam I
want to go to Alhaba like what do I do?"
Just do one mitzvah and you just do it
properly then you'll get your ticket to
alaba. So okay but you do it
altruistically. You see there's a
problem there. Yes. What's the problem?
Because once you want to get right.
Exactly. Okay. Like I'm trying to get to
that's the goal is how do I get to you?
You do a mitzvah properly. Right. So
there's like an internal kind of
challenge in it. Problem is flipping
understanding what the word mitzvah
means. Meaning that we don't
misunderstand. Everyone knows I'm an
orthodox rabbi. So a mitzvah obviously I
believe are are are not optional. I'm
not saying they're optional. If we
define a miss simply as an obligation,
we're miss the teachers is we're missing
a point or opportunity. Beautiful. And
therefore what the is saying
here is what's ingenious about is
basically flipping the definition of
what is saying gives us so many
opportunities to do good so many
opportunities to achieve so many
opportunities to bring merit into our
life to bring kadusha to bring godliness
into our life it's it's it turns the
definition of the word mitzvah on its
heels the beautiful beautiful so we're
going to see more about that
understanding the mitzvah is not just a
command but there's something much
deeper there. But nevertheless, if I if
I want to know tlless according to the
Rambam how to get to I have to do a
mitzvah altruistically. That's a bit
it's a bit of a challenge. Now, um it
must be right that that a person must be
able to step away from the sense
of I'm getting something for this and
I'm really doing the mitzvah in the
proper way. Okay. Um it must be because
it doesn't make sense otherwise, right?
It must be that the person can achieve
this and they can remove themselves.
Okay, I'm not worried about that there.
I just want to do the mitzvah. I just
want to do it from a place of love for
you, a place of connection to you. It
must be that that what that's what the
Rambam's talking about. Okay. There
there's some ability to step away from
the Sahar aspect of it. Okay. Um but
there's another problem here with the
Rambam. If you only need to do one in
order to get to my ticket
to then Sorry.
Yeah. Why didn't maybe I'll say to
myself, hey, you know what? I put on
twill this morning. I had kavana. I did
it. I know. I don't know. I don't know
how to I just feel like I did it. You
know, kahogan. I put it on. I got there
early. I put it on. I said all the
things that are connected with it. I had
the kavana. Felt really spiritual,
right? It felt awesome. I did that
mitzvah fillin koi kahogan nyava. All
the all the things that the rambom
asked. Now what?
Like let's go to the B a Cyprus lay on
the beach, right? Like I did it. But
then I'm done. But then if you do that
then you prove that you didn't do that
for the sake of you didn't. No, I did
it. I I wanted to I needed to do it. It
was a task. The rabbi told me that in
order to get alab, I have to complete
the task. I completed the task. Now I'm
going on vacation.
Right. Some people retire and they just
I don't know. Not like you guys coming
to learn Torah. This is awesome. They go
and retire and they, you know, land on
the beach all day. But but uh but the
right so you hear there's a problem here
with the rambom that way. This is a
problem immediately. Yeah. Says you do
it altruistically, right? But you're
going to get allah. So already it's not
altruistic, right? So good. So we
pointed that out. So we said it must be
that a person must have to be able to
separate themsel from the mitzvah. Like
we say pure vote, don't serve the master
in order to get the prize. Rather do it
not in order to serve the prize. Right?
That's kind of that same type. So I have
to kind of remove myself from this
looking for a prize, right? I mean, you
know, think about this in our own lives,
human being, right? To look for not
something good for doing something good.
Yeah. No, for sure. Whatever. So I'm
just thinking about this. The way we
give because we want to give. On the
other hand, somewhere back of our mind,
we're going to we're doing a mitzvah.
Sure. So if we're doing a mitzvah, it
means we're doing what? God's broken
bond. Therefore, we will get some reward
for it. Right. I mean, we don't go
through all that thinking what we're
doing. You're right. You're right. Look,
I think the way the human beings are
naturally built is that we have a an
interest in getting something for it.
That's kind of the way we're built. And
part of our work in the world,
especially if you want to get more
mystical, I think someone mentioned kind
of a deeper idea, want to get more into
mysticism and cabala. Really, the whole
purpose of the Torah and why we're here
is to be able to transform ourselves
from receivers, excuse me, from givers,
no, from receivers to givers. Yes.
