Sunday, November 30, 2025

Tikkun Ha-achila

The basic component of Shabbos meals is the bread, and its special name is 'challah'. The bread's name, 'Challah,' refers to the creation of the first Erev Shabbos: "Adam HaRishon... the Challah of the world", and from this comes the special care required by the mitzvah of separating Challah by a woman, and the reference to the serpent's deed.

Hence also the custom of baking challah for Shabbos on Erev Shabbos, which is mentioned in the Rema, and according to the early authorities it is alluded to in the Babylonian Talmud; however, in the Jerusalem Talmud, the baking on Friday evening is explicitly stated:

 Ezra decreed for Israel... that they should bake bread on Erev Shabbos.

 "By the sweat of your brow you will eat bread."

The Chida writes: "שלחן" with the letters reversed –  "לנחש"  . And from here to the first time bread is mentioned in the Torah – as a punishment for the sin of Adam and Eve, which was caused by the serpent:

 "By the sweat of your brow you will eat bread".

 The tikkun for this came in the Abrahamic War:

 And Melchizedek, king of Salem, brought out bread and wine,

 And then the bread rises on the table of the angels:

 "And I will take a morsel of bread and refresh your hearts".

 In essence, the bread-making process involves selection and refinement. This is 'by the sweat of your brow you shall eat bread', from the thorn and thistle to find food. The selection continues through the very act of eating, and this is the essence of the work of 'raising the sparks'.

 Bread and Selectivity in the Bible

 A similar process can be seen in the seven mentions of bread in the Book of Genesis. We mentioned the first three times: 'By the sweat of your brow you shall eat bread', 'He brought out bread and wine', and 'And I took a piece of bread'. The fourth time is when Avraham sends Yishmael away:

 "And Avraham rose early in the morning and took bread and a skin of water and gave it to Hagar".

 Here too, there is a process of clarification, Yitzchak being chosen from the pair: Yishmael and Yitzchak, in the manner stated regarding the sons of the concubines: "And Avraham gave gifts and sent them away".

 This process continues in our parsha – in the struggle for the birthright. Jacob and Esav are the sons of the same parents, twins, and here Jacob gives to Esav:

 "Bread" and lentil stew.

And with this, he buys the birthright from him and becomes the chosen one. And indeed, this is the fifth time bread is mentioned in the Bible – and again, it is through a selective sorting of food from waste.

And make me delicacies.

Indeed, in our parsha, eating plays a central role – in Yitzchak's blessing. Yitzchak Avinu asks Esav for delicacies:

"Prepare me delicacies, that I love, and bring them to me, and eat, so that my soul may bless you before I die" [12].

Yitzchak's request for food raises understandable difficulty, and the author of 'Shem MiShmuel' addressed this, seeing the request for the hunt as a desire to elevate the sparks:

And make me delicacies as I love... And it is known from the matter of holy sparks that fell during the breaking of the vessels and need to be clarified and raised from inanimate, plant, animal to speaker [man], and with the proper kavana of eating, they are returned to holiness. And while they are in the "breaking", they are like captives and hunted, and when they are returned to holiness, it is as if one hunts and captures the captive... [13].

In another year, the 'Shem MiShmuel' explains it from a different angle – Yitzchak's request for delicacies was so that the Holy Spirit would rest upon him:

Regarding what Yitzchak wanted in the delicacies, God forbid, to say that he was eager for the lust of eating... It seems that in the Midrash on the verse "And there was a bitter spirit" Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai said that it caused them to lose the Holy Spirit... And it can be said that Yitzchak attributed it to his eyes being dimmed, and the Holy Spirit only dwells in joy, and since a blind person is considered dead, he lacked joy. Therefore, he sought things to gladden his heart, like Elisha, about whom it is written, "And now bring me a musician... so that the Holy Spirit may rest upon him."

The Tikkun of The Tree of Knowledge 

Although Yitzchak asked for delicacies, Rivka added the bread, and this is the sixth time bread appears in the Bible:

And she gave him the delicacies and the bread which she had made with her hand for Yaakov her son.

Regarding this, the "Shem Shmuel" explained that their intention was to rectify the sin of the Tree of Knowledge:

"And make me savory food, etc." It seems that Yitzchak only said "savory food," while Rivka added bread... It seems that in the Midrash, regarding "and make me savory food," Rabbi Eliezer, quoting Rabbi Yose bar Zamra, said three things were said about it [the Tree of Knowledge]... And similarly, Yitzchak said, "and make me savory food, etc."... It seems that the Midrash came to hint that the entire purpose of the savory food that Isaac requested was to rectify the sin of eating from the Tree of Knowledge... And Yitzchak did not think to rectify anything other than the damage to the physical aspect... But Rivka, who knew through prophesy that Yaakov would receive the blessings and Esav would descend greatly, "wisdom of women builds her house" and added the bread, which is a rectification of the intellectual aspect.

This tikkun must come specifically through Rivka's efforts, who rectifies the sin of Chava:

 The fact that the blessings needed to come to Yaakov through Rivkas's efforts is explained according to the words of the esteemed father of our Rebbe, may his memory be blessed, that Yaakov and Esav, who were born twins in the same womb, were a likeness of the Tree of Life and the Tree of Knowledge, which were intertwined at the same root. And it is known that the mothers rectified the sin of Chava... and Rivka rectified the sin of Chava by feeding Adam from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. This means that since Esav is a model of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, the delicacies he prepared were a model of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, that is, to connect good with evil. And the delicacies of Jacob were a model of the fruit of the Tree of Life. Therefore, Rivka, who tried to prevent Yitzchak from eating Esav's delicacies and instead had him taste Yaakov's delicacies, thereby rectified the sin of Eve who fed Adam from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil.

 Now it is clear why Yitzchak did not taste Esav's delicacies:

 And according to what is stated, the reason why Yitzchak did not taste any of Esav's delicacies will be understood. It was simple for him to taste some of them to appease Esav, and also so that the blessing he ultimately gave would come to pass, because he recognized and knew what was before him, that they were the fruit of Esav.

 After Jacob gave Esav bread with lentil stew, the bread he gave Yitzchak was pure, and from it came joy to Yitzchak, and the Holy Spirit rested upon him.

 The joy of corrected eating

 Regarding the joy of proper eating, Rabbi Kook wrote:

That which simple appetite accomplishes for all creatures and for average human beings, stimulating the individual to eat in order to strengthen his life and his faculties, so too in a rarefied way, with elevated power, in people with great awareness, righteous people, the foundations of the world, it awakens the desire to unite with all of the holy sparks concealed in each food, corresponding to which the soulful joy awakens in the person who eats in their presence, receiving them into his soul, increasing, because of them, light and vast joy. And the sparks themselves add might and joy at that movement, even before the eating. 

When we eat for the sake of our material appetite, our sadness intensifies, as in the hidden meaning of the verse, “those who eat the bread of sadness” (Psalms 127:2). 

That is because the spiritual sparks in the food, which were capable of rising, descend. And when they are sad at their having descended, the person eating feels their sadness as a result of the interchange of a number of ways of feeling and transpositions of spiritual letters, until the sad feeling is recognized in a psychological disclosure within himself. 

The food of the Land of Israel sanctifies from within and is not material except in its outward appearance, but one must be careful with the foods of the Diaspora. The anticipation of Eretz Yisrael elevates the food outside the Land.

And this is the secret of remembering Jerusalem, whether by the rivers of Babylon or in the Song of Ascents, which is repeated at every meal. The hoping for the Land of Israel, which comes right after eating, refines the food from abroad and makes it close to the elevation of the Land of Israel. 

