Thursday, August 21, 2014

Parshas Re'eh - All You Need is One

Thoughts on The Parsha
Parshas Re'eh


All You Need is One
By: Daniel Listhaus

רְאֵה אָנֹכִי נֹתֵן לִפְנֵיכֶם הַיּוֹם בְּרָכָה וּקְלָלָה

“See, I present before you today a blessing and a curse.”
-Re'eh 11:26

            When reading the first passuk (verse) of this week’s parsha, one may notice the inconsistent Hebrew grammar. The word “re’eh” (see) is written in the singular form, yet the word “lifneichem” (before you) is written in the plural form. Why does the Torah switch the form from singular to plural mid-sentence?

            The Kli Yakar[1] raises this question and explains the passuk with the following gemara. The Gemara[2] brings a Baraisa which states that a person should always perceive himself as being half-guilty and half-meritorious. If he performs a mitzvah, his is praiseworthy for having tipped the scale in his favor to the side of merit. If he however commits a single aveirah (sin), woe to him, for he has tipped his scale to the side of guilt.

            This first part of the Baraisa itself is a tremendous idea to think about and an important perspective to have. A person should always view himself as presently being precisely in the middle of the balance scale and think that his next action will define him as being either a tzaddik (righteous person) or a rasha (wicked person). In this way a person will lead a very productive life constantly choosing the path of one more good deed in order to tip the scale in his favor. Yet, the Baraisa does not stop here. The Baraisa continues to quote Rebbe Eliezer who points out that the world as a whole is also judged based on the deeds of the majority of the world’s population. Therefore, one should always view himself as being half-guilty and half-meritorious and the world as being exactly half guilty and half meritorious. It follows that when a person does a mitzvah not only has he tipped his own scale in his favor, but the world-scale as well. Unfortunately, the flip-side is true too that when one transgresses and commits a single aveirah, the perspective is that not only has he negatively tipped the scale for himself, but is also considered to have tipped the world-scale to the side of destruction.

            Based on this Gemara, the Kli Yakar writes that this is why the passuk chose the word re’eh and chose to put it in singular form before switching to plural. The Torah is conveying that each person should change his perspective and look within himself and the actions he chooses, for not only does it return to each individual, but has an effect on the entire world as well.

            This gemara indeed speaks loud and clear to many of us who indeed feel like we are in the middle and that as much as we try to do mitzvos and lead lives according to halacha (Jewish law), that we are still far from perfect and do plenty of aveiros whether purposely, accidentally, or out of ignorance. However, the difficulty with this gemara is what about those of us who know that we are more bad than good? For such a group one more mitzvah will not tip the scale and although perhaps it may not be utterly worthless, its value is probably not worth the effort. So why is the gemara telling every person that because he is precisely in the middle, his doing one mitzvah will not only tip the balance to him being a tzaddik, but will even have such an effect for the world?

            Interestingly, a similar question crosses the mind of many on Election Day. Oftentimes we get ourselves get caught up in what we could term as the “voter’s fallacy” – the perspective that one vote does not make a difference so what is the point in voting. After all, very few times in history was an election won by one vote, so is taking your time to spend on line at a nasty voting center really worth the value of your vote? This is a question that many ponder when Election Day rolls around and