and you need Talmud too

My grandfather wrote in one of his maamarim: It is necessary to study some of the Written Torah daily with Rashi, for his commentaries are the t'rumot - the select - of the interpretations of our Sages.

...and at the very least everyone must study a tractate of Talmud each year

yom yom Adar Sheini 18

you need mitzvos

Study alone doesn't cut it because the divine light can only enter where there is nullification and for that you need mitzvos. From Chabad.org

 "When even one person applies himself diligently to Torah study, the Shechinah is with him,”meaning, in this case, that the Shechinah rests upon his divine soul, and upon its faculties of thought and speech which are engaged in the mental and oral study of the Torah. However, in order to draw the light and radiation of the Shechinah upon his body and animal soul as well, i.e., upon the vitalizing soul actually clothed in the body and providing for it a corporeal life-force, one must fulfill the practical mitzvot (i.e., commandments involving the faculty of action), which are performed with the body itself."



והנה ביאור משל זה שהמשיל אור השכינה לאור הנר
The meaning of this analogy comparing the light of the Shechinah to the light of a candle, “is clear... to every intelligent person,” as the Alter Rebbe will conclude shortly, after a closer examination of its details. Just as it is true of the candle’s flame
שאינו מאיר ונאחז בפתילה בלי שמן
that it does not shed light nor is it retained by the wick, without oil,
By nature, fire strains upward; it will not remain below unless restrained by a wick or wood, for example. But a wick alone is rapidly consumed, and the fire vanishes quickly. Moreover, the burning wick produces a dim and smoky light, for it consists of material insufficiently refined to be completely absorbed by the flame. Oil, on the other hand, is completely transformed into the flame and absorbed by it; burning steadily, it produced a pure and clear light.
This is what is meant by the Alter Rebbe’s statement that without oil “the flame of the candle (a) does not shed light, (b) nor is it retained by the wick.”
Returning now to the point of the analogy:
וכך אין השכינה שורה על גוף האדם שנמשל לפתילה, אלא על ידי מעשים טובים דווקא
similarly, the Shechinah does not rest upon man’s body, which is compared to a wick, except through man’s performing good deeds.
The body can only act as a wick, not as oil. It is a coarse physical being which will not be absorbed within the light of the Shechinah, but will always remain separate from it. The good deeds that man performs provide the oil.
-ולא די לו בנשמתו, שהיא חלק אלוה ממעל, להיות היא כשמן לפתילה
It is evident from the Zohar, however, that one’s soul, although a part of G‑d above, is insufficient to serve as oil for the wick.
A question is implied here. Why should the soul, itself divine, and thus certainly suited to being absorbed within the light of the Shechinah, require anything external (such as good deeds) to serve as oil for that light? Surely the soul itself should constitute the oil!
מבואר ומובן לכל משכיל
But the reason for this — the Alter Rebbe now concludes the sentence begun earlier with the words “The meaning of this analogy” — is clear and understandable to every intelligent person.
The Alter Rebbe will now proceed to explain why good deeds can serve as oil for the light of the Shechinah,whereas the divine soul cannot. The explanation in brief:
Man’s soul is not, after all, completely nullified before G‑d and one with Him to the extent that it is capable of becoming absorbed within the G‑dly light. This is true even of the soul of the tzaddik, who serves G‑d with the loftiest forms of love and fear. Indeed, it is the soul’s very love of G‑d that emphasizes its separateness; for love entails two separate entities, the lover and the beloved. Similarly with fear: there is one who fears, and another who is feared.
Only “good deeds” — mitzvot, which (as the Alter Rebbe will explain further on) are completely one with G‑d — can therefore serve as the oil which is absorbed within the flame of the light of the Shechinah that is kindled over man.
In the Alter Rebbe’s words:
כי הנה, נשמת האדם, אפילו הוא צדיק גמור, עובד ה׳ ביראה ואהבה בתענוגים
For the soul of man, even if he be a perfect tzaddik who serves G‑d with fear and “love of delights” i.e., his love consists of delighting in the experience of G‑dliness — a most lofty form of love,
אף על פי כן אינה בטילה במציאות לגמרי ליבטל וליכלל באור ה׳ ממש, להיות לאחדים ומיוחדים ביחוד גמור
is nevertheless not utterly nullified out of existence, so that it might be dissolved into, and absorbed within G‑d’s light, to be merged with it in perfect unity.
