1. Atzilut is Private Providence
2. The Striking of Thoughts upon Man
3. Against Your Will – 1
4. If There Is a Virgin Maiden
5. The Meaning of Sins Becoming as Merits
6. A Gentile Who Observes the Sabbath Must Die
7. The Correction of Lines
8. This Is the Path of Torah – 1
9. A Hedge for Wisdom – Silence - 1
10. For He Whom the Lord Loves He Admonishes - 1
11. The Fear of You and the Dread of You Shall Be upon All the Animals of the Earth - 1
12. The Whole World Is Nourished by My Son Hanina – 1
13. A Hand on the Throne of the Lord – 1
14. Thus You Shall Say to the House of Jacob
15. Ordinances
16. The Numbered Things of the Tabernacle – 1
17. Concerning the Shechina [Divinity]
18. The Garments of the Soul - 1
19. Beginning to Speak from the Connection with the Creator
20. Concerning the Will to Receive - 1
21. Sanctification of the Month
22. And You, Israel
23. Behold, I Am Setting Before You
24. The Main Thing We Need
25. The Summoning for the Blessing on the Food
26. Who Will Not Lift Up the Face
27. Three Lines – 1
28. The Earth Feared and Was Still
29. The Creator Observed Their Works
30. Turn Away from Evil and Do Good – 1
31. How I Love Your Teaching
32. Man’s Greatness Is According to His Work
33. What Is Amalek, Whose Memory We Must Blot Out
34. TANTA [Taamim, Nekudot, Tagin, Otiot]
35. Find Favor and a Good Mind
36. Who Hears a Prayer
37. Fish Means Worries
38. The Blessing of the Torah
39. Anyone with Whom the Spirit of the People Is Pleased – 1
40. Concerning Two Witnesses
41. Raising the Hands
42. Serve the Creator with Joy
43. The Discernments of “Woman” and “Sons” in the Torah
44. Ruin by Elders—Construction; Construction by Youths—Ruin
45. Sons of Wise Disciples
46. This Moment and the Next Moment
47. Worse than Everyone
48. Right, Wholeness, and Truth
49. Our Faith in Books and Authors
50. Man’s Sensation of Time
51. The State of Shabbat [Sabbath]
52. God Made It so that He Would Be Feared
53. The Voice, the Voice of Jacob, but the Hands, the Hands of Esau
54. Everlasting Salvation
55. Delight Them with a Complete Structure – 1
56. Questions in the Work
57. A Kli [vessel] that Holds a Blessing
58. Ani [I] and Ein [nothing/null]
59. Anyone Who Is Angry, It Is as though He Commits Idol-Worship
60. A Request for Help
61. Right and Left
62. Reward and Punishment
63. You Stand Here Today – 1
64. All Is Done by His Word
65. Turn Away from Evil and Do Good – 2
66. Woe unto You Who Await the Day of the Lord
67. What Is Truth?
68. The Order of the Work
69. The Reward for Work in Spirituality
70. The Difference between Kedusha [holiness] and Sitra Achra [other side]
71. The Meaning of Exile
72. Concealed and Revealed in His Providence
73. Flavors of Torah
74. Father and Mother
75. The Work of the Greatest in the Nation
76. The Works Go Up
77. Greeks Have Gathered Around Me
78. The War of the Inclination
79. What Is Handsome In the Work?
80. Man’s Receptions
81. Against Your Will You Live; Against Your Will You Die
82. A Horse to Ride On
83. A Prayer for Life and Nourishments
84. Touching the Tefillin [phylacteries]
85. Observing Torah Only in the Land of Israel
86. The Degree of “Wicked”
87. Jerusalem
88. The War Against Amalek
89. Joy and Fear
90. The Difference between Money and Honor
91. All Bitter Herb [Maror]
92. Old and New
93. A King Who Breaks through a Fence
94. A Groom Is Akin to a King
95. The Kingdom of Heaven Begins with Hesed
96. Affliction Precedes Mercy
97. The Torah Must Be Received with Both Hands
98. Midnight Correction
99. Wholeness and Deficiency – 1
100. Faith and Reason
101. Faith Above Reason
102. Good Deeds Are Called Sons
103. The Unification of ZON
104. The Prohibition to Teach a Gentile Torah
105. Blessed Is Our God, Who Has Created Us for His Glory
106. The Ruin of Kedusha [Holiness]
107. And Golan in the Bashan
108. Man Determines
109. The Reason Why People Go to the Graves of the Patriarchs
110. The Path of Torah
111. Nothing New Under the Sun
112. Returning a Theft
113. The Old Man Looks for Fear of Heaven
114. Three Partners
115. The Meaning of “Torah Lishma [for Her sake]”
116. Who Are the Wicked?
117. The Light in It Reforms Him
118. Except for “Leave!”
119. From Lo Lishma to Lishma
120. Joy that Comes from Dancing
121. Two Forces within Man
122. Being Rewarded with Life
123. Without Hands and Without Legs
124. To Serve Me
125. Definitions – 1
126. Visiting the Sick
127. Happy Is He
128. Exalt the Lord Our God
129. Knowledge and Faith
130. The Testimony of the Creator
131. See a Life with a Woman that You Love
132. Upper and Lower
133. It Is All Corrections
134. Repentance Does Not Help in GAR
135. Righteous Take by Force
136. The Tying of Isaac
137. The Lack Is the Kli [Vessel]
138. A Near Road and a Faraway Road
139. A Foot and a Shoe
140. The Difference between Envy and Lust
141. The Spirit of the Wise Is Displeased with Him
142. The Sorrow of the Shechina [Divinity] – 1
143. The Need for Recognition of Evil
144. Revealed and Concealed
145. Passion for Knowledge
146. Suffering and Joy
147. The Line of the Work
148. Faith Is Called “Action”
149. “Land” Is the Kingdom of Heaven
150. A Knife for Slaughter
151. The Desire to Bestow – 1
152. Walk Discreetly
153. Torah with the Manner of the Land
154. Sitting in Corners
155. You Have Chosen Us – 1
156. Sanctification of the Moon
157. What Comes First—the Blessing or the Peace?
158. According to the Sorrow Is the Reward
159. The Need and Importance of Teaching Faith
160. And All the People Stand Over You
161. Awakening – 1
162. Love of Others
163. Colors in the Work
164. What to Ask of the Creator—to Be His Servant
165. The Matter of Keeping
166. Which Repentance Helps?
167. Strict with Himself and Blesses
168. Blessed Is the Man Who Puts His Trust in the Lord
169. The Meaning of the Bed
170. Faith Within Reason
171. How Good Are Your Tents, Jacob – 1
172. Man and the Torah
173. Tefillin
174. The Commandments Are from the Mouth of the Creator
175. Three Degrees of Man
176. Faith Is Regarded as Above Nature
177. The Fruit of Torah
178. Father Ejected Mother Because of Her Son
179. Ibur [Conception] – 1
180. King David Has No Life
181. The Quality of Adam HaRishon – 1
182. Heresy Is the Punishment
183. Work Is the Most Important
184. The Time of Wearing the Tefillin [Phylacteries]
185. Concerning Shekalim – 1
186. Return, Israel – 1
187. The Greatness of the Creator Is His Humbleness
188. Covering a Portion, Revealing Two Portions – 1
189. Concerning Learning the Wisdom of Kabbalah
190. The Place of Repentants
191. The Roles of Light of Wisdom
192. Foundations
193. The Meaning of the Second Restriction
194. Why Was David Punished?
195. The Association of the Quality of Judgment with Mercy
196. Devotion
197. Concerning Suffering – 1
198. Hochma and Hassadim
199. Oral Torah
200. Receiving Pleasure from Three Kelim [Vessels]
201. Raising MAN – 1
202. Concerning Fear
203. The Torah Is Acquired through Suffering
204. Two Kinds of Repentance
205. Action and Intention
206. Three Things in the World
207. For Your Crimes, Your Mother Was Sent Away
208. The Meaning of Dust
209. A Groom and a Bride
210. Man’s Actions
211. Man
212. A Palace
213. Darkness, Fire, and Shadow
214. He Who Robs His Father and His Mother
215. Having Guests – 1
216. Concerning Women
217. Run My Beloved
218. Israel Are the Sons of Kings
219. Seek Peace and Pursue It
220. Good Taste in Small, Corporeal Things
221. What Is Life?
222. Scrutinies in the Work
223. Entry into the Work
224. The Reason for the Faith
225. Names Are Given only According to the Lower One
226. The Ark Carries Its Carriers
227. In Katnut, Gevurot Appear First
228. Moses Is the Quality of Faith
229. She Opened Her Mouth with Wisdom
230. Am I In the Place of God?
231. Aza and Azael
232. Bribing the Sitra Achra
233. Concerning Yenika [suction/nursing]
234. Reality and the Existence of Reality
235. The Forms of the Light
236. The Whole Earth Is Full of His Glory
237. Mind and Heart
238. The Joy of the Groom and Bride
239. Widows
240. Discernments in States
241. When Wicked Are Lost, There Is Singing