Translated from a sicha of Rav Hadari

Weight Loss Drugs/ Holy Eating

A new study analyzed how often people develop severe side effects after taking semaglutide

The report claims the trendy drug contributed to nearly 25,000 emergency room visits between 2022 and 2023

Most reported hospital visits were due to gastrointestinal complications

Trendy weight-loss drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy have sent a shocking number of people to the hospital, according to claims made in a new study.

The study — published April 8 in Annals of Internal Medicine — analyzed how often people develop severe side effects that send them to the emergency department or hospital after taking semaglutide, an FDA-approved prescription medication for people with type 2 diabetes and chronic obesity.

A spokesperson for Ozempic’s manufacturer, Novo Nordisk, said in a statement, "The safety and efficacy profile of Ozempic has been evaluated in clinical studies. The most commonly reported side effects were gastrointestinal, including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach (abdominal) pain, and constipation. The known risks associated with use of Ozempic are reflected in the FDA-approved product labeling."

Semaglutide — known by brand names Ozempic and Wegovy — works in the brain to impact satiety.  Over the past two years, the popularity of weekly injections for weight loss has soared. As of 2024, one in eight adults in the United States has taken a GLP-1 medication (glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists) like Ozempic. 

Scientists from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention studied national surveillance data collected at dozens of hospitals. They found that semaglutide contributed to nearly 25,000 emergency room visits between 2022 and 2023, with more than 82% occurring in 2023.

The visits were typically due to gastrointestinal complications. Patients experienced nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and diarrhea. 

Additionally, some hospital visits were also reported for low blood sugar, allergic reactions, pancreatitis, and bile duct disease — all less common incidences.

“We found that it’s very infrequent that semaglutide leads to very serious adverse events that would land a patient in the hospital, but that they do occur,” Dr. Pieter Cohen, study author and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, told Health.

“The adverse events presented [in this study] are not new,” added Dr. Mahyar Etminan, associate professor of medicine at the University of British Columbia.

Although researchers noted that most drugs have some side effects, and most reported in the study were already known, they stress that these findings should not be minimized, and that doctors should do more to mitigate those that require hospitalization.

“Clinicians could counsel patients when initiating semaglutide about the potential for severe gastrointestinal adverse effects and adjust co-prescribed antidiabetic medications to decrease hypoglycemia risk,” the authors wrote.

The impacts of semaglutide and similar medications on the digestive system have been investigated; In June 2024, the drugs were linked to severe gastroparesis, also known as stomach paralysis, which the Mayo Clinic says “[prevents] your stomach from emptying properly.”

In September 2024, the FDA issued a warning that Ozempic can lead to a life-threatening condition known as ileus — a type of bowel obstruction where either sections or the entirety of the intestines become obstructed. This blockage can restrict blood flow to organs, resulting in tissue necrosis.

 "We stand behind the safety and efficacy of Ozempic® when used as indicated," the company said in its statement.

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Despite semaglutide’s popularity for weight loss, experts are sounding the alarm on its major shortcomings—limited long-term success, serious side effects, and rapid weight regain after stopping the drug.

While millions of Americans qualify for semaglutide, research reveals that most users remain overweight or obese even after years of treatment.

Semaglutide: Effectiveness and Limitations

A popular weight loss drug, semaglutide, is making headlines—but not just for its widespread use. New concerns are being raised about its long-term effectiveness, safety, and what happens when people stop taking it.

In a letter published in JAMA Cardiology, Dr. Vanita Rahman of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine warns that semaglutide may not be the weight loss solution many are hoping for. Her response comes after new research found that more than half of U.S. adults, an estimated 137 million people, are now eligible to use the drug for weight management.

Semaglutide is a prescription medication originally developed to treat type 2 diabetes, now widely known for its use in weight loss under the brand names Ozempic and Wegovy. It works by mimicking a hormone called GLP-1, which helps regulate appetite and blood sugar levels.

“This research found that half the U.S. adults are eligible for semaglutide for weight loss, and while the authors correctly cite access and cost as important barriers, there are other significant limitations and risks,” says letter author Vanita Rahman, MD, DipABLM, internal medicine and lifestyle medicine doctor with the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a public health advocacy nonprofit.

Weight Loss Plateaus and Persistent Obesity

For many people taking semaglutide, weight loss slows over time and often stalls completely. Even after four years of use in the SELECT trial, only 12% of participants reached a healthy body weight. Most people remained either overweight or obese.

And the progress doesn’t always last. When participants in the STEP-1 extension study stopped taking semaglutide, they quickly regained the weight they had lost.

Severe Side Effects and Unknown Long-Term Safety

Semaglutide is associated with a high prevalence of adverse events, and its long-term safety is unknown. In an observational study, semaglutide was associated with a more than fourfold and sevenfold risk of nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy in people taking semaglutide for type 2 diabetes and weight loss, respectively.

Plant-based dietary interventions, on the other hand, have led to significant weight loss along with improvements in cardiometabolic risk factors. In the BROAD study, a low-fat plant-based diet led to an average weight loss of 12.1 kg at 6 months compared with an average weight loss of 1.6 kg in the standard-care group. The plant-based group also experienced larger reductions in total cholesterol.

The Broader Health Impact of Weight Loss

Dr. Rahman adds, “Obesity and overweight are highly prevalent conditions associated with considerable morbidity and mortality, and successful weight loss interventions can lead to important reductions in cardiometabolic risk.”

Though semaglutide can lead to meaningful weight loss in some individuals, it comes with important risks and limitations. On the other hand, plant-based diets are a safe, low-cost treatment option with research-proven benefits.

Bridging the Gap Between Knowledge and Practice

Half of U.S. adults say they know eating a plant-based diet can improve their health and help prevent chronic diseases, according to a recent Physicians Committee/Morning Consult survey. Yet just 1 in 5 primary care practitioners discuss this lifesaving message with patients.


“This provides us as health care professionals with an opportunity to support and guide our patients toward nutrition interventions that work and reduce the risk of chronic diseases that affect millions,” Dr. Rahman says.


Reference: “The Limitations and Risks Associated With Semaglutide Treatment” by Vanita Rahman, 14 May 2025, JAMA Cardiology.

DOI: 10.1001/jamacardio.2025.1095


כשאוכלים לשם תאוה חמרית מתגבר העצבון בסוד אוכלי לחם העצבים. 

When we eat for the sake of our material appetite, our sadness intensifies, as in the hidden meaning of the verse, “those who eat the bread of sadness” (Psalms 127:2). 

כי הניצוצות, שהיו ראויים לעלות, יורדים, ובהיותם מתעצבים על ירידתם, מרגיש האוכל את עצבם, על ידי חילוף של כמה דרכי ההרגשה, ותמורות אותיות, עד שההרגשה העצבנית נכרת בגילוי נפשי בקרבו. 

That is because the spiritual sparks in the food, which were capable of rising, descend. And when they are sad at their having descended, the person eating feels their sadness as a result of the interchange of a number of ways of feeling and transpositions of spiritual letters, until the sad feeling is recognized in a psychological disclosure within himself. 

ועל ידי אכילה בקדושה, והגברת המגמה העליונה של טהרת הנשמה ובהירותה, מתוספת צהלת הרוח ושמחה באוכל, על ידי שמחתם של הניצוצות שנתעלו. 

But when one eats in holiness and intensifies the supernal goal of attaining purity and clarity of the soul, the happy spirit and joy of the person eating is enhanced as a result of the joy of the spiritual sparks that have risen. 

ובשמחתם מאירה גם כן הנשמה, המעלה אותם ושמחה עמהם, והלב מרגיש על ידי כמה שבילים וצינורות שונים, וחדות ד' מתגברת עליו. 

With their joy, his soul that raises them and rejoices with them shines as well. And his heart feels this via a number of pathways and various conduits, and the gladness of Hashem overtakes him. 

