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Why Did Yitzchak Love Eisav? Because That’s what a Father Does - By Rabbi YY Jacobson
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How the Man Who Never Ceased to Dig Wells Taught Us and G-d How to Love. - Toldos Women’s Class This women's class was presented on Tuesday Parshas Toldos, 25 Cheshvan, 5778, November 14, 2017, at Beis Medrash Ohr Chaim in Monsey, NY.
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
The Yeshiva.net
I'm going to begin today with a very
perplexing story
that is made by the sages, by the rabbis
in the Gamara
in tractate Shabbos, page 89, Maseches
Shabbos
Daf Pates Amud Bais.
The Gamara there
makes the following observation.
I just want to open it so I can read it
in sight.
The Gamara says
Reb Shmuel, the son of Nachmani
said in the name of Rebbi Yochanan.
The prophet Yeshayahu Hanavi
Yeshayahu perek samach gimmel, Isaiah
chapter 63
says ki ato avinu.
The Jews say you are our father, Avraham
lo yedanu Yisrael lo yakirenu.
Avraham we don't know
Yisrael
which is the second name of Yaakov, we
don't recognize.
Ata Hashem
avinu gayalenu, you are our father.
So the Gamara wants to know what does
this mean?
What does it mean that in the future the
Jews will say we don't know Avraham, we
don't know Yaakov, we don't know
Yisrael, you are our father.
So Reb Shmuel says lo asid lovi in the
future yam malach Kadosh Baruch Hu
l'Avraham.
Hashem is going to tell Avraham
banacha chatu.
Your children sinned.
They sinned to me.
They rebelled against me.
So Reb Avraham Avinu responds yimach al
kedushas shmecha.
Penalize them, punish them, sanctify
your name.
So Hashem says to himself, let me share
the same issue with Yaakov.
D'hava lei tzaar gedel banim.
Yaakov had the pain of raising many
children.
He may be more sensitive.
So Hashem tells Yaakov banacha chatu.
Your children sinned.
So Yaakov, just like his zeida Avraham,
says yimach al kedushas shmecha.
Penalize them. Punish them.
So Hashem says lo b'savi ta'ama v'lo
b'dard'kei eitza.
You're not going to find any logic
by the grandfather or by the grandson.
Lo b'savi ta'ama.
By the zeida I won't find any logic. Lo
b'dard'kei, by his grandchild I won't
find eitza, I won't find advice.
Meaning Avraham and Yaakov
I will not find there what I'm looking
for.
So he goes to Yitzchak.
And he tells Yitzchak banacha chatu li.
Your children sinned to me.
Avraham and Yaakov, when they heard
that, they said punish them.
What does Yitzchak say when Hashem tells
Yitzchak your children sinned to me?
Amal l'fanav. Yitzchak said Ribono shel
Olam, banai v'lo banacha.
What are you calling them your children?
They're my children, they're not your
children.
So it's like when your husband says, you
know, would you come home to take care
of your children?
You ever got that one?
Take care of your children. Really?
How did that happen?
So this is what Yitzchak tells God.
Hashem says your children sinned. So
what's this your children? Your children
sinned. Banai v'lo banacha.
They're my children, they're not your
children.
I don't understand.
By By a Mount Sinai when they said
na'aseh before nishma
we will do and we will understand
at that period of history you called
them b'nei Yisrael.
In parshas Shmois, when they're still in
Egypt then they're your children. B'nei
Yisrael, you you said.
Hashem told Moshe to tell Pharaoh b'nei
Yisrael, these are my children.
Now suddenly
history evolved, circumstances changed,
you forgot they're not your child
children anymore, you disowned them?
This is what Yitzchak tells the Ribono
shel Olam.
You know, when things were going like
when your child is doing what you want,
ah, he's your child.
SUDDENLY NOW IT'S YOUR CHILD SINNED.
But Yitzchak wasn't finished yet. He
says now I'm going to tell you something
else.
What are you telling me they sinned?
Let's analyze this. Kama chatu, how much
could they sin already?
The average lifespan of a person,
Yitzchak says, is 70 years.
The first 20 years you can't hold them
responsible, they're babies.
First 20 years, no punishment. So you're
left with 50.
Half the time people are sleeping.
It's night.
So you're left with 25 years.
He says half of that they're either go
eating or going to the bathroom.
So you're left WITH 12 AND 1/2 YEARS. IS
VOS V'ALST, WHAT can you already do with
12 and 1/2 years?
That's what he says.
So here's my deal, he says. Im ata
soivel es kulam, if you can carry all of
them, mutav, great. Im lav, if not,
palga alai u'palga alaich.
Half on you, half on me.
IF YOU'RE NOT READY to deal with their
12 and 1/2 years, God, you can't deal
WITH IT, NO PROBLEM. WE'LL SPLIT THE
POT.
WE'LL SPLIT THE POT.
SIX AND A quarter on me.
Six and a quarter on you. Palga alaich,
palga alai palga alaich. I take half, I
deal with half of the sins, you deal
with the other half.
And then he continues, and if you don't
want to deal with any of it you want to
put it all on me, lo ich gut. V'im
timtza leima kulam alai, if you want to
put it all on me hakreivus nafshi
kamoch. I already have sacrificed my
soul to you, I could carry them all.
When the Jewish people hear this
conversation
they say we don't know Avraham and
Yaakov, meaning they're alienating us.
Ki ata avinu. You Yitzchak, you're our
father. You are our father.
That is the meaning of the pasuk that lo
asid lovi, they say ki ata avinu, you
are our father.
That's the end of the story in Gamara
Maseches Shabbos daf pates amud bais.
Which of course
it's a very strange story from beginning
to end, obviously loaded with layers of
symbolism and profound messages.
Hashem comes to Avraham says your
children sinned. He doesn't like his
response. That's why he goes to Yaakov.
He doesn't like his response. He rejects
the grandfather and the grandson.
He goes to Yitzchak.
Yitzchak's response is satisfactory.
Why did Yitzchak say this? Why couldn't
Avraham say this?
Why couldn't Yaakov say this?
Avraham couldn't tell Hashem
they're your children just as much as my
children. Yaakov couldn't say the same
thing.
Both of them
said they sinned, okay, punish them.
You know, when the principal calls you
up in the old days
when the principal called up your father
and said
he sinned, what did you say? Punish him.
I remember once on visiting day, a
mother, I was a counselor in camp
a couple of number of years ago, so a
mother comes to me on visiting day.
So she says, how is my child?
So he was challenging, very very
challenging.
Extremely challenging.
But I didn't want to say everything in
one shot.
So I said, you know, he's an interesting
boy and there's a lot to learn
and one can grow a lot through
interacting with him.
So she says, why are you beating around
the bush? Why don't you just tell me the
truth?
He's a horrible horrible kid, he's
making your life miserable, he's making
the whole bunk miserable, he's probably
making the whole camp miserable. You
should punish him.
So Avraham and Yaakov said, what are you
What are you complaining? We send them
to school for a reason. You're the
babysitter, not me. Figure it out.
Yitzchak has a completely different
response. First of all, he can't deal
with the fact that God is calling them
your children, not my children.
Second of all, once upon a time they
were your children, what happened?
Third,
machnishta d'avraham for 12 and 1/2
years.
Fourth, even if yes, half is on me.
Five, all is on me.
Ah, that's the answer. Why Yitzchak?
Logically even, it would seem
uncharacteristic of Yitzchak because we
know it says in Zohar and in many many
sforim
that Avraham represented which
attribute? Chesed.
Pasuk calls Avraham also in Yeshayahu
Avraham ohavi.
Avraham my lover, the one who loves me.
Yaakov is middas harachamim, the
attribute of empathy, of compassion.
Yitzchak
is the middah, the attribute of gevurah
of of discipline, of strength. It's
known as middas hadin, judgment. Pasuk
says about Yitzchak u'pachad Yitzchak
hayali.
The awe of Yitzchak, the fear of
Yitzchak, the reverence that Yitzchak
embodied and represented the middle of
year
of awe, of fear, of reverence.
Nonetheless, it was Yitzchak who
apparently
completely defies
what you would expect from
me. This is okay, punish.
Quid pro quo.
Chesed says, "Ah,
he's a cute kid."
He's a cute kid.
And you have compassion, you have
empathy. But here it's on the contrary.
Yitzchak is the one who says
"Oh."
But I will always be with you.
So we'll come back to this
let's change the subject.
One of the astounding stories in
partials told us
is the relationship between Yitzchak and
Esau.
The success is clearly
that Jacob and Yitzchak were very
different types of people.
The way the describes them to quote
on the arm
the boys grew up, the twins Jacob and
Esau grew up.
But their development, their lifestyle
varied and varied drastically.
Esau is a day at sight of soda.
He's a man, he's a skilled hunter, a man
of the field.
Outdoors, he loves the outdoors and he's
a hunter. Jacob is Tom.
Literally a wholesome person, a complete
person who
dwells in the tents. He's assiduous.
He is uh
introspective, he's scholarly, he's
spiritual.
By year of Yitzchak as Esau he said
before.
Yitzchak loved Esau.
And the Torah is so ambiguous just gives
three words as a reason. He said before
literally translated in English
Isaac loved Esau because game was in his
mouth.
Rebecca I have a sister Jacob.
And Rebecca loves Jacob. No reason why
Rebecca loves Jacob, but there's a
reason why Yitzchak loves Esau.
He said before.
What is the meaning that he said before?
On the most literal literal level it
means because Esau fed him.
Esau brought him food. Esau hunted
animals for him and brought him food. He
said it before.
Rashi, like the mattress, is perturbed
by this interpretation.
Rashi brings the mattress before shall
Esau. Because there was game not in the
mouth of Yitzchak in the mouth of Esau
shall Esau and the Torah.
