The Root Of Unhappiness
Parshas Ki Savo
Posted on September 2, 2020 (5780) By Rabbi
Yochanan Zweig | Series: Rabbi
Zweig on the Parsha | Level: Intermediate Beginner
“Because you did not serve
Hashem, your G-d, with happiness and goodness of heart, when you had everything
in abundance”(28:47)
The Torah attributes all
of the horrific curses which will befall Bnei Yisroel to not serving Hashem
with happiness. The complaint is not that we will not serve Hashem, rather,
although we will serve Him, the stress is upon the fact that it will not be
done with happiness. Citing the Zohar, the Ramban teaches that the admonition
in this week’s parsha refers to the period of the second Beis Hamikdash through
its destruction and the subsequent exile.1
The Talmud states that the
second Beis Hamikdash was destroyed because of “sinas chinam” – “baseless
hatred”.2 This would appear to contradict the reason
offered by the Torah, that the destruction was precipitated by Bnei Yisroel’s
not serving Hashem with happiness. How do we reconcile this contradiction?
The Torah attests to the
fact that we were unhappy, even though we had everything. This is mirrored by
the contemporary phenomena which finds a high percentage of depressed and
disenchanted people to be those who enjoy success and high social standing. Why
do people who apparently have everything that life has to offer, still exhibit
a lack of happiness?
A person can only be truly
happy if he appreciates what Hashem has given him. However, if a person is
egocentric, considering himself deserved of all that he has, he will not be
content by that which is already his; rather, he will be focused on those
things which are not yet his, but to which he feels entitled. If a person goes
through life with the attitude that everyone owes him, he will constantly be
miserable, never satisfied with what he has. Furthermore, since he feels he is
entitled to everything that he desires, a person who has something he desires
becomes an immediate threat to him. He begins loathing that person for no
reason other than the perception he maintains that that person is withholding
from him an object which should rightfully be his. It is this type of loathing
that the Talmud defines as baseless hatred.
Consequently, baseless
hatred can be traced back at its inception to our lack of appreciation for what
Hashem has done and continues to do for us. Therefore, sinas chinam is not a
different reason than the reason offered by the Torah as to what precipitated
the destruction of the Temple; it is a manifestation of being unhappy when
serving Hashem.
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