והיינו ויאכל בעז וישת וייטב לבו, מאי וייטב לבו בדברי תורה, שחוץ ממה שנטיית הלב להגברת הרוחניות של העלאת החיים הכמוסים במאכלים מביאה לחשק רוחני, שמתמלא באהבת התורה ולימודה, עוד התוכן המקודש של אכילה קדושה זו היא בעצמה דברי תורה, וזה השולחן אשר לפני ד'. 

And so “Boaz ate and he drank, and his heart was glad” (Ruth 3:7). “What is the meaning of ‘and his heart was glad’? In words of Torah” (Yalkut Shimoni, Ruth 604). That is because, besides the fact that the propensity of the heart to intensify the spirituality associated with raising the vitality hidden in foods leads a person to spiritual desire, which is fulfilled with the love for the Torah and learning it, in addition the sanctified content of this holy eating is itself words of Torah. “This is the table that is before Hashem” (Ezekiel 41:22; Pirkei Avot 3:3). 


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מה שהתיאבון הפשוט של האכילה עושה אצל בעלי חיים כולם, ואצל בני אדם בינונים, להמשיך את האדם לאכול להחזיק את חייו וכחותיו, פועל בצורה אצילית וכח נשגב אצל גדולי הדעה, צדיקים יסודי עולם, החפץ להתאחד עם כל ניצוצי הקודש הטמונים בתוך המאכלים, שהשמחה הנשמתית מתעוררת מהאדם האוכל לעומתם, לקבלם אל תוך נשמתו, להוסיף בהם אור ומדות עולמים, והם בעצמם מוסיפים עז ושמחה בתנועה, גם לפני האכילה.  

That which simple appetite accomplishes for all creatures and for average human beings, stimulating the individual to eat in order to strengthen his life and his faculties, so too in a rarefied way, with elevated power, in people with great awareness, righteous people, the foundations of the world, it awakens the desire to unite with all of the holy sparks concealed in each food, corresponding to which the soulful joy awakens in the person who eats in their presence, receiving them into his soul, increasing, because of them, light and vast joy. And the sparks themselves add might and joy at that movement, even before the eating. 

בעת האוכל כבר השמחה מתנוצצת במעמקים, ובאכילה עצמה היא עולה במעלה יותר עליונה, ויאכל בעז וישת וייטב לבו, וייטב לבו בדברי תורה, שהן הן האכילה והשתיה עצמן, לבאי בסוד ד', דידעי מאי דמחוי להו במחוג. 

At the time of eating, joy blazes in the depths. And with the eating itself, it rises to a higher level. “Boaz ate and drank, and his heart was glad” (Ruth 3:7): “his heart was glad in the words of Torah” (Yalkut Shimoni, end of 604). Those are the eating and drinking themselves for those who enter the secret of Hashem, for those “who know the meaning of what they are shown in every gesture” (Chagigah 5b).


Can There Be Morality Without G-d?/ Maimonidean Vs. Aristotelean Ethics

Aristotle dedicated an entire book to the topic of ethics, a book that was named "Nicomachean Ethics"[1]. In the first chapter of his book, he addresses the question of motivation to engage with these topics, meaning what the goal of human behavior should be according to ethical principles. After presenting Aristotle's answer to this question here, we will turn to what Maimonides wrote on the matter – given the not insignificant influence of Aristotle's writings on Maimonides' views – and we will attempt to distinguish between what Maimonides adopted from Aristotle and the topics from which he diverges and even disagrees.

Ethics in Ancient Greek Thought Before Aristotle

The origin of ethics in Western thought, like other branches of philosophy, lies in Greek thought.

The Sophists [2] believed that there was no universal principle by which one could determine what is the appropriate action and what is the good deed. Any statement about good depends on conventions or the individual's subjective perception [3]. This relativism does not in principle deny the existence of a normative ethical system at a given time or in a given place, as the existence of such a system does not have to be above time and place.

The Hedonists [4] believed that there was a principle by which one could determine the appropriate action, and that was the pursuit of pleasure, which is considered the highest good. Pleasure is a matter of individual taste, and therefore a universal ethical system cannot exist.

The teachings of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle grew out of opposition to the arguments of the Sophists and Hedonists, as they believed there was a universal standard for determining moral rules. According to Socrates, everyone is capable of discovering truth and virtue thru deep thinking. Virtues are already inherent in humans from birth, as stated by him: "People manage their affairs correctly and well only when guided by knowledge" [5]. According to Socrates, goodness and knowledge are interdependent: knowing the truth enables a person to know what good deeds are, and thus prevents them from doing bad deeds.

Plato developed and expanded the Socratic idea that no one knowingly does evil because it is evil. In his opinion, man does evil out of a mistake in the nature of evil, because he thinks of it as good. The right intention and the right action come from within, from a desire to know the essence of true good. For "no one does evil knowingly." And therefore, reason is the foundation of morality. 6]

However, it still needs to be determined what the cognitive contents are that lead to moral behavior.

What is "ethics" for Aristotle?

Essentially, Aristotle views ethics as part of political science, meaning as the science that determines the proper and desirable behavior of humans toward those around them, since "man is by nature a social animal" [7]. However, it is necessary to identify what should be the criterion for what is truly worthy and desirable, and therefore he opens the first chapter of his book with the following sentence:

Every art and every subject of research, as well as every action and occupation, is strong in its aspiration toward what is good; therefore, they rightly defined the good as that which everything aspires to [8].

However, this definition is lacking: what is this "good" that everyone strives for? Aristotle addresses this question and offers various explanations that will be detailed below. He first claims that the main goal to achieve is happiness: "It is nothing but happiness, and no one distinguishes at all between a happy life and a good and successful life" [9]. And what is happiness? Life will be desirable and nothing will be lacking. We attribute this characteristic to happiness... Therefore, we find that happiness is something perfect and sufficient in itself, and it is the purpose toward which all our actions are directed [10]. However, it remains to specify its content, and Aristotle answers this demand as follows: "pleasure or wealth or honor"[11].

 However, these things are dynamic and can change for each person according to their circumstances, as "the same person changes their mind, so that when they are sick, they identify happiness with health, and when they lose their wealth, with happiness" [12].

 At this point, Aristotle offers a new explanation for happiness. In his opinion: "Most people, and the simplest among them, identify good and happiness with pleasure" [13]. However, a problem arises here: the concept of "pleasure" is usually reserved for the satisfaction of physical needs, and then there is no certainty that we can call the behavior to obtain them appropriate, as Aristotle puts it:

And behold, the sons of the common people appear to us as those of base character, because they choose a way of life that is fitting for beasts; however, they have the means to justify this choice, since many of the powerful follow the ways of Sardanapalus [14]. 15]

Therefore, he proposes a different, more honorable goal: "Those scholars who are men of action are likely to identify happiness with honor, since honor is like the ultimate purpose of political life"[16].

We have learned that Aristotle requires every person to act in such a way that human society as a whole enjoys the greatest happiness, which can be expressed in various forms: pleasure, wealth, honor, health, etc., and even a life of contemplation, depending on the circumstances. Therefore, he should not act selfishly to fulfilll his own desires, but rather strive to achieve happiness among the greatest possible number of members of the community in which he resides. It follows that "morality is essentially the performance of certain actions not because we see them as inherently right, but because we see them as bringing us closer to 'the good for man'" [17].

Eudaimonia

If so, what is "the good for man"? This is what Aristotle calls eudaimonia (εὐδαιμονία), which, according to a group of researchers, is:

Eudaimonia is often translated as "happiness," but the contemporary interpretation used in philosophy translates it as "flourishing" or "prosperity." Different interpretations of Aristotle's eudaimonia have been offered in modern philosophy. These interpretations share the idea that eudaimonia reflects virtues, excellence, and the realization of one's full potential. Rooted in its philosophical origins, eudaimonia represents an objective standard of good and is considered a worthy pursuit in life. 18]

In Aristotle's view, the essence of morality is therefore in performing certain actions that bring a person closer to εὐδαιμονία.

