Chapter 3: Mishna 1: Part 3
We are taught in Berachoth (5a): Rebbe Levi bar Nachmani said in
the name of Reish Lakish: A person should always provoke the yetzer
hatov (good inclination) [to do battle] against the yetzer harah, as it
is written “Tremble, and sin not”(Tehillim 4:5). (The word for
“tremble” in the text is “rigzu,” which has a root similar to the word
which means to provoke and make angry.) If the yetzer harah leaves him
alone, well and good. If it doesn't, he should involve himself in
Torah, as it is written (ibid.) “…introspect…”. If it leaves him alone,
well and good. If not, he should recite Kriyath Shmah, as it is written
(ibid.) “…upon your bed…” (alluding to the Shmah, which is recited
before sleeping each night). If it leaves him alone, well and good. If
not, he should remind himself of the day of death, as it is written
(ibid.) “be completely still, selah” (alluding to death).
The explanation of this section is as follows. A person is always
supposed to work to have his yetzer hatov overpower his yetzer harah.
If his yetzer harah is so strong that he can't prevail over it, then he
should recite Kriyath Shmah. The reason for this is that Kriyath Shmah
is the declaration of the unity of G-d, while the yetzer harah, which
stands in opposition to the yetzer hatov, has power over man only
through the existence of a duality of forces. With the establishment of
the absolute unity of G-d, no force can exist which deviates from the
Divine will. It is for this reason that at the end of days, when “G-d
will be [recognized as] One, and His Name will be One,” the yetzer harah
will be completely eliminated. (See Sukkah 52a, where we are taught
that at the end of days G-d will bring the yetzer harah and slaughter
it.) The yetzer harah exists due to the [perceived] fragmentation of
reality , while the unity of G-d eliminates any deviation from that
unity.
If the recital of Kriyath Shmah doesn't work to neutralize the
yetzer harah, since in this material world there is a duality of forces,
and it will only be at the end of days that the yetzer harah will be
eliminated, then a person should involve himself in Torah [study]. The
reason this can be effective is that Torah is the complete emancipation
from the yetzer harah, and the yetzer harah cannot exert any control
within a system of Torah. This principle is extracted from the verse
"…(and the script was) engraved on the tablets" (Shemoth 32:16), from
which the Rabbis made a drasha "Don't read it as 'engraved' ('charuth,'
which is way the word is pronounced), but rather read it as
'emancipated' ('heiruth', which is spelled the same way, and means
freedom from the Angel of Death)"(Avoth Ch.6, Mishna 3). And we are
taught that the Angel of Death is the yetzer harah. (See T.B. Avodah
Zarah 5a and Bava Bathra 16a.) Torah is such an elevated reality that
the power of the yetzer harah cannot impact upon it. (See Kiddushin 30b
about the power of the yetzer harah and the remedies to counteract that
power.)
We have explained a number of times (see our comments on the Maharal's
introduction to Derech Chaim) that the yetzer harah, as represented by
the "satan" can only attach itself to the material dimension of
existence. But the Torah is freedom from this deficiency which exists in
the physical creation, and is the essence of emancipation. Therefore,
man is advised to involve himself in Torah.
(We have mentioned before that the yetzer harah is caused by in
man’s insecurities, which are a product of his material dimension and
physicality. It is exactly this physicality, which is finite, that is
the source of death. It is the attempt to escape from this limitation
which enables the yetzer harah to drive man to compulsive behaviors.
Man's spiritual dimension is not limited by any physicality, and it is
not vulnerable to the yetzer harah and the Angel of Death. When man's
existence is built on the Torah, living his life in a spiritual
dimension, he transcends the limitations of his physicality, and he can
insulate himself from the destructive forces of the yetzer harah. This
does not mean that man doesn't operate in the material world. Rather,
every interaction with the material world is perceived as a spiritual
activity. This neutralizes the insecurities that grow out of the limits
of his physical existence, which is the source of the power of the
yetzer harah,.)
