Let Us
Make Man
Parshas Bereishis
Posted on October 11, 2023 (5784) By Rabbi
Naftali Reich | Series: Legacy | Level: Beginner
Why would the Creator need
any help to complete the work of creation? Surely, the One who formed the world
out of nothingness, who created all the hosts of the heavens and the teeming
life of the earth, was perfectly capable of creating anything He chose to
create. And yet, on the seventh day of creation, He said, “Naaseh adam. Let
us make man.” Whose help was He seeking? And why?
The Sages explain that Hashem was consulting with the angels, inviting
their participation in the process of creating mankind. Although He obviously
did not need their participation, Hashem was
teaching us to be sensitive to protocol and proper behavior. Before undertaking
a major project, consult with others.
The questions, however,
continue to baffle. The angels were created on the third day, yet Hashem did not consult with them until the sixth
day when He created mankind. Why didn’t he invite their input when He was
creating the mountains and the valleys, the tress and the flowers, the animals
and the fishes?
The commentators explain
that the creation of mankind was indeed the most appropriate setting for
teaching the lessons of proper etiquette. How do we measure the worth of a person?
On the one hand, every
person is infinitely valuable, worthy of having the entire universe created for
his sake, as the Sages tell us. On the other hand, there are people who are
undoubtedly a disgrace to their purpose and design.
How then do we evaluate a
person? We see if he is attuned to others or if he is totally egocentric. Only
a person who recognizes that there is much to be learned from the knowledge and
experience of his peers, who is sensitive to the feelings and sensibilities of
others, truly has the potential for growth and fulfillment as a sublime human
being.
Therefore, it was in the
context of the creation of man that Hashem teaches
us this important lesson. A tree is a tree and a flower is a flower no matter
what, but a human being who has no use for other people’s advice is not much of
a human being. He is not a mensch.
A young lady came to seek the
advice of a great sage.
“I am so confused,” she
said. “I have many suitors who have asked my hand in marriage. They all have
such fine qualities, and I simply cannot make up my mind. What shall I do?”
“Tell me about their
qualities,” said the sage.
“Well, they are all
handsome and well-established. I enjoy their company, they are so entertaining.
Why, I can sit and listen
to any of them for hours and hours.”
The sage shook his head.
“These are not the qualities you should be seeking. It is all good and well if
a man is handsome and wealthy, but does he have a good character? Is he a fine
person? As for their being so entertaining, it is far more important that your
husband be a good listener than a good talker. Look for a fine man who knows
how to listen. He will bring you happiness.”
In our own lives, we must
learn to differentiate between self-confidence, which is an admirable quality,
and egotism, which is not. It
is all good and well to believe in one’s own talents and abilities. The truly
wise person, however, knows that all people have limitations, and there is
always someone of value to be learned from other people. And even in situations
where other people do not have anything worthwhile to contribute, the wise
person will be sensitive to their feelings and make them feel involved and
helpful. If we can find it in ourselves to overcome our egotistic
tendencies and behave in the sublime manner of which human beings are capable,
we will reap not only spiritual rewards but material and emotional rewards as
well.
Reality
Check
Parshas Bereishis
Posted on October 11, 2023 (5784) By Rabbi
Pinchas Avruch | Series: Kol
HaKollel | Level: Beginner
Adam was placed in the
Garden of Eden with but one command to follow: do not eat from the Tree of
Knowledge of Good and Bad. When the snake came to entice Chava (Eve) to eat
from it, he steered the focus to the one forbidden tree by inquiring if G-d had forbidden eating from ALL of the trees.
“The woman said to the snake, ‘Of the fruit of any tree of the garden we may
eat. Of the fruit of the tree in the center of the garden G-d has said, “You shall neither eat of it nor
touch it, lest you die.”‘” (Beraishis/Genesis 3:2-3) Indeed, G-d had never said anything about touching it. Rashi explains that the snake pushed Chava
against the tree and she suffered no harm, to which the snake responded, “Just
as you did not die when you touched the tree, nothing will happen when you eat
from it.” Rashi notes
that her effort to embellish G-d’s command led to its diminishment.
But why did her coerced
contact with the fruit convince her that eating was without risk? After all, G-d does not hold people accountable for violations
of the Divine will caused by outside forces. Sifsai Chachamim (super commentary
on Rashi by Rabbi Shabsai Bass, 1641-1718)
clarifies that Chava, in her effort to understand the punishing power of the
fruit, rationalized that the fruit was toxic, from which she assumed that the
toxins killed by any contact, internal or external. She was so invested in this
rationale, concludes Sifsai Chachamim, that when touching the fruit caused no
harm, she concluded that there must be no poison – G-d must not
have been forthright in his warning, just as the snake told her – and,
therefore, nothing would come of eating it.