He deceived. He deceived Yitzchak. Esau
he he he trapped him. He was sly with
him. He deceived him through his words.
There was game in the mouth of Esau who
used his gift of gab and his skill and
his charm to be able to give an
impression that he is somebody who he is
not.
Yet taking this on face value is very
difficult to understand.
Everyone sitting in this room can
testify
that a parent only if he or she is only
a regular ordinary parent knows a child.
At least knows a child pretty well.
Never mind Yitzchak of Eno.
And even if the child makes a face and
starts asking you questions
when you grow up with somebody, when you
watch somebody, when you observe
somebody and you're somewhat sensitive
and alert
you know what the person is.
Can one really believe that Esau
completely deceived Yitzchak? Never mind
the fact that Yitzchak
was who Yitzchak was and one of our
others, one of our patriarchs. Besides
the itself says later
that uh Esau married
Judith, the son the daughter of
Basemath, the daughter of Elon.
But to Yianna
rule out Yitzchak and Rebecca.
They were a source of
melancholy, of dejection, of of
frustration, of spiritual uh rebellion
if you wish it's one translation to
Yitzchak and Rebecca. And Rashi says the
reason.
Rashi says all of their deeds aggravated
Yitzchak and Rebecca. Shall we
say the Tsar? They were idol worshipers
and these were the people Esau chose as
his spouses.
So the same Torah clearly says that
Yitzchak knew what Esau was involved in.
And this is years before he's giving him
the blessings.
Esau wasn't a youngster anymore. He was
already 40 years old. But this is years
before he wants to give him the
blessings.
So he see clearly in the
that Yitzchak was not just naive and
looked at Esau and everything Esau did
was perfect. Sometimes you have a parent
is
on a child.
And it's sometimes very very sad. You
see different situations but usually
comes from terrible dysfunction
in a parent's life. They become fixed on
one child. That child could do nothing
wrong and any child who says something
or thinks differently becomes the
absolute enemy.
There are such situations, they're
tragic situations where people lose
proportion, they have they don't have
perspective. It usually comes because
that child feeds a certain deep issue
that they're dealing with to the
exclusion of anybody else who doesn't
fit into the pattern that allows them to
go on with this functional life, but
we're not going to elaborate on this at
the moment.
What is then the meaning of Yitzchak's
tremendous love
that he had to Esau? Just to say because
he used to feed him?
And that's why he overlooked everything?
Or because he fooled him? It seems to be
that this these explanations are not
completely satisfactory.
They tell a part of the picture, but not
the whole picture.
Last year we discussed this aspect and
many other aspects of the story at
length.
We spoke about the innocence and the
holiness of Esau
which was one angle of the story.
Which uh
anybody remembers the class about uh
Jacob and Esau and two brothers and
different missions.
You could watch it on the dot net. You
have probably the video there and the
audio there of last year's women's class
partials told us.
But today
we're going to go and I'm not going to
say a different very different at all.
It's all creates one mosaic, one
tapestry, but emphasize a different
point.
And by introducing
a completely different subject.
And that has to do
with the mystery of the wells.
If you look at the lives of the others,
one sees that for some reason digging
wells was an extremely significant
enterprise.
Already with Abraham of Eno.
Now, we all understand that digging
wells then was important
because that was the exclusive
or that was one of the most important
sources of water which allowed people
families, animals to live.
This is before the industrial
revolution, thousands of years before
the industrial revolution.
You're not opening the sink in your
house and getting water.
But rather you're going to the well in
the outskirts of the town or the city or
maybe the middle of the town, wherever
the well was and you're drawing water.
The whole
of Yitzchak and Rebecca happens at the
well as we discussed partials of Sarah.
The whole drama around the air and the
well which was the meeting place where
people would meet up because you had to
come to the well to draw water and you
had to do it on a constant basis as long
as you needed water and one can't live
without water, not for themselves, not
for their children, not for their
animals. You needed of course for
bathing and for washing and for cleaning
and the main thing for drinking.
Nonetheless, so obviously everyone had
to have access to a well, dig a well,
own a well, rent a well or have access
to a public well. This was a major
staple of life.
But that was everybody
if you wanted to live and you wanted
your animals to live.
Even camels who can go
we spoke about can go weeks weeks weeks
weeks without water. For that they have
their blessed elevated humps. But
nonetheless, when they see the water,
they seize carpe diem, they seize the
day and they don't stop drinking which
is how we explain this extraordinary
depth in what Eliezer saw in Rebecca
when she filled the trough and refilled
it and refilled it and refilled it until
10 camels
had enough to drink.
So that's this was a staple of life for
everybody. That's why Eliezer went to
the well.
There was a reason he went to the well
to meet girls. Why did he go to the
well?
What's up with the well? Why didn't he
go to the other places? This was the
hang This was I'm not going to say the
hang Maybe it was a hangout also. When
Jacob of Eno was looking for a where
does he go? He also goes to a well. At
the well you met everybody.
Huh?
You know, there's certain places you
know you're going to meet everybody
there.
Everybody you're going to meet. There's
certain places. This was the well. Where
does Moses go when he runs away from
Egypt? Where does he go to hang out? He
goes to the well and sure enough
everybody finds their there.
Maybe we should start going to the we
should start going to the wells.
We could dig some well, but nobody knows
where the well is anymore. Very good.
Somebody once told me he was having a
difficulty. He said, "They tell me
there's light at the end of the tunnel."
I said, "No." He says, "Yeah, but I
don't have a tunnel."
I'm looking for the tunnel to be able to
get to the light at the end of the
tunnel.
You got to know where your well is.
So,
the wells were natural places where
people of all walks of life,
rich and poor, even if the rich sent
their servants, men and women, young and
old, needed it simply to live.
Yet, with the Avos, we see a special
emphasis
and occupation,
not just with going to the well, which
was a staple of life, but with digging
wells, with discovering wells, with
finding wells. And there's always a
dispute.
It doesn't start with Yitzchak. It
already starts with Avraham Avinu. But
with Avraham Avinu, it's only one story
in Parshas Vayeira.
There's a story between Avraham Avinu
and Avimelech. Also quite an interesting
story. You know, these stories that uh
it's easy to gloss over.
What happens is
Avraham Avinu rebukes Avimelech.
Al odoi's b'eir hamayim asher gazlu
avdei Avimelech.
Avraham dug a well
and the servants of Avimelech, the
Philistine king, stole. They seized the
well. Avraham rebukes the king and
Avimelech tells Avraham, Lo yada'ti mi
asah sadov ra'zeh. I don't know who did
it. That's number one. Number two, v'gam
ata lo yaga'd'tali. You never told me.
Number three, v'gam anochi lo shama'ti
bil'ti hayom. I didn't hear about it
till today.
Three excuses that are still given for
every story.
It's to the point that Avraham makes a
covenant with Avimelech. They literally
exchange animals. They make a covenant.
He gives him seven sheep and he says as
testimony ki chafarti es hab'eir hazos.
This well I dug.
That's with Avraham Avinu.
What's the fascination with a well?
Is it pure finances? Is it pure water?
Is money? Water is life? That's why it's
money?
Is that it? Or is it more?
Suddenly, when it comes
to uh Yitzchak Avinu, we see a whole new
level of fascination with wells. In
fact, the only real story we know about
Yitzchak,
if you'll ask, "Tell me about the Give
us the biography of Yitzchak Avinu."
We don't know many stories about the
Avos and the Imahos, but with each of
them, Avraham and Yaakov, there are a
few major stories that we know.
We know about Avraham's birth. We know
about his journeys. We know about some
of his great tests, his great battles.
The same is true with Yaakov.
When you look at Yitzchak's life and you
want to know what was Yitzchak lived
longer than all of them.
Yaakov 140. Avraham 175. Yitzchak 180.
The longest life.
You want to know what did he do during
these 180 years? We know that he was
born.
The story of the Akedah
is attributed almost exclusively to
Avraham.
Yitzchak just asks a question,
"Who's going to be the offering?" And
then he walks with his father.
There's no major story even though the
person is Yitzchak.
Then we hear about Sarah's death. Even
Yitzchak's marriage, he's not involved.
He's completely passive.
His father arranges everything.
All he has to do is show up for the
wedding.
Avraham Avinu marries Sarah. Yaakov has
to run and search for a shidduch. Moshe
as well. Yitzchak is completely passive.
By the Akedah,
in the story, he's somewhat passive.
It's always called the Akedah
of the scus of Avraham,
cuz it's hard for a father to sacrifice
a child, maybe even harder than the
child sacrificing himself.
Yitzchak goes together with Avraham, but
it's Avraham's story. The shidduch of
Yitzchak is not Yitzchak's story. It's
Eliezer's story. It's Rivka's story.
It's the story of the camels and the
well.
And then you ask, "What's the story?"
Then there's a story at the end of his
life
where he gives the brachas. And there
too, he ultimately is pretty passive, it
seems, because he gives the brachas to
He wants to give it to Esau and ends up
going to Yaakov.
And then you want to know all these
years, what was Yitzchak involved in?
There's only one story about Yitzchak
himself, and that is
he's digging wells.
That's what Yitzchak does. He digs
wells.
In Parshas Toldos,
the pasuk says,
after Yitzchak moves to a place called
Gerar because of a hunger,
so the pasuk says Yitzchak planted. He
was very successful.
All the wells, v'chol hab'eirus, all the
wells that the servants of his father
dug in the days of Avraham
and the Plishtim plugged them,
they stopped them and they filled them
up with earth,
Yitzchak re-dug
all of those wells.
Vaya'shev Yitzchak vayachpor es b'eirus
hamayim asher chafru bimei Avraham aviv
vayisa'tum Plishtim acharei mos Avraham.