Criticism of Aristotle's approach to the purpose of morality

Aristotle does not doubt man's duty to act according to well-defined rules, but he struggles to find a single, clear, and universal purpose. The εὐδαιμονία, which is supposedly the goal to strive for for as many people as possible, also lacks a clear definition. After all, the feeling of happiness is subjective; it can differ from person to person and also change over generations. As Aristotle himself noted, this feeling depends on a person's state, so it can change over time even for the same individual.

Furthermore, even if it's understood that a healthy social life requires moral behavior from everyone toward all other people, there's no sufficient reason here for everyone to feel obligated to act according to moral rules! The self-conviction that there is an obligation to act according to certain rules must be based on a belief in a transcendent entity that imposes this behavior on the individual. Dostoevsky expressed this idea in his famous novel, "The Brothers Karamazov":

God... what if we don't exist? What if... this is an artificial idea of humanity? And then, if we are not, man is the master of the earth, the universe. Great! But how can he do good without God? Question! I'm constantly occupied with only this. For who will man love then? To whom will he give thanks, to whom will he sing a hymn? Rakitin laughs. Rakitin says that it is possible to love humanity even without God. Only a weakling can claim that, and I won't be able to understand it. Rakitin's life is easy. Today he told me, "You'd better worry about expanding human civil rights, or even about the price of meat not going up. In this way, you will discover love for humanity in a simpler and more intimate way than through philosophies. To this I retorted: "And you, I say, without God, will make meat more expensive, if you get the chance, and make a ruble on every kopeck." He got angry. For what is the good deed? Answer me, Alexey. In my eyes, this deed is good, and in the eyes of the Chinese, another deed is good – the matter is therefore relative. Isn't that right? Isn't it relative? This is a tricky question. You wouldn't laugh if I told you I haven't slept for two nights because of this question. Now I'm only surprised at how people live and don't think about it at all. Nonsense! Ivan has no God. He has an idea. Not on my scale. But he's silent... Once... I told him, "If so, everything is permitted, if that's the case." 19]

And more explicitly, Dostoevsky writes in a letter:

Now let's assume there is no God and no immortality of the soul. Now tell me, why should I live righteously and do good deeds if I'm going to die completely on earth? ...and if so, why shouldn't I go (as long as I can rely on my intelligence and agility to avoid getting caught by the law) to slaughter another person, to steal... [20]

 After all, it's possible that society would be happier if I behaved in a certain way, but what is the source of my obligation to care for that society?

If so, Jean-Paul Sartre is Aristotelian, when, following what Dostoevsky wrote, he claims:

Dostoevsky wrote: "If God does not exist, everything is permitted." This is the starting point of existentialism. Indeed, everything is permitted if God does not exist, and because of this, man is abandoned, as he finds no possibility of enduring either within himself or outside of himself. First of all, he doesn't make excuses. If, in fact, existence precedes essence, it will never be possible to explain it by referring to a given and fixed human nature; in other words, there is no determinism, man is free, man is freedom. 21]

If there is no God, not only is there no obligation to keep moral rules, but man must invent them.

The source of the obligation to act according to moral rules according to Maimonides

For Maimonides, the foundation of morality is God's commandment, which appears at the beginning of the Laws of Opinions: "(a) to emulate His ways, (b) to cleave to those who know Him." In the first chapter of Hilchot De'ot, the Rambam explains the first commandment, how to "imitate the ways" of the Holy One. In the Book of Commandments, Maimonides brings three different verses from which the Sages learned "the commandment we were commanded to emulate Him, may He be blessed, to the best of our ability" [22]. All the verses are from the Book of Deuteronomy: "For if you carefully observe all this commandment... to love the Lord your God, to walk in His ways, and to cling to Him" (Deuteronomy 11:22); "You shall follow the Lord your God and fear Him" (ibid. 13:5); "If you keep the commandments of the Lord your God and walk in His ways" (ibid. 28:9).

These verses were interpreted by the Sages [23], and they concluded from them that there is a general commandment in the Torah for moral behavior, in addition to the many commandments in the Torah whose purpose is to instill good character traits in specific cases (such as laws regarding orphans, widows, and slaves; the prohibition of interest; the prohibition of bribery, etc.). Unlike both classical and modern philosophical theories, in which ethics is one of its main fields and is entirely based on the dictates of conscience, reason, or accumulated experience, Jewish ethics is fundamentally transcendental, both in the very demand for moral behavior and in giving content to this commandment.

The Sages, in their attempt to give content to this commandment, determined that one should learn from God's ways, whether explicitly revealed or implicitly mentioned in the Torah. Moses asked God, "Please show me Your ways" (Exodus 33:13), and he was answered – at least partially – when God revealed to him what His thirteen attributes are: "The Lord, the Lord, a merciful and gracious God, etc." (ibid. 34:6-7). From here they demanded, "Just as the place is called merciful and gracious, so too, be merciful and gracious yourself and give a free gift to all" [24]. Not only in this verse were the attributes of the Holy One, blessed be He, revealed, but "just as the Holy One is called righteous, as it is said, 'The Lord is righteous in all His ways and gracious in all His works' (Psalm 145:17), so too, you should be righteous... so too, you should be gracious" [25].

The Purpose of Morality According to Maimonides

However, according to Maimonides' system as well, the purpose of moral behavior is the benefit of society. 26] And he wrote: "The commandments... which we have enumerated in the laws of character, all have a simple and clear benefit, because they are all virtues by which the state of society among people is improved"[27]. Later, Maimonides adds that the purpose of these commandments is not -

But for the benefit of mankind... because if you assume that one person is alone and has no dealings with anyone, you will find that all his moral virtues are then null and void and have no purpose, and they do not bring any perfection to his personality at all. [28]

And yet, it turns out that according to Maimonides, the benefit of morality is not only that "the state of society between people will be improved." But in addition to this, "all these vises [bad traits] are partitions that separate a person from God, may He be blessed"[29]. It therefore follows that the acquisition of virtues has another purpose beside the betterment of society.

We have learned that moral behavior and the acquisition of virtues have purposes that are divided into two layers, one above the other. At the first level, there is a requirement to bring about the repair of society through behavior that aligns with the attributes of the Holy One. Middos at this level have only instrumental significance. In the second level, a religious and personal role is attributed to the virtues themselves: the purpose of man is to perceive God, and whoever strives to reach Him is required to internalize his virtues and, as far as possible, become like Him, until he is entirely "kindness, charity, and justice." Perceiving God is not merely an intellectual pursuit but a goal that demands active and complete personal identification and intervention. Just as this explanation applies to a private individual, so too does it apply to someone gifted with prophesy. A necessary condition for inspiring prophesy is the removal of the "barriers separating man from God, may He be blessed," by man reaching the level of perceiving God.

Basing moral principles on Greek philosophy

In explaining the details of the commandment, the Rambam uses many sources, including not only the words of the Sages, but – as is his way – also the philosophy of Aristotle, through the writings of Arab philosophers, and among them mainly the writings of Al-Farabi. 30] This is despite the fact that, according to Maimonides, moral behavior is a Divine commandment, while according to Aristotle, it is solely a commandment of reason.

 As mentioned, in Aristotle's view, the essence of morality is to achieve the good for humanity. Maimonides also believes that the purpose of man is to achieve perfection and that moral behavior is a means and instrument for attaining this goal. However, in his opinion, this perfection is a goal of a religious nature that leads to clinging to God, which is the ultimate purpose of all the commandments. Aristotle cannot accept this approach because in his world there are no transcendental commandments, and therefore perfection has only human meaning.

