Mitzvos are an afterthought

I find the following very depressing. Mitzvos are an afterthought. The goal is perfection and you get that via discussing "two are holding a tallis." There's a pecking order, you'll never be like Yaakov Kamenetsky because he really could learn up that Gemara about the tallis, or the get, or the oath. And what do women do? They get it through you, by doing the dishes. Does this make any sense? The Gemara talks about mitzvos, but we don't care about them so much. We care only about the mind, but you must close your mind and mimic the thoughts of the leaders. It's a bundle of confused dogmas that contradict one another. The end product is king making. You serve the self-appointed kings. They do the Gemara all day long thanks to you slaving at the office and handing over your money, and the woman slaving in the kitchen. The kings get richer and richer. You watch them wave from the palace balcony like the Queen of England and Prince William.  He even quotes God. Hakadosh Baruch Hu says, he says. His words here are disguised as encouragement, but they are a wolf in sheep's clothing. He is devouring us.


Rav Avigdor Miller on The Best Merchandise

Q:
You’re speaking tonight about the greatness of learning Torah and how important it is for a person’s perfection. But don’t you think that some people are better off making achievements in other areas? Maybe they didn’t have the opportunity when they were younger to learn how to learn and now it’s too late?

A:

You’re living up to your reputation of asking good questions; very good, very good. And the answer is nobody is excluded from learning Torah because there's no such thing as not having the opportunity.  Now it doesn't mean that if you'll study Torah, you're going to become a chaver of Rav Yaakov Kamenetsky.  It doesn’t mean you'll sit next to the Steipler and talk in learning.  But you certainly can achieve in learning Torah.  If you're interested, join our telephone Torah program.  It's amazing what you can accomplish.  You'll learn a half possuk of chumash a day on your own with a linear translation.  After a while, you'll be amazed – you'll know two parshiyos of chumash.  There's no excuse for not doing that.  Then you'll start Pirkei Avos and eventually you'll know six perakim of Pirkei Avos.  Then you'll learn it without the nekudos.  You'll say six perakim of mishnayos without nekudos.  Then we'll put you on the gemara program, and you're on the straight way to greatness.  Everybody can do it!  

Now, this you could say.  Suppose somebody is not doing it and won't do it; are there no other avenues to achievement? Yes, there are also other avenues to achievement.  Yes, certainly we do not deny that.  There certainly are other opportunities for greatness but the prime achievement is the study of Torah. And if people want to know how to do it, we're happy to advise them privately and give them a program that's easy, that's available, and it’s a program that everybody can succeed in.

There are other things to do too, however, in addition to that.  People can grow great in emunah.  That's a big field! People can grow great in tefilah; a very big field.  People can grow great in tzedakah; a big field.  People can grow great in changing their middos of character.  A very big field!  There are other fields and branches, subdivisions of these fields.  There is a great deal of work to do in this world. Like it says hayom katzar, life is short, vehamelachah merubah, and there's a great deal of work.  And nobody is left out of opportunities.  

Only if you go into a store where you have a benevolent merchant – of course every merchant is benevolent to himself but imagine you have a benevolent merchant who really wants to help you – and you come in to shop and you have let's say a certain amount of money. So he's going to tell you, “Look, the best merchandise is this right here.  It might not be the most appealing to you.  It may not interest you most but I’m telling you that it will be the best you can get for your money.  However, if you want to turn down this offer, I have something else that's almost just as good or maybe much less valuable but it's good too.”

And therefore Hakadosh Baruch Hu says, “Look. You don't want to learn?  Then there are other things to do; there are a lot of good things to do.  But My beloved children I am holding out to you an offer.  I hope you'll accept it.  Ki lekach tov nasati lachem, I'm giving you the best thing to buy, torasi al ta'azovu, don't forsake the study of My Torah.

TAPE # 263 (May 1979)


Shlomo said, "The sum of the matter is this: all his heard, fear God and keep His commandments. This is the sum of the man."

That's like a different Torah from what Rabbi Miller is offering. 