Transform ourselves from receivers to
givers to make sure that my whole life
is about looking out for the other as
opposed to looking out for my own
interest.
That's right. So, the Rambam very aligns
with that very nicely. the Rambom isn't
interested in me and we'll get to this
you know shortly I see um the I can't
step on other people to get my mitzvot
right it's like there's something wrong
if I'm doing what's called a mitzvah a
vera if I'm doing an aa I doing
something wrong in order to get a
mitzvah there's a problem there okay so
has to be done properly and just to to
touch on the other point um maybe I'll
check out once I do that one
mitzvah so I'm not g a person who would
get to a place where they could do a
mitzvah all the all the uh the
conditions that the Rambam outlines that
type of person wouldn't go and lie in
the beach all day afterwards, right?
That type of person has transformed
their personality to no longer be a
taker but a giver. Okay? So therefore,
we wouldn't have to worry about that.
Okay? But that's the Rambam's position.
By the way, the Mahal doesn't like it.
The Rambom gets a lot of flack for this.
How could it be that one mitzvah doing
one properly gets you? It's a lifelong
endeavor. mitzvah as Ra Sam said
beautifully it's it's it's a
momentby-moment opportunity not not an
obligation that's put upon us okay so
there's definitely one to think about as
far as the Rambam is
concerned just for time sake let's move
on to the shemish and this is sorry just
is it okay hold on to it if we have time
at the end please I'd love to touch on
it okay the the shem is uh uh already
moving things in a ve in a different
directionic perspective and he's already
taking into assumption And we understand
the word mitzvah should not be or should
not always be com translated as the word
command but rather the word mitzvah is
connected to the Aramaic word za which
is connected to the modern Hebrew word
which means a staff. It's about
connection. Okay, we have 613 points of
connection available to us with the
divine. Okay, let's look at the shemo.
Yeah, I know. I'm just thinking if we
should for sake just do let's do the
Hebrew. Why did Hashem command all these
different types of mitzvah? We have we
have we haveim all these different
types.
Hey, these mitzvah they're good for us.
There's something positive. We're
supposed to live these each and every
day. How is it that these mitzvot are
good for us? This is our question.
There's a problem that we have and that
is the nature of the physical world. The
natural world would cause us to
forget forget Hashem. Forget that we're
anything physical. Forget that there's
any broader purpose in the
world. Because the word nature is also
means to drown. Drown in the river.
That the nature of this world, it drowns
all these good ideas, not just smart
ideas, but ideas that are deep, that
connect us to the divine, that connect
us with our true selves, that connect us
with the
bar. The world is a raging river and we
have no control over it. It's trying to
drown us. So, what do we do? Yeah,
sorry. Go ahead. He's referring to one
of the questions of the first on the
four sons. Exactly. Very good. Yeah.
Exactly.
Very good. People go to nature to be
absolutely right. But he's talking not
about you know the beautiful trees and
the tu and the negv or something. Um
he's talking about the nature of the
physical world and its ability to be
able to cause us to forget that there's
a god in the world. Okay. um difficult
thing to open up one's bank account and
see oh what is that big charge oh yeah I
spent that right where's a go in that
moment it's hard this physical world
right raising kids grandkids great
grandkids um not even to talk about the
the troubles we're in the challenges we
have as a nation war hostages right I
mean there's a lot of challenges in the
physical world both on a personal level
a national level international level I
mean not going to open it up we could
just spend the next you half an hour
fetching or so, right? I mean, it's
hard. The My friend over here is
nodding. Yes. Yes. Yes. We know. Uh yes,
it's a tough world. The nature of this
world caused us to forget the Ramall in
the beginning of his says, you know,
there's no in this book, which is not
true. Obviously, it's full of it's the
joke of it. But uh he says you have to
read this book because the physical
world will cause you to forget all these
lessons. The nature of the physical
world causes us to
forget that there's a god in the world.