 In conclusion, Maimonides and Aristotle disagree, both in the starting point of the moral commandment and in its purpose. On the other hand, the influence of Aristotle's ethics is felt on the details of the commandment, as described by Maimonides. Essentially, the idea of the "golden mean" [31] is entirely based on the words of Aristotle.

 The question arises: how is it possible that Maimonides would rely on secular philosophical Torah, whose beginning and end are in human reason, to infuse content into a commandment whose beginning and end are holy? Some are trying to emphasize that the doctrine of the "middle way" is a doctrine taught by our sages and prophets, and from there it found an echo in the thought of the gentiles. According to this, the words and opinions of the Rambam are drawn from a blessed source, from the source of Israel, and the words of the philosophers serve him only as "a supporting teacher." 32]

 However, it seems this is not Maimonides' way. According to his view, it is permissible, and even desirable, to use the findings of science and philosophical theories as long as they do not contradict the core principles of religion, because, in his view, the findings of science and philosophy are not foreign to Judaism as he sees it. Maimonides essentially accepts Aristotle's scientific method and utilizes his organized teachings in places where such teachings are not found in our sources. Contrary to what was stated above, Maimonides derived the idea of the golden mean from the writings of Aristotle, not from verses in the Bible or from rabbinic interpretations. In the time of Maimonides, the prevailing opinion was that philosophy and the sciences were known and accepted in Israel even before they were revived by Greek philosophers, but that they were forgotten and lost when we were exiled from our land. Therefore, we must learn these sciences from the Gentiles in order to reintroduce them into our curriculum. And so Maimonides writes: "Know that the many sciences that existed in our nation regarding these truths were lost over time and due to the rule of foolish nations over us, etc." [33]. Therefore, in Maimonides' view, even Aristotle's philosophical writings are essentially of Jewish origin [34].

The Rambam's right as a philosophical thinker is essentially twofold: the Aristotelianization of Judaism and the Judaization of Aristotelianism. What does the Aristotelianization of Judaism mean? This does not mean that Maimonides was the first to introduce Aristotle's philosophy into Judaism, but rather that before him, this was not done with such systematic consistency as we find in this great thinker. For example, in Rabbi Abraham ibn Daud's book "Emunah Ramah," there is a tendency to reconcile the two Torahs [להבדיל בין קודש לחול ובין אור לחושך], that of Judaism and that of Greek philosophy. However, in this Jewish philosopher, who predated Maimonides, there is more of an aspiration for parallelism and compatibility between the different Torahs than for mutual sharpening. Not so with Maimonides; he first grasped the problems under discussion in all their clarity, without ignoring the contradictions between the Torah of Moses and the philosophy of Aristotle, and then sought the point of contact between the two, creating a new synthesis, a synthesis for generations. 35]

 So, despite a fundamental disagreement between Aristotle's approach and traditional Jewish thought, Maimonides managed to draw from Aristotle the necessary materials he needed.

Different approaches to the question of the relationship between religion and morality

Some say that there are three different approaches to the question of the relationship between religion and morality:

Some argued that religious assumptions are essential for moral activity, and that religion, in one way or another, is a condition for morality. A well-known thinker from this school is Kant. Although he emphasized the autonomous nature of morality, Kant believed that certain religious beliefs – the existence of God, the belief in reward and punishment – are essential for moral activity, and he called them: "postulates of practical reason."

There were thinkers – such as Aristotle, Plato, and their followers – who rejected this dependence, attempting to prove the autonomy of morality.

Other thinkers went even further, arguing that religion interferes with and is contrary to morality. An example of this type of thinker is Nietzsche, who believed that religion hinders and stifles human development. 

According to what was explained above, it is clear that Maimonides belongs to the first category. In his opinion, the source of morality – both the commandment and the giving of content – is God. However, Maimonides does not leave the laws of opinions as laws without an obvious reason. In the Laws of Opinions, he tries to follow Aristotle and base the demand for ethical behavior on logical arguments. Unlike Kant, who believed that religion – without feeling bound by it – is beneficial for ensuring moral behavior because the commandment and content are based on reason, Maimonides believed that morality is entirely a divine commandment that can be reconciled with human reason, which will decide in case of doubt.

Summary

In the dilemma posed by Socrates in the dialogue Euthyphro [37], the question discussed was: What is piety? At a certain point in the discussion, Euthyphron offers this definition: piety is what all the gods love, and conversely, what all the gods hate is sin.

 Socrates asks about this: Is piety loved because it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved?

 In modern discussions, the dilemma is usually presented like this: Is an act moral because God willed it, or did God will it because it is moral?

 According to Aristotle, there is no doubt, as in his view, God does not give any commandments to man, and morality must be based solely on human thought. Apparently, according to Maimonides as well, this dilemma does not exist for him. He certainly believes that moral rules have autonomous and intellectual value, but there was never a moment when God adopted them. The way Rambam understands the unity of God – see Laws of the Foundations of the Torah 1:7 – leaves no room for any moral-ethical system outside of Him – He is morality and morality is He.

 [1] Although there is another book dedicated to the topic of ethics, called "Eudemian Ethics," Nicomachean Ethics is "more mature" (David William Ross, Hebrew Encyclopedia, entry on Aristotle, p. 846).

 [2] The Sophists were a respected group of private tutors in ancient Greece's Athens, whose main focus was teaching rhetoric. The evidence we currently have about them comes to us thru partial quotations from their teachings written by their opponents, particularly the writings of Plato. However, the importance of their teachings within the framework of Greek philosophy is significant, also because Socratic philosophy grew against the backdrop of Sophism.

 [3] An opinion shared even by modern skeptics.

 [4] Aristippus of Cyrene founded the school of hedonism in Greek philosophy. Following Socrates, who said that "happiness is one of the goals of moral activity," Aristippus believed that pleasure is the highest good. Epicurus made the same argument, but he placed spiritual pleasure above sensory pleasure, which is largely dependent on chance rather than will.

 [5] Plato, Meno, translated from Greek by Aryeh Simon, Jerusalem 1975, p. 76 (96e).

 [6] The Hebrew Encyclopedia, Yosef Klausner, E. Plato, p. 231.

 [7] Aristotle, Ethics, translated from Greek by Joseph G. Liebes, Jerusalem and Tel Aviv 1985, p. 24.

 [8] Ibid., p. 15.

 [9] Ibid., pp. 17-18.

 [10] Ibid., p. 25.

 [11] Ibid., p. 18.

 [12] Ibid., p. 18.

 [13] Ibid., p. 19.

 [14] Sardanapalus is a fictional literary figure created by the Greek writer Ctesias. He is described as the last king of the Assyrian Empire and the one who brought about its downfall with his own hands. Sardanapalus is depicted as a decadent figure who squanders his life and the empire's resources and dies in an orgy of destruction. The legendary decadence of Sardanapalus later became a theme in literature and art, especially during the Romantic era.

[15] Ibid., p. 19.

[16] Ibid., p. 19.

[17] David William Ross, Hebrew Encyclopedia, entry "Aristotle," p. 847.

[18] Free translation of the following passage:

Nasir Abbas, Muhammad Ali Raza, Wajid Hussain, Kazim Abbas, Aristotle's eudemonia and its impact on human well-being in modern psychology: a critical analysis, in International Journal of Contemporary Social Science, Volume 3, Issue 1, 2024).


[19] Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov, translated by Zvi Arad, Dvir Publishing House 1993, Part Four, Book 11, Chapter 4.


