Parshios Tazria & Metzorah
Who Is The Man Who Wants To PRESERVE Life?
These divrei Torah were adapted from the hashkafa portion of Rabbi
Yissocher Frand's Commuter Chavrusah Tapes on the weekly portion:
Tape# 765 - How Many Mitzvos of Sefira Are There. Good Shabbos!
There is a famous Medrash on Parshas Metzorah which tells of a peddler who
used to travel around the cities near Tzipori proclaiming that he was
selling the "Elixir of Life" (sam Chayim). Crowds used to gather around him
to hear more about the product. Rav Yannai also overheard this proclamation
and asked the peddler to come over and sell him some of what he was offering.
The peddler told Rav Yannai "You and people like you do not need what I am
selling." Rav Yannai persisted and insisted he wanted to know what the
peddler was selling. The peddler came over, pulled a book of Psalms out of
his pocket and showed Rav Yannai the pasuk, "Who is the man who wants life,
who loves days of seeing good?... Guard your tongue from speaking evil and
your lips from speaking deceit." [Tehillim 34: 13-14]
Rav Yannai responded, "All my life I read this pasuk and I did not realize
how to interpret it until this peddler came along and taught me who the man
is who desires life!"
The problem with the Medrash is obvious. One does not need to be Rav Yannai
to figure out what this pasuk is saying. One can be a simple Jew who knows
basic Hebrew. What was so novel about the peddler's interpretation that Rav
Yannai found to be so revolutionary?
The Chida offers a novel interpretation of the Medrash based on a careful
analysis of the words of the peddler. The peddler did not say "Who wants
life?" Rather, he advertised his wares by saying "Who wants 'Sam Chaim' (the
Elixir of Life)? The Chida suggests that the word 'Sam' (literally drugs or
medicine) teaches a great novelty. It would not be anything out of the
ordinary to teach that if one wants Life, he should observe Torah and mitzvos.
When a person has a tremendous amount of grain, what protects it from being
spoiled? There are certain preservatives that may be added to make sure that
the grain does not rot. This is the way it is for all foods. Today we have
foods that have long shelf-lives because of preservatives, but the basic
concept is an idea that goes back centuries in time. The novelty of the
peddler's sales pitch was that he had the secret for PRESERVING life.
The Chovos HaLevovos teaches something that should give us all tremendous pause:
One day we will all go to the Heavenly Court for the great accounting of how
we lived our lives. On that frightening day, we will be shown an accounting
of all the mitzvos we did during our lives and all the sins we committed. On
that day, we will apparently find mistaken entries in the Heavenly Journal.
We will find sins that we did not commit attributed to us and we will see
mitzvos that we did perform missing from our accounting. Likewise, we will
find ourselves receiving credit for mitzvos that we know for a fact we never
did!
We will protest. We never did these things! G-d will explain to us why
mitzvos we never performed are recorded: "This mitzvah was done by someone
who slandered you." The way the Heavenly System works is that a person
forfeits his own mitzvos to the person about whom he spoke Lashon Harah.
This is a very difficult concept to understand. Were this idea not cited by
the likes of the Chovos HaLevovos, we might question it. The frightening
downside of the system is that not only do we get "free mitzvos" done by
those who slandered us, but by the same token, we may lose mitzvos that we
spent the better part of our life trying to accomplish, when they are
transferred to those about whom we spoke Lashon Hara. We will furthermore
have their sins transferred to us!
Rav Yosef Karo had – in his lifetime – many detractors (as was the case with
many great men in Jewish history). It was said that an Angel came to learn
with him on a regular basis and the Angel told him not to worry about his
detractors because eventually he would wind up with the mitzvos done by all
of his detractors!
The Chovos Levovos writes, "If people were aware of this Heavenly System,
they would rejoice when someone spoke Lashon Hara against them, instead of
being upset!"
The Chida explains that this very idea is what the peddler taught Rabbi
Yannai. Guarding one's tongue from speaking evil is the medicine that
PRESERVEs life. Rav Yannai had thought the intent of the pasuk was teaching
that guarding one's tongue is a way to ACQUIRE life – i.e. – a person gets
reward for it like for any other mitzvah. However, the peddler taught him
that even someone who has earned great reward stands to lose it by speaking
evil. The great novelty of guarding one's lips is that it is a PRESERVATIVE.