רק הוא דבר בפני עצמו, ירא ה׳ ואוהבו
It is, rather, a separate entity, which fears G‑d and loves Him. Since it is not absorbed within G‑dliness as oil is absorbed within a flame, the soul cannot serve as oil for the light of the Shechinah.
מה שאין כן המצות ומעשים טובים, שהן רצונו ית׳
Not so with mitzvot and good deeds, which are G‑d’s Will — each commandment representing G‑d’s desire that a particular act be performed.
ורצונו יתברך הוא מקור החיים לכל העולמות והברואים
Now, G‑d’s Will is the source of life for all the worlds and the creatures — they live only because G‑d so desired.
שיורד אליהם על ידי צמצומים רבים והסתר פנים של רצון העליון ברוך הוא, וירידת המדרגות
The difference between the Divine Will expressed in mitzvot and that same Will as expressed in creation lies in the latter’s descending to them by means of many contractions (tzimtzumim), and by concealment of the “Countenance” i.e., the internal aspect of the Supernal Will, with only the external, superficial, aspect of G‑d’s Will expressing itself in creation, and through a descent from level to level.
עד שיוכלו להתהוות ולהבראות יש מאין ודבר נפרד בפני עצמו, ולא יבטלו במציאות, כנ״ל
All these steps were necessary so that it would be possible for [the worlds and creatures] to come into being and to be created ex nihilo as separate entities, without becoming nullified out of existence, as mentioned above.1 Without the previously enumerated forms of concealment of G‑dliness, all created beings would be so completely nullified before the Divine Will that created them, that they would have no independent identity. Thus the Divine Will expressed in creation can come about only through its seeming contraction, occultation and descent.
מה שאין כן המצות, שהן פנימית רצונו יתברך, ואין שם הסתר פנים כלל
The mitzvot, on the other hand, are the internal aspect of the Divine Will. There the “Countenance” is not hidden at all, for, on the contrary, mitzvot are the underlying purpose (the “inner aspect of will”) of creation in its entirety.
To illustrate by way of example:
One engages in business so that he will realize a profit, and thereby support his family. In all, he wants the business to prosper, wants the profits, and wants to provide for his family. Yet his true, inner will lies only in supporting his family. His desire for profit is merely incidental, “external” to this will, and his desire for business even more so.
So, too, with the Divine Will as expressed in creation and as expressed in the mitzvot. The desire for creation is an external will. It is generated by the inner (i.e., ultimate) desire that Jews observe the mitzvot — obviously an impossibility without a created world.
אין החיות שבהם דבר נפרד בפני עצמו כלל
Because the mitzvot represent G‑d’s true, inner Will, and because in them there is no concealment of this Will (unlike the case in creation), therefore the [G‑dly] life-force within them is by no means a separate entity,
אלא הוא מיוחד ונכלל ברצונו יתברך, והיו לאחדים ממש ביחוד גמור
but is united with and contained within G‑d’s Will, and they (the mitzvot) are truly joined in perfect unity with G‑d’s Will.
It is thus clear why (in the above-mentioned metaphor) the mitzvot can serve as oil for the light of theShechinah: for they are truly absorbed within and transformed into the light of the Divine Will just as oil is absorbed within a flame. (The Alter Rebbe will arrive at this conclusion, after a preliminary discussion on what the Zohar means when it says that the light of the Shechinah “rests” on man. This exposition now follows:)
והנה ענין השראת השכינה
The “resting” of the Shechinah means i.e., when we single out a specific object from a world filled with the Shechinah, by saying that the Divine Presence “rests” upon that object, its uniqueness lies in
הוא גילוי אלקותו יתברך ואור אין סוף ברוך הוא באיזה דבר
the revelation of G‑dliness and the Ein Sof-light in that particular object.