[20] Free translation from French (I couldn't find the exact reference):

 Maintenant supposons qu’il n’y a pas de Dieu ni immortalité de l’âme. Maintenant dites-moi, pourquoi devrais-je vivre avec droiture et faire de bonnes actions, si je vais mourir entièrement sur terre? … Et si c’est le cas, pourquoi ne devrais-je pas (tant que je peux compter sur mon intelligence et l’agilité pour éviter les être pris par la loi) couper la gorge d’un autre homme, voler.(https://la-philosophie.com/si-dieu-existe-pas-tout-est-permis-dostoievski).

[21] Free translation of the following passage:

Dostoievsky avait écrit: «Si Dieu n’existait pas, tout serait permis». C’est là le point de départ de l’existentialisme. En effet, tout est permis si Dieu n’existe pas, et par conséquent l’homme est délaissé, parce qu’il ne trouve ni en lui, ni hors de lui une possibilité de s’accrocher. Il ne trouve d’abord pas d’excuses. Si, en effet, l’existence précède l’essence, on ne pourra jamais expliquer par référence à une nature humaine donnée et figée ; autrement dit, il n’y a pas de déterminisme, l’homme est libre, l’homme est liberté” (Jean-Paul Sartre, L'Existentialisme est un Humanisme, Paris 1970, p. 36).

[22] The Book of Commandments, Eighth Commandment.


[23] Babylonian Talmud, Sotah 14a, Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 13b.


[24] Books of the Maccabees 11:22.


[25] There.


[26] See explicit statements in this spirit in the Guide for the Perplexed III, chapter 38 and 39, under the heading "And the third kind."


[27] Guide for the Perplexed, Part III, Chapter 8.


[28] Guide for the Perplexed, Part 3, Chapter 1.


[29] In the seventh chapter out of eight chapters.


[30] See for example: H. Davidson: Maimonides' Shemonah Peraqim and Alfarabi's Fusul al-Madani, Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research, XXXI (1963), pp. 35-50


[31] Laws of Opinions 1:4.


[32] See the commentary of Rabbi M. D. Rabbinowitz, in eight chapters, within: Introductions to the Commentary on the Mishnah, Jerusalem 1994, Chapter Four, Note 9 at the beginning of the chapter.


[33] Guide for the Perplexed I a. In that regard, see also Guide for the Perplexed, Part II.


[34] However, it is possible that Maimonides did not truly believe in the truth of this legend, but rather that it served as a winning argument for him to draw information from foreign sources.


[35] Menachem Stein, Maimonides and Aristotelianism, The Israeli Writers Association near "Massada" Publishing House, 1970.


[36] Daniel Statman and Avraham Sagi, Religion and Morality, Jerusalem 1993, p. 9.

Translated from Prof. Alex Klein

[37] Euthyphro

Drawing Shefa/Abundance

How does one achieve שפע - abundance? When I talk about abundance, I mean abundance in all parameters, both financial and spiritual. I once heard a story about someone who, about 20 years ago, won 50 million shekels in the lottery. After 13 years from winning, he passed away penniless. Studies show that most people who won the lottery came from low-income families with financial hardship, none of them believed they would become rich, and most of them did indeed lose their money after 10 years. What is the reason for this? They simply didn't have an abundance mindset, so the money didn't stay with them. In contrast, there are people who are magnets for abundance. People who live not only in economic abundance but also with a constant sense of satisfaction. What united these people was their central common element – without exception, they all had an "abundance mindset."


Abundance consciousness is built from six components:


1. Your approach to life, your beliefs, and your thoughts


2. Your physiology


3. The words you use


4. The actions you take


5. The people you surround yourself with


6. Connecting yourself to the Source of abundance.

"Abundance isn't something that happens to you – it's something you call into being."


Abundance begins with you becoming an owner of an abundance mindset. You live, feel, breathe, speak, think, and behave from a sense of abundance, and this abundance manifests in the different areas of your life. You become a magnet for abundance.

These people have developed abilities that open them up to opportunities. They look at what's happening around them differently, and this is an important component of their success. A group of people can be in a certain place at a certain time, seemingly all seeing and hearing the same things, but only some of the group, and usually a very small portion, will find the treasure, the gold, the opportunity. The success of people with an abundance mindset is not the result of hard work and effort, nor is it the result of exceptional talent or ability in their field. On the contrary, it often seems to stem from their ability to be in the right place at the right time, and simply enjoy and reap the rewards.

On YouTube, there's a video showing an interview with Bill Gates. One of the top interviewers in the United States asks him: "Bill, what is the secret of your success?"

Bill replies: "Before I answer you, I want to give you a gift."

He took an open check out of his pocket and said to her, "Tell me what amount to write on the check, up to $50 million, and I'll write you the check."

The interviewer says to him, "Absolutely not, I don't want you to give me a gift like that!"

Bill insists: "Are you sure?" Don't worry, there's coverage for the check. You will be the richest interviewer in the United States. She replies, "I'm sure, thank you very much, but no thank you." Bill says to her, "This is my secret to success, I almost never miss an opportunity."

The Creator of the world sends us opportunities in all sorts of areas, not just in the economic realm. The Zohar calls this "Drona d'Malka" – a gift from the King. It's important that we know how to accept these gifts that we receive.

Self-love:

Another thing related to abundance consciousness is our self-love. Someone who doesn't love themselves and doesn't believe in themselves cannot love others. It's not just a matter of the Torah's language being "Love your neighbor as yourself." In order to love your friend, you also need to know how to love yourself.

I learned an important lesson on this topic at my children's school.

Our seven children attended the "Reshit" school, a school that fully integrates children with special needs into the classrooms.

At one of the school events, we, the parents, arrived, and there was a band singing while the orchestra accompanying them played various instruments. The band was made up of special children and regular children.

It was very moving to see this combination and hear the performance, which on the one hand wasn't the most perfect, but it can be said that it was the most precise.

You are one of the songs sung by a child with Down syndrome.

Until he sang, I had never heard this song. But since then, for many years, I haven't stopped listening to him.

The lyrics of the song are based on the words of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov: "I have conquered and I will conquer, I have finished and I will finish, I am a river that purifies from all stains, I am a man of wonders and my soul is a great wonder, there has never been a novelty like me."

I watched this special child, who sang in a loud voice and truly from the bottom of his heart, 'I am a man of wonders and my soul is a great wonder, there has never been a novelty like me,' and the words simply pierce my heart and touch the most painful and complex places.

Since then, every time I feel a setback or a lack of faith in myself or my abilities and I get sad, I put the song on full volume in the car and really shout out loud, "I am a man of wonders and my soul is a great wonder! There has never been a novelty like me!"

It is said about Rabbi Simcha Bunim of Pshischa, one of the great figures of the Chassidic movement, that he used to say: "Everyone should have two pockets, which they can use when needed." In one pocket it will say, "For my sake the world was created," and in the other pocket, "And I am dust and ashes." We need to be careful to use each pocket at the right time.

Escaping Negative Energy:

Another thing you need to do to receive abundance is to avoid energy-draining content or people.

In the past year, it's been almost impossible to disconnect from the news; the question is the dosage and where you hear it.

I don't watch news and current affairs programs of any kind on television, and I don't listen to the radio either. When I listen to the news on the radio every few months and I get past the five-minute mark, I feel the negative energy entering me.

A few years ago, someone who had been at the institution for many years and had taken early retirement came to me for consultation.

He told me he was depressed and not doing so well in life in all areas.

I quickly realized one of the roots of his problem. I said to him, "Isn't it true that you listen to that announcer's program regularly?"

He replied with astonishment: "How do you know?" I'm his fan, I don't miss any of his programs, and sometimes I listen to the same program several times.

I replied to him, "This is one of your main problems, that you listen to all the poison he pours on you and everyone else. Stop listening to the poison."