When Avraham passed away, the Plishtim
plugged and filled up all the wells that
Avraham Avinu and his servants dug, they
filled them all up with earth. Meaning,
they basically destroyed them. They made
them unusable, inaccessible. Yitzchak
comes and he re-digs, he excavates, he
removes the earth and he rediscovers,
re-digs, reopens
access is once again all the wells that
his father dug. Suddenly, we hear that
his father dug more than one well that
we knew about. And Yitzchak reopens them
all because the Plishtim covered them
all after Avraham and he gave them the
names, the same names that his father
gave them.
How many wells are these?
It's hard to know.
Could be 20. Could be 50. Minimum three.
If it says kol hab'eirus,
it's more than one. It's more than two
because if it would have been two, could
have just said b'eirus, the wells.
It's minimum three. When it says kol,
the Seforno says it's minimum three.
Could be 10. Could be more. But minimum
three.
But all the wells that Avraham dug, we
can presume there was more than three.
I'm just saying minimum three. That's
what the Seforno writes, Rabbi Ovadia
Seforno. Then it says, "The servants of
Yitzchak dug on their own and they found
A NEW WELL, B'EIR MAYIM CHAYIM." And
what happened? There was a major fight.
The shepherds of Gerar quarreled with
the shepherds of Yitzchak, "Lo namayim,
it's our water." So, Yitzchak gives the
name of the well, gives the name a
special well. The They gives the well a
special name.
Gives the name a special well. Gives the
well a special name, Esek. What does
Esek mean? Ki his'asku imoi. He calls it
Esek because they involved themselves.
They They fought about it.
They dig another well and there's
another fight.
It's our water.
So, Yitzchak has a name for the second
well. It's called Sitnah, which means
animosity.
He moves away. They dig a third well.
There's no fight.
So, he calls this well Rechovos,
broadness, expansiveness. Ki hirchiv
Hashem lanu u'farinu ba'aretz. At last,
Hashem has granted us ample space. We
can multiply. We can be fulfilled in
this land. We can own a well without
people trying to come coming and trying
to seize it. Esek, Sitnah, Rechovos.
So, besides re-digging all the wells of
Avraham, now he has his own new three
wells. So, how many wells does Yitzchak
now have? Who knows? At least six. Could
be dozens. And if this is not enough,
if this is not enough, the king
Avimelech comes to Yitzchak for a peace
treaty. Let's make peace. Let's make
Let's create cooperation. On that day,
the servants of Yitzchak come and they
give him news. What's the news you can
give Yitzchak?
What would interest Yitzchak? One thing.
They tell him, "We have been digging a
WELL FOR A WHILE, matzanu mayim. We came
across water. We have been digging and
digging and digging."
So, Yitzchak calls that well Shivah. Why
Shivah?
The Seforno says, cuz this was the
seventh well.
Three from Avraham, three Esek, Sitnah,
Rechovos. Now is a seventh.
Other meforshim give different
interpretations.
Could Could be it was even more than
seven.
This is what Yitzchak was involved in,
digging wells.
The last story we know about Yitzchak is
he tried to bless Esau. He ended up
blessing Yaakov and he sends Yaakov
away.
No other story about Yitzchak.
Between the story of the of the of the
of the
moving away to Gerar and the wells and
the end of his life was close to a
century.
At least 80 years.
So, all we know about Yitzchak's 180
years, besides a story that connects to
his father, a story that connects to his
father's servant, a story in which his
wife
spilled their all. She plays the major
role. The story where Yitzchak is
personified was he digs wells. What type
of story is this? Why is he always
digging wells? Why is he so into wells?
Why is he fascinated with wells?
Zolsayn, he needs wells. Everybody needs
wells. But the Torah makes a point to
give us
You understand that 180 years you do a
lot of things.
But what we know about Yitzchak is he is
the well digger of Judaism.
Avraham too,
Yaakov too, but not like Yitzchak.
The explanation to all of this, you're
with me?
Exhibit one, you remember?
They're not my children, they're your
children.
Exhibit two, a special love to Esau. Ki
sayid b'fiv.
Exhibit three, the fascination with
digging wells.
There's a famous expression
in Gemara
in Maseches Bava Kamma,
ein mayim ela Torah.
Water
is compared to Torah.
Why?
I mean, there's other things Torah is
compared to other beverages as well.
Honey
and milk and wine and oil and these are
not just random associations.
Every one of these beverages has a
certain quality, a certain
characteristic.
Torah also has many different
characteristics. Each characteristic
parallels a certain type of liquid and
beverage, so it's not contradict not
like Monday we wanted to Shavuot, we
want to talk about milk, suddenly the
Torah becomes milk. Hanukkah we're in
love with oil
because of its nutritious quality, so
suddenly the Torah becomes oil.
Sukkot where where with Sukkot or
Pesach, you want to drink wine, so Torah
becomes wine.
And then in the middle of the week where
you should be drinking water
according to the advice of your
physician, Torah becomes water.
Each one of these beverages has a
characteristic
and Torah has different layers,
different facets that parallel these
particular individual characteristics.
And this is true generally in
Yiddishkeit, something is compared to
this and compared to this. It's not
stomach so challenging. Whatever you
could compare something to, we'll
compare it to. Each comparison
underscores a different point you want
to make concerning this particular item
or person or object.
What is the connection between Torah and
water? Why is Torah connected to water?
So there's different explanations.
Moreso mayim yordim mimakom gavoha el
makom namuch.
Water water represents humility, it will
always look for the lowest the lowest
point. It will always which is true
about all beverages of course, including
water.
But
we want to talk about one element and
that is you know when you're tired, when
you're exhausted,
when it's a hot summer day, when global
warming is functioning well
and you're parched, you're arid, you're
tired, you're hiking for 2 hours on the
bare mountains,
there's nothing as delicious
there's nothing as tasteful, there's
nothing as
exhilarating
and reviving to the person as a cup of
water,
which is God's natural beverage.
It's true.
The Mishna says in Brachot, water
doesn't have a special taste
or aroma or color.
That's why you only make a Bracha on
water when you're thirsty.
Hashem shemayim u'smoyim borei kol minay
bidvaroi.
You're drinking apple juice or orange
juice or wine, whether you're thirsty or
not even for social reasons or to
swallow a pill, you still make a Bracha
cuz it has a special taste.
Water is considered aromaless,
colorless, tasteless, but when you're
thirsty, there's nothing like the taste
of water.
So when a person is thirsty, they have
to make the Bracha shehakol niyeh
bidvaroi.
Water quenches the thirst of a body, it
rejuvenates one's spirit, it
resuscitates one's energy
and it's really the staple of life.
Most of our body
and the majority of each cell, we have
close to 100 trillion cells in our body,
most of it is made up of water.
The child the fetus develops in the
amniotic sac in water.
Water is crucial to live.
In this sense, water represents
spiritually the gift of wisdom,
of inspiration that becomes a major
source of life for the psyche, for the
spirit, for the soul.
The body must have water to live and the
mind and the soul needs wisdom,
perspective, enlightenment, focus,
inspiration, Torah in order to be able
to live. It refreshes a soul, it
quenches our thirst, it gives vitality,
vivaciousness, life and inspiration.
Generally in our world, we have two
sources of water.
A water is above the ground, oceans,
rivers, lakes, streams, brooks, canals
and of course rain,
which is not only above the surface, it
comes from the heavens, from the clouds.
But then there is another source of
water and that's the water that flows
below the ground.
That water is under the earth. It's not
the ocean, the beach, the lake, the
river.
It's certainly not the rain that comes
down and you could see.
These sources of water which we call in
Hebrew be'erot, mayonot. Mayon is a
wellspring. A be'er is a well.
This is under the earth, it's below the
ground and it's covered.
It's covered BY GRIT.
NOT BY a little grit, by layers of grit.
Sometimes you have to dig not 1 ft and
not 2 ft and not 10 ft. Sometimes you
have to continue to dig deeper and
deeper until you will discover the
water.
These
these these waters, this latter source
of water,
they seep out when you discover them.
I don't know if you ever discovered a
well, but they seep out from sand, from
gravel.
They seep out, they come out from uh
soluble rocks,
from cleavage planes, from unexpected
places. They struggle to emerge from
beneath the earth that covers them, that
conceals them.
Because this water is eclipsed and
covered by many layers of dirt, gravel,
rock, pebbles, whatever filth, earth,
sand.
And that's where you have to discover
the water. Now, one would naturally
assume without knowing
that the restricted flow of water
struggling to emerge from amid gravel,
grit, dirt, filth, sand would be far
inferior in terms of its quality to the
unrestricted and smooth, conspicuous,
open beds of water that lay above the
ground.
After all, these should be the cleanest,
purest, most refreshing sources of
water.
The reality is otherwise.
If you ever went to a well
to drink water from a well,
we know that there is something uniquely
refreshing about spring water. The very
fact that these waters are hidden
beneath the ground keep them free from
pollution,
from many of bacterias, many germs and
it grants them a freshness and a sparkle
that you will not find in the above
ground water.
I was one Shabbos in the community in
Tenafly for a Shabbaton.
So Shabbos morning,
I asked the Rabbi if I could use the
mikvah, so I went to the mikvah.
I go in and I saw something special.
Something you know, I said this is not a
regular mikvah.
So I asked the Rabbi, what is this? He
said he was building a mikvah for the
women in the community in Tenafly. Name
is Rabbi Shane.
And
they were just digging a regular pit, a
cistern, a crevice in the ground to be
able to let it be filled with rainwater
and then of course as we build most
mikvahs, you build a second one
which is clean water,
warm clean water and then there's an
opening between the two mikvahs, between
the two pits which and the water
touches. This is called hashaka, which
means kissing or touching.
