Transcript
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Okay, now it's time to have fun with my
personal algorithm. I don't know what
the algorithms deeper intentions were,
but I'm going to show you a video that
popped up in my feed today and tell you
why it has deep significance for me and
hopefully for you.
Here we go. 10 years
not much happens. A little dent.
25 years
you get more of a valley.
50 years goes by
and
the fruits of your labors
are seen.
Stay at it. Things take time. Okay,
there you go.
So, I'm going to tell you a story. A
story about one of the great rabbis of
all time, Rabbi Akiva. Rabbi Akiva lived
during the time of the Roman domination
over the Holy Land. In fact,
he lived after the destruction of the
Second Temple by the Romans
and he ultimately was executed by the
Romans for teaching Torah.
But, he was not always a Torah teacher.
In fact, he was not even literate.
For 40 years, he was a simple shepherd.
He was not a student of the Torah.
He was uh
we'll just say it as it is, rough and
uncouth.
He was you know, your typical shepherd.
You know what you know what shepherds
are like or at least in those days, you
know, shepherds.
And uh here's the story of how his whole
life changed in a moment.
The story
is contained in a rabbinic
text called Avot deRabbi Natan.
And it describes how Rabbi Akiva was at
the mouth of a well, like a natural
well, wellspring.
And uh I guess there was sort of like
a
stone
uh
like a rock formation
where the where the water was coming out
into it into a stream.
And Rabbi Akiva asked, "Who carved that
rock?"
And cuz I guess it was it
looked like it was carved very well. It
looked like it was admirable
craftsmanship.
And they said to Rabbi Akiva, "What do
you mean, who carved it? The water
itself carved it."
And
they cited I don't know who the the the
they is. These were
literate people, I guess. They cited
the verse from Iyov. Iyov is in Hebrew
and
uh in English they call him Job.
You know, Job suffered. He had a tough
life. But, Job is also a book full of
poetry.
There are many lyrical verses,
lyrical and
uh philosophical verses in the book of
Job. So, they cited the verse Job
chapter 14 verse 19 that says, "Water
wears away stone and torrents crush away
earth."
Avonim shochaku mayim
tishtof sfi'achah afar aretz.
So, they told Rabbi Akiva, "The water
itself
carved that stone."
And it wasn't like uh
a huge amount of water. It was like a
little trickle coming out of a out of a
wellspring from the ground.
So, Rabbi Akiva then at that moment, he
had like this epiphany.
And he saw how the trickle of water
carved
stone.
And he said, "Wow!
If
trickles of water can cut through the
rock
then the Torah can make an impression in
my in my brain."
And
he became a scholar, but not overnight.
He was 40 years old. He had to actually
go to a
literal kindergarten and learn
aleph-bet. Yet, that he was illiterate.
He had to learn what the little kids
learn.
And uh eventually
after 40 years
he became one of the greatest teachers
among the Jewish people.
And he taught for another 40 years and
he lived in total 120 years. Like, who
else lived 120 years?
That's right. Moshe Rabbeinu, Moses
lived 120 years.
So, 40 years as an illiterate shepherd,
40 years studying until he became one of
the greatest rabbis
and then 40 years as a leader, a teacher
among his people.
So, I'll tell you a cute Hasidic story.
And uh
I don't know the source of this story,
but it's one of those things that I
heard a few times at a farbrengen. You
know what a farbrengen is? When we get
together and
sort of like an informal
it's not like a
frontal teaching classroom setting. It's
more like what usually sitting at a
table and there's
there's food and there's drinks and
singing and it's kind of social.
But, there's usually somebody who's
leading it. Somebody who's like the
teacher, but it's again, it's not like
it's not didactic in like the formal
sense. It's more like
uh experiential.
So, sometimes they tell stories,
sometimes uh
we just you know, sing a lot. But,
here's a story I heard at a farbrengen a
few different times and I don't know the
original source of it.
But, I heard a few different few
different people say this story. Story's
like this, Hasidic story. That once upon
a time
there was a guy
who
um had a horse.
And he had to go inside, I guess to the
to the inn
to to eat, to sleep, whatever it is. So,
he ties up his horse out in front of the
inn.
And when he comes out, he notices that
the horse is tied up
uh like you know, near the I guess the
the building has like an overhang.
And there's water dripping from the
overhang
from the from the like the downspout,
the gutter.
And uh
it's dripping on the horse's back.
So,
the guy looks at it and he says, "Hmm,
this is very curious.
Rabbi Akiva saw how water cuts through
stone.
Now, a horse is a lot softer than stone.
Now, the water is dripping on the
horse's back all this time
and I don't see that it's made a dent in
the horse's back. There's no impression
there.
What why not?"
And he thought about it and he said,
"Ah, I know.
Because
the stone stays in one spot and the
water keeps hitting it over and over
again the same spot. But, the horse
every time the trickle touches his back,
he shakes it off."
Now, that's the story as it's told at
farbrengens.
What's the explanation? They don't say
the explanation at the farbrengen. At
the farbrengen, you're supposed to be
immersed enough that
the meaning of the story is
self-understood.
Okay, but this is YouTube, so I'm not
expecting you to be in farbrengen mode.