והיינו לומר, שאותו דבר נכלל באור ה׳, ובטל לו במציאות לגמרי
This means to say that this object is comprised within G‑d’s light and is nullified out of existence toward Him (i.e., it has no separate identity);
שאז הוא ששורה ומתגלה בו ה׳ אחד
for [only] then can the One G‑d rest upon it (upon that object) and reveal Himself in it.
אבל כל מה שלא בטל אליו במציאות לגמרי, אין אור ה׳ שורה ומתגלה בו
But anything not completely nullified out of existence toward [the G‑dly light] cannot have G‑d’s light rest and reveal itself within it.
ואף צדיק גמור שמתדבק בו באהבה רבה, הרי לית מחשבה תפיסא ביה כלל באמת
Even a perfect tzaddik, who cleaves to Him with “abundant love” — a most lofty level of love and attachment to G‑d; yet even in the case of such a tzaddik “no thought can truly grasp Him at all.”
כי אמיתת ה׳ אלקים אמת הוא יחודו ואחדותו, שהוא לבדו הוא, ואפס בלעדו ממש
For the true implication of the phrase “G‑d is the true L‑rd,” is His Unity and Oneness, that He alone exists and there is absolutely nothing besides Him.
As explained in ch. 20, the statement “G‑d is one” means (not only that He is the sole G‑d, but also) that He is the only being that truly exists. All else is totally nullified before Him.
ואם כן, זה האוהב, שהוא יש ולא אפס, לית מחשבה דיליה תפיסא ביה כלל
If so, this person i.e., the above-mentioned tzaddik who loves [G‑d] and who is a [separate] “being” in his own self-perception (as is evident from the very fact that he loves G‑d), rather than a “nonentity”, no thought of his can grasp Him at all.
ואין אור ה׳ שורה ומתגלה בו, אלא על ידי קיום המצות שהן רצונו וחכמתו יתברך ממש, בלי שום הסתר פנים
Even the tzaddik cannot grasp G‑d and thereby become one with Him through the faculties of his own soul;therefore G‑d’s light does not abide or manifest itself in him except through the fulfillment of the mitzvot, which constitute His actual Will and Wisdom, without any “concealment of Countenance.”* Since the inner aspect of the Divine Will stands revealed only in the mitzvot, it is only by means of them that the light of the Shechinah rests upon man; not through spiritual devotion alone.
הגהה
וכאשר שמעתי ממורי עליו השלום, פירוש וטעם למה שכתוב בעץ חיים שאור אין סוף אינו מתייחד אפילו בעולם האצילות, אלא על ידי התלבשותו תחלה בספירת חכמה
*NOTE
Concerning his aforementioned statement that the Ein Sof-light reveals itself only within that which is totally nullified before G‑d and absorbed within Him, the Alter Rebbe notes:
This accords with what I heard from my teacher (the Maggid of Mezritch), peace upon him, on the meaning of and the reason behind the statement of the Etz Chayim that the Ein Sof-light does not unite itself even with the World of Atzilut (Emanation) except by first vesting itself in the attribute ofChochmah (Wisdom).
The Maggid (a) explained the meaning of the Ein Sof’s vesting itself in Chochmah; (b) provided the reasonthat it does not unite with Atzilut except by way of Chochmah.
והיינו משום שאין סוף ברוך הוא, הוא אחד האמת, שהוא לבדו הוא, ואין זולתו, וזו היא מדרגת החכמה וכו׳
This is because the Ein Sof is “the true One”; which means that He alone exists, and there is naught besides Him; and this, in fact, is the level of Chochmah.
The attribute of Chochmah represents the perception of G‑dliness as the sole existing being. This, then, is the meaning of the Ein Sof’s “clothing” itself in the attribute of Chochmah: The revelation of Ein Sof as “One alone, with naught besides Him.” And for this reason the Ein Sof does not unite with any world or level except by way of Chochmah; for, as stated above, G‑d abides (“may be united with”) only where there is no sense of self or separation from Him, only in that which is pervaded with the spirit of “He alone... and naught besides him”; and this spirit constitutes the attribute of Chochmah, as stated.
(This note expresses a profound chassidic concept; after further study of the Tanya, we will understand it more clearly.)