242. As He is merciful, So You Are Merciful
243. Finding Grace
244. Repentance
245. The Help of the Creator
246. Concerning Shekalim – 2
247. He Who Is Meticulous about Turning His Gown
248. He Who Delights the Shabbat
249. I Will Sin and Repent
250. Anyone in Whom There Is Fear of Heaven – 1
251. Concerning the Minyan [Ten in the synagogue]
252. A Broken Heart – 1
253. Do Not Eat the Bread of an Evil-Eyed Man
254. Work Means Faith
255. Words of a Dead Man
256. The Light that Was Created on the First Day - 1
257. Idol Worship
258. Who Is Rich?
259. Building the Temple
260. Great Is He Who Is Commanded and Does
261. Hear, My Son, Your Father's Ethics – 1
262. We Have Forgotten the Good
263. The Merit of the Bride
264. Ascend in Degree, Choose a Bridesmaid
265. Inner Keys and Outer Keys
266. Anyone Who Is Settled in His Wine
267. Man Was Created in the Torah
268. One Learns Only Where One’s Heart Desires
269. One Does Not Toil Over a Meal and Misses It
270. Anyone with Whom the Spirit of the People Is Pleased - 2
271. Any Person Who Is Favored
272. Anyone Who Associates the Aim for the Creator with Another Thing
273. The Mightiest of the Mighty
274. Specifically through a Man and a Woman
275. I Wish They Left Me and Kept My Law
276. If a Human Being Has on the Skin of His Flesh
277. When One of the Members of the Group Dies
278. The Light Created on the First Day - 2
279. Why Israel Are Compared to an Olive Tree
280. This World and the Next World – 1
281. Be Mindful with a Minor Commandment as with a Major One – 1
282. Be Mindful with a Minor Commandment as with a Major One – 2
283. Be Mindful with a Minor Commandment as with a Major One – 3
284. I Have a Minor Mitzva [commandment], Whose Name Is Sukkah
285. A Person Builds a Building
286. Truth and Peace Loved
287. Turning His Ear from Hearing Torah
288. With Me, from Lebanon, Bride
289. The Creator Is Meticulous with the Righteous
290. A Righteous Shall Live by His Faith
291. Man and His Role
292. One Who Restrains Himself in Strife
293. Anyone Who Observes the Shabbat [Sabbath] Properly, Desecrates It
294. We Will Do and We Will Hear – 1
295. Anyone Who Sanctifies the Seventh – 1
296. The Core of Creation and the Correction of Creation
297. He Raises the Poor from the Dust, Lifts the Indigent from the Trash
298. Associating the Quality of Mercy with Judgment
299. Having a Clean Mind
300. A Land Where You Will Eat Bread Without Scarcity
301. The General Public and the Chosen Few
302. For the Lord Chose Jacob for Himself
303. Delight Them with a Complete Building – 2
304. Fear and Love
305. The Meaning of Evil
306. If the Rav Is Similar to an Angel of the Lord
307. You Have Not a Blade of Grass Below
308. You Have Chosen Us – 2
309. Concerning Walking in Secrecy
310. The Righteous Perishes and No One Notices
311. The Tree from which Adam HaRishon Ate Was Wheat
312. If You Go to War – 1
313. When the Lord Rejoices Over You
314. Smallness and Greatness
315. Three Souls
316. Adam HaRishon – 2
317. Faith – 1
318. Seeing and Hearing
319. Anyone Who Is Proud, It Is as though He Commits Idol-Worship
320. It Is Not the Shy Who Learns
321. Eating from the Waste
322. Concerning Choice
323. Discernments in a Spiritual Kli [vessel]
324. The Preparation Period
325. The Light of Hassadim on which There Was No Tzimtzum
326. Man’s Work
327. The Merit of Having Guests
328. Their Idols Are Silver and Gold, the Work of Man's Hands
329. Prayer
330. Lowliness
331. The Voice Is Good for Perfumes
332. Concerning Equivalence of Form
333. He Who Begins a Mitzva [Commandment]
334. The Difference between Charity and a Gift
335. A Messenger of the Public
336. He Who Cries over a Fitting Person
337. Happy Is the Man
338. A Cure before the Blow
339. Let the Earth Put Forth Grass
340. In the Beginning [God] Created
341. And the Lord Saw
342. Noah Was a Righteous Man
343. Gopher Wood
344. Go Forth
345. Anyone with Whom the Spirit of the Creator Is Pleased
346. Mind and Heart
347. Passed By Your Servant
348. When the Creator Loves a Person
349. L'Albero della Conoscenza del Bene e del Male
350. The Lord Appeared to Him by the Oaks of Mamre
351. How to Draw Near Him
352. Until I Was Circumcised – 1
353. Abraham Arose
354. Abraham Gave All that He Had
355. He Who Has No Sons
356. A Son Makes the Father Worthy
357. Abraham Begot Isaac
358. And Isaac Was Forty Years Old
359. Isaac Sowed in That Land
360. I Did Not Find My Hands or Legs in the Seminary
361. Your Good Treasure
362. Jacob Saw that There Was Grain
363. Four Angels
364. All Who Are Violent, Prevail – 1
365. And Judah Approached Him – 1
366. Hard on Himself and Easy on Others
367. To Benjamin He Gave Three Hundred Pieces of Silver
368. And Behold, the Lord Stood Over Him
369. Joy While Learning Torah
370. The Way of the Land Preceded the Torah
371. A Ladder Set on the Earth
372. It Came to Pass as That Day
373. He Saw that He Could Not Prevail Over Him
374. He Touched the Hollow of His Thigh
375. Jacob Sent
376. Jacob Was Very Frightened
377. Better a Poor Child
378. Jacob Lived in the Land Where His Father Dwelled
379. Miracle and Choice
380. Anyone Who Sanctifies the Seventh – 2
381. The Lord Hears the Poor
382. When Pharaoh Sent the People
383. They Stood at the Foot of the Mountain
384. Observing Shabbat [Sabbath]
385. I Will Carry You on the Wings of Eagles
386. This Is the Day that the Lord Has Made
387. A Decent Judge and an Indecent Judge
388. These Are the Ordinances
389. Raise a Contribution for Me – 1
390. Coercion and Inversion
391. The Creator Did Not Try Job
392. A Hand on the Throne of the Lord – 2
393. Carrier of Iniquity
394. When You Count the Heads of the Children of Israel to Number Them
395. The Quality of “Still” and the Quality of “Vegetative”
396. Behold, the Lord Has Called the Name Bezalel
397. Take from Among You a Contribution to the Lord
398. The Numbered Things of the Tabernacle – 2
399. The Tabernacle of the Testimony
400. Half a Shekel – 1
401. Hear, O Israel
402. If a Woman Inseminates – 1
403. This Shall Be the Law of the Leper
404. And Say a Matter
405. When an Ox or a Sheep or a Goat Is Born
406. Six Days You Shall Work
407. If You Buy a Hebrew Slave
408. Count the Heads of the Whole Congregation of Israel
409. Concerning Suffering – 2
410. Self-Love and Love of the Creator
411. All Who Are Violent, Prevail – 2
412. The Vow of a Hermit, to Dedicate Himself to the Lord
413. The Difference between Books of Ethics and the Books of the Baal Shem Tov
414. The Rabble Who Were Among Them Had Greedy Desires
415. When You Raise the Candles - 1
416. This Is the Making of the Menorah [Temple Lamp] – 1
417. And Aaron Did So
418. Poverty Becomes Israel
419. Spies
420. Send Forth
421. Concerning the Spies
422. From Afar the Lord Appeared to Me
423. Three Lines - 2
424. The Dispute between Korah and Moses
425. Korah Took
426. The Prayer of a Righteous, Son of a Righteous, and a Righteous, Son of a Wicked
427. This Is the Constitution of the Torah [Law] – 1
428. This Is the Constitution of the Torah [Law] – 2
429. Make Everything in Order to Bestow
430. A Higher Soul
431. A Shoe for His Foot
432. The Making of the Calf
433. The Lord Your God Was Unwilling to Listen
434. How Good Are Your Tents, Jacob - 2
435. When Balak Took Counsel
436. Three Prayers - 1
437. Great Priesthood
438. Save Your Servant, You, My God
439. Why Was Pinhas Awarded the Priesthood?
440. Pinhas Saw
441. Avenge the Vengeance of the Children of Israel
442. Your Children, Whom You Said
443. The Writing Is in the Labor
444. Darkness Precedes Light
445. No Masach [Screen] in Keter
446. The Meaning of Dry Land
447. Peace with the Creator
448. The Sensation of Wholeness
449. The Drop Is Declared
450. Forces that Induce the Development of the Heart and the Mind
451. Pure Eyed
452. Just as I Am Dancing before You
453. The Eyes of Both of Them Opened
454. He Who Prays for His Friend
455. Because You Hear - 1
456. Small Talents
457. The Counsel of the Lord Ever Stands
458. And It Came to Pass because You Hear - 2