And the water, the natural rainwater of
the mikvah kashers the other water which
was processed through pipes, etc. He
said as they were digging simply near
his building, they were digging under
the ground, they discovered a well.
Literally a flowing, living wellspring
that was flowing.
So that he doesn't have two borders,
that became his mikvah.
The mikvah is refilled every day by the
work of God. All he does is warm the
water.
So I was looking the water has such a
a lot of people go to Israel, they go to
the Arizal's mikvah in the cemetery in
Safed also. It's it's it's it's very
very cold.
Uh
It's extremely cold. I was in uh I was a
few months ago in Mezhibozh in the
Ukraine
and there there is uh
It's quite a story. There's a well, it's
very interesting well as I out of the
blue and one in the outskirts of
Mezhibozh in one of the fields,
there's a little well.
And uh
there's a story about that well that the
Baal Shem Tov
was once taking a walk with his student,
the Toldos Yaakov Yosef, Rabbi Yaakov
Yosef Hakoyen of Polonne, the Rav of
Polonne.
They were taking a walk in the outskirts
of Mezhibozh. You could still see
there's like forests, and they were
taking a walk, and they got deeply
engrossed in conversation.
And then suddenly, the Toldos Yaakov
Yosef tells the Baal Shem Tov it's a few
minutes before sunset.
We have to daven Mincha.
And they would not be able to get back
on time to the shul to make the minyan
for Mincha. So, they realized that in
order not to miss sunset, shkiah, they
would have to daven Mincha right there.
The Baal Shem Tov asked the Toldos
Yaakov Yosef, "What do we do about
washing our hands before davening?" So,
the Toldos Yaakov Yosef said,
"There's no water here."
So, he writes this. He says, "My My
master, the Baal Shem Tov, got down
literally on his body,
prishut yadain veraglain, completely
prostrated himself flat on the ground,
and he started to speak to God, and he
says, "You know the truth,
that for me not to wash my hands before
davening Mincha like the halacha of
Shulchan Aruch is essential to my life,
and not to do it for me is like a death
sentence.
Please, I need water."
And the Toldos Yaakov Yosef said, a few
moments later, within 6 ft, within dalet
amos, he suddenly started to see a flow
of water. A well emerged, and the Baal
Shem Tov washed his hands, and he
davened Mincha.
That well, when I was there in
Mezhibozh, I met non-Jews there who were
speaking in Ukrainian language. So, I
asked my guide, who knows their
language, "Why are they here?"
So, they looked at me like I'm crazy.
And they said that this They They They
call this well in Ukrainian, they call
it the Rebbe's well.
And they come when somebody is sick,
they come, and they wash their hands.
That I saw a guy,
it was maybe below zero, it was 20,
and it was five below zero, 10 below
zero. I was shaking. And he
He removed his garments, and he showered
He He bathed himself in the well. They
said it's a miracle well.
So, uh
So, today, 2 years ago, 3 years ago,
the guy there who build builds
restores the kvarim, he had this well
flowing to a pit with a mikvah.
With a mikvah.
So, I went in. So, I tell you that
Ariza's mikvah
is boiling hot
relative to that.
I couldn't even go three times. I felt
that I'm my body will not be able to I
had to jump out.
The coldness was incredible,
but the clarity,
the translucency,
the freshness, and the sparkling,
the cleanliness and purity of the spring
is something extraordinary.
Here you have the paradox. The water
that's above the earth that never comes
in contact with grit or dirt,
try to drink ocean water. It's usually
very salty.
The well water is right away available.
There's nothing like somebody stuck a
hot summer day, and they find a well. I
remember we once went on a hike and
camp, and our dear counselor got us lost
badly,
and we had no water, and this is before
the days of cell phones,
and we came across a well, and the
simcha we had was like almost like
hugger simcha with Yishmael. I can't say
we were stranded for so long. Nobody's
dead. Life wasn't in danger, but I still
remember the enjoyment of the freshness,
the coldness, and the clarity and the
purity of that water. Yes, the flow is
usually very, very small. It's a little
trickle because it's so encumbered. It's
so It's covered by obstacles and layers
and layers. You have a little trickle, a
little flow, but when you get access to
that, there's nothing as powerful,
nothing as fresh like it.
This is, of course, a metaphor.
The two sources of physical water in our
world parallel two sources of wisdom
in our lives. In Mayyim Chayim there are
two sources of wisdom in your life.
The first of these sources parallels the
water that's above the ground, that's
above the earth.
This is wisdom and inspiration that is
born above and beyond
the dirt of life's daily challenges. It
comes to lucid people at lucid moments.
Some people are just blessed
with open souls,
open hearts, open minds, open homes,
good mentorship, good parenting, good
education.
You'll call them in Yiddish gute
neshamos, good souls who come in contact
with other good souls.
It takes two to create lucidity.
And it's straightforward. It's easy.
It's smooth.
We all know of those people whose lives
Well, we're still looking for those
people. Whose lives are straightforward,
easy, and smooth. The source of water is
above. It's open. It's conspicuous.
There's easy access to it. You go to the
ocean, and there is the water. These are
the water These are the waters that
emerge from
the hearts of pristine individuals,
untainted individuals, pure individuals,
lucid, sober, clear, open individuals,
men and women who are unsoiled
by the filth and the muck
innate
to many a human character and many
circumstances of life. Some people
remain immune,
unsoiled by the dirt, by the gravel,
by the challenges, and literally by the
quagmire. I think that's the word.
That is so innate to the human condition
and so innate to circumstances in life.
These waters are delightful.
They're visible. They're unrestricted.
But then, there is another source of
water.
And this is the wisdom
that emerges from life's grime,
from life's grit,
from life's filth, from life's
challenges. This is the water that you
will never find in the surface. And
people who live on the surface will
never have access to this water. This is
the water for which you have to take
shovels
and dig and excavate. And people around
you will say, "There's nothing but dirt
here. Don't search. You're not going to
find anything here."
And when you search and you dig another
mile, THE CYNIC INSIDE OF YOU, the
pessimist inside of you, will tell you,
"No, it's time to give up.
It's time to despair. It's time to
realize there's no water. This is a life
that's only filled with grit and dirt.
Stop while you're ahead. Go find ways of
numbing the pain instead of searching
for depth.
This is not the place. This is a place
that's made for grit and gravel, not for
a flowing source of enlightenment,
wisdom, and inspiration.
This is a source of water that comes out
from amid struggle,
strife.
This is inspiration that is born from
the human heart that has stumbled, that
has failed, or the human heart that is
submerged in the psychological and
emotional gravel of life.
Some lives' journeys are not smooth.
They're not straight.
Some people's emotions have to be buried
under earth. Some people's innocence is
buried under the earth. Some people's
purity, confidence, optimism, joy,
spirit, wisdom, sense of purpose is
buried under layers of dirt and gravel,
either due to their own struggles,
due to circumstances that occurred to
them, due to people who have been unkind
to them, let's put it mildly, due to
nature or nurture or a combination of
both, due to loss or grief, due to
various circumstances, psychological,
emotional, physical, financial, mental,
or spiritual
that really eclipses
their source of vitality,
of water, of inspiration, of wisdom, of
enlightenment, their Mayyim Chayim.
When this person continues to dig
and finds the water inside, below the
earth,
you will never have water
as potent, as vivifying.
Is that a word?
I think it's good.
As nutritious,
as inspirational,
and most importantly, as life-giving and
life-altering as that water.
We know once in a while we meet a person
who's been through a lot.
If you would read their resume
of everything they have been through,
not the resume they give to an employer,
the real resume,
you would say, "Wow, this person must be
a real mess."
This person's dysfunction
must be a level of dysfunction on
steroids.
Their home must be a bait I don't even
want to walk in there.
Their life must be a complete complete
horror.
Sometimes I hear the lives of people
what they went through.
And I look at them
and I start crying
because when these people
challenge their turmoil, their trauma,
their pain,
and they find the water underneath their
earth,
there is a dignity and a majesty
that they bring with themselves that
they're not even aware of. There's an
aura, a halo, literally around their
face, around their body.
Because their water you can't take for
granted.
And this level of water is so
life-giving. It's so full of energy and
vitality only because because it was
under the earth.
In many ways it was protected from a lot
of bacteria and germs. And in other ways
it had to fight
its way through the gravel and the
earth.
One of the reasons that the water under
the earth is so fresh, one of the
reasons that's given in Sefarim is
because
it's so pressured to disappear,
every trickle of water under the earth
has to own, it has to fight for it.
It has to protect itself
amid miles and miles and layers of dirt
and gravel, and that refines it in such
a powerful way cuz it has to work
through
all of the toxicity. And when it manages
to survive and you uncover it, there's
nothing like it.
Because it comes from the rocky psyche.
Sometimes you wake up in the morning and
your psyche just lucid and clear and you
look at your marriage and it's wonderful
and you everything is just wonderful
what we like to call in Monsey nachas.
You heard that word?
Everybody's giving you nachas.
And then sometimes you look into your
heart, you look into your brain, and all
you see is muck
and grit and gravel and quagmire.
At best sand.
Soil.
So Yitzchak Avinu
taught the Jewish people and the world
for eternity
that whenever you see earth,
you have to be able to know now is the
time to take a shovel.
Now is the time to inspire yourself and
inspire the people around you to start
digging.
There was a reason why the fathers of
the Jewish people were engrossed in
digging wells and in preserving wells
because even after you dig a well, you
have to preserve the well. Remember, if
you just leave it on its own, the earth
will refill it and you're back to square
one. It's constant maintenance.
With this they taught us to fight and to
cherish the truth,
the wisdom, the clarity, the emes, the
godliness,
the idealism
that emerges from the deep rubble of
falsehood,
superficiality,
narcissism
around us.