END OF NOTE
The Alter Rebbe now returns to our subject of the light of the Shechinah which rests upon man only through the mitzvot (which alone can serve as oil for this light). He points out that the effect of this light upon the person performing a mitzvah, varies from one category of mitzvot to another.
Those mitzvot performed in one’s thought and speech, cause the light of the Shechinah to rest upon the divine soul alone. Drawing this light upon the body and upon the animal soul requires the performance of mitzvot which involve action, where one harnesses the power of the animal, life-giving soul.2 In the Alter Rebbe’s words:
והנה, כשהאדם עוסק בתורה, אזי נשמתו שהיא נפשו האלהית, עם שני לבושיה הפנימים לבדם, שהם כח הדבור ומחשבה
When a person studies Torah, using his powers of thought and speech, his Neshamah, his divine soul with its two inner “garments” only, viz., the faculties of speech and thought*—
Thought is obviously an internal “garment”, as it is connected to the soul itself. This is why thought functions ceaselessly; it is closely bound to the soul, and the soul’s presence is constant. Speech too is internal, when compared with action, which acts upon objects outside the soul.
נכללות באור ה׳ אין סוף ברוך הוא, ומיוחדות בו ביחוד גמור
are absorbed within the light of G‑d the Ein Sof, blessed be He, and are merged within it in perfect unity.
והיא השראת השכינה על נפשו האלקית, כמאמר רז״ל שאפילו אחד שיושב ועוסק בתורה שכינה עמו
This constitutes the “resting of the Shechinah” on his divine soul; as our Sages have said:3“When even one person applies himself diligently to Torah study, the Shechinah is with him,”meaning, in this case, that the Shechinah rests upon his divine soul, and upon its faculties of thought and speech which are engaged in the mental and oral study of the Torah.
אך כדי להמשיך אור והארת השכינה גם על גופו ונפשו הבהמית, שהיא החיונית המלובשת בגופו ממש
However, in order to draw the light and radiation of the Shechinah upon his body and animal soul as well, i.e., upon the vitalizing soul actually clothed in the body and providing for it a corporeal life-force,
צריך לקיים מצות מעשיות הנעשות על ידי הגוף ממש
one must fulfill the practical mitzvot (i.e., commandments involving the faculty of action), which are performed with the body itself.
שאז כח הגוף ממש שבעשיה זו נכלל באור ה׳ ורצונו, ומיוחד בו ביחוד גמור
In this way the actual power of the body engaged in this act e.g., when one dons Tefillin, it is the physical strength in his arm that impels the motions that constitute the fulfillment of the mitzvah; and therefore this bodily power is absorbed in the Divine light and Will, and merges with it in perfect unity.
והוא לבוש השלישי של נפש האלקית
This (power of the body) constitutes the third garment of the divine soul. As mentioned in ch.4, the divine soul expresses itself in the faculty of action through performing the mitzvot.
ואזי גם כח נפש החיונית שבגופו ממש, שמקליפת נוגה
When the faculty of action is absorbed within the Divine Will then in addition the power of the vitalizing soul actually clothed within the body, the power of that soul derived from kelipat nogah,
נתהפך מרע לטוב, ונכלל ממש בקדושה כנפש האלקית ממש
is transformed from evil to good, and is actually absorbed into holiness exactly like the divine soul.
מאחר שהוא הוא הפועל ועושה מעשה המצוה
For it is the [power of the animal soul] that implements and performs the act that constitutes the mitzvah.
True, the divine soul is the force motivating one’s observance of a mitzvah, yet the divine soul cannot directly activate the body to perform a physical action; to don the Tefillin, for example. It can accomplish this only through the agency of the animal soul, which serves as a medium between the divine soul and the body. In the Alter Rebbe’s words:
שבלעדו לא היתה נפש האלקית פועלת בגוף כלל, כי היא רוחניית והגוף גשמי וחומרי
For without this power of the animal soul the divine soul would not affect the body at all, since it is spiritual and the body physical and corporeal, so that body and divine soul are antithetical, as are the spiritual and material dimensions generally.
והממוצע ביניהם היא נפש החיונית הבהמית, המלובשת בדם האדם שבלבו וכל הגוף
The intermediary between them is the vitalizing animal soul clothed in man’s blood, which is in his heart and throughout his body.