459. Because of Humbleness and Fear of the Lord
460. Will Keep His Promise to You
461. “See” in Singular Form
462. Blessed Is the Place [Creator]
463. You Became Rich; You Are in the Evening; Light the Candle
464. If You Go to War - 2
465. The Work of the General Public and the Work of the Individual
466. Optional War and a War of Mitzva [Commandment]
467. All the Peoples of the Earth Shall See
468. This Day, the Lord Your God Commands You
469. Each Day They Will Be as New in Your Eyes
470. When You Come - 1
471. You Stand Today - 2
472. The Concealed Things Belong to the Lord Our God
473. Sins Become for Him as Merits
474. And the Canaanite, King of Arad, Heard
475. Lend Ear, O Heavens
476. The Rich Shall Not Give More and the Poor Shall Not Give Less
477. What Do You Have in the House?
478. What Was the Sin of Korah?
479. You Shall Not Distort Justice
480. The Place Where the Lord Will Choose
481. The Whole World Is Nourished by My Son Hanina - 2
482. This Is the Path of Torah - 2
483. A Hedge for Wisdom – Silence - 2
484. He Whom the Lord Loves He Admonishes - 2
485. Your FearThe Fear of You and the Dread of You Shall Be upon All the Animals of the Earth & Dread - 2
486. The Beginning of Speech Is from Ein Sof
487. Concerning the Will to Receive - 2
488. The Garments of the Soul - 2
489. Against Your Will - 2
490. Adornments of the Bride
491. Raising MAN - 2
492. The Reward for a Mitzva
493. A Righteous Son and a Wicked Son
494. There Is Fear Only in a Place of Wholeness
495. The Creator Ascended
496. The Path of Truth
497. Blessed Are You
498. It Shall Come to Pass That If You Surely Hear
499. “I” is the Malchut
500. When You Raise the Candles - 2
501. The Quality of Truth – 1
502. If Man Wins, the Creator Is Happy
503. Partnership
504. The Secret of the Lord Is to Those Who Fear Him
505. True Mercy
506. Saved Us from the Hand of the Shepherds
507. What Is Joy?
508. The Ascent of Malchut to Bina
509. The Revelation of the Love of the Creator
510. Concealed and Revealed
511. The Middle Line
512. He Who Disputes Peace
513. Gathering Wood
514. Welcoming Guests – 2
515. Concerning the surrounding lights
516. A Shoe
517. The Constitution of the Torah
518. He Who Comes to Defile
519. Concerning the Tzimtzum [restriction]
520. Water Will Flow from His Buckets
521. The Mind [Reason] that Governs Man
522. “Right” Means Wholeness
523. What It Means to Bear a Son and a Daughter in the Work
524. What Is, He Swallowed Maror [bitter herb], He Will Not Come Out, in the work?
525. Three Lines – 3
526. With All Your Heart
527. The God of Israel
528. Prayer
529. I Will Give You My Blessing
530. Movement Due to Shame
531. The Essence of the Correction
532. The Main Choice
533. The Creator Pulls the Man Close
534. Concerning the Groom
535. A Cup of Kiddush
536. You Shall Tithe a Tenth
537. This Month Is to You
538. I Give Him My Covenant of Peace
539. Questions about “Return O Israel”
540. Nourishment
541. When the Lord Favors Man’s Ways
542. Return, O Israel – 2
543. Tell the Children of Israel
544. Man Is Born a Wild Ass [Donkey]
545. Laboring and Finding
546. He Made Everything Good in Its Time
547. The Attribute of Caution
548. Doing and Hearing
549. Feeling the Lack
550. If You Seek Her as Silver
551. The Torah as a Spice
552. He Who Comes to Purify Is Aided - 1
553. The Difference between Concealed and Revealed
554. The Power of Thought
555. The Exile of the Shechina [Divinity]
556. The Torah, from the Words “Shot Through”
557. Concerning Ohr Hozer [reflected light]
558. Desire for Spirituality
559. One Hundred Blessings
560. Generations
561. The Soul of Israel
562. Wisdom and Prayer
563. Definitions – 2
564. Fire, Wind, Water, Dust
565. To Do Them Today
566. Cast Their Seed Among the Nations
567. The Quality of Truth – 2
568. The Meaning of “Right” and “Left”
569. The Meaning of the Offering
570. General Attainment and Personal Attainment
571. He Is One and His Name, One
572. Two Labors
573. They Shall Fear You
574. If You Come - 2
575. The Purity of the Work
576. A Shabbat Dish
577. Concerning the Goal
578. Half a Shekel – 2
579. I Will Remove the Stony Heart
580. A Good Neighbor and a Bad Neighbor
581. The Act Is What Decides
582. One Whose Wife Provides for Him
583. Righteous and Wicked
584. The Face of the Lord Is in Evildoers
585. The Kingship and the Governance to The One Who Lives Forever
586. Which Is the Straight Path
587. The Upper One Scrutinizes for the Purpose of the Lower One
588. Malchut of the Upper One Becomes Keter to the Lower One
589. God Did Not Guide Them
590. Those Who Walk to the Land of Israel
591. Renewed Work
592. The Names of Malchut
593. One Should Not Appease One’s Neighbor When He Is Angry
594. The Commandment of Repentance
595. The Measure of the Greatness of the Creator
596. Nothing New Under the Sun
597. A Generation Goes and a Generation Comes and the Earth Forever Stands
598. What It Means that Shabbat Is Called “Guest” in the Work
599. Arise, O God
600. From the Depth I Called You, Lord – 1
601. Prayer and Request
602. One Should Not Be Ashamed of the Mockers
603. There Is Shechina in the Wall
604. Why He Waited until the War Against Amalek
605. And Jethro Heard
606. Those of Little Faith
607. Remember that You Were a Slave
608. Not because You Were Many
609. God Is More Terrible than Your Sanctifiers
610. Buying a Woman
611. Capital and Fruits
612. Concerning This World and the Next World – 2
613. When a Woman Inseminates
614. Bitter Herb
615. The Reward for the Work
616. The Governance of Malchut
617. Peace at Home
618. Awakening – 2
619. King of the Nations
620. Concerning a Blessing
621. A Minor Mitzva [Commandment]
622. Overcoming
623. Purify Our Hearts
624. Ushpizin
625. The Mitzva of Sukkah
626. Anything that the Merciful One Does, He Does for the Best
627. Law and Judgment – 1
628. The Qualities of “Idol-Worshippers” and “Israel”
629. One Who Despises a Wise Disciple
630. And There Was Evening and There Was Morning
631. Kedusha [Holiness] and Tahara [Purity]
632. I Will Always Yearn
633. Revealing a Portion and Covering Two Portions – 2
634. Fear of Heaven
635. This World and the Next World – 1
636. The Need for Flavors of Torah
637. Four States in the Work
638. Man’s Inclination
639. This Is the Making of the Menorah [Temple Lamp] – 2
640. A Blessing and a Curse
641. Inheritance of the Land
642. Justice, Justice You Shall Pursue
643. Supporters of the Torah
644. Passing the Dead before the Bride
645. By Your Actions, We Know You
646. The Generations of Jacob Joseph
647. A Prayer Requires a Deficiency
648. The Joy of the Giver
649. Preparation for the Light
650. Criticism on Bestowal
651. Day and Night
652. If Any Man of You Brings an Offering - 1
653. Concerning Threshing
654. Who Despises the Day of Smallness
655. Shoots Like an Arrow
656. For the Iniquity of the Amorite Is Not Complete
657. What Is Reality and What Is Imagination
658. This World and the Next World – 2
659. What Are Torah and Work?
660. How Did They Sin?
661. Branch and Root
662. Four Discernments in the Desire
663. If He Is Rewarded, His Work Is Done by Others
664. Feeling the Sin Increases the Light
665. Counsels against the Inclination
666. He Who Comes to Purify Is Aided – 2
667. A Descent and Ascent in the Work
668. In a Place Where Repentants Stand
669. The Good Inclination and the Evil Inclination
670. You Shall Give Him His Wages On His Day
671. Sorting Food and Waste
672. The Creator Craves the Prayer of the Righteous
673. The Death of a Righteous
674. Rimproverare l’altro
675. The Quality of Joseph
676. Being Privileged
677. Why Matza Is Called “Bread of Poverty”
678. Male and Female
679. Signs of the Son of David
680. Annulment - the Baal Shem Tov Way
681. When a Woman Inseminates – 2
682. Exit and Entry in the Work
683. A Wise Sees the Future
684. The Quality of Moses
685. The Creator Complements the Desire
686. The Most Important Is the Right
687. Make for Yourself an Ark
688. Raise a Contribution for Me – 2
689. The Matter of Father and Son
690. This World and the Future
691. The Torah Was Given in Secret