Because the essence of Judaism was you
don't live in heaven.
You must discover heaven within earth
beginning within your own earth.
That's where it begins. That's the
mission statement of Judaism.
Angels live in heaven. Souls are deeper
than heaven. If angels would come down
to earth as they did once,
they would lose it. In heaven, there's
water.
MAYIM ELYONIM, IT'S FULL of water.
Remember the whole earth was once water.
God spread the earth over the water.
K'ilu olam chasdo. Taitch is davar
d'salavi because his chesed is l'olam is
concealed.
The divine core is concealed.
And because it's concealed, all you see
is eretz, you don't see mayim. There was
a split in the water. There's the mayim
elyonim, the water above, and the mayim
tachtonim, the water below, under the
earth. And the Zohar says, "Mayim
tachtonim bochinan anan beinon l'meivi
kod hamalk."
The lower waters weep, "We also want to
come before the king."
And Sukkos, the greatest simcha was
Simchas Beis Hasho'eivah. Chazal say,
"Mi shelo ra'ah Simchas Beis
Hasho'eivah, lo ra'ah simcha meyomav."
If you didn't see the simcha around the
drawing of the water, you never saw JOY
IN YOUR LIFE. A WHOLE night in the Beis
Hamikdash they would dance, and not just
dance, dance with tremendous ecstasy,
and at dawn they would make a procession
down the Har Habayis, the Temple Mount,
to the Shiloach Spring. Any of you were
at the Shiloach Spring? They would draw
water, a flask of water, BRING IT BACK
UP TO THE Beis Hamikdash, and at sunrise
pour the cup of water onto the
mizbei'ach, on the altar.
This was the biggest simcha. Why is it
such a big simcha?
SO YOU DRAW WATER, "AFTER MAYIM b'sasson
u'v'simcha mayanei hayeshua." Draw water
with joy. This is the greatest simcha
because there's no joy
like the joy
of discovering
the truth of the water that is beneath
your own grit.
There's no joy in life like the joy of
looking at all your fears, all your
traumas, all your insecurities,
layers upon layers upon layers, and
instead of surrendering, instead of
becoming mediocre,
instead of living a life of quiet
desperation,
rather you take the shovel with courage
and confidence,
and you begin to dig.
It's scary
cuz you don't know if you're going to
find there anything, and you might get
stuck.
But Yitzchak says, "Dig."
And dig. And then when you come across
water, they'll try to steal it from you,
too.
You already got the water. THEY'LL SAY
IT'S MINE, IT'S MY WATER.
BUT YOU DON'T STOP DIGGING.
YOU'LL have an Eisik and you'll have a
Sitnah and you'll have a Rechavus,
but you'll have a Rechavus, "Ki heirich
Hashem lanu u'farinu ba'aretz." That
expansiveness you will get.
So now, if this is what represents the
others, but uniquely this is what
represents Yitzchak,
it's not just
when it comes to the physical wells, it
represents also the spiritual wells.
And here we have to understand why this
is so fundamental to life. You see,
there are two types of relationships.
There are two types of love.
There is a love that is reciprocal.
I like the person, the person likes me.
I love the I cherish the person, the
person cherishes me. Why?
We both gain from each other.
If I have a company, I'm managing a big
company, I need money. I come to an
investor, he's a great guy, I ask him to
invest. We become close friends, but we
all understand that the friendship is
based on mutual benefit.
I'm making money from his money, and I'm
making money through his money, and he's
getting part of it.
This is a very simple level, but most
relationships, or at least many
relationships, are based on that. It's
called an avaha tluya b'davar.
It depends on something I am getting
from this person. They say Rabbi Sal
Salanter, the founder of the Mussar
movement, once saw a Jew eating chicken
with a lot of passion and gusto. You
ever saw a Jew eat chicken?
Not the vegan Jews, but other Jews.
So uh
he was eating it with a lot of like his
hislavus, a lot of ecstasy. So Rabbi Sal
Salanter said, "Why are you so excited?"
He said, "I love chicken."
"What should I tell you, rebbe? I'm
telling you that I love the chicken." He
says, "Wow, it's interesting what you do
to those you love."
You had the poor chicken killed,
sliced, plucked, sauteed, and converted
into your bloodstream. This is what you
do with everybody you love?
A little correction, my dear friend. You
don't love the chicken. You love your
taste buds.
You love the abdomen. You love your
abdomen.
The chicken happens to be a wonderful
tool to satisfy your stomach or to numb
your anxiety.
You don't love the chicken.
So there is a love that is based on the
fact that I am getting something from
you, I am getting you're getting
something from me. There's an expression
in Sefarim of Chokirah and Mussar,
Jewish philosophy and ethics, called
avah chizeres el ha'ayef.
All love always goes back to the one who
loves. Meaning I love because
the I is enriched through this
relationship.
I may love the person's humor, wisdom,
sensitivity, kindness, what they do for
me, which is wonderful, it's good.
That's the the world goes around by
those relationships.
But essentially, what is it?
Something that I am enriched as a result
of. Therefore, what happens when these
two people separate?
The relationship is compromised. It's
mitigated, it's diluted. And what
happens if they can't be here for each
other?
Then sometimes it's completely lost. And
what happens if they grow far away from
each other, whether physically,
geographically, emotionally, verbally?
Sometimes they lose interest in each
other because the love was based on the
fact that there was a closeness and I
was being enriched by it.
But then there's another type of love.
There's a love that's called atsmus.
Av atsmus means an essential love.
It's not
It's not because I'm enriched by this
person. It's because we're one atsum,
we're one.
Just like the love to self. You don't
wake up and if you're a healthy person,
you don't wake up in the morning and say
let me see if I could find a reason to
like myself today.
Okay. I'm going to do exercise.
I'm going to eat healthy.
I look very good today. I'm a good guy.
I think I'm going to like myself today.
If that's the situation, you're pretty
bad off because other days
you're not going to like yourself. So
that's what actually happens with a lot
of people. They're basically waiting to
see how the day progresses if they
should like themselves or not.
Somebody gives you a compliment. Oh, I'm
really I'm good. Yeah, okay, great.
Somebody takes away that compliment.
Okay, now I'm bad.
Now I hate myself.
You don't need a reason for self-love.
Of course, you should behave in a way
that you give yourself nachas from
yourself. That's wonderful. But you
don't need a justification for the love.
You are you. You're one with yourself.
So there's a love there, there's a
connection there.
It's taken for granted. It's not even
conscious. It's deep. It's so deep that
a person will give away usually almost
every other love in the world if it's
going to threaten their life.
I read once a fascinating research that
was done. People who were in addiction
and then they were diagnosed with an
illness that was terminal
and the addiction literally disappeared.
Some people 30 years are in recovery and
still struggling.
Why? Because they heard that their life
is over in 6 weeks, in 2 months, in 4
months
and suddenly they were on a different
level of consciousness. That's when you
see the relationship with the self, the
love to your own life.
When there is love to somebody
like a child
that is based on the essence. It's one
atsum, it's one essence. It's not
because of what you give back to me.
Sometimes a child doesn't give back to a
mother or a father.
I was invited once to a bar mitzvah
to speak.
I came to the bar mitzvah
and I saw that it's not a regular bar
mitzvah. This is a child who's close to
a vegetable.
Been that way almost since birth.
And the parents told me they never go
away
far away because of this child.
The child never spoke. The child barely
moves and barely has any contact. So the
whole family came it was like a house
bar mitzvah. The whole family came
Friday night and they asked me to speak.
I came to speak.
And to see the love and the sensitivity
of the siblings to this sibling and the
father and the mother to this child was
incredible. What do they get back?
Nothing.
On the contrary, a life that is very
challenging and difficult.
But the love is called an atsmus. It's
unconditional. It's not reciprocal. It's
not based on reciprocity.
It's an essential love that cannot be
obliterated. When one develops this type
of love
distance
doesn't destroy it. It only intensifies
it.
Because if it's a love that is not
innate
it needs to be cultivated. If it's not
cultivated, if we don't see each other
in 4 years and I don't get anything from
you, it's over. But if it's an essential
love
just like I can't separate from myself,
I can't separate from this person. So
therefore, the more distant we are, it
doesn't take away the love. It doesn't
belittle love. It intensifies the love.
And if THERE'S EVEN MORE DISTANCE, IT
BECOMES more intense. And the greater
the distance, the deeper the love.
So the Baal Shem Tov explains that this
is the difference between angels and
souls. Malachim and neshamos.
Angels are divine because by nature
they're divine. They're like in a
partnership with God. They're in the
business.
The moment they come down to earth
they discover the earth, they're
separated
and there they go, they lose it. On the
neshama is bonim atem l'Hashem Elokecha.
Bnei bechirei Yisrael.
The soul is a child of God. A child is
one with the atsum. You're one in the
essence. It's not based on what you do
and what you don't do and it's not
reciprocal. Here, the further the soul
strays from God
the deeper the relationship becomes.
The further I'm away from my child, I
don't forget them. I never heard a
mother say, you know, my child has been
away for 6 years. I completely forgot
them.
I stop worrying at all. You I start
worrying.
I don't have to tell the people in this
room.
You know, my child doesn't call me
doesn't call me. So I just stopped
thinking about them.
I once spoke to a psychia- big
psychiatrist in Connecticut. So he was a
I asked him about Jews. So he told me an
interesting thing. He says, "Two boys
were by me today. Each one for an hour.
A Jewish kid and then an Italian kid."
He says, "The Jewish kid WAS HERE ALL
WHOLE HOUR. HE WAS COMPLAINING that his
mother is a control freak."
Every night. "How are you?" "Fine."
"What does that mean?"
You know, worst thing to tell a Jewish
mother is you're fine.