Rabbi Moshe Weinberger and the Lubavitcher Rebbe

 http://www.gruntig.net/2020/06/rabbi-moshe-weinberger-and-lubavitcher.html


Rabbi Moshe Weinberger and the Lubavitcher Rebbe

Rabbi Moshe Weinberger interviewed last week on the  Meaningful People Podcast, relates a story he had with the Lubavitcher Rebbe. Today, the 3rd of Tammuz is the Rebbe's 26th Yahrtzeit, Zechuso Yagen Aleinu.

Rabbi Michael Eliezer Forshlager

  Rabbi Michael Eliezer Forshlager of Baltimore, a foremost student of Rabbi Avraham Bornstein, Rebbe of Sokhatchov (author Responsa Avnei Nezer) carried in his tallit bag a volume which consisted of Tanya and Nefesh ha-Hayyim bound together at Rabbi Forshlager’s special request.

grammar

This week's Living Torah talks about how the Rebbe opposed the whole world method of Hebrew instruction for children. He said instead to teach each letter with its vowels. He said this is the traditional method and it fosters emunah.

Something worse than the whole world method takes place today. It's the whole sentence method. When a school for baalei teshuva doesn't teach Hebrew grammar, the student learns whole sentences at a time. The rebbe reads an entire sentence and translates. Usually, he reads the Hebrew so fast the student can't even make out the words. He learns whole sentences at a time. 

You have to teach Hebrew grammar, at least once a week. 

tznius

 Reb Mordechai (Mottel) Levin was the educational director of the Beis Rivkah Seminary in Kfar Chabad. Once, at yechidus, the Rebbe urged him to impress upon the students the particular importance of modest dress. The Rebbe explained that since in the world at large this virtue is so widely neglected, when a girl “conquers herself” and dresses in a modest manner, this is evidence of her level of yiras Shamayim. The Rebbe directed Reb Mottel to consult with a famous educational authority in Bnei Brak in order to receive advice on how to cope with this educational challenge. )בת מלך פנימה ע' 19)

tznius

 Reb Uriel Zimmer had a yechidus with the Rebbe in Tamuz תשכ”אx(1961), and he inquired about the Rebbe’s much sought after opinion on the upcoming elections in Eretz Yisroel. The Rebbe replied that he didn’t wish to reveal his opinion about it yet, and went on at some length. The Rebbe mentioned a number of times during this conversation that action must be taken in the area of tznius, and he said: “This isn’t just election season but tznius season!”

(היכל מנחם ח"א ע' רב)


What about mitzvos? What about Hashem?

Litvish Judaism has taken over everywhere. Few are themselves anymore. Up in Breuer’s in Washington Heights, you see only a trace of the old Yekke sensibility. Sure, they are punctual. Sure, the synagogue is orderly. But the boys all go off to Lakewood. Rav Schwab himself, though Frankfurt born, went off to the Mir and came back talking about learning, learning, learning. He commented on baalei teshuvah how they start in goyish clothing, talking about goyish things, and then you hear them all excited about Torah study, by which he means Gemara lomdus.

What about mitzvos? What about Hashem? 

And then there’s the Sephardim. I used to visit a Sephardish beis keneses in Flatbush. They were more inviting than Litvacks, but they sure looked like them in their black suits. Yes, they still kiss the chocham’s hand. But they talk like Litvacks. Torah, Torah, Torah. I asked about this. Torah is gold, mitzvos but silver, said the rabbi smugly. I have a Sephardish acquaintance who tries to maintain Sephardish identity. He used to daven at the bi-weekly Shabbos only Sephardish minyan in Passaic. But you meet him on the street. He’s staiging in the meshecta. That’s all he talks about. 

What about mitzvos? What about Hashem? 