692. The Torah Is Called Tushiya – 1
693. The Torah Is Called Tushiya – 2
694. Great Is a Transgression that Is Lishma
695. And They Shall Take to You Pure Olive Oil
696. Your Strength to the Torah
697. And You Shall Honor It, Not Doing Your Ways
698. Two Kinds of Internality
699. The End of Correction
700. Covering and Revealing
701. Confidence
702. From the Depths I Have Called You, Lord – 2
703. Miketz [After]
704. Why Was the Torah Given to Israel
705. Impudence
706. By the Sweat of Your Brow
707. A Treasure of Fear of Heaven
708. The Prayer of the Righteous
709. Education
710. Three Generations, Three Lines
711. There Has Never Risen a Prophet Like Moses
712. Desire and Intellect
713. One Who Walks along the Way
714. Torah of Hesed [Mercy/Grace]
715. Concerning Preparation for a Fast
716. Concerning Pride
717. Voice and Speech
718. Anyone Who Mourns Jerusalem
719. And Judah Approached Him – 2
720. He Who Adds Knowledge, Adds Pain
721. The Segula of Torah and Mitzvot
722. Action and Thought
723. Tzimtzum
724. Balak Saw
725. Man’s Soul Will Teach Him
726. Going on the Road
727. The Most Important Is the Environment
728. Faith – 2
729. This World Is Sanctified by Man
730. Nicer than Gold
731. Charity for the Poor
732. Before the Face of the Menorah
733. In Its Time, I Will Hasten It
734. The Western Candle
735. On the Day When the Tabernacle Was Established
736. The Diminution of the Moon
737. A Eulogy
738. A Covenant of Salt
739. Two Types of Attire
740. Three Gifts
741. To Cleanse the People
742. The Lord’s Revenge Against Midian
743. The Journeys of the Children of Israel
744. Abraham’s Gemstones
745. When the Creator Came
746. Concerning the Fetus
747. In the Heat of the Day
748. To Renew the Reason
749. The Commandment of the Upper One
750. How Terrible Is This Place
751. Anyone in Whom There Is Fear of Heaven – 2
752. Before I Was Circumcised – 2
753. Concerning the Evil Inclination
754. The Complaint of the Angels
755. To Enjoy in Order to Bestow
756. A Deficiency from the Light
757. Toil
758. The Measure of Overcoming
759. L’Uomo nella Sua Totalità
760. The Material of the Soul
761. Two Discernments in the Kelim
762. Degrees of Aviut
763. Inverse Relation between Lights and Vessels
764. The View of Kedusha
765. He Who Learns Torah in Poverty
766. The Ability to Receive
767. You Shall Make Holy Garments
768. The Suckling of the Klipot
769. Merging of the Body
770. The Difference between the Soul and the Body
771. Walking
772. Writing a Book of Torah
773. The Difference between Torah and Ethics
774. It Is Good to Thank the Creator
775. The Thoughts of a Gentile and Those of Israel
776. Still of Kedusha
777. A Prayer for the Exile of the Shechina
778. Pleasure Cancels the Mind
779. Bless the Fruit of Your Womb
780. And You, Write
781. The Way of the Baal Shem Tov
782. How Great Is Your Name
783. A Ransom for His Soul
784. The Meaning of Shabbat
785. Law and Judgment – 2
786. The Lord Came from Sinai
787. ABYA in the Work
788. He Raises the Poor from the Dust – 1
789. From the Peh and Above, It Is Not Considered a Kli
790. Be Careful with What Comes Out from Your Lips
791. Demand and Receive Reward
792. A Stubborn and Rebellious Son
793. Write Them on the Tablet of Your Heart
794. The Place of Attainment
795. Hear, My Son, Your Father's Morals – 2
796. The Real State
797. A Gift
798. The Merit of the Little One
799. The Birth of the Moon
800. A Broken Heart – 2
801. The Klipa of Ishmael
802. If Any Man of You Brings an Offering – 2
803. The Order of Conveying the Wisdom
804. Raises the Poor from the Dust – 2
805. Concerning Joy
806. Esau’s Head Is Holy
807. Fire Is Called “Judgments”
808. Wholeness and Deficiency – 2
809. Wholeness in Life
810. He Who Fears Me
811. Returning to One’s Origin
812. Turn Away from Evil and Do Good – 3
813. The Desire to Bestow – 2
814. Times in the Work
815. Bo [Come]
816. Observed and Received
817. The Meaning of “Poor”
818. Happy Are They Who Keep Judgment
819. Borrowing Vessels
820. The Discernment of “In Everything”
821. Faremo e Ascolteremo - 2
822. A Handmaid Who Is Heir to Her Mistress
823. The Name Shadai
824. Interiorità ed Esteriorità
825. Choice
826. A Messenger to Circumcise
827. The Godliness Made the Concealment
828. A Lot
829. The Basis of Learning the Revealed
830. The Need for Gentiles
831. The Need for the Torah
832. Dead Fish
833. Turn Away from Evil and Do Good - 4
834. “Grow!”
835. Gird Your Sword
836. Servant and Son
837. Adhere to His Attributes
838. The Trueness of Providence
839. A Kosher Woman
840. Quick Nearing
841. Coerced
842. The Work in General
843. The Work Is the Reward
844. Labor Is the Reward
845. None as Holy as the Lord
846. Faith Is the Quality of Malchut
847. Willows of the Brook
848. The Days of the Messiah
849. A Condition for Marrying a Woman
850. A Proselyte Who Converted
851. A Desire for Levirate Marriage
852. Two Kinds of Scrutinies
853. The Need to Recognize the Greatness of the Creator
854. Takes His Part and the Part of His Friend
855. Wood and Stone
856. Man’s Nature
857. The Need for a Kli without Light
858. Moses Assembled
859. You Shall Increase Their Inheritance
860. With What to Aid?
861. The Work of the Lines
862. Will Give Wisdom to the Wise
863. Korah’s Complaint
864. See Life
865. Wholeness Is One Hundred
866. Peace to the Far and to the Near
867. The Governance of Peace
868. The Reason that Obligates
869. Matrimony
870. Adam HaRishon Was a Heretic
871. A Scorpion and a Snake
872. Who Makes a Way through the Sea
873. Ibur [Conception] – 2
874. Rest and Joy, Light to the Jews
875. Three Lines - 4
876. The Creator Created the Evil Inclination, He Created for It the Torah as a Spice
877. Three Prayers - 2
878. Their Leg Was a Straight Leg
879. Good Writing and Signing
880. Judgments
881. Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur
882. Rosh Hashanah
883. For Man Is the Tree of the Field - 1
884. The Rosh Hashanah Prayer
885. With a Shofar You Will Renew
886. Malchuiot, Memories, and Shofarot
887. I Do Swear
888. Good Days
889. The Quality of Mercy
890. The Sorrow of the Shechina – 2
891. The Meaning of Yom Kippur
892. An Article for Sukkot
893. The Fruit of a Citrus Tree
894. Simchat Torah [The Joy of Torah]
895. The Meaning of Hanukah
896. Repel Admon in the Shadow of Tzalmon
897. What Is Hanukah
898. What Is the Miracle of Hanukah
899. Hanu-KoH
900. Two Degrees
901. Rosh Hashanah for the Trees
902. Israel Are Compared to an Olive Tree
903. Concerning the Fifteenth of Shevat
904. Man Is the Tree of the Field - 2
905. Daveh [Afflicted] or Hod [Glory/Majesty]
906. The Meaning of Amalek
907. When He Let His Hand Down, Amalek Prevailed
908. Blotting Out Amalek
909. Revealing the Concealment
910. Until He Does Not Know
911. The Meal of a Wicked One
912. What Is Purim
913. His Law He Contemplates
914. Two Opposites
915. I and Not a Messenger
916. The Day after Shabbat [Sabbath]
917. A Kept Matza [Passover bread]
918. Concerning Passover
919. Concerning the Environment
920. The Torah Spoke Regarding Four Sons
921. The Need for an Act from Below
922. The More One Speaks of the Exodus from Egypt
923. And he said, “When You Deliver the Hebrew Women”
924. And God Spoke to Moses
925. And I Will Take You as My People
926. Come unto Pharaoh
927. Concerning Hametz and Matza
928. Behold, a People Has Come Out of Egypt
929. The Passover Offering
930. Concerning the Beginning of the Month
931. Peh-Sah [speaking mouth]
932. The First Innovation
933. Concerning the Exodus from Egypt
934. The Duty to Tell the Story of the Exodus from Egypt
935. Concerning the Matza [unleavened bread]
936. The Time of Redemption
937. Questions for the Exodus from Egypt
938. Concerning the Omer [Count]
939. The Exodus from Egypt and the Giving of the Torah
940. The Point in the Heart
941. Mount Sinai
942. Concerning the Mind Controlling the Heart
943. Three Discernments in the Torah
944. The Giving of the Torah Is with Two Eyes
945. The Ninth of Av
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The Need and Importance of Teaching Faith
 