If his involvement in Torah does not work in alleviating the yetzer
harah, because the drives of the yetzer harah are exerting such a strong
control on him through his physicality, he should remind himself of the
day of his death, when he will return to dust. The primary goal of the
yetzer harah is bring man to sin, causing him to be banished from the
world, and when man is focused on the day of his death, the yetzer harah
leaves him alone. As we have explained before (see our explanation to
Ch. 2 Mishna 2, especially parts 2-3, and what we wrote in part 1 of
this Mishna) the yetzer harah is the force of destruction attempting to
bring man to a state of non-existence. Man is susceptible to this force
specifically when he feels that he has a stable and accomplished
existence. This arrogance is exactly what triggers the quest of the
yetzer harah to banish him to a state non-existence. When man is
conscious of the day of his death, aware of the tenuous nature of his
existence, then the yetzer harah's power is weakened, since there is no
stable existence to attack and undermine. King David is the paradigm of
one with a complete lack of any arrogance (as evidenced in so many of
the chapters in Tehillim), and we are taught (Avodah Zarah 4b) that King
David's sin with Batsheva was not part of his nature, as it is written
"…and my heart has died within me," indicating that the yetzer harah was
not expected to have any control over him. (Rashi explains that the
"heart" is representative of his desires and yetzer harah, and its
"death" implies King David’s complete ability to control it.)
We are taught to contemplate three things in order that we not come
to the hands of sin. When one sees that he has come from a putrefied
drop, he realizes that man’s origin lacks any importance. When one sees
to where he is going, ending in a place of dirt, maggots and worms, he
realizes that his end also has no significance. When his origin has no
significance, and his conclusion is of no importance, his arrogance is
completely eliminated. If he had a dimension of importance in his
origin, even if his conclusion lacked importance; or if his conclusion
was one of significance, even if his origin lacked any significance; in
either case the person could have a feeling of self-importance and
arrogance (creating an environment conducive to the yetzer harah). But
since both his origin and his conclusion are states of insignificance,
the yetzer harah is eliminated completely. The yetzer harah exists only
when the person considers himself a creation of independent importance.
You should not make the mistake of thinking that the realization of
man’s insignificance as a putrefied seed should lead to him to despair
of any positive accomplishments. The opposite is true. Rather than
being discouraged from doing mitzvoth, this realization can motivate him
to elevate himself from his lowly origins and transform himself into a
creation of importance by doing mitzvoth.
We see clearly in these words of the Maharal that the recognition
of one's insignificant origin and conclusion in no way contradicts the
need for man to have high self-esteem. The "feeling of importance" that
the Maharal views as such a negative force refers to human arrogance.
When a person realizes that his entire existence is built on his
responsibilities to fulfill his unique role in the Divine plan, and this
is the foundation of his existence, this creates humility while building
tremendous self-esteem. What could be more important than being a major
player in the Divine plan! Under these circumstances, there is no room
for the yetzer harah to divert man into destructive activities.)
When King David writes (Tehillim 51:7) "Behold in iniquity was I
fashioned, and in sin did my mother conceive me" (implying that man's
innate nature is one tending to lust and sin) this is not a
justification to sin, but rather an apology and explanation for having
sinned. Since his nature is a material one, rooted in lust, man is
susceptible to sin, and it is proper for G-d not to be too exacting in
judgement. But this material nature is certainly not a justification to
allow sin. Rather, it should motivate him to elevate himself and not
remain in such a lowly state.
Similarly, when Iyov says (Iyov 14:1) "Man, born of woman, has a short
life, filled with anxiety…" his intention is to mitigate the strictness
of G-d's judgment if and when man sins, but certainly not to present a
justification for man to sin, Heaven forbid. Rather, he was praying
that G-d would not exact strict judgment for man’s sins, given man’s
inherent limitations.
Contemplating the three things taught in the Mishna will save us
from the yetzer harah, which is the cause and source of sin. If we are
insulated from the yetzer harah, the natural result is that there is no
sinful activity. The intention of "From where did you come? From a
putrefied drop. To where are you going? To a place of dirt, maggots and
worms," refers to man's physical dimension, where the yetzer harah
resides and which seeks sin. Therefore, when man contemplates the fact
that this physical dimension, which is the source of the yetzer harah,
has no real importance, the yetzer harah will evaporate. It is true that
man will ultimately stand before G-d and give an accounting (implying
that man's existence has significance and staying power) but this is
only at the time of the resurrection of the dead. While man's body
lives, the origin of that life is from a putrefied drop (implying no
enduring significance to the physical dimension of man).
The class is taught by Rabbi Shaya Karlinsky,
Dean of Darche Noam Institutions, Yeshivat
Darche Noam/Shapell's and Midreshet Rachel for Women.