"Well, what do you mean? What's going
on? Is Is everything all right? What are
you feeling?
Really, what's really happening?"
He says, "TELL MY MOTHER TO LET ME LIVE.
FINE MEANS FINE. BYE. GOOD JOB. IT'S
BOOM."
HE SAYS THE JEWISH boy went out. The
Italian boy comes in.
He says and he says, "You know, I wish I
would have a mother who would care about
me a little bit.
She would call me." He says, "My mother
calls me. She says, 'How you doing,
Tony?'"
"I say I'm good." "OKAY, GOOD. BYE."
SO THE DOCTOR, THE PSYCHIATRIST tells me
he wanted to
swipe the two mothers.
Give the Jew the Italian mother.
AND GIVE THE ITALIAN THE JEWISH MOTHER.
YOU KNOW, TWO teenagers come home, they
taste the spaghetti and they tell their
mother, "Not on my dead body."
And both mothers shoot. The Italian
mother shoots the kid. The Jewish mother
shoots herself.
So the child didn't call you for 2
years. You say, "YOU KNOW WHAT? I LOST
INTEREST IN YOU. BYE. HAVE A GOOD DAY."
How is IT WITH THE
IN THE BIG SECULAR with boyfriends and
girlfriends?
No no text, NO EMAIL. BYE. YOU'RE NOT
INTERESTED. WHY WITH YOUR CHILD?
HE DIDN'T CALL YOU FOR 2 WEEKS, NEVER
MIND FOR 2 MONTHS, NEVER MIND FOR 2
YEARS. You're going crazy.
Because when the relationship is
superimposed
when the relationship is not intrinsic,
it's not innate, you need the closeness
to nurture it.
If not, what's in it for me?
If you're not part OF MY LIFE, YOU'RE
NOT part of my life. That was brilliant,
no?
If you're not part of my life, you're
not part of my life. Right?
I think it can be proven scientifically.
But what if when you're not part of my
life, you're still part of my life cuz
you are one with my life? So there's no
thing you're not part of my life. Now
the distance only creates yearning.
The more THE DISTANCE, THE MORE THE
YEARNING. THE DEEPER THE DISTANCE, the
deeper the relationship. It may not be
actualized, but the deeper the
relationship.
So here the Baal Shem Tov said something
unbelievably moving.
The
This is very very powerful stuff for our
generation.
The deepest relationship
of God is with the souls that are the
most distant.
Just like with your child
the further the distance, the deeper the
yearning, the deeper the craving, the
deeper the awareness of how close you
are.
Because you
are craving to overcome that even though
it may take time to actualize it.
But in terms of the closeness, it's the
deepest form of closeness.
And that's why the soul came down to
earth.
In heaven
heaven is divine.
L'roika ha'aretz al hamayim ki l'olam
chasdo.
Our world is defined by earth.
Earth in terms of l'olam chasdo, the
chesed is l'olam. From the word as I
said, the Gemara says in Pesachim l'olam
is from the word helem, concealment.
Zeshmi l'olam, zeshmi l'olam.
His grace, his revelation is concealed.
Where is the water? The water is beneath
the earth.
But since the soul is one with God,
every neshama is a chelek Eloka mima'al
mamash. So it's inseparable. It's one.
It's an essential, holistic, indivisible
oneness between the Jewish soul and
Hashem.
So therefore, THERE'S NO SEPARATION AND
the deeper the distance, the more the
yearning, the more the craving, the more
intense the relationship, THE GREATER
THE THIRST. TZAMA L'CHA NAFSHI.
KAMOCHA BASAR, YOU REMEMBER THE END OF
THE PASUK? BA'ARETZ TZIYA V'AYEF.
B'li mayim.
Kein bakodesh chazisi'cha lirus oz'cha
v'chvod'cha.
So the Baal Shem Tov explained David
HaMelech said, "Kein means halivai.
Halivai, when I come back to kodesh, I
will be able to have the same thirst
as I have when I am ba'aretz tziya
v'ayef, which means in a land that is
parched, dry, arid, and exhausting,
believe I am. This is the summer of
that thirst. It's only down here on
Earth. That's the reason the soul came
down here, not to compromise the
relationship, to intensify the
relationship. THAT'S THE SIMCHA OF
SUKKOT. You go down and you find water
on the Earth in the well that was dug
and YOU BRING IT UP TO THE BASE OF the
Mikdash. There's no Simcha like that.
That connection, that relationship is
transcends any other type of
relationship, transcends infinitely any
other type of relationship. That's the
water THAT YOU DISCOVER. WHY is it that
these people I spoke before
who endure such trauma or difficulties
and emerge have this majesty about them?
Because what did they discover? They
discovered their essence that was never
compromised, that was never abused.
There is a divine core that's
indestructible. Nothing in the world
and I say this to certain individuals
sitting here. No abuser in the world, no
molester in the world
can crush that core of wholesomeness in
your soul.
Whether it was physical or emotional or
spiritual or other issues and I'm not
going to describe them now graphically.
Everybody knows what I'm talking about.
Nobody can destroy that core. It may be
invisible, but it's one. It's one with
truth. It's one with wholesomeness and
it's ALWAYS THERE. AND BECAUSE IT'S
ALWAYS THERE, THE DISTANCE ONLY
INTENSIFIES
its qualities, its yearnings, its
properties. AND WHEN YOU GET THERE,
the wholesomeness is an extraordinary
wholesomeness
because of its unique quality. This is
something a Malach can't even
understand. That's why Malachim have to
stay in heaven. It's a good place for
them.
Souls are sent down to Earth. Life is
challenging under all equations, even in
the 21st century with prosperity that
our great-grandparents couldn't dream
of. Nonetheless, everybody knows life is
challenging. Life is filled with gravel
and grit and Earth, but the soul is sent
here because it's one with one. And
because it's one with one,
its truth emerges only beneath the
Earth, in the Earth, when it discovers
the water.
So, now
when Yitzchak takes a look at his
children,
Yitzchak takes a look at Esau.
Yitzchak takes a look at Yaakov.
Remember what you have to know about
Yitzchak is he is the well digger.
He is the well digger.
So, therefore
where people see Earth, dirt, gravel,
Yitzchak only sees the need, the calling
to dig.
Esau was no simple kid.
Esau was a very, very challenging child.
Esau,
he was out in the field. He was out. He
was an earthy person, literally an
earthy person.
But who is the master of understanding
that there's always water beneath the
Earth? Yitzchak Avinu.
The Yitzchak yeah of Yitzchak as Esau
cuz Yitzchak understood
that it's easy to look at a child and
reject, dismiss. You'll never make it.
You know you were excluded from the
system, you were rejected from the
system.
Yitzchak understands that souls don't
function on that level.
Yitzchak understood that a soul is one
with the divine and you have to always
have the courage to be able to dig and
dig and dig again
so you can excavate the infinite depths
of truth, of inspiration, of wisdom, and
life-giving waters that is below the
Earth.
And that's what we know about Yitzchak.
And he also knew that the wells that his
father dug were plugged. They were
clogged up and not only clogged,
sometimes they're covered up with a lid.
They were filled with Earth. It's a
whole different level of being clogged.
You don't even see anything anymore.
It's not just there's a lid on top of
the well so no one has access to it or
there's one layer OF YITZCHAK AVINU
OFFER.
Yitzchak doesn't get into a spoil. He
goes, he'll redig everything. And then
he'll dig his own wells and then he'll
dig a seventh well and he'll name the
city Beersheba.
So, when Hashem when Hashem
when the Gemara, the Gemara in Maseches
Kiddushin
Maseches Kiddushin has a fascinating
argument.
What's the argument between two people
of Yehudah and Reb Meir?
What's the argument?
Reb Yehudah says, it says "Banim Atem
laShem Elokeichem." You are children of
God. So, Reb Yehudah says "B'zman
she'atem nohegim mineig banim." When you
behave like children, you're children.
And when you behave like animals, like
chayos, you're not children. That's what
Reb Yehudah says.
B'ein kach, you know it from the song,
no? B'ein kach o b'ein kach atem keruyim
banim.
However you behave, you're considered a
child. Always. You're a child.
Reb Yehudah says, NO, YOU got to behave
like a child. Be loyal. Reb Meir says,
b'ein kach o b'ein kach.
AND HE BRINGS FOUR PESUKIM.
In Yirmiyahu, the Navi says in the name
of God, "Banim sichlim heim." My kids
are fools. He says, you see, you can
have a kid, he's a fool, but he's still
your child. An idiot, but a child. An
ar, an ar a child.
Moshe Rabbeinu says in Haazinu, "Banim
lo eimun bam." It's children that I
can't trust.
You see, YOU CAN'T TRUST THEM, but
they're children.
Don't think she's going to clean up when
you go to the chasanah, but she's still
your daughter.
Yeshayahu says, "Zera mere'im banim
mashchisim." Evil seed, corrupt
children. Corrupt, but children. And
Hoshea says, "B'makom asher yeyamer
lahem lo ami atem, yeyamer lahem b'nei
Kel Chai."
Instead of saying about the Jews,
"They're not my nation," they're going
to be called children of the living God.
So, Reb Meir says, they're always
children. Usually in Gemara, when
there's an argument between Reb Meir and
Reb Yehudah,
the halacha is like Reb Yehudah.
The Rashba, Rabbeinu ben Aderes
in his Shaalos u'Tshuvos Gedolos, says
this is an exception. Here, halacha is
like Reb Meir.
How do we know? Let's say a Jew
converts. A Jew is baptized.
He's baptized to another religion and
then he gives, he marry, he betroths a
Jewish woman. Does she need a get or
not? What's the halacha?
Yes?