159. The Need and Importance of Teaching Faith

“‘And choose life.’ Tanna Rabbi Ishmael, it is a craft. From here, sages said, One must teach his sons a craft. If he does not teach him, he must teach himself. What is the reason? So you will live, it is written’” (Jerusalem Talmud, Kidushin, Chapter 1, Rule 7).

This means that it is a Mitzva [commandment] to learn a craft, and it falls in the category of “Choose life.” Thus, why is there no such arrangement at the seminary that each of the students at the seminary learns a craft, and why is the management of the seminary not seeing to it?

It is written in Kidushin (p 30b), “How do we know about teaching him a craft? Rabbi Hizkiya said, he called ‘See a life with a woman you have loved.’ If a woman, really a woman. As he must marry him to a wife, so he must teach him a craft. If it is Torah, as he must teach him Torah, so he must teach him a craft.” So why are they not minding this?

It is written in the Tosfot, Chapter, Kama de Kidushin: “Rabbi Yosi, son of Rabbi Eliezer, says in the name of Raban Ben Gamliel, ‘Anyone who has mastered a craft is like a fenced vineyard that beasts and animals cannot enter, and passersby cannot enter or see what is inside.’”

We should ask, What is the connection between a craft and a fenced vineyard that animals and beasts cannot enter? Also, what does it mean that passersby cannot enter it? How does craft help in this? Also, the fact that they cannot see what is inside, why would it matter if they did see what is inside, so much so that it is worth engaging in craftsmanship instead of Torah?

It is written in Kidushin (29a): “Rabbi Yehuda says, ‘Anyone who does not teach his son craftsmanship, teaches him to be a robber. Robbery, can you imagine? Yet, it is as though he teaches him to be a robber.’” It seems from the Jerusalem Talmud that it falls into the category of “Do!” from the verse, “Choose life,” and for Rabbi Hizkiya it is from the verse, “See a life,” and from Rabbi Yehuda it seems that he will transgress the “Do not rob,” as he said, “It is as though he teaches him to rob.”

Concerning craftsmanship, we find a dispute in the words of our sages: “Bar Kafra said, ‘One should always teach one’s son clean and easy craftsmanship.’ Which is it? Rabbi Yehuda said, ‘a needle of furrows.’” RASHI interprets, “A needle of furrows, whose stitches are made in furrows, lines, like the furrows of a plow” (Kidushin 82a).

Later in the Gemara, “Tania Rabbi says, ‘No craft passes from the world (meaning that everything is for a purpose). Happy is one who sees his parents in fine craftsmanship; woe unto one who sees his parents in flawed craftsmanship.’”

The world cannot be without perfume and without tanning [foul smelling craft]. Happy is he whose craft is a perfume; woe unto one whose craft is tanning. The world cannot be without males or without females. Happy is he whose children are males; woe unto he children sons are females.

We should ask, 1) Why does he begin with his parents, then with himself, and finally with his sons? 2) What does it mean when he says, “Happy is he whose parents…”? What does it come to teach us? After all, he cannot correct his parents. It follows that he is crying out about the past, while our sages teach us that what we should correct pertains only to the present and the future, and not to the past.

“Rabbi Nehorai says, ‘I forego every craft in the world and I teach my son only Torah, for any craft in the world stands only during his youth, but when he is old, he is thrown to hunger. But the Torah is not so; it stands by man when he is young, and gives him a purpose and hope when he is old.’”

RASHI interprets that any craft does not yield reward after some time, but their reward is at that time. But the reward of Torah comes by itself over time, and even a sick or an old man who cannot engage in it now, eats from the past (Kidushin 82a).

We should ask, What is the reward that one has if he engages in Torah when he is a child the same as when he is old, that we can say that it sustain him? Moreover, according to the above said, it implies that he is exploiting the Torah, against the words of our sages (Avot 4). We should interpret all the above, as our sages teach us how to walk in the ways of the work.

But before we elucidate all the above, we must understand the matter of the purpose of creation for which man was created. It is explained in the holy books that the reason is in order to delight His creatures, since it is the way of the good to do good.

Also, it is explained in Midrash Rabbah (Beresheet, Chapter 8), “The ministering angels said to the Creator, ‘‘What is man that you should remember him, and the son of man that you should care for him?’ Why do You need this trouble?’ There is an allegory about a king who had a tower filled with abundance but no guests. What pleasure does the king have? They said to Him, ‘Master of the world, do that which pleases You.’”

This explains that the reason for man’s creation was that the Creator wanted to do good to them. This is why He created the creatures, and it is about this that they asked, If the purpose is to do good, why are the creatures suffering torments and sorrow and are not receiving the delight and pleasure that the Creator wishes to give them?

The Zohar explains, “He who eats that which is not his is afraid to look at his face.” That is, in every free gift there is the flaw of shame.

In order not to have the bread of shame, meaning that for the Creator’s gift to be complete and without any flaw, He has given us a place of work, which is called “the work of choice.” Through it, we can receive all our abundance from the Creator without any shame.

When a person observes Torah and Mitzvot [commandments], when he still does not feel any flavor in the work, he must observe everything only by way of faith, since when the guidance of the world is in concealment of the face, it is possible to observe the Torah and Mitzvot on the basis of faith.

At such a time, there is the matter of choice, to loathe the bad and choose the good. By making the choice, a person can correct himself so he can do all his work not in order to receive reward, but only with the aim for the sake of the Creator.