For the nature of the animal soul is such that the coarsest, most material-like level of its spiritual substance is capable of clothing itself within the blood.
Since the animal soul is the divine soul’s medium of affecting the body, its active power is also absorbed into holiness when one performs a mitzvah.
ואף שמהותה ועצמותה של נפש הבהמית שבלבו, שהן מדותיה הרעות, עדיין לא נכללו בקדושה
Although the substance and essence of the animal soul, in his heart, i.e., its evil middot (its evil emotional character), have still not been absorbed into holiness,
As explained in ch. 12, only in the case of tzaddikim are the evil middot themselves transformed into holiness. In others, only the animal soul’s garments — its faculties of expression by means of which a mitzvah is accomplished — are absorbed into holiness; not the middot which constitute the animal soul’s essence. Nevertheless, this fact does not prevent the light of the Shechinah from suffusing the entire body, as the Alter Rebbe concludes shortly.
מכל מקום, מאחר דאתכפין לקדושה, ובעל כרחן עונין אמן, ומסכימין ומתרצין לעשיית המצוה
yet, because they (the evil middot) are subjugated to holiness and “against their will they say Amen,” agreeing and acceding to the performance of the mitzvah,
על ידי התגברות נפשו האלהית שבמוח ששליט על הלב
through the strengthening of the divine soul in the brain which masters the heart,
As discussed in ch. 12, although the emotions of the Beinoni have not been transformed into good, he nevertheless has the power to control them by means of his mind, through contemplating G‑d’s greatness. In this way the Beinoni can direct his heart as he chooses, insofar as the actual performance of the mitzvot is concerned.
והן בשעה זו בבחינת גלות ושינה, כנ״ל
and [the evil middot] are, at such time when one exercises the natural mastery of brain over heart by contemplating G‑d’s greatness, in a state of “exile” and “sleep” i.e., impotent as mentioned above in ch. 12,
ולכך אין זו מניעה מהשראת השכינה על גוף האדם בשעה זו
therefore this incorrigible nature of the animal soul’s evil middot does not prevent the Shechinah from resting on one’s body at this time.
The Alter Rebbe now goes on to explain how it is possible for one mitzvah to draw the Shechinah upon one’s entire body.
דהיינו שכח נפש החיונית המלובש בעשיית המצוה
This “resting of the Shechinah” means that the power of the animal soul clothed in the act that constitutes the mitzvah e.g., the power in the hand donning Tefillin
הוא נכלל ממש באור ה׳, ומיוחד בו ביחוד גמור
is actually absorbed into the divine light, and merges with it in perfect unity.
ועל ידי זה ממשיך הארה לכללות נפש החיונית שבכל הגוף, וגם על הגוף הגשמי
Thereby one draws down a “ray” of the light wherein the particular power has been absorbed upon the totality of the animal soul throughout the body, and [upon] the entire body as well.
בבחינת מקיף מלמעלה, מראשו ועד רגליו
This “ray” of divine light illuminates one’s animal soul and his body in a manner of “encompassing from above,” surrounding them from head to foot.
וזהו שכתוב דשכינתא שריא על רישיה, על דייקא
This explains the expression (appearing in the passage from the Zohar quoted at the beginning of this chapter): “The Shechinah rests upon his head,”4 specifically “upon” i.e., encompassing him “from above”;
וכן: אכל בי עשרה שכינתא שריא
and in a similar vein, the expression “upon every [assembly of] ten [Jews] the Divine Presence rests” means that the light of the Divine Presence does not permeate them, but illuminates them “from above.”5
Heretofore, various levels in the “resting of the Shechinah” have been discussed: As it rests upon the divine soul; upon the specific faculty of the animal soul that performs a mitzvah;6 upon the animal soul as a whole and upon the body — the latter two only encompassed by, but not permeated with, the light of the Shechinah. As to the light of the Shechinah encompassing the body, within this level we find further subdivisions: that level which is the effect of a mitzvah; that which encompasses any gathering of ten Jews, even when not engaged in amitzvah; and perhaps we may distinguish yet another level — that which rests upon even one individual Jew, even when he is not occupied with a mitzvah.