It is the Elixir which keeps one's reward from being transferred to someone
else!
Ethics of The Fathers: Chapter 2, Mishna 5
The Mishna teaches, "Do not have confidence in yourself until the day you die."
Rabbeinu Ovadya Bartenura connects this Mishna with the famous Gemara that
states that Yochanan the High Priest served in that office for 80 years and
at the end of his life became a Sadducee [Brochos 29a].
However, the Vizhnitzer Rebbe raises a contradiction between this Mishna and
the Gemara in Yoma 38b: Rav Yochanan states that if a person passes the
midpoint of his life without having sinned, he will no longer sin. (The
Gemara implies that if a person has lived the majority of his life and has
dealt successfully with all of life's challenges, he may rest assured that
he will not stumble spiritually in his later years.)
To reconcile these two sources, the Vizhnitzer Rebbe states that our Mishna
in Avos is not speaking about mitzvos and aveiros. Rather, it means that a
person should never say "I think I have done enough in my lifetime. It is
time to sit back and rest on my laurels."
In the United States of America, a person can retire at 66, but when it
comes to Divine Service and to one's obligations as a Jew – in other words,
when it comes to the very purpose of our life that we were put here for – we
should not be confident in our accomplishments until the day we die. "I have
done enough already" is not a Jewish attitude.
I always find a great ethical lesson in the life of Rav Yosef Breuer, zt"l.
When Rav Breuer came to the United States at the end of the 1940s, he was
already 60 years old. He had lived a very accomplished life until that
point. He was the Rav of the community in Frankfurt, Germany. He came to a
new country at age 60 and did not know the language or the culture of his
new home. He could have had the attitude "I am going to retire early." That
must have been a tremendous temptation. Yet, at that age he founded a
community that became one of the finest Jewish Kehillos in the entire world.
This is an example of "Do not be confident (in your prior accomplishments)
until the day you die." It is scary that if Rav Breuer would have taken the
tempting attitude of "I have done enough already" and lived out his life in
retirement for the next 30 years, he would have come to the Heavenly Court
after 120 years and they would have asked him: Where is the Kehilla in
Washington Heights? Where is KAJ? Where is the Samson Rafael Hirsch Yeshiva?
Where is the KAJ Kashrus Organization? Where is all of that? He would have
said "What are you talking about? I was 60 years old. Give me a break!"
This is the teaching of "Do not be confident in yourself until the day you
die." You must continue until they take you away. All other jobs may have
mandatory retirement ages, but not Yiddishkeit. Divine Service does not have
a retirement age.
This write-up is adapted from the hashkafa portion of Rabbi Yissocher
Frand's Commuter Chavrusah Torah Tapes on the weekly Torah Portion. The
halachic topics covered for the current week's portion in this series are:
Tape # 007 - Self-Defense
Tape # 051 - Moser: The Dilemma of the Jewish IRS Agent
Tape # 094 - Hallel on Yom Ha'Atzmaut?
Tape # 142 - Eyeglasses in Halacha
Tape # 189 - Mikveh: Tevillah and Chaziza
Tape # 279 - Women's Testimony in Hilchos Niddah
Tape # 325 - The Microscope in Halacha
Tape # 369 - Bris Millah That Causes Chilul Shabbos
Tape # 413 - Speaking Lashon Horah on Baalei Machlokes
Tape # 457 - Getting an Aliyah After Childbirth
Tape # 501 - Milah and the Sick Baby
Tape # 545 - Dangerous Medical Procedures
Tape # 589 – Pidyon Haben – Daytime or Night?
Tape # 633 – Lashon Harah and Lashon HaTov
Tape # 677 - Tallis Koton -- Wool or Cotton?
Tape # 721 – Eruv Pesach – Mores Special Than You Think
Tape # 765 – How Many Mitzvos of Sefira Are There?
Tape # 809 – Netilas Yadayim – Things You Never Knew
Tape # 853 – Mila on Shabbos: Fascinating Questions
Tape # 897 – Insights Into Sefiras Ha'Omer
Tape # 942 – Kiddush Hashem – Is Everyone Obligated?
Tape # 984 – "What's Tonight's Sefira?" and other Sefira Issues
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