I'll just tell you the explanation.
The explanation is like this.
>> [gasps]
>> Uh the truth will
permeate
but only if you allow it to.
Rabbi Akiva emulated the stone, meaning
he subjected himself to Torah and he
allowed it to break through his mind
and do what it does.
But, somebody else might hear that same
truth
and deflect it. You know, they start to
rationalize. You know what it means to
rationalize? Rational lies. It's when
you use your intellect to explain why,
"Oh yeah, that's true, but here's why
it's different in my case." And all such
things.
So, that's like the horse shaking it
off, refusing to internalize it. So,
yeah, water can make a hole in stone,
but precisely because the stone lets it.
But, if you don't let it, then it won't
make the hole.
Now, I'll tell you something else
fascinating about Rabbi Akiva,
>> [snorts]
>> which is
>> [sighs and gasps]
>> obviously, he had a very lofty soul.
Obviously,
from the fact that he was able to
achieve such greatness.
That came from his lofty soul.
In fact, we're even told that Moshe
Rabbeinu, who we compared Rabbi Akiva
to, they both lived 120 years and they
were leaders of their people.
Um Moshe Rabbeinu actually prophetically
saw Rabbi Akiva
even though they lived over a thousand
years apart.
Um
Moshe Rabbeinu saw Rabbi Akiva
and was
so impressed with Rabbi Akiva's depth
that Moshe Rabbeinu, Moses, says to
Hashem "Hashem, why are you giving the
Torah through me? Give it through
Akiva ben Yosef.
And uh
was it was it was a there was like this
prophetic experience where Moshe
Rabbeinu was actually in the classroom
of Rabbi Akiva
and couldn't follow the lesson that
Rabbi Akiva was teaching.
And then somebody asked Rabbi Akiva,
"Well, where do you know this from?" And
Rabbi Akiva said, "Oh,
we got this as a tradition from from
Moshe Rabbeinu. Moses received this at
Mount Sinai."
And then Moshe Rabbeinu realized, yes,
maybe on the conscious level what Rabbi
Akiva was capable of unpacking
was
more depth than even what Moshe Rabbeinu
was aware of, again, on a conscious
level. But the download, the original
code,
was all there in what Hashem gave to
Moshe Rabbeinu. So, Moshe Rabbeinu was
the one who was able to take the
download at Mount Sinai and get all the
information
that is in the Torah. And then there was
a process over generations of unpacking
it, decoding it. In fact, it says that
Rabbi Akiva was so adept at decoding
that not only was he able to figure out
the
meaning from every letter of the Torah,
but even the calligraphy. If you look at
an actual Sefer Torah, the way the
letters are written, there are little
crowns. They're just orna- Well, I
shouldn't say they're just
ornamentation. They appear just like
ornamentation, but uh Rabbi Akiva was
able to deduce halakhic ramifications,
meaning
outcomes that affect practical
Torah law
based on the calligraphy.
Uh so, that that's the greatness of
Rabbi Akiva. And and then So, the
question is like this.
Clearly, Rabbi Akiva was this awesome,
powerful, mighty soul.
If so, how's it even possible that for
40 years he was a simple, illiterate
shepherd?
Like
it doesn't even make sense that that's
the same person.
You know, you go from good to great.
That makes sense.
But to go from absolutely
no awareness of Torah, being an uncouth
shepherd, and then not just becoming a
scholar, but like the scholar par
excellence.
It's kind of funny.
So, I'll tell you what the Kabbalah
explains. The Kabbalah says that it's
important
what intentions parents have when they
conceive their child.
And it says that that affects the
lavush,
the garment. The garment means the
interface
that the soul will have when it's in its
embodiment.
And that interface will affect and
throttle and service the filter through
which all of the heavenly
energy will enter from on high into the
body,
as well as act as a filter for all the
spiritual output that the person in
their body is going to contribute to the
world. So, that garment, which is
created according to the parents'
intention. When when the parents
conceive the child, if their
intention is pure and holy,
if they are
in other words, not just lustfully
seeking physical gratification, but if
they have a holy intent
in their union, then their child will
receive a an interface that will be more
refined, and then this child will have
an easier time being sensitive to
spirituality.
Rabbi Akiva's parents were simple
people.
They didn't have that lofty intent.
And therefore, Rabbi Akiva inherited a
very
uh gunky filter, so to speak.
And so much so that it served as a
pretty serious impediment to his
spirituality for 40 years.
However, it's only the filter. It's only
the the interface. It's not the soul
itself. The soul itself was very, very,
very lofty. So, eventually, like they
say, the cream rises to the top. But it
took 40 years.
So,
imagine that. You have this incredible,
lofty soul
that's sort of frustrated
because it's trapped behind this
really uh coarse interface.
Huh.
But eventually,
it expressed itself.
And Rabbi Akiva became the Rabbi Akiva
that we all know and revere
to this day.
Anyway, folks,
we can all
make a change if we allow the truth to
penetrate and we don't shake it off.
Maybe
we're not meant to be Rabbi Akiva. Only
Rabbi Akiva was meant to be Rabbi Akiva.
But each one of us has a potential to
fulfill.
And if we allow
the truth to affect us, we will be able
to reach that fullest potential.