Chassidim too. I walked around a Boyan shul in Kiryat Sefer. I walked around the Beis Midrash of Vishnitz Monsey in Beit Shemesh. Gemara and Mishneh Berurah are all I saw in any hand, on any desk. Yes, they are warmer. Anybody but a Russian goy is warmer than a Litvack. But all they know is Gemara. Maybe they are not quite as caught up in the Brisker lomdis, at least not in Satmar. But it’s Torah, Torah, Torah, which means Yeshivisheh mesechtas and lomdus. 

What about mitzvos? What about Hashem?

As for the Litvacks, we all know about them. You go to a yeshiva dinner and hear about one thing, and it’s not God. It’s not mitzvos. You watch a video for a baal teshuva school. You hear about one thing. Yesterday, they were smoking on Shabbos. And today? They are learning Gemara. Wait, what about Shabbos? Oh, they don’t talk about that. They are so excited about their learning. You read an article about a deceased rav. It might very well be called “Nothing Else Mattered.” I have seen a few like that recently. He learned, learned, learned, and he had good middos too, allegedly. Nothing mattered to him but his learning.

What about mitzvos? What about Hashem? 

Dovid the King said: 

הַֽלְלוּיָ֨הּ | אַשְׁרֵי־אִ֖ישׁ יָרֵ֣א אֶת־יְהֹוָ֑ה בְּ֜מִצְו‍ֹתָ֗יו חָפֵ֥ץ מְאֹֽד:

 

Hallelujah. Praiseworthy is the man who fears the Lord, who greatly desires His commandments. (Tehillim 112:1)

 

I will pursue with delight Thy commandments which I have come to love. (Tehillim 119:47) 

Shlomo the king and wisest man said: 

The end of the matter, everything having been heard, fear God and keep His commandments, for this is the entire man. (Koheles 12:13)

 

My son, forget not My instruction, and may your heart keep My commandments for they shall add length of days and years of life and peace to you. (Misheli 3:1) 

Sounds like a different religion from what the Litvacks do. But what about the Vilna Gaon, their champion? He said: 

All God’s service is dependent upon the improvement of one’s character…The prime purpose of man’s life is to constantly strive to break his bad traits. Otherwise, what is life for? (Even Shelaimah 1:1-2) 

The purpose of Torah is mitzvos, just as the purpose of a tree is its fruit. (Even Shelaimah) 

So what do they do with that? Well, we have to go by today’s gadolim they’ll say. Now, that’s going to be a problem if their leaders have strayed from the basic principles. Say you lived in the Northern Kingdom as they engaged in idol worship, can you hear someone saying, doesn’t matter if the Chumash would call this idolatry, our gadolim say to do it. 

But Rav Soloveitchik said that the main thing is doing, not learning, the learning brings you to do. The Lubavitcher Rebbe talked endlessly about the goal being to create a dwelling place down here for Hashem and that requires doing.

No wonder the Litvacks were so vicious towards them. You can hear the hiss, they sound like angry snakes. Somebody is messing up their little plan.

Doesn’t that make sense, in the end of days, that even the Torah Jews would be off the mark? So it would go, that the group that is dominating everybody is preaching a false Judaism, one that takes us from Hashem?  The world is drenched in sheker, right? So us too. 

The Litvacks love to say that they have all the talmidei chochamim. This is so false. There are great scholars in every group. But if it were true, and if they have more, that’s in part because they have hijacked the people from the other groups. It’s like America attracting great scientists born in India and Greece. They are not American. Moshe Feinstein came from Chassidic stock. So did the Steipler and Rav Chaim Kaniefsky and Rav Ruderman. And the others? Could be sitra achra giving them a certain kind of success. I learned to talk like that from them. I have heard it said about Chabad and YU.

Like America, the Litvacks took over. Does that make America good? We know it’s all going to collapse, that it’s fake money at this point. America is the world's primary source of immorality and violence. Wasn't always like that and the Litvacks weren't always like this. They changed. 

Say what you want. I’m going with Dovid and Solomon. We seek Hashem and mitzvos, which includes Torah. Our engagement in both is dependent on Torah. Torah is central, but it’s not the most important thing. Hashem and mitzvos are the main thing. 

Start with that and see who honors it.