How could Chava make such
an egregious error? She knew that G-d said
nothing about toxins, that it was her own assumption, contrived to make sense
of the situation, and that she further invented the danger of any – even
accidental – contact. When she saw that she did not die, she should simply have
realized that her hypotheses were WRONG. How did she suppose that G-d was not truthful in His warning such that
she felt free to eat without fear of consequence?
Rabbi Alter Henach
Leibowitz (Rosh Yeshiva/Dean of Yeshiva Chofetz Chaim in Kew
Gardens Hills, New York) observes the destructive power of haughtiness and
unbridled self assuredness.
Chava was so confident in
her comprehension of the tree’s power that the undoing of her assessment
discredited the ENTIRE warning, to the point she lost faith in the basic Divine
caveat to refrain from eating. So great is the challenge of recognizing and
admitting one’s own failings that the normal human reaction is cognitive
dissonance, the unwitting manufacture of a preposterous fact pattern in the
simple effort to lend credence to – and avoid retraction of – one’s original
assumptions. Chava could believe G-d was less
than truthful, eat from the tree, and introduce death to the world, but she
could not be wrong.
True humility is difficult
to attain, but the Mishna (Eduyos 5,6) advises
that it is better for one to be called a fool by his peers for his entire life
than be construed as evil by G-d for one
moment.
Orchos Tzadikim clarifies
the corrosive nature of pride. G-d Himself
warned us (Devarim/ Deuteronomy 8,14) that haughtiness causes such self
overconfidence that one eventually forgets G-d and His
role in guiding our daily affairs. With this comes dereliction to mitzvos (Divine
commandments) and laziness toward chesed (kindness)
opportunities, because his primary focus is himself. Conversely, continues
Orchos Tzadikim, humility is the root of Divine service, because it is the
recognition that our strengths and weaknesses, our successes and failures, are
all ours as gifts from the Orchestrator of the Universe. Humility does
not mean denying our talents. It means accepting that we are not the true
source of those talents; accepting that the true source gave us those talents
so we may fulfill a mission; and accepting that with those talents came a
number of flaws, too.
Life is about choices. One
of G-d’s greatest gifts to us is our freedom to choose…and one of our most
important choices is: Whose will do I serve? Whose mission plan do I follow?
Who is really “number one”? G-d or I?
Have a Good Shabbos!
Eve of
Life
Parshas Bereishis
Posted on October 11, 2023 (5784) By Rabbi
Mordechai Kamenetzky | Series: Drasha| Level: Beginner
Doom and despair and
destruction. It all happened so fast after the promises of an idyllic life.
And all from two bites of
the forbidden fruit. Man, who was promised eternal bliss in the Garden of Eden
is now cursed with a plethora of misfortunes. He must toil by the sweat of his
brow, work an earth that will produce thorn and thistle. His wife must bear the
pain of childbirth with all its physiological implications. All these are
crowned with the most powerful malediction that “you are of dust and to dust
you shall return”.
But it seems that Adam
takes all the news in proper perspective. In the verse that immediately follows
the curses, Adam does not spread blame or lament his fate. He continues
developing civilization exactly where he left off. Prior to his meeting Eve and
partaking of the forbidden fruit, Adam began classifying all living things with
names that appropriately described their attributes. After the curses he continues.
He names his wife.
“Adam called his wife
Chava because she was the mother of all life.” (Genesis 3:20)
Isn’t it unsuitable for
Adam to name his wife Chava — the mother of all life — immediately following
the curse of death? What message is the Torah sending us with that
juxtaposition?
Rav Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev was known for his love
and good will toward his fellow Jews always trying to assess the good in people
rather than expose the bad.
Once on the Fast of Tish’a
B’av he saw a Jew eating in a non-kosher restaurant.
He tapped lightly on the window of the establishment and summoned the man
outside.
“Perhaps you forgot that
today is a fast day?” Rav Levi Yitzchok queried.
“No, Rebbe,” the man replied.
“Then perhaps you did not
realize that this restaurant in not kosher.”
“No, Rebbe, I know it is a traife (non-kosher) eatery.”
Rav Levi Yitzchok softly placed his hands on the man’s
shoulders and looked heavenward. “Ribbono Shel Olam, Master of the Universe,”
he exclaimed. “Look at how wonderful your children are. They may be eating on a
fast day. In a non-kosher restaurant to boot. Yet
they refuse to emit a falsehood from their lips!”
Adam heard the curse
bestowed upon himself, his wife, and humanity for eternity. His immediate
reaction was not scorn or criticism. He named his wife Chava, derived from the
word life. He viewed the woman whom he had once blamed for his downfall with a
different perspective. He saw only the eve of life — and thus named her so. After
tragedy and defeat there is enough blame to share and spread. Adam picked up
the pieces and cherished the beauty of what was left.
He did not see himself on
the eve of destruction. He saw himself standing at the dawn of life. And he
appreciated that life dearly.
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