Hashem's presence is instilled of all of
reality. It's a challenge. The world is
according to a raging river and we have
no place to turn and to hold on to
except
for look back in the
Hebrew. How did Hashem help us? What's
the life raft that we have to hold on
to? So he says we have all these
mitzvah that every mitzvah is an
opportunity for us to hold on. It's like
a life raft in the the raging river of
this
world. Everywhere I turn, I see a
mitzvah. Why are there so many? Why do
the rabbis add on to it? They're trying
to get me in trouble. are trying to have
me do uh write write long lists for lol
and and have to do all this juva. No,
they want us to have contact points with
the divine. Okay? Just like a battery
has two contact points in order to make
the battery go. We as Jews have an
incredible opportunity. We have contact
points with the divine each and every
moment in our life through the mitzvah.
Wake up in the morning. What's that?
It's awakening to the fact that you're
in the world. What's going to happen?
Otherwise, I'm gonna get up. I'm gonna
start to hear the news and I'm gonna
start to think, oy, what's going to be?
So I center myself around mitzvot around
around these mitzvot that from the very
first moment of consciousness I'm able
to connect to a broader understanding of
reality and I'm able to hold on to as
she says able to hold on to a life raft
in this challenging world which is
filled with
upheaval. Yes. I guess I'm wondering but
I disagree because I see that if you see
the world you believe that someone
created it just didn't come about.
Absolutely. The apocryphal story
everyone must know about Rabbi Sh who
went to the Alps on vacation and his
congregation was very against it that he
took a month off. He said, "But if you
see the Alps, you know that there is a
God." Beautiful. How could I go up to
Shabbay and they'll ask me, "Uh, did you
not see my beautiful Alps?"
100%. Okay, so this is beautiful. This
is what our friend over here was saying
as well. Wait a second. We can see God
in nature. And the Rambon himself, by
the way, says, "You want to find God's
fingerprint in the world? Look at
nature." Absolutely. That's true. 100%.
What's your name again? Sorry. Leah.
Leah. You know what? You're what I call
a pot stir, Leah. We have these with my
students. They're my favorite students.
Okay. Because they don't let things just
be. They like to stir the pot. So good.
It makes it interesting. So I thank for
I thank you for what you're saying.
Leah, I wanted to go back one sentence
too that human beings who are being
human. Yeah. And they're not Jewish.
This refers to Jewish people, the Torah,
right? But you look at people who are
good, the ones who say people who do not
see Holocaust and people who are
general, genuinely good, moral people.
Absolutely. So, so that there Lee, I'm
going to say I'm sorry that's just a
little bit out of the scope of what we
have the time for today, but agreed. Um,
there's definitely one to talk about
about non-Jews, but here we're just
today focusing on uh for Jews and
mitzvah and how that works as far as our
relationship with Torah. Okay. So, um,
but you're right. I think that both
things are right. In other words, nature
gives us an opportunity to appreciate
the divine whether we're doing it in,
you know, uh, appreciating nature in a
in a hike or a walk or excuse me, I grew
up in Florida, so like there's a
beautiful sunsets. I used to be on the
beach a lot. Definitely. Um, was spent
as a child I spent time on a on a
sailboat out in Lake Michigan in
Chicago. Those are some of my most like
cherished memories as as a kid. You're
out there on a boat and you're just in
the middle of Lake Michigan. It's like,
wow. You know, that's an a awesome
opportunity to to to appreciate nature
and God's fingerprint. That's true. And
the world is a crazy world, okay? And
the world is filled with upheaval. And
I'll just speak for myself and maybe
this isn't as much a challenge for you,
Leah, for others. But to be able to hold
on to a consciousness that Hashem is
running the world in each and every
moment, no matter what, no matter what's
going on in my life or my wife's life or
at home or with my kids or with, you
know, our community or or whatever, that
can be more challenging. So that's I
think what the Shemish is saying and the
mitzvot are opportunity to make contact
and keep in touch, right? Right?
Hashem's like, "I'm going to send you
down to the physical world." And it has
to be a world where you can't
necessarily intuit it my existence. Why?
There's something important to that.
What's the importance of the world? Not
seeing Hashem's hand overtly, right?
Shown. What's the Why? Why? Why is the
world like that? Why do we need the
world to kind of hide God's face, so to
speak? Look for him. We can look for
him. Free will. Okay, good. Free will.
We have to have free will. Without free
will, so the whole plan doesn't make
sense. Okay. But there so says I have to
make this world this way. If there's
going to be something called and if
there's going to be something called
free will so it has to be this way that
my face is hidden but I got something
good for you. I got for you life wraps
to be able to stay in touch and they're
called mitzvot. Okay, that's what the
was saying. So that really turns the
whole thing on its head and then from
that perspective we're like well if
that's what it is give me more. And
that's what the rabbis are doing.