The Alter Rebbe now goes on to state that this variety of levels at which the Shechinah becomes manifest does not indicate any change or plurality in its light (G‑d forbid). The variety means merely that the different objects of the light (the divine soul, the animal soul, the body, and so on) receive it in different ways.
In the Alter Rebbe’s words:
והנה כל בחינת המשכת אור השכינה, שהיא בחינת גילוי אור אין סוף ברוך הוא
None of these various forms in which the light of the Shechinah is manifested, meaning the ways in which the Ein Sof-light is revealed,
G‑d the Ein Sof is everywhere; it is only that He is concealed from His creatures. Thus, the uniqueness of the manifestation of the Shechinah lies in the revelation of the Ein Sof.
אינו נקרא שינוי, חס ושלום, בו יתברך, ולא ריבוי
can be construed as a change in Himself, or as a plurality.
The fact that the Shechinah manifests itself at some point (e.g., in one’s soul, through the performance of amitzvah), whereas it had previously not been manifest, does not point to any change in G‑d; nor do the various forms of manifestation indicate plurality within Him.
כדאיתא בסנהדרין דאמר ליה ההוא מינא לרבן גמליאל: אמריתו כל בי עשרה שכינתא שריא, כמה שכינתא אית לכו
As we find in the Tractate Sanhedrin7 where it is recorded that a certain heretic said to Rabban Gamliel: “You say that the Shechinah rests on every assembly of ten. How many Shechinahshave you?”
והשיב לו משל מאור השמש הנכנס בחלונות רבים כו׳
And Rabban Gamliel replied with an analogy of the sun’s light which enters through many windows, etc.
Despite the multitude of windows, there is but one light. The same holds true even where the light appears differently from place to place: sunlight shining through stained-glass windows of various hues remains nonetheless unchanged, though it takes on the multicolored appearance of the windows; as does also water in a colored glass — once removed from the glass, it appears in its pristine clarity.
So too with the various modes in which the light of the Shechinah is manifested: The light remains the same, without change or division; any differences in manifestation are attributable only to the way the light is received by the object in which it is manifest.
והמשכיל יבין
And the intelligent will understand — and, as chassidim would add, “The devout will perceive.
——— ● ———
FOOTNOTES
1.Chs. 21, 22.
2.The Rebbe notes: “See below, ch. 37; cf. commentary of Rabbi Korf.”
3.Berachot 6a.
4.The Rebbe notes: “From the fact that the prohibition of walking bareheaded (mentioned in the Zohar) is constant, applying even when one is not engaged in the performance of a mitzvah, it is evident that the reason for the prohibition — that the Shechinah rests on his head — is also constant. Since the Shechinah rests upon the individual constantly, independently of his performance of a mitzvah, the meaning of the Tanya here requires further study.”
5.
The Rebbe notes: “This, too, is unrelated to the performance of a mitzvah.(Accordingly, we can begin to understand how this [quotation] is relevant here.)”
The explanation of the Rebbe’s comment is as follows: At first glance, the statement, “On every [assembly of] ten [Jews] the Divine Presence rests,” seems to be totally unrelated to the subject under discussion. Our text is speaking of the light that encompasses the person from above, and descends upon him through the performance of a mitzvah. How is this related to the Shechinah’s resting upon any assembly of ten Jews, even when they are not performing a mitzvah?
Quite the contrary, answers the Rebbe; this question in itself begins to provide an answer:
The Alter Rebbe seeks to emphasize that an illumination of the Shechinahencompasses the entire vivifying soul and the entire body (“from head to foot”), not only that organ of the body or the particular faculty of the animal soul that actually performs the mitzvah. He therefore quotes the saying of our Sages which speaks of “every assembly”: even when the assembled are at that moment not performing a commandment, the Shechinah nevertheless rests upon them — in an encompassing fashion at least.
6.The Rebbe takes issue with this statement, because the Alter Rebbe states that “[the vital spirit as garbed in the physical body] is absorbed in the Divine light, and furthermore ‘it is truly absorbed.’”
7.39a.
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