Man's Free Choice is All in the Eyes -- Parshat Ki Tavo by Rabbi Eliezer Berland Shlit"a
PARSHAT KI TAVO - SECRETS OF THE TORAH WITH RAV BERLAND, SHLITA FROM THE WORDS OF RAV ELIEZER BERLAND, SHLITA, TRANSLATED FROM 'TZAMA NAFSHI'. AM YISRAEL IS A HOLY NATION Am Yisrael is an Am Kadosh (holy nation). It only seeks to serve [God] in holiness and purity. Am Yisrael doesnât seek to get âpropheciesâ, or big âspiritual levelsâ, which is what the nations of the world and the people who donât know the true way to serve Hashem are looking for. This was the mistake that Bilaam made, and that all the nations of the world makes. By them, the ikker (essence) is to be a âbigâ man, an important guy, someone whoâs famous. But by Am Yisrael, weâre only looking for one thing: how do we serve [God] in holiness and purity, which is the opposite of all the ideologies and the doctrines espoused by the nations of the world, who donât have the first idea about true kedusha (holiness). They really have no idea about this concept of kedusha. Am Yisrael are kedoshim (holy), they arenât satisfied with just empty words. By us, the first thing we do is start to work on our kedusha, on our shmirat eynayim (guarding of the eyes), on kedushat habrit (sanctifying our marital relations), and we fight for these things. We want to be saved from [transgressing] the âdonâtâ in âdonât stray after your hearts and lust after your eyesâ, even though this is very hard, and a person often doesnât see any way that he could possibly be saved from transgressing this. But he knows that he has to fight for it, and that he doesnât have any other choice - this is the whole reason he came to the world!... KEDUSHA IS THE MAIN FOCUS And this is what is written in the book Even Shleimah, by the Vilna Gaon, that a man only comes to the world in order to overcome this thing, only for this he comes to the world. And not for any other reason! All the other things only come to help assist him with his kedusha. People think that kedusha is an insignificant thing. Thereâs 613 mitzvot, and these also include the âdonât do itâ, the negative commandment, to not stray after our hearts and lust after our eyes⌠The Rambam says that all those who think itâs OK to skip over the âdonâtâ in âdonât stray after your heartsâ etc, and who like to put that part in brackets, or leave is somewhere on the side, and who like to say: âThereâs 613 mitzvot⌠On this one mitzvah, Iâm not makpid (strictly observant)⌠After all, not everyone keeps every single mitzvah. Iâm keeping the mitzvah to be a Torah genius, and to be a famous scholar, and to be a person reknowned to have ruach hakodesh (the spirit of prophesy). But to keep the âdonâtâ in âdonât stray after your heartsâ? I donât have time for that. This is beyond my capabilities, Iâm a busy man, Iâm the one driving the bus, here. Truly, the world is making a big error with this. Itâs certain that a person can guard his eyes, even someone who has to drive somewhere can guard his eyes, he can ask God to guard his eyes for him, because by way of prayer, itâs possible to attain everything. Just like Avraham Avinu, who travelled across the world but who didnât see anything. And also like the sons of Yaakov Avinu, who went from Israel to the land of Egypt, and who didnât open their eyes the whole way. The midrash says that they didnât see anything on the way. A person can travel across the whole world, and still guard his eyes! Now, weâre travelling to Uman, and itâs certain that we can guard our eyes throughout the journey. People look at profanity, then say thereâs nothing wrong with it. A person blemishes his eyes, then says âwhat did I do?! What sin did I do?! Iâm not influenced but what Iâm seeing!â - but this is a lie!! WHY CHAREIDIM RUN AWAY FROM PROFANITY Itâs told that the âBeit Yisraelâ had to meet a group of professors, who asked him: âWhy are the chareidim so scared from seeing things, from every sight? These things donât influence us or disturb us at all.â The Beit Yisrael replied, âWhat can we compare this matter to? To a Bedouin and a European gentleman. The Bedouin spends his whole life going barefoot over sharp stones and splinters and thorns. From the day heâs born, heâs walking across the pointiest stones, and it really doesnât bother him. He doesnât feel any pain in the soles of his feet. âAnd then we have the European gentleman, who is bothered by even the smallest stone that he can feel inside his shoe, or the tiniest bit of sand, and already he canât go on, because his foot hurts him. He suffers a great deal from this.â The Beit Yisrael continued: âThis is the moral of the story: You professors are like the Bedouin, youâve already so spiritually sullied yourselves, with all your infinite tumah (spiritual impurity), that a small stone, a small sin, a small forbidden sight, a small glimpse of something - you already donât notice it at all. âBut for a person who has a completely refined soul, and who is guarding his soul, even the smallest thing - the smallest sin, the smallest forbidden sight, the smallest forbidden peek - this bothers him! It pains him! It stabs him with a thousand daggers.â MAN'S FREE CHOICE IS IN THE EYES Manâs free choice exists only in the eyes. The moment that a man guards his eyes, he can reach all the spiritual levels that exist in the world. Heâs not going to speak lashon hara any more, heâs not going to be harshly judgmental of other people, heâs not going to oversleep, heâs going to keep Shabbat, and lay tefillin⌠And weâre not just talking about guarding our physical eyes, here, weâre also talking about guarding our âmentalâ eyes, too. A person can guard his physical eyes, but he still has an infinite number of other eyes, like âjealous eyesâ, and âhateful eyesâ, and âhonor-seeking eyesâ - he has to guard every type of âeyeâ that he has, and to disconnect all of his senses from the world. He shouldnât look at any worldly matter, he shouldnât look at anything. All his senses and all of his desire - it should all be only for Hashem Yitborach, and for Hashemâs honor. And when a person guards his eyes like this (both his physical eyes, and his âjealousâ and âhatingâ eyes, etc)âŚthen all the secrets of the Torah are revealed to him, and all of the secrets of creation, and all the wonders of the world.