They're like yeah more more. Let's throw
in more mitzvah.
Okay. So, let's see a little bit more
here. Different perspectives. Now, um I
want to go back to the mar. This is
going to shift things. Okay. From up
until now, I think we've been talking
about mitzvot in relation to my personal
relationship with mitzvot my mitzvot. Am
I eating kosher? Am I keeping mitzvot?
Am I putting on? Am I ding? Right? All
those type of
things. But really, as we pointed out at
the beginning, mitzvot are not just for
me alone. Okay? And there's a broader
perspective of mitzvah. Okay. So look at
the moral number six. He
says maybe you'll say, "Wait a second.
You'll lose out on all the merits for
the mitzvah that you do because there's
so many that you're going to miss out
on." And if you put together your column
plus and minus you're going to come out
on the negative side because there's too
many mitzvot. Okay? Remember the moral
asked the question less mitzvot would
have been better. Seemingly more mitzvot
is problematic.
person doesn't do what he's supposed to.
Okay? We live in a world where you have
to buy what you pay for. That's the way
the world
works. So the mar says that's true. If
go back to the marmar okay look back to
your page number one it
says the mar says if it would have
said the individual ah so then
what this would be a question if we're
talking about pluses and minuses like a
personal accounting If it said wants to
give merit to the individual, you got
you got a point there. My question is
valid because it's possible that so many
mitzvot might not be good for the
individual. Maral says this, it's a wild
statement. So many mitzvot actually for
the individual could be a problem. It's
a problem because you're going to have
people that are in the negative when
they do their tally sheet. Okay. No one
here in this room obviously. Don't worry
about it. Sadik here. But
um but but but there are people in the
world that are going to lose out by the
system that was created by the Torah.
Yeah. But not doing the mitzvah.
So it would have to be again that I
think that the understanding is that if
you have an opportunity to do it and you
do it and it's a it's it's an assay or
you do something that you're not
supposed to. However it is that that the
that it works out, right? However it is
that it works out because there's so
many possibilities. 3 613 365 248
because of all that. So there's a
possibility you'll come out in the minus
and the moral says inami it is possible
that an individual person could come out
on the wrong side of the equation. It's
not great for the individual. However,
this is where we have to shift our
understanding of what mitzvah are about.
Look at the second line
there is the purpose of it is not just
for the individual. It's
for all of us together. Right? Jews
together all over the world here in
Israel. here in this room all over the
world. Even if it would have been great
for the individual, one personal person
that there'll be less. Right? Back to my
analogy of my kids. One commandment.
One, right? Ten commandments. That would
have been better. Even though that's
true, but the Torah was given to we are
prepared for. We are ready for. We are
built for this. We are built for the
Torah. not in relation to the individual
but the nation as an entirety as as I
think Leah said someone said that
um right is uh men women people at
different stages in their life right the
Torah is a national spiritual framework
and imperative that we all have to get
in on together it's claw Israel yeah and
then I'm confused a human general has to
make decisions that'll be good for the
army but maybe they have good correct
exactly Exactly. Exactly. Should be on a
higher level. No, because any system
that has to exist in this world always
has a flaw. Every system has well in
this case, right? There's uh this
person's going to find a way out or this
person's going to get punished. Every
single system works that way. It's just
the nature of systems. We still live in
the physical world. We're not living in
Hashem's world. We're living in our
world, in the physical world. So that we
have to understand that because we live
in the physical world, the system has to
fit the physical world. This is the best
possible system that Hashem could
create. But nevertheless, the moral says
there's there's a flaw in the system.
But we have to understand the why the
system is built this way. Okay. And what
about when the actual mitzvah itself is
bad for the person
that what you'd have to give me a
specific example who has to stay
unmarried because there's no Okay, good.
So fine. Um, Auna crisis, right? That we
could get into a whole list of um, yes,
there are challenges there.
This is my first time sitting with you,
so I'm not going to open up everything,
but um there are challenges there. I
have personal challenges with some of
the mitzvah in the Torah, some of the
issues that you're bringing up. I'm sure
we could bring up challenges with it.