When one does not feel any flavor in the work, he becomes accustomed to doing things even without a reward. Hence, afterward, when he is rewarded with receiving the interior of the Torah and is rewarded with the light of pleasure, when he will be in a state of revelation of the face, he will still be able to receive these pleasures only because of a Mitzva [sing. of Mitzvot].

That is, it is the aim of the Creator that man will receive the upper pleasures, as this is the purpose of creation, but not for his own benefit. That is, he does not want to receive the pleasures in order to please himself. Rather, his aim is to receive in order to bestow. This was the whole purpose for making a place of concealment.

Hence, during the concealment there is room to work to take upon himself the fear of heaven “as an ox to the burden and as a donkey to the load” in order to accustom himself to serve the Creator not in order to receive reward.

According to the above, the main work we were given is faith, which is the quality of the fear of heaven. Obtaining fear of heaven is a great thing, as our sages said, “Is the fear of heaven such a little thing?” (Berachot 33b).

This means that first we must learn what is fear of heaven, and then there is work to take upon oneself the fear of heaven. As was said, they said that “To Moses, it was a small thing,” meaning a little smaller than the degree of Moses is a great thing although we cannot understand how it can be that fear of heaven is such a great thing.

After all, who does not have fear of heaven? Even if a person prays only once a day and eats kosher food, we already say about him that he has fear of heaven. Hence, here we should say that our sages knew what real fear of heaven was; therefore, they determined and said that this is a great thing, whereas we must first learn what is the fear of heaven, that it is such a great thing that our sages said, “In the end, after all is heard, fear God and keep His commandments, for this is the whole of man.” What is “for this is the whole of man”? “Rabbi Elazar said, ‘The Creator said, ‘The whole world was created only for this; this is equal to the entire world—the whole world was created only to command this’’” (Berachot 6b).

This means that all of our life depends on faith in the Creator, since this is called the Kli [vessel] by which we can acquire everything in our world, where we were given the work in Torah and Mitzvot. Everything depends on the measure of faith that we acquire.

By this we will understand what our sages said, and as RASHI interpreted, “The Creator considered it for Abraham as a merit and Tzedakah [righteousness/charity],” for the faith that he had in Him. We must understand why faith is called Tzedakah, and what is the connection between Tzedakah and faith.

If a person works in order to bestow and not in order to receive for his own pleasure, it is similar to one who gives to his friend a hundred pounds without wanting anything in return for the one hundred pounds, or to someone who gives to his friend a hundred pounds and in return wants a suit or a closet. No one will say about the one who gives the one hundred pounds in return for a suit that he is very generous and has a kind heart that he can give to the merchant a hundred pounds, since he receives a reward in return for the effort.

But when one gives to his friend a hundred pounds and does not want anything in return, he certainly has a kind heart and wants to give Tzedakah.

Therefore, one who serves the Creator on the basis of faith, his work is not in order to receive reward. Otherwise, if his basis is not faith, then he belongs specifically to those who want to receive reward for the labor, since he always wants to be rid of the faith and work only on knowledge.

By serving the Creator in bestowal and not in order to receive any reward, this is called Dvekut [adhesion] with the Creator, meaning that by this we become adhered to the Life of Lives, as our sages said, “Cling unto His attributes, as He is merciful, so you are merciful” (Shabbat 133b). That is, as the Creator bestows upon the lower ones, so man should work in order to bestow.

When one has come to a state where he can serve the Creator with this aim, he is rewarded with the spiritual pleasures that the Creator contemplated by His aim to do good to His creations, for then the gift that the Creator gives is whole, without the flaw of bread of shame in it. It is as our sages said, “Rabbi Meir says, ‘He who learns Torah Lishma [for Her sake] (with the aim to bestow) is rewarded with many things’” (Pirkei Avot, Chapter 6).

Faith is also called a Mitzva. There is Torah, and there is Mitzva, as Baal HaSulam interpreted the words of our sages, “If he performs one Mitzva, happy is he, for he has sentenced himself and the world to the side of merit” (Kidushin 40b), and one Mitzva means faith. According to the above, faith, fear of heaven, and one Mitzva are the same thing, but each one points to a different form.

Now we can interpret the above-said, that what the Jerusalem Talmud brings in the name of Rabbi Ishmael, “Choose life—this is craftsmanship,” that he must teach his son craftsmanship, that it refers to faith. This matter is called “craftsmanship,” since this is great learning, as our sages said, “Is fear a trivial matter?”

The term “craftsmanship” pertains primarily to something that depends on actions, but one who learns some science, medicine, or engineering, or a quality, this is called “wisdom” and not “craftsmanship,” since it pertains to the brain and not to the rest of the organs.

Hence, since the matter of faith is the quality of above reason, which is against the mind, for one can speak of faith precisely where the mind does not reach, and this is only a force, which is acceptance of the burden of the kingdom of heaven by force, “as an ox to the burden and as a donkey to the load.” For this reason, faith is called “craftsmanship.”

Here comes the matter of choice in the verse, “Choose life.” The father must teach his son this craft, and if he does not, he must teach himself. What is the reason? “So that you may live,” meaning that it is impossible to receive the life of Torah without faith.

Also, in this way we can interpret what Rabbi Hizkiya said, that the obligation to teach his son is from the verse, “See a life with a wife,” meaning that it is impossible to be rewarded with life without the commandment of faith, since specifically through faith he is rewarded with adhering to the Life of Lives. Naturally, he has life by adhering to life, since Torah without faith is not regarded as life.

This is why he said that as he must teach him Torah, so he must teach him craftsmanship, since when the Torah is on the basis of faith, it is possible to feel the life in it and then we see that it is in the manner of “for this is your life and the length of your days.”

According to the above, we can interpret what is written in the aforementioned Tosfot, which says, “Anyone who has mastered a craft is like a fenced vineyard.” We asked what is the connection between a fence and a craft. We should interpret that craftsmanship is faith, since one who has faith, it is as though he has a fenced vineyard, where “vineyard” refers to the “vineyard of the Lord of Hosts,” meaning the spirituality in a person.

At that time, if he has faith, it is like a fence that guards him from all the things that can harm him, since the things that harm a person’s spirituality are the foreign thoughts and ill wills, which is considered that a beast and an animal have entered him.

The faith keeps him from all the questions and from all the evil lusts, which is called “a beast”; it is matters that are the work of a beast. Also, bad animals, which are not of Kedusha [holiness], cannot enter when a person has taken upon himself the burden of faith, “passersby cannot enter it.”

That is, those are the people who always breach the Mitzvot and repent. They cannot grip to a person who has faith because they do not see what is inside him, since one who is careful that his work will always be in faith, works in concealment, and then his intention is unseen.

When a person works Lo Lishma, it is possible to see his intention because he wants reward for the labor. But one whose work is on the basis of faith, his thought is covered and not revealed to anyone, so there cannot be a grip to the outer ones in his work.

We should interpret similarly what Rabbi Yehuda said, “Anyone who does not teach his son craftsmanship, it is as though he teaches him to be a robber.” Our sages said, “Anyone who enjoys in this world without a blessing, it is as though he robs the Creator and the assembly of Israel, as was said, “One who robs his father and mother and says, ‘there is no crime,’ is a friend to a destructive man.” Rabbi Hanina son of Rabbi Papa said, “He is a friend of Jeroboam son of Navat, who destroyed the world to their father in heaven” (Berachot 35).

We should understand the connection between a robber and Jeroboam son of Navat, and why he who enjoys without a blessing is considered a robber. What is the connection between robbing and blessing? The thing is that the purpose of creation is to do good to His creations. In order not to have the bread of shame, the place of concealment was made, so that man would be able to receive the pleasure in order to bestow upon the Creator. In this manner, there will not be any flaw in the present of the Creator, as our sages said, “The cow wants to feed more than the calf wants to eat” (Pesachim 112a).

However, as longs as a person is not ready to receive, the abundance does not come to the lower ones. Hence, one who enjoys in this world should do so with the aim to bless the Creator. That is, the aim should not be that he wants to enjoy, but that he wants to bless the Creator.

At that time, the Creator gives the upper abundance to the assembly of Israel, as our sages said, “He who performs one Mitzva, happy is he, for he has sentenced himself and the entire world to the side of merit” (Kidushin 40b). In other words, by performing the Mitzva, he causes the Creator to bestow upon the assembly of Israel. This is the meaning of “sentences the entire world to the side of merit.”