He called me after a while and said, "Wow, you have no idea how much this advice has affected my soul."

Connecting to positive energy:

As we move away from energy-draining sources and figures or those that generate negative energy, we need to connect with sources of positive energy.

I once heard a saying that goes, "A good friend is one who finds the good in you and brings out the best in you."

We need to gather truly good friends around us, and that's also a great source of abundance.

אורי שכטר

Judging Others

There are 86,400 seconds in a day, every day. It is quite consistent:-). 

We judge people. We HAVE to judge people from time to time. Should I trust him or not? Does he have my best interests in mind or his own? Is he a danger or not etc. etc. We often judge even when not necessary

But after the "trial" is over it is worth reminding ourselves - there are 86,400 seconds a day and of those we are not even present with this person for the majority of those secods. And even when we are with this person we can never know what this person is thinking and what his true intentions are. 

So most of our judgments sare based on insufficient information and we judge anyway b/c it gives us comfort and a sense of control. 

But ultimately, if I may quote my friends and cousins from the descendents of Cham from my youth - we don't know nothin'....  

Why does a person get tzaraas for lashon hara? Because you took one negative nekuda in this person and reduced him to that. As a punishment - the speaker gets one little nekudah on his body that makes his entire self tamei!!  

Do you want to be more loving and tolerant? Remind yourself that you really don't know this person, what their struggles are, what they experienced in the past, the trauma, the sadness, the fears, the infinite number of problems they may have had or have. 

Lessons From Yaakov's Encounter With Esav And The Malach

 רלב"ג תועלות בראשית ל"ב

(הקדמה) והתועלות המגיעים מזה הסיפור הם עשרה:

(ד-ו) התועלת הראשון הוא במידות, והוא שראוי למי שיש לו שונא וירצה שתסור שנאתו ממנו, שיתקרב אליו בכל עוז, ויגיד לו עניניו, כי בזה מהתקרבות-הלבבות מה שלא יֵעָלֵם. וזה, כי האדם לא יודיע פרטי עניניו כי אם לאוהבו, ויעלימם מהשונא, וזה אם כן ממה שייסד בלבו שהוא אוהבו, וישבר לבבו ותסור שנאתו ממנו. ולזה תמצא ששלח יעקב מלאכים לעשו והודיע לו עניניו, כדי שיתיישב בלבו שהוא אוהבו.

(4-6) The first benefit is in character, and it is fitting for someone who has an enemy and wants their hatred to cease, to approach them with all their might and "tell them their matters" [share personal issues], and this will bring a closeness of hearts that will not disappear. And this is because a person will not reveal the details of their affairs except to their beloved, and will conceal them from their enemy. This is based on what they establish in their heart that someone is their beloved [when they share private matters], and it will break their [hateful] heart and their hatred will turn away from them. And for this reason, you will find that Jacob sent messengers to Esav and informed him of his affairs, so that he would be reassured in his heart that he was his friend.


(ז-ח) התועלת השני הוא במידות, והוא שראוי לאדם שיהיה מפחד תמיד, וישפוט הדברים בַּיותר רע שאפשר, כדי שיתבונן לקחת עצה להימלט מהרע. הלא תראה כי יעקב, כששמע שעשו אחיו הולך לקראתו וארבע מאות איש עימו, ירא שיהיה בואו להזיק לו, אף על פי שכבר קדמהו הייעוד מה' יתעלה שהוא ישמרהו ויהיה עימו, והיה אפשר גם כן שישפוט שהוא בא לכבדו ולשומרו. ולזה התחכם לקחת עצה על זה לפי מה שאפשר.

(7-8) The second benefit is in virtues, and it is that a person should always be fearful, and judge things in the worst possible way, so that he will consider taking advice to escape evil. Don't you see that Jacob, when he heard that his brother Esav was coming to meet him with four hundred men, was afraid that his arrival would harm him, even though he had already been promised by God Almighty that He would protect him and be with him, and it was also possible for him to judge that he was coming to honor and protect him? And for this, he cleverly sought counsel [took measures to protect himself] on this as much as possible.


(ח-ט) התועלת השלישי הוא במידות, והוא שאין ראוי לאדם – שיִראה שהוא מחוייב שיגיע לו רע-מה – שיתרשל מלקיחת העצה אי-זה רע ישתדל להרחיקו יותר ויבחר ברע היותר מְעַטִּי. כי אולי יתרשל האדם בזה, לחושבו שאין ראוי שיבחר ברע, ואין הענין כן, כי הוא ראוי שיבחר האדם ברע מועט כדי שינצל מרע שהוא יותר חזק ממנו, כי הוא מזה-הצד טוב. ולזה תמצא כי יעקב – כאשר פחד שישחית עשו כל מחנהו – חילק מחנהו לשתי מחנות, לתקותו כי אולי ישאר האחד. ולזאת הסיבה גם כן חצה את הילדים על לאה ועל רחל ועל שתי השפחות, ושׂם היותר חביב אחרון, כדי שאם ישאר מהם – ישאר היותר חביב לו.

(8-9) The third benefit is in virtues, and it is that it is not fitting for a person – who appears to be obligated to experience some evil – to be negligent in accepting counsel as to which evil he should strive to distance and choose the lesser evil. Because perhaps a person will become negligent in this, thinking it is not fitting for him to choose evil, and that is not the case. For it is fitting for a person to choose a lesser evil in order to escape a greater evil, because from this perspective, it is [not evil but] good. And for this reason, you will find that Jacob – when he feared that Esav would destroy his entire camp – divided his camp into two camps, hoping that one might remain. And for this reason, he also divided the children among Leah, Rachel, and the two maidservants, and placed the most beloved last, so that if any of them remained, it would be the one he loved the most.

(י-יג) התועלת הרביעי הוא במידות, והוא שאין ראוי לאדם שיימנע מֵהתפלל לה' יתעלה אפילו בעת הסכנה העצומה, כמו שאמרו רבותינו ז"ל (ברכות י, א): אפילו חרב חדה מונחת על צוארו של אדם אל ימנע עצמו מן הרחמים. הלא תראה כי יעקב אבינו, עם היותו בתכלית הסכנה לפי מחשבתו שעשו אחיו אשר היה שונא אותו שנאת מוות היה בא כנגדו בדרך עם ארבע מאות איש, התפלל לה' יתעלה שיצילהו.

(10-13) The fourth benefit is in virtues, and it is that a person should not refrain from praying to God, may He be exalted, even in times of great danger, as our Rabbis, may their memory be blessed, said (Berachot 10a): "Even if a sharp sword is placed on a person's neck, let him not refrain from mercy." Don't you see that our forefather Jacob, even though he was in extreme danger according to his brother Esav's plan, who hated him with a deadly hatred, was coming against him on the road with four hundred men, he prayed to the Almighty God to save him.


התועלת החמישי הוא בדעות, והוא להודיע שאפשר שייעד ה' יתעלה ייעוד טוב ולא יתקיים, כשהיה הייעוד גוזר בעצמוּת שיהיה בו תנאי, כמו הענין בזה הייעוד שייעד ה' יתעלה ליעקב שישמרהו בכל אשר ילך. שכמו זה הייעוד לא יתכן שיתקיים כי אם במי שהוא באופן מהדבֵקות עם ה' יתעלה שתדבק בו כמו זאת ההשגחה הנפלאה. ולזה ירא יעקב, כי שיער בעצמו שאין מעלתו באופן שתדבק בו כמו זאת ההשגחה הנפלאה, אבל הוא קטן ושפל בערך אל הטובות שהשפיע לו ה' יתעלה מצד דבקות ההשגחה בו.