That's again, I'm going to push that
aside just because of the time. We don't
have to deal with that. But correct,
that is something that would have to be
dealt with. But the purpose of the point
here is yeah,
it's for the majority and not for it's
for it's for uh the Maharal here. The
Rambom thinks that that the reason why
there's so many is because it is good
for the individual. In other words, for
the ra the Rambom solves this problem in
another way. Yeah. That
there's I mean obviously the rabbi is
aware of this but that
our acknowledges and prefers the
majority minority. That's a very good
point. What is that's a point. What's
your name?
Aig says that if you look in different
areas of halaka, there's a preference
for the majority opinion. Okay? Whether
we talk about how the Sanhedrin works or
even talk about um finding uh if you
have three pieces of meat on the ground,
you're not sure which story they came
from, which one's kosher, right? You
work according to majorities. There's uh
what about those hostages? What do you
mean? Because then other people will be
kidnapped. Okay, just without getting
into that because that's a charged
topic. But um we have to we have to
really, you know, have a couple of clims
together before we get into that and
it's a little too early for me. But um
what's that? It's always 5:00 somewhere,
right? Uh but I'm not going to touch
that one. Um however, let's just say
like this. Uh it's an interesting point
that the Torah prefers the concept of
rov. Okay. um and and and that is a
general principle in Halaka. So that
actually that actually helps the
position of the mar that supports it. I
like that very much. In other words,
Aigal is seeing in the broader kind of
conceptual idea that we're presenting
here about the importance of the of the
over the prat. We see this in as well in
details. We see it as well. Okay. So the
the mar says it is better that it's it
has to be it's for the cl so therefore
some individuals will miss out. The ram
says no it doesn't work that way. It's
for the individual. That's why there's
so many. Okay. So, it's a really
interesting and if you want to see more
inside is he goes through that and
describes that. Okay. But that's the
answer again. So, just to appreciate
before we see the last piece of that we
have to kind of turn our focus uh
towards mitzvot not only as an
individual practice but also as a
national spiritual framework that all of
us exist in. Okay. great example in in
uh modern hakic history about this.
Okay. Rabavadia Ysef was tasked with
setting up the Rabanoot Kashoot agency
for the state of Israel. Okay. Now uh
the Robinoot Kashoot was set up as a
standard that would allow as many
restaurants as possible, as many hotels
as possible to be able to keep a minimal
level of kashoot so that we could have
something that as many restaurants and
and and hotels could buy in on. That was
the goal of it. Was the goal to keep all
the right all the questions that the
shock brings up and the Taj bring up and
does it solve all the day? Absolutely
not. Okay. There are individuals that
would choose not to eat ramen. By the
way, the rabbin is very complicated,
right? Rabanuai might be different than
Rabanutaria and so forth. Certainly not
getting into puskining as far as what
people should eat and what heck sharing
they should eat from, especially in an
oir, right? H how could I say such a
thing? But
um but but that was set up as a national
standard. So we look at this is great to
be an Israel on so many levels but we
can appreciate this much more here in
Israel because we are a part of a
broader whole. We see oursel as part of
a nation here. It's easier for us than
it is let's say in New York or wherever
we are um to be able to see that. Okay.
So we have to see oursel as united
amongst us. Kim you do your part is
women men we all do this together. Okay.
It's a different
perspective now.
Um, on that
note, we're going to look at what Rav
Cook has to say about this. We know that
Rav Cook sees the
iner bright perspective. He's going to
give us here. He
says, there's one, this is kind of funny
to say to, you know, in a Jewish
perspective. You have to be cook to be
able to say this. There's one unified
principle that is unique for the entire
Jewish people that we all can buy in on,
right? Big camp Judaism. There's one
concept that we can all buy in on. What
could this possibly be? Okay, we are not
We Jews, my friend said to me this once,
we're splitters, not we are um yeah,
splitters, not lumpers. Okay, we always
like to divide things. So, how could
there be
one common ideology that we all buy in
on what is this
magic arts? It's the very beginning of
the Torah. This is something that we all
buy in
on arts. What what is Rook saying there?
What does he mean that this is one
unified concept that is unique to that
we all buy in on?
What is that? What does he mean? Why is
that so important? What does the first
sentence of the Torah really teach us?