She needs a get? WHY? IF HE'S NOT JEWISH
ANYMORE, HE'S A She shouldn't need
a get.
There's intermarriage, you don't need a
get.
It's a civil marriage. It doesn't have
the power of a Jewish marriage. Why do
you need a get? So, the Rashba says, you
see from here that the halacha was
established like Reb Meir. "B'ein kach o
b'ein kach atem keruyim banim." Says,
why? So, the Rashba says, because
there's four pesukim that support him in
Tanach.
So, it's unique.
So, the Gemara asks, why do you need all
the four pesukim?
Why do you need all the four pesukim?
So, the Gemara in Maseches Kiddushin
over there, page 36, daf lamed vov,
gives an extraordinary answer.
That each pasuk adds another dimension.
And I should say that the Maharal
in his sefer Netzach Yisrael, chapter
11, where he dedicates almost a whole
long, long chapter to analyze this piece
of Gemara.
And that is, the first pasuk, Yirmiyahu
calls them sichlim. They're foolish
children. So, from here I learn that if
you have a child who's not wise and is
foolish, Jews make mistakes, God says,
"You're still my child." But what
happens if they're not foolish? "Lo
eimun bam." Moshe Rabbeinu says, I can't
trust them. They're rebels. They sin
b'meizid, willingly. Not unwillingly,
willingly. They know what they're doing.
You would think they're not children.
Says, no, even children that you can't
trust, even children that you can't
trust,
Hello?
Even children that you can't trust, in
other words, they're sinning b'meizid,
willingly, they're still children. You
would say, okay, that's as long as
they're sinning. But what happens if
they reject their father and mother?
What if your child looks at you and
says, "You're not my father anymore.
You're not my mother. I'm going
somewhere else." Now you would think
you already crossed a threshold. You
already crossed a red line that can't be
crossed. When the Jews go to Avodah
Zarah, here God says, that's it. COMES
THE THIRD PASUK IN YESHAYAHU AND SAYS,
NO. "ZERA mere'im banim mashchisim."
Even if they're corrupt, zera mere'im,
they go to Avodah Zarah,
they're still considered banim.
So, the Gemara says, okay, you'll say
they're children, but they're lousy
children. They're horrible children.
They're sick children.
That's what you're going to say. So, the
Gemara says, no, there's a fourth pasuk.
They're called children of the living
God, b'nei Meili. Perfect children.
Asks the Maharal, how could you say
this? I DON'T UNDERSTAND YOU. YOU LOST
ALL VALUES, ALL PRIORITIES. He said, no,
because the child in them is perfect.
Meaning the relationship is completely
intact. They don't know how deep the
relationship is. They're not aware of
the relationship. They're not aware of
their holiness, but the relationship
is impeccable. It's flawless. Not only
that, as we learned, the distance
actually makes it a deeper relationship,
a deeper yearning. That's why
Shimon Shimon them ain't looking at them
like that. Because the water that comes
from beneath the earth has a purity and
a sparkle to it that no other water
could have.
And that's why
we understand that this betrayal is not
essential to their identity.
It's alien to their core identity. So
therefore they're called "children of
the living God". That's why the brings
forth them.
So the
JUDAISM IS LIKE
NOT LIKE THAT.
AND THE TRUTH is
history proved that the is like not like
that.
History proved it.
Adolf Hitler didn't
didn't look and say, "This Jew
is a great rabbi,
a great sage, a saint, a rabbi, a
teacher. He belongs in the gas chambers.
This Jew,
an atheist, a socialist, a communist,
despised religion, despised Jews,
despised Judaism.
If there was Jewish blood flowing in his
sinews,
our worst enemy understood
he has to be exterminated like the
greatest saint. Why? Because he knew
in a devil-like fashion that the
holiness in this Jew is akin to the
holiness in that Jew. And evil senses
holiness and wants to destroy it.
Haman also mean
talking about HIM. HE DIDN'T LIKE HAMAN.
HE DIDN'T
YOU YOU'RE UPSET AT MORDECAI. KILL HIM.
He's not bowing down to you. Kill him.
Why do you Why do you want to kill
everybody? Because he understood that
every Jewish child is really Mordecai.
Every child is a
little
is a little Mordecai. Every child is a
little Mordecai. He understood that.
So therefore history has proven that
made us But it goes much deeper. Rabbi
Meir
did not come from Jews.
Who was Rabbi Meir's
great-great-great-great grandfather?
Esau.
The says that he was with him.
Isaac saw in the soul of Esau are
trapped souls. Like who?
Rabbi Meir, Shemaiah, Avtalyon. He saw
what's inside of Esau.
So now when Messiah comes, God comes to
Abraham and says,
"Your children sinned." Abraham says,
"Punish them."
"Jacob, your children sinned. You know
you raised kids. Punish them."
Comes to Isaac, the well-digger.
He says, "Your children sinned." Isaac
says, "Well, before we even continue the
conversation, let's get this right.
WE'RE NOT DISCUSSING SINS YET. WE'LL GET
THERE. FIRST thing is stop calling them
my children.
They're your children."
What was Isaac saying? Hashem doesn't
know this? What are you giving Hashem a
lesson? You're going to teach him a
lesson? God forgot the Torah? He forgot
the Torah? You remember it?
Isaac is giving God a tutorial?
God forgot what happened at Mount Sinai?
He doesn't know he said "children of
Israel"?
Hashem was waiting for Isaac to respond
to say this.
Don't say "your CHILDREN SINNED". SAY
"OUR CHILDREN, MY CHILDREN". THAT'S
ALREADY A DIFFERENT SPIN. Even if
there's a sin, it's already A DIFFERENT
SPIN. LET'S FIRST AND FOREMOST REMEMBER
THESE ARE YOUR CHILDREN.
So now you'll ask me, "Why Isaac? Why
did Isaac love Esau?"
The answer why Isaac loved Esau is
because he was his child.
And that's what a father does. A father
loves a child.
It's easy to love Jacob.
It's hard maybe to love Esau, but that's
what the well-digger teaches us. A
father loves a child. Doesn't mean I
agree with my child.
It doesn't mean I'm not hurt by my
child's decisions always. It doesn't
mean
it doesn't mean I don't have pain
because of certain behaviors of my
child. On the contrary, the more the
love,
the more the pain.
But it means I still love my child.
I don't throw my child out of my house.
I don't alienate myself from my child. I
DON'T EXPEL MY CHILD. I DON'T SAY YOU'RE
NOT MY CHILD, YOU'RE A GENTILE.
I MAY BE HURT. I may be pained. I may be
disappointed. I may cry.
I may have sleepless nights, but I DON'T
SAY YOU'RE NOT MY CHILD. YOU'RE MY CHILD
and I love you because the LOVE IS
ESSENTIAL AND UNCONDITIONAL. AND THE
DISTANCE IS ONLY THERE ULTIMATELY to
create a much deeper relationship. The
whole story of a soul's journey on earth
is this.
It's not a story about a few children.
This is A STORY OF EVERY SOUL IS THE
SAME.
That's the story of the well-digger.
So Isaac says,
"My
children, not your children, my
children."
Now let's talk about the sins.
Let's give it perspective.
People who live 70 years, they're
miserable, THEY'RE STRESSED. HALF THE
TIME THEY'RE SLEEPING, they don't even
know what hit them.
The other half of the time they're
looking for a bathroom.
Or today's world they're running from
one doctor to another doctor, from one
nutritionist to another nutritionist,
from one yoga to another yoga, one
therapist to another therapist, one
store to another store, one cafeteria to
another cafeteria,
one friend to another friend. They don't
have a clue.
Who even knows who even has the
mindfulness of knowing what's going on?
SO YOU'RE LEFT WITH 12 AND 1/2 YEARS
THAT THEY'RE ANYWAY in the bathroom
trying to figure out their system.
NOW THIS 12 AND 1/2 YEARS THEY SINNED.
ISAAC SAYS, "HALF ON YOU HALF ON ME. AND
IF YOU DON'T WANT HALF ON YOU, FINE,
I'LL TAKE everything because I'm a
father."
What do the Jews say about Isaac? "YOU
ARE OUR FATHER." You are our father. We
learn now what a father is. We learn now
what a mother is.
This doesn't mean that strong decisions
This doesn't mean that Isaac was not
upset with Esau's behavior. When he
married certain women, it says Isaac was
upset. Love doesn't mean I'm not upset.
Love doesn't mean I'm not hurt. Love
doesn't mean I'm not confused and I'm
not in pain. Love means I'm hurt, but I
love.
The two are not mutually exclusive.
Loving you doesn't mean I agree. I
embrace everything. I agree with it and
I call it holy. BUT
I LOVE.
So
Isaac
loved Esau. Isaac loved Esau
with him.
So I saw Rabbi Meir Rabbi Meir
says
with him. This gave him game in his own
mouth.
Because when Messiah comes, Rabbi Meir
says, God tells Isaac, "YOUR CHILDREN
SINNED."
"YOUR CHILDREN SINNED." ISAAC SAYS,
"HALF ON YOU HALF ON ME. AND IF YOU WANT
ALL ON ME,
WHAT IS HIS REAL ARGUMENT? His argument
was, "God,
learn from me.
I had
Esau in my house.
I had Esau in my house. What did I do?
I loved him. I embraced him. I connected
to him every day. We had moments of deep
intimacy together. He looked forward to
serve me, to bring me a meal. For him to
bring me a meal from the field was the
sea of ecstasy. Why? Such a lowlife,
such a lowlife. So why is he SO EXCITED
THAT AN OLD FATHER AN OLD FATHER who's
sitting with an old book
by his by his desk? Well, he wasn't
sitting with an old book. Whatever he
was sitting with, what do you have with
him? You're a man of the world.
Because he knew that his father loved
him. And he knew that that love he won't
find anywhere in the world.