The fifth benefit is in hashkafa, and it is to inform that it is possible that God, may He be exalted, decreed a good decree that did not come to pass, when the decree was inherently conditional, as in the case of this decree that God, may He be exalted, decreed for Jacob, that He would keep him wherever he went. It is impossible for such a purpose to be fulfilled except by one who is united with God, so that it adheres to him like this wonderful providence. And for this reason, Jacob was afraid, because he felt that his merit was not such that this wonderful providence would cleave to him. But he is small and insignificant compared to the blessings that God, may He be exalted, bestowed upon him due to his adherence to Divine providence.


(יד-יז) התועלת הששי הוא במידות, והוא שראוי לאדם שיוותר משלו לתת לשונאו, וייכנע לו בתכלית מה שאפשר, עד שישלים עימו, ואף על פי שהיה שונאו פחות-המעלה והוא גדול-המעלה, כי הוא עושה זה ההכנע בעבור עצמו ─ שיימלט משונאו, לא בעבור שונאו. וראוי לו גם כן שיהיה מה שיתן לו באופן שיהיה שלם, ויסדרהו בסידור אשר ייראה בו המַתָּן יותר גדול. הלא תראה שיעקב נכנע לעשו בכל זה האופן הנפלא, ונתן לו זה המַתָּן הנפלא; ורצה עם זה בו יעקב השלמוּת, רוצה לומר שיהיו מהזכרים בכל עדר מה שיספיק לו; וציוה לתת ריוח בין העדרים כדי שייראה המַתָּן יותר גדול.


(14-17) The sixth benefit is in character traits, and it is that a person should give up some of his possessions to give to his enemy, and humble himself to him as much as possible, until he makes peace with him. Even if his enemy is of lower status and he is of higher status, he does this humbling for his own sake – to escape from his enemy, not for his enemy's sake. And it is also fitting for him to have something to give him in a complete manner, and to arrange it in an order that makes the gift appear greater. Don't you see that Jacob yielded to Esav in all this wonderful manner, and gave him this wonderful gift? And with this, Jacob desired completeness in him, meaning that there would be from the males in each flock as many as would suffice him; and he commanded to leave space between the flocks so that the gift would appear greater.

(כג-כד) התועלת השביעי הוא במידות, והוא שראוי לאדם שיישמר מֵעֲבוֹר בְּמקום שיש בו סכנה, אם לא אחר הנסיון שיתברר לו בו שאין סכנה בעוברו במקום ההוא. ולזה תמצא כי יעקב – להיותו משער בעצמו, שאם יראה מִדֵּי עוברו שיהיו בנחל ההוא מים רבים לא יתכן לעבור בהם, יוכל לשוב לאחור מבלי שישיגהו בזה נזק – רצה לעבור זה הנחל קודם שהעביר את אשר לו. כי אולי אם העמיס על עצמו להעבירם קודם שניסה עומק המים, יִמְצָא המים באופן מהעומק שלא יוכל לעבור, ולא יוכל לשוב אחור עם מה שהיה מעביר מנשיו ובניו.

(23-24) The seventh benefit is in virtues, and it is that a person should avoid going where there is danger, unless after an experience that clarifies to him that there is no danger in passing through that place. And for this reason, you will find that Jacob – because he assumed that if he saw from where he was crossing that there was a lot of water in that stream, it would be impossible to cross it, and he could turn back without suffering any harm – wanted to cross that stream before he sent his belongings over. For perhaps if he burdened himself to transport them first, before testing the depth of the water, he would find the water at a depth he could not cross, and he would not be able to return with what he was transporting from his wives and children.


(כה-כט) התועלת השמיני הוא בדעות, והוא להודיע חוזק השגחת ה' יתעלה בדבקים בו, עד שכבר הראה ליעקב בנבואה – לְיַשֵּׁב נפשו ממה שהיה מפחד ממנו – שכבר שׂרר עם אלהים, וזה לו לאות כי ישׂור גם כן על אנשים ויוכל. ולזאת הסיבה בעינה ציוה לשנות שמו – כמו ששינה שֵׁם אברהם ושרה כאשר הבטיחוֹ שיהיה לו בן ממנה – כאילו אמר שאם היה ראוי שינוצח יעקב ─ הנה ישראל לא ינוצח. כמו שאמרו רבותינו ז"ל (בראשית רבה מד, י): "אברם אינו מוליד, אברהם מוליד". ולזאת הסיבה נכפל זה השינוי בשמו, כשייעד לו ה' יתעלה שיהיה ממנו גוי וקהל גוים (בראשית לה, ט-יב), כאילו אמר שאם אין יעקב מוליד עוד ─ הנה ישראל יוליד. ולזאת הסיבה אמרו רבותינו ז"ל (ראש השנה טז, ב) ששינוי השם הוא אחד מהדברים שמקרעין גזר דינו של אדם.

(25-29) The eighth benefit is in ideas, and it is to show the strength of God's providence over those who are attached to Him, to the point that He already showed Jacob in prophesy – to calm his fears – that he had already prevailed with angels, and this was a sign to him that he would also prevail over men and be able to do so. And for this very reason, he commanded him to change his name – just as he changed the names of Abraham and Sarah when he promised him that he would have a son from her – as if to say that if Jacob were worthy of being defeated, then Israel would not be defeated. As our sages of blessed memory said (Genesis Rabbah 44:10): "Abram does not beget, Abraham begets." And for this reason, this change was doubled in his name, as God, may He be exalted, destined that a nation and a multitude of nations would come from him (Genesis 35:9-12), as if to say that if Jacob does not bear children again, then Israel will. And for this reason, our sages of blessed memory said (Rosh Hashanah 16b) that changing one's name is one of the things that tears up a person's decree.



(ל) התועלת התשיעי הוא בדעות, והוא להודיע שאי אפשר לאדם שישיג מהות השכל הפועל כמו שחשבו זה קצת הקודמים. וזהו שאמר לו המלאך: 'למה זה תשאל לשמי' (בראשית לב, ל), כמו שביארנו. וכבר ביארנו אמיתת זה בראשון מספר מלחמות ה' (פרק יא).


10) The ninth benefit is in hashkafa, and it is to show that it is impossible for a person to grasp the essence of the Active Intellect, as some of the earlier thinkers believed. And that is what the angel said to him: 'Why do you ask for my name?' (Genesis 32:30), as we explained. And we have already explained the truth of this in the first book of the Wars of the Lord (Chapter 11).

(כה-לג) התועלת העשירי הוא להודיע מעלת יעקב. וזה, שכבר התקרבה מדרגתו למדרגת המלאך עד שנדמה לו שיאבק עימו. עם שיש במה שנשאר לו מהרושם מזאת הנבואה פרסום לאמיתת זאת הנבואה; וזה, שכבר נמצא צולע על ירכו כשהקיץ. ולזאת הסיבה נצטוינו שלא לאכול גיד הנשה אשר על כף הירך, כדי שיתפרסם לנו ענין זאת הנבואה הנפלאה; עם שיש בזה גם כן רושם להאמתת ענין הנבואה אשר היא פינה מפינות התורה, וזה, שאם לא ייאמן בנבואה תפול התורה בכללה.


(25-33) The tenth benefit is to reveal the merit of Jacob. And this, that his rank had already approached the rank of an angel to the point that he thought he could wrestle with him. With what impression he had left of that prophesy, he publicized the truth of that prophesy; and that he was already lame in his thigh when he woke up. And for this reason, we were commanded not to eat the sciatic nerve, which is on the hip, so that the significance of this wonderful prophesy would be made known to us; together with the fact there is also an impression here to verify the truth of the prophesy, which is one of the corners of the Torah. This is because if one does not believe in prophesy, the Torah as a whole will fall.

Al Bamoseinu Chalalim - Chiloni Pioneers And Soldiers: Ba-yomim Ha-heim Ba-zman Ha-zeh #2

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