Forget about the story, right? Not
talking about the literal nature of it
or the allegorical nature of it. What
does teach us? God created the world.
God created the world. Therefore, what
we have to come back to his Wait, sorry,
one second, Leah. To come back to God.
Okay, you guys are too too high level
for me. I'm looking for something very
simple. Our whole existence is to be
tools of Hashem. Okay, also beautiful
but too high simple. One word. What does
it mean that God created the world?
Recognition. Recognition of help me.
There's one word here.
Sorry.
A recognition of the creator which means
what? If I realize that this is a that
we live in a story and that there's an
author to the story. Therefore, what
there's he gave the Torah. Yes. Sure.
But but what what there's an author
here. We're a part of something. Sorry.
Creation. Yes. Okay. Maybe I'm just
thinking about this in a specific way.
My what's that? God exists. God exists.
Therefore, what purpose? Okay. This is I
think the word that Rook is getting
towards. If God exists, if we're part of
a story and there's a beginning to the
story,
end. Therefore, there's an end. There's
a middle, right? We're in the middle
somewhere. We don't know where.
Hopefully towards the end. We're
hopeful. But there's a story with a
beginning, a middle, and an end. And
there's a if there's a beginning of the
story, there's an end to the story. That
means there's a purpose to it. And not
only there's a purpose to the total
story, but there's a purpose that each
and every person has within that story.
Okay, that's the first step that quotes.
So now, what are the what are the
ramifications of
that? Uh so now that we understand that
there's a purpose to the world. Okay. So
what do we do now that there's a
purpose? So Rav Cook says God gave us
what we call mitzvot masot. We have
these very practical mitzvah to do.
Everyone here was very spiritual
beautiful. Rook says no it's about
mitzvot
masot. What's the power of a mitzvah
doing it here? I'm connecting shamay
arts. from taking shamayim the abstract
the conceptual the ideal right that's
just you know up there so to speak to
the arts the here grounding it doing it
the practical I'm building a bridge
between those two two places
says and it also offers this sense of
relationship this connection to Israel
as our specific land in order to do
this. Okay, again, yes, mitzvot are what
connects us to heaven and earth. But we
also have a connection to erit Israel.
What's that connection about? It's about
doing the mitzvot. It's about
actualizing this vision of building a
bridge between shmayva, but not just
doing it on individual level. Doing it
as a nation and doing it in a place. The
place that is meant to do mitzvot that
were enabled to perform this task is
here in Israel. And obviously here in
there's a there's even higher kusha
here so that we can do we're supposed to
do without being bothered. At least
that's the way it's supposed to be in
theory in actuality. Just one second.
Sorry. And then we'll get want to just
get through this piece and then we'll
ask question.
from decay. Okay.
Um, so we're supposed to be able to have
this land where we're able to do what
we're supposed to do in harmony, right,
with the climate of the land, with who
we are. That's the second part, okay?
I'm Israel through the mitzvah. Okay? As
a nation doing it all together. Now, now
that we have that, we have to wait a
second. Now, we're all here in Israel or
whoever is here. But that differentiates
us from the other nations.
There is a mechanism set up in this
mitzvah which separates us. Okay. What's
one of one example of a mitzvah that
separates us from the non-Jews?
Kash. Beautiful. I think the easiest
example, right? Kash. Uh, sorry. You
know, we can have a meeting together. We
can be friends, but we can't eat
together. It has to be this separation.
So, says, "Wait a second. We're supposed
to be
Israelit doing all these things. uh a
light to the nations, but also the Torah
does something unique and as well that
allows us to be able to provide a unique
sense of our own identity. We're
separate but we're in we're both engaged
with the whole world but separate from
it. Who is the great teacher that
teaches us how to do this? Who was both
involved in the world and yet separate
from it? from the avot way back
au beautiful Ara gave us this model to
be able to both be in the world he was
going and he was separate right he was
separate he created this opportunity for
us to be both engaged in the world to be
able to lift up the world as well as
maintain our unique identity from it
mitzvot practical mitzvot in all of
allow us to connect sh this is a whole
list here connect shaya actualize our
potential as a nature as as a nation
live here in Israel and lift up the
entirety of all of all humanity while at
the same time allowing us to maintain
our unique distinctive entity different
from the non-Jews all those things
happen with mitzvah mat okay so