Laughing
All the Way to the Bank
Parshas Eikev
Posted on August 7, 2020 (5780) By Rabbi Label
Lam | Series: Dvar
Torah | Level: Beginner
…and you will say to
yourself, “My strength and the might of my hand that has accumulated this
wealth for me.” But you must remember the Lord your G-d, for it is He that
gives you strength to make wealth, in order to establish His covenant which He
swore to your forefathers, as it is this day. (Devarim 8:18)
There is a very grave
danger, and perhaps the greatest danger that is highlighted and emphasized, and
hammered time and time again. What is that gravest of all dangers? Forgetting
about HASHEM! We are all at risk and at all times regardless of the external
condition in which we find ourselves.
The Ramchal gives this
description of the human condition; “Thus, we see that man is truly placed in
the midst of a raging battlefield. For all matters of this world, whether for
the good or for the bad, are trials for a man; Poverty from one side or wealth
from the other. This is as Shlomo said: “Lest I be satiated, and deny You, and
say, Who is G-d? or lest I be poor, and steal…” (Prov.30:9). Tranquility on the
one hand and suffering on the other… until the battle is being waged against
him from the front and from behind!”
What looks like the worst
situation may actually be the best and the best the worst. It matters more what
we do with each of the ever changing circumstances of life. There was a book written about tennis called,
“The Inner Game”. This is what matters most. Does my inner response to
whatever the surroundings bring me closer or farther away from HASHEM?! That is
the question!
There’s an odd expression
that goes like this, “Nothing fails like success!” I think that maybe now we
cannot understand it from this angle. Wealth may even be a bigger test than
poverty, although we have been crying out for generations now, “TEST ME!”
Looking at the landscape of many materially successful Jewish people in the
last few decades, we would have to wonder if wealth brought enough of them and
their families closer to HASHEM. No one can know! Everyone can ponder!
The Sefer Orchas Tzadikim
outlines three reasons why a person might be treated to wealth in this world
and then he provides a sign, a way of telling which of these reasons most
likely applies. Someone might become rich as 1) a punishment 2) a test or 3) a
blessing.
What might indicate that
it is a punishment? The person’s suffering and perhaps even his ultimate demise
is because of all that money. He falls out of harmony with his children or his
wife or his friends.
He takes on new habits of
indulgence that eventually are the cause of death. How often do we hear about
people who were stricken with “sudden wealth syndrome” for having won the
lottery or getting a giant signing bonus and not only does the money not solve
their problems, it amplifies them by millions.
A husband and wife
janitorial team, married and working together for 40 years win the lottery and
what happens!? Two years and two wives later he falls of his yacht with a high
alcohol and drug content in veins in what the police are calling, based upon
insufficient evidence, an accident.
What would show that it is
a test? He cannot spend on himself or anybody else either. He is paralyzed with
fear of losing the sum. He obsesses on his investments and lives a miserly
existence.
He cannot give charity and
neither can he gives himself permission to splurge on himself. The money holds
him more than he holds the money.
How does one know if
wealth is given as a blessing? He is busy using his wealth to accomplish more
and more good for himself and others. He hires an assistant to watch his
affairs so he can spend more time learning.
He actively seeks out
Tzedaka and Mitzvah opportunities in which he can happily invest without
expecting returns in this world. With this attitude he rejoices as someone who
is truly laughing all the way to the bank!
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