It follows that when one enjoys in this world without a blessing, without the aim to bless the Creator, because of this, the Creator does not bestow upon the assembly of Israel, since the aim for the sake of the Creator is missing.

Thus, this person robs the Creator and the assembly of Israel by not blessing and by wanting to enjoy only for himself and not for the sake of the Creator. For this reason, he becomes a “friend to a destructive man,” Jeroboam son of Navat, who “destroyed the world to their father in heaven.”

All this is because they lacked faith in the Creator. This is why Rabbi Yehuda said, “Anyone who does not teach his son a craft, it is as though he teaches him to be a robber,” meaning it is as though he teaches him to rob the Creator and the assembly of Israel. Hence, there is a strict obligation to teach the matter of faith, since only by this is it possible to achieve the complete wholeness.

From all the above, we can explain the measure that they gave to learning the craft itself. Bar Kafra says, “One should always teach one’s son a clean and easy craft.” Rabbi Yehuda interprets that it is “a needle of furrows.” In RASHI’s interpretation, “A needle of furrows, whose stitches are made in furrows, lines, like the furrows of a plow.”

We therefore see that the stitching is in order to connect two separate things so they become one. This means that one should achieve equivalence with the Creator, meaning Dvekut [adhesion], as it is written, “And to cleave unto Him,” as he interpreted, as the furrows of a plow, meaning to turn the dust that was below and make it on top, and that which was on top to be underneath.

So is man. There are two desires in him: 1) a good will, to bestow, to have faith, and 2) an ill will, when he wants only to receive for his own sake and to have no faith in the Creator. When a person is born, by nature, the good will is of inferior importance to him and he does not want to use it, since it is loathsome to use such a desire.

Conversely, the ill will is of superior importance, and whenever he can use it, he is in utter elation. That is, when he can satisfy the ill will in him, he has no higher state than this, since all he wishes is to satisfy the bad within him.

Hence, a person who wants to cling unto his Maker must equalize the qualities, as our sages said, “Cling unto His attributes, as He is merciful, so you are merciful” (Shabbat 133b). In other words, as the Creator wants only to bestow upon the lower ones, man, too, should see that he wants only to bestow upon the Creator and does not want to receive for his own pleasure. This is all of man’s purpose in his work in equivalence of qualities.

Hence, man must invert the qualities within him, similar to plowing, so that what was previously above, meaning the ill will, will now be below, and every time he is about to use the ill will in him, he will feel that he regards it as loathsome and base.

Conversely, the good will, which was previously of inferior importance, will now be in a state of “above,” so that each time he can do things for the sake of the Creator, he should feel that such a state is an ascent for him, since by this he comes to cling unto Him.

This is only by faith. This is why faith is called “clean and easy craft.” It is “clean” because there must not be any mixture of self-benefit there, but only for the sake of the Creator, since when one believes in the greatness of the Creator, a person has no desire or yearning other than to adhere to Him all day and all night. This is why it is called “clean,” meaning only for the sake of the Creator.

However, before a person is rewarded with his body’s consent to the work of faith, this work is regarded as lowliness, since he does not see anyone respects him when he works only for the sake of the Creator.

At that time, he must see that his work is in concealment, since otherwise his work cannot be clean because while his work is with excitement, his actions will certainly be praised and by this, the matter of respect will interfere, that others will respect him for this.

Therefore, when he wants to have no mixtures, he must work in concealment and then he will not get any respect from this. This is why clean work is despicable in his eyes. Also, Kalah [easy/light] comes from the word Nikleh [despicable], meaning despised.

Also, clean work is despised because a person cannot tolerate faith above reason, since by nature, a person appreciates what he grasps in the mind when reason obligates him.

Conversely, going against reason is despicable because such work is called “gullible,” as our sages said about the verse, “Who is gullible? Let him come here.” This is Moses, pertaining to faith, since Moses is called “the faithful shepherd,” who has faith and planted the faith in the whole of Israel.

In this way, we should interpret the words of Rabbi, “No craft passes from the world.” As RASHI interpreted, whether it is loathsome or clean, since the view of Rabbi is that the whole world cannot do clean work, meaning that specifically one who is inclined to the work of truth is capable of doing clean work where there are no mixtures of Lo Lishma [not for Her sake] there.

Conversely, the thoughts of the majority of the world revolve around the view of the world. They do not have a strong mind or a strong desire so they can exert and have the power to get what they want. Rather, they work for the general public, and what the public obligates, they do. They have no permission to do in the world what they understand and want, but are rather dependent on the view of the public.

For this reason, when some Mitzva is given to the general public, we must see that the general public can observe it.

This is why Rabbi says, “No craft passes from the world,” but the most important is for a person to take upon himself the burden of the kingdom of heaven whether it is clean, meaning entirely for the sake of the Creator, or loathsome, meaning with mixtures of not for the sake of the Creator, since any craft is needed because from Lo Lishma we come to Lishma.

Our sages said, “A thousand people come to the Bible [Pentateuch]… and one to the light” (VaYikra Rabbah, Chapter 2:1). This means that by a thousand coming in, it makes it possible for one to come out to the light. This is why Rabbi says, “No craft passes from the world.”

However, “Happy is he who sees his parents in fine craft.” “His parents” means thoughts, since before every act, there must be a preceding thought and cause that is the reason that makes him do this thing. Hence, “his parents” are the thought that causes him to observe Torah and Mitzvot.

“Fine craft” means one that brings a person to the goal for which he was created—to engage in Torah and Mitzvot for the sake of the Creator—by which he will be rewarded with receiving the delight and pleasure that the Creator contemplated giving.

At that time, he will feel happy because of all that he has acquired through his labor in Torah and Mitzvot. But if the thought is not for the sake of the Creator, he cannot achieve the goal, and it turns out that his craft is flawed.

This is why Rabbi said, “Woe unto one who sees his parents in flawed craft.” Because his faith is mixed with Lo Lishma, this faith is flawed. Therefore, we must try to make the parents, meaning the cause, be for the sake of the Creator.

By this we will understand the words of our sages, “Happy is one who sees his parents in fine craftsmanship.” We asked, But this is something that he cannot correct, since if he is born to such parents, what can he do? According to the above, it is all well, as it pertains to himself, that he should try that the thought and the cause of Torah and Mitzvot will be with the aim for the sake of the Creator.

In this manner, it is written in The Zohar, Shemot, “The world exists only on the smell.” And in this manner, we should interpret, “The world cannot be without perfume and without tanning.”

“Perfume” refers to perfumes, whose fragrance ascends from below upward. His craftsmanship should be with the aim to bestow contentment above, for the person is regarded as below and the Creator as above. It follows that the man sends all his pleasures to the Creator, who is above.

“Tanning” is the processing of leather, which emits a great stench. This means that when he sees that his work will be Lo Lishma, yet he must engage in work only for the sake of the Creator, the work becomes loathsome to him and stinks in his eyes.

In a place where there should be pleasure, when he sees that now he has a chance to work for the sake of the Creator, he cannot do this. Hence, in a state where he does not see the return for his work, he feels heaviness and idleness and lowliness, and his heart is angry and upset.

For this reason, although his work is not with the aim not for the sake of the Creator, he still lacks the joy and merriment from giving contentment to the Creator.

Although “it is impossible without tanning,” meaning that man must come to such a state, since this place is the passage between Lishma and Lo Lishma, but woe unto he who stays in that place, which is a midway stop, and does not continue toward the goal of wanting to please the Creator.

He interprets further and says, “The world cannot be without males and females.” “Happy is he whose children are males, and woe unto he whose children are females.” The famous question is, What does it mean that his children are females?

We should say that we know from books of those who have fear that the giver and bestower are called “male,” and the receiver and deficient are called “female.” This is the meaning of what he says, that the world cannot be without males and females, meaning that there must be the state of Lo Lishma in the world, regarded as taking pleasure for self-benefit. Otherwise, it is impossible to begin to engage in Torah and Mitzvot.

Sometimes the reason is the Lo Lishma, but during the act, he comes to thoughts of repentance and performs the Mitzva with the aim for the sake of the Creator, meaning his aim is to bestow contentment upon his Maker. This is regarded as “his children are males.” For this reason, he says, “Woe unto he whose children are females,” meaning that the things he does are also with the aim to receive reward, which is regarded as his children being females.

“Rabbi Nehorai says, ‘I forego every craft in the world and I teach my son only Torah.’” He is not referring to the way by which the general public should behave, but rather speaks of his own degree, that he has been rewarded with permanent fear of heaven. This is why he says that he foregoes all the crafts, meaning that now he is leaving the flawed faith and the fine faith, since he has left both kinds of faith. Instead, now he teaches his son, meaning his action, called “son,” only the Torah.

He explains that the reason is that “Any craft in the world stands only during his youth.” RASHI interprets that “Any craft does not yield reward after some time, but their reward is at that time.”

Faith is called Mitzva, and the acceptance of the burden of the kingdom of heaven is a Mitzva. Our sages said, “A Mitzva protects and saves while engaging in it. Torah protects and saves when engaging in it, and when not engaging in it” (Sotah 21b). The difference between Torah and Mitzva is that we see that in the Torah, a person can remember and use what he learned the previous day or even before, or repeat the rules he learned so as to know how to behave according to what he learned before. For this reason, the Torah protects and saves even while not engaging in it, since he can remember what he learned a while ago.

But faith, which is a Mitzva, pertains only when engaging in it, since each time a person takes upon himself the burden of accepting the kingdom of heaven, it is a Mitzva, and a Mitzva is an act. There is no remembering here, as with the Torah; rather, each act stands on its own.

Hence, during the fact, it protects and saves, and he cannot say that he remembers that he took upon himself the burden of accepting the kingdom of heaven a while ago, since this will not help him. Instead, at any given moment, he needs faith, and it cannot be said that now he does not need the burden of faith.

Thus, each acceptance is a new Mitzva. This is why faith is called “youth” and “childhood,” since “old age” pertains where something took place a while ago. But since the burden of faith must always be renewed, there cannot be old age in it, and it is always called a “youth.”

This is why he says, “forego,” since it is with him only in his youth, since faith protects and saves only while engaging in it. As RASHI interpreted, “Any craft does not yield reward after some time, but their reward is at that time,” meaning it protects and saves only while engaging in it.

But the Torah is not so. Rather, it assists a person in his youth and gives him hope when he is old. As RASHI interpreted, “But the reward of Torah comes by itself over time, and even a sick or an old man who cannot engage in it, eats from the past.”

In other words, the Torah protects and saves even while not engaging in it. This is why he interprets that it helps him in his youth, meaning when he engages, and gives him hope when he is old, when he does not engage in it.

“Even a sick or an old man who cannot engage in it, eats from the past.” This means that it protects and saves even while not engaging in it. This is why Rabbi Nehorai says that he himself is doing so, since he has already taken upon himself the matter of permanent faith. For this reason, he says, “I forego every craft,” since he has been rewarded with this degree permanently, unlike the rest of the people.

***

Rabbi Elazar said, “All the craftsmen in the world are destined to stand on the ground, as was said, ‘And they will come down from their ships and all the oarsmen will stand on the earth.’ Rabbi Elazar said, ‘There is not craftsmanship more inferior to the earth, as was said, and they came down’” (Yevamot 63).

We should ask, If the work of the earth is an inferior craft, why did Rabbi Elazar say, “destined to,” meaning that in the end, they will have good craftsmanship, yet he deduces that it will be an inferior craftsmanship?

We should interpret that faith is called “light” [or “easy”], meaning inferior, because to man, faith above reason is not important. This is why it is difficult to work. But in the future, they will be rewarded with this clean faith.

Our sages said, “In the days of the Messiah, proselytes will not be accepted, just as proselytes were not accepted in the days of David and in the days of Solomon. Rabbi Eliezer said, ‘What does the verse say? For he will surely fear (he who comes to convert), ‘he who is not with Me’ (while we are not with you, he will convert, meaning in this world). ‘Whoever assails you will fall because of you’ (whoever attacks you while you are poor will fall because of you in the next world) (Isaiah 54), but another will not’” (Yevamot 24b).

The Tosfot ask, “They did not accept proselytes in the days of David? What about Ittai the Gittite and Pharaoh’s daughter, for in the days of Solomon there isn’t the question; he is the reason, and they do not need the king’s table.

And the Gibeonites converted by themselves, as in the days of Esther, “And many of the peoples of the earth became Jews,” and from that one who came to Hillel … Hillel was certain that even if it is for the sake of the Creator, and that one who came and said, “Convert me so that I may marry that disciple, it was also for the sake of the Creator.”

From all the above, it seems that one who wants to convert in order to receive the good reward that the people of Israel have is not accepted. This is the meaning of “no proselytes are accepted in the days of the Messiah.” Rather, they must convert only for the sake of the Creator and not for the sake of reward.

In other words, one who wants to take upon himself to be a Jew and convert the gentile within him, cannot be a Jew and adhere to the people of Israel unless he does not aim for the good reward, which is called “for the days of the Messiah.” Rather, as it is written, “Who dwells with you in the days of your poverty,” as our sages said, “Rabbi Yonatan says, ‘Anyone who observes the Torah from poverty will eventually observe it from wealth” (Avot, Chapter 4).

That is, he who is poor in knowledge yet observes the Torah will eventually observe it from wealth, meaning he will be rewarded with understanding. Conversely, anyone who cancels the Torah because of wealth will eventually cancel it because of poverty, meaning that the knowledge of Torah will depart from him.

Yevamot 63: “Rabbi Elazar said, ‘Anyone who does not have a soil is not a man, as was said, ‘The heaven are the heaven of the Lord, and the earth, He has given to the sons of man.’’” We should ask, accordingly, each person should strive to have a piece of land.

The Tania also asks, So would Rashbi say, “The graves of idol-worshippers are not to be defiled in a tent, as was said, ‘You are My flock, the flock of My pasture, you are man. You are called ‘man,’ and the idol-worshippers are not called ‘man’’” (Yevamot 61a). This means that specifically a man from Israel is called “man.” But how can it be said that if he has no land, he does not fall into the category, “You are called ‘man’”?

We can interpret that “land” means earth, as the evidence he brings from the verse, “The heavens are the heavens of the Lord, and the earth, He has given to the sons of man.”

The Torah is called “heaven,” since the Torah was given to Moses from heaven. Moses received the Torah from Sinai. The earth is called Malchut, “faith,” “fear of heaven,” as our sages said, “everything is in the hands of heaven but the fear of heaven” (Berachot 33b).

This is the meaning of “One who has no faith,” which is the fear of heaven, called “earth,” “is not regarded among “you are called ‘man.’”

Yevamot 63: “Rabbi Elazar said, ‘There is not craftsmanship more inferior than the earth, as was said, and they came down.’ Rabbi Ami said, ‘Rains come down only for the faithful, as was said, ‘Truth will spring forth from the earth, and justice reflects from heaven.’’” RASHI interprets, when truth springs forth from the earth, when there is faith in negotiation, justice reflects from heaven, meaning rains, which are Tzedakah [righteousness/charity].

We should understand why it is specifically because the negotiation is not with faith that Tzedakah is not given from above, and the matter of faith, where earth is a desire, which is the heart, where one engages in the matter of faith, called Tzedakah, as it is written, “and he believed in the Lord and He considered it for him as righteousness.”

Therefore, in a corresponding measure, they cause righteousness, which is faith, to come from above. This is the meaning of the prayer for the rains in order to invoke faith.

“And He smelled him in the fear of the Lord, and He will not judge by what His eyes see, nor make a decision by what His ears hear” (Isaiah 11). This means that the Messiah King, meaning one who wants to walk on the path toward being rewarded with the purpose, which is the quality of the messiah, should not judge anything by what he sees or by what his ears hear, but by the scent of the fear of heaven, which is faith. According to this line, he should determine all his ways.

As it is written afterward, “Justice will be his belt around his waist, and faith, his belt around his loins.” In other words, his faith should be justice, regarded as righteousness, not in order to receive reward, and this will be his support that he can walk in the work of the Creator, since the light strengthens his waist so he can walk and not stumble as he walks, meaning not to grow tired from walking.