And even Rebecca,
even Rebecca, when she had to send away
Jacob cuz he would have been killed,
look what she did. Why didn't she send
away Esau?
Just like Isaac TOLD JACOB, "GO. GO FIND
A
AND GO AS FAR AS POSSIBLE."
He could have done the same thing with
Esau.
Tell Esau, "You know, Esau, I think you
should go discover the United States of
America before Columbus."
Esau would have listened TO HIS FATHER.
"GO. GO FIND GO FIND DIAMONDS. Go find
gold." Rebecca could have made a
situation where Esau leaves, Jacob
stays. Let the two saints bask together.
Instead, Jacob was separated 22 years
from his father.
How much did the world lose from that
separation?
You have an answer to this question? WHY
DIDN'T REBECCA SEND ESAU AWAY? YOU'RE
SENDING JACOB. Send Esau. They won't
Whoopsie.
Okay. So good.
No, don't put it there.
Yeah. Yeah.
You forgot the laws of gravity.
You know what the answer is? The answer
is one word, and that is
It says here Esau.
The end of parshas told us, it says,
Yitzchak sent Yaakov away. He went to
Lavan, the daughter of Bethuel,
the brother of Rivka, the mother of
Yaakov and Esau. Aim Yaakov and Esau.
Zucht Rashi, "Any idea ma melamdeinu?"
AFTER A WHOLE PARSHAS TOLD US, YOU
DECIDED TO TELL ME THAT Rivka was the
mother of Yaakov and Esau. Really?
Good morning, as we say, "Hast an deckt
America." A whole parsha we're learning
Rivka, Yitzchak, Yaakov, Esau, boom,
boom, BOOM. AND THEN SUDDENLY AT THE
END, WHEN YAAKOV is leaving, he's
already 60 years old,
suddenly she's the mother of Yaakov and
Esau.
But there's a reason for it. After the
whole story, you might think Rivka was
Yaakov's mother, not Esau's mother.
So at the end of the story, we say she
sent Yaakov away. You know why?
She was Esau's mother.
She knew Yaakov
can go far away, he'll do well. Esau
needs his father. You don't send Esau
away from his father. Don't take Esau
out OF THIS HOME.
YAAKOV WILL do well, he did well for
himself. He travels far away, and he
finds wells wherever he goes. THE FIRST
THING HE DOES IN CHARAN IS "VAYINTZEI."
REMEMBER "VAYINTZEI be'er basadeh." He
finds a well there, too. Rivka knows
he's going to find a well. And who's at
the well? RACHEL.
JUST LIKE YITZCHAK AND Eliezer Eliezer
and Rivka and Moshe and Tziporah. But
Esau Esau needs his father.
She was Esau's mother, too. She wasn't
only Yaakov's mother.
Yes, she made some strong decisions. She
knew Yaakov has to get the blessings.
That's a separate shiur. But she was
Esau's mother.
So when God tells Yitzchak, "Your
children sinned." Yitzchak says,
"It's on me.
I lived with Esau. What did I do WITH
ESAU? I'M NOT GOD. I'M A MORTAL HUMAN
BEING. I'm a man OF FLESH AND BLOOD. BUT
I DIDN'T THROW ESAU OUT OF THE HOUSE.
I CONTINUED TO HOLD ESAU'S HAND
THROUGHOUT, NOT BECAUSE I WAS NAIVE. I
KNEW EXACTLY WHO HE WAS, WHAT HE
MARRIED, WHAT HIS PRIORITIES WERE. BUT I
KNEW HE'S MY CHILD."
HE LOVED Esau "tzayid befi." This gave
him in his mouth.
This counter response, what God was
craving to hear from the ultimate well
digger.
Ribbono shel Olam,
you could learn from me.
Learn from me.
And the Divrei Meir says that the Be'er
Mayim Chaim, Reb Chaim Chernowitzer,
he's one of the great Chassidic masters,
the Be'er Mayim Chaim. He had a child.
He was one of the great tzaddikim of the
generation, Reb Chaim of Chernowitz. He
wrote a book called Be'er Mayim Chaim.
He wrote a book called Siddurei shel
Shabbos.
And he says there that he had a child
who left his path.
Left the path of his father.
And uh
you know, those days,
it was very common, you sat shiva, you
tore your clothes, you threw him out of
the house, it was over. But he kept him
and he was very close to him.
He said every day the Be'er Mayim Chaim,
before he would start davening, he would
put on a tallis and tefillin, and he
would start speaking to Hashem, and he
would say, "Before I start davening, the
first thing I want to say is I want you
to learn from me
how to treat a child."
I'm going to quote this to you. I found
it fascinating. Somebody sent it to me
last week.
It says Divrei Meir, parshas told us.
So he said,
before davening, he would say, "Ribbono
shel Olam,
look at me. See how I behave with my
child, even though he doesn't go in a
wholesome way. I do with him only good
and kindness. I embrace him, I love him,
and I think about his well-being. And
I'm only a human being of flesh and
blood. You are our compassionate father,
tov u'meitiv u'rav chesed.
This is how you should behave with your
children. K'rachamim av al banim, kein
tiracham aleinu u'sashpiya aleinu. Learn
from me, Ribbono shel Olam, a kal
vachomer."
So that's why when Mashiach comes and
Hashem tells Yitzchak, "Banecha chatu."
Your children sinned. It's Yitzchak
whose life personified this, who
responds.
And that's really the true concept of
gevurah.
And with this we close it up. We bring
the circle together. Chesed means
kindness, love. Rachamim means
compassion. Gevurah is discipline,
boundaries. Real gevurah doesn't come
from apathy, from cruelty, from
indifference, from distance.
It comes because I believe actually in
you.
When I have to give everything, give and
give and give and give and give, I don't
feel in your ability to respond. I don't
feel your potential is there.
We sometimes look at chesed as the
ultimate love. Chesed is powerful.
But chesed can often also mean, "I'll
just cover up for you."
Gevurah actually means, "I believe in
you.
I know that it's in you. I want to see
your potential emerge." Real gevurah
comes from the deepest type of love. I
don't only love you, I believe in you.
I know it's you, it's inside of you. You
don't need me.
You need the boundaries for you to be
able to discover who you are. Gevurah,
discipline, strength, that is not based
on this type of caring,
often is destructive.
Because it becomes about revenge, anger,
vengeance. I'll teach you a lesson. I'll
show you who's boss. Real gevurah,
Yitzchak's gevurah, is a gevurah that
comes from the deepest type of
attachment. I AM SO ATTACHED TO YOU
THAT ACTUALLY I GIVE you your space
because I know how powerful you are.
Once Yitzchak lived this life, and
therefore he refused to give up even on
Esau,
"ki tzayid befi." He has a grandson, Reb
Meir. Reb Meir came from Esau. It looked
like Yitzchak wasn't successful with
Esau. Where did Esau end up? Eich veizo
hu.
His head was buried with Yitzchak
because the origin of Esau is always one
with Yitzchak. But the manifestation of
Esau went elsewhere. But generations
later, you have Reb Meir.
Reb Meir was a descendant OF ESAU. THE
GEMARA SAYS he was called Reb Meir
because Meir einayim chachamim
ba'halacha.
HE CAN LIGHT UP THE EYES OF THE SAGES in
halacha.
Reb Meir was considered the gadol hador,
and Reb Meir's rebbe was Elisha ben
Avuya, who became a heretic.
And he continued to remain a student by
him.
So they asked Reb Meir, "How could you
learn from this rebbe? He's a heretic."
And the Gemara says in Maseches Chagiga,
Reb Meir tocho achal u'klipo zarok.
He ate the inside
and he threw out the shells. Asks the
MAGGID OF MEZRITCH, "WHAT do you do
first? You remove the shell or you do
the inside? What do you do first?" FIRST
YOU REMOVE THE SHELL. HE SHOULD HAVE
SAID "KLIPO ZAROK V'TOCHO ACHAL."
GOOD QUESTION, NO? So the Maggid of
Mezritch answers, "No.
Reb Meir can do this with Elisha ben
Avuya because his whole life was lived
in this way.
That "Tocho achal u'klipo zarok." He
never got disturbed by the shells. HIS
WHOLE LIFE WAS THAT HE ALWAYS COULD
FOCUS ON THE TOCH. So therefore, even a
rebbe like Elisha ben Avuya, he can
always see that light inside."
Reb Meir becomes one of the great sages
that passes on Torah to the Jewish
people.
This was Yitzchak, what he saw in Esau,
"ki tzayid befi." Have a wonderful week.
That's a good question. When you keep
your son at home and you're enabling bad
behavior, it's not an easy
It's difficult. It's complicated. You
have to be able to figure it out.
If the child is going to be home,
all the other children have to be
mobilized
into
Then it's much easier.
If there's other children, the other
children have to be given a
almost like if a child, chas v'shalom,
is suffering from an illness.
Yeah? And they're home. The other
children don't say, "Oh, why is he not
going to school?" We explain to the
children what this child is going
through, and that we're all going to be
here together
to help this person. All the children
have to be in on it. If not, it could be
a disaster. You're right, it is very
challenging. It's not easy.
You have to include the children in the
mission. They have to be soldiers,
mobilized.
If the child is alone in the house, then
it's much easier.
That could be.
That could be. Every Here's the clock. I
didn't mean to make a generalization
about every child and every
relationship.
Does he mean mekarev is the small
doiche? You have to know what the child
is suffering from, what the child is
dealing with. If how serious it is, how
deep it is, what's going on, and make
different judgments. That's true. You
can't make generalizations, and people
need people in their life that they
could trust, confidants,
confidants, whether a good friend, a
good master, a good mentor, people who
are experts in this field, to help guide
them.
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