Its all About Middos
By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
It is a well-worn truism that people hear what they want
to hear. People can be having a conversation about a specific topic, and each
participant will take have a different understanding of the conversation. Each
one will think that the other person said something different from what he
said. Based on prior experiences and biases, people inflect and arrive at
conclusions that they are convinced are the truth, without recognizing that
they totally misconstrued what the other fellow was saying.
People do it subconsciously, without being aware of what
they are doing. They allow their subconscious to take hold of their thought
process and act in an incorrect manner. They may be convinced that they are
correct, or that they are doing what we were taught to do or following the
directions of their rabbeim and parents, when, in fact, they are doing
just the opposite.
Is it their fault? Is there something they can do to
prevent hearing what they want to hear instead of hearing what was really said?
The Steipler Gaon wrote a letter to Rav Moshe Mordechai
Shulzinger (Peninei Rabbeinu Ha’Avi Ezri) pertaining to Korach and how
he came to deny the validity of the Torah. In it he writes: “If a person sinks
with sin, or a ruach tumah comes over him through eating non-kosher
foods and the like, that will bring him to kefirah. Also, if a person is
tempted by something the Torah forbids, he will come to be a kofer to
enable him to fulfill his desire and then he will sink continuously further.
“This is what happened to Korach. Because his pride was
hurt when he wasn’t chosen for the position he coveted, he became angry at
Moshe. In order to take revenge on Moshe and defeat him, Korach descended to kefirah
and then found arguments and complaints with which to depose Moshe. This
happened because when a person’s bad traits - middos raos - take over a
person’s actions, they compromise his thinking ability and take over his
thought process [and he is unable to think and perceive things properly].”
Thus, while Korach began as a tzaddik who had
witnessed the many miracles Hashem performed through Moshe Rabbeinu, when the
temptation for kavod affected him, it completely took him over and he
sunk to the depths of depravity.
Middos.
It is all about middos.
We always viewed middos as things that pertained to
behavior and the way a person deals with other people. But the Steipler
enlightens us that middos affect not only the way we act, but also the
way we think. If we want to be able to think clearly and be able to reason
intelligently, then we have to improve our middos.
We can have everything going for us. We can have
impeccable pedigree, be a brilliant talmid chochom, and be an
acknowledged tzaddik, yet if we don’t learn sifrei mussar and
don’t control our desires, we can end up deep in the hole, r”l.
Bilam, the protagonist of Parshas Bolok, is another
example of a person whose lack of middos tovos led to his demise.
Blessed with the gift of prophecy, his craving for respect and adulation led
him astray. In the current vernacular, we would say that his middos did
him in.
The Gemara (Gittin 45a) tells a story. “Rav
Ilish was captured and held in captivity. One day, a person who understood the
language of birds sat down next to him. A crow came by and called to Rav
Illish. ‘What did he say?’ asked Rav Illish. The man answered that the bird
said, ‘Illish, escape! Illish, escape!’ He said in response, ‘A crow is not
trustworthy. I will not rely on what he said.’
“A dove came by and called out to him. Rav Illish asked
the man what the dove said. He responded that the bird said, ‘Illish, escape!
Illish, escape!’ To which Rav Illish said, ‘Knesses Yisroel is compared
to a dove. Apparently, a miracle will happen with me.’ He attempted to escape
and succeeded.”
Rav Akiva Eiger (Gilyon Hashas, ibid.) cites the Aruch,
who says that from this Gemara it is apparent that Rav Illish understood
the language of birds. However, the Seder Hadoros disputes the Aruch
and says that this story indicates that he did not understand bird talk,
because if he did, why did he have to ask the stranger what the birds were
telling him? He knew on his own. How does the Aruch deduce from the
story that Rav Illish understood the language of birds?
Rav Chaim Shmulevitz asks why Rav Illish would believe the
stranger over the crow. What made him more trustworthy? The crow flew by with a
message. He asked the man to interpret what the bird said and when the man said
that it told Rav Illish to escape, he said that he didn’t trust the bird.
Assuming that Rav Illish did not understand what the bird said and that is why
he asked the stranger what the bird said, why would he trust what the heathen
man told him the bird said, a heathen is an assumed liar. Perhaps the man told
him to escape because he wanted him to get caught and severely punished.
He explained that this question is what led the Aruch
to state that Rav Illish understood what the birds were saying and the reason
Rav Illish asked the man what the bird said was because he feared that he was
hearing what he wanted to hear and had misinterpreted what the bird said
because he wanted to be freed from his predicament.
When the other man told him that the bird said to escape,
he knew that that was what the bird had said. He didn’t follow the advice of
the crow, because it is not an honest bird, but he accepted the advice of the
dove and successfully escaped.
We can be as great as the Amora Rav Illish, but we
must always be on guard to ensure that we are not allowing our personal wants,
desires and biases to interfere with our thought process. Before acting on
something we hear, we must always ensure that we heard what was said, not what
we want to have been said.
Thus, we read (Bamidbar 22:13) that Bilam recounted
to Bolok’s messengers that Hashem did not permit him to return with them to
Bolok. The posuk says, “Moein Hashem lesiti lahaloch imochem –
Hashem does not allow me to go with you.” To which Rashi adds, “He won’t
allow me to go with you, but He will let me go with higher level ministers than
you.”
Hashem told him unconditionally not to go with Bolok’s
envoys. Bilam’s bad middos and his desire for kavod led him to
hear, or to imagine, that he couldn’t go with these messengers because they
weren’t important enough, but if the king who desired to curse the Jews would
send more important people than they to sign him up for the deal, it would be
okay to go. His middos had grabbed a hold of his mind and altered it so
that not only could he not think straight, but he also couldn’t hear what was
being said to him.
The pattern continued, with messages being sent to him
through other intermediaries, such as his donkey, stating that this mission
wasn’t for him, yet he continued along his path, determined to win the
admiration of Bolok and his nation. As many times as he saw that he could not
curse the Jewish people, he would not be deterred and tried again, for his mind
was clouded and his thought process corrupted.
For all time, Bilam is viewed with derision, but the Torah
tells us the tale of his downfall for us to learn from him and work on our middos
so that our minds don’t mislead us.
Often, we are confounded by people and it is difficult for
us to discern whether they are motivated by good or bad intentions. Chazal
(Avos 5:19) provide us with a method of telling the two apart. They
teach that if a person sees things with positivity and is humble, you can
assume that he is a student of Avrohom Avinu. If he is cynical, arrogant and
conceited, he is a student of Bilam.
A person with good character traits is referred to as a
student of Avrohom, because to achieve that status, he had to have worked on
himself to achieve perfection. Achieving greatness requires a lifetime of work
and dedication. To maintain the energy and will to engage in steady
self-improvement, a person must be suffused with faith. A person who believes
that all that happens to him and to the world is from Hashem is a positive
person, who is able to view others kindly and without jealousy and disdain.
Such a person does not become consumed with hatred and jealousy.
Such a person arrives at his level through studying Torah
and mussar. Like Avrohom Avinu, he perfects his character and middos,
and therefore his actions are selfless and pure. His mind and everything
about him have not been corrupted and taken over by middos ra’os. He can
be trusted to be a fine and good person.
However, a person who doesn’t study Torah and mussar is
under the control of his middos ra’os, and everything that he does is
degraded and tainted. Every action of his, and every thought, is motivated by
greed and selfishness. He cannot be trusted to do good, and even when it
appears as if he is acting forthrightly, you can be confident that it is a ruse
driven by his need for self-advancement and enrichment. Such a person is a
student of Bilam.
Let us take the
opportunity of studying this parsha to enhance our middos tovos
so that we become better people b’ruchniyus u’vigashmiyus, improving our
thoughts and actions and helping to raise ourselves and those around us so that
we can help bring closer the arrival of Moshiach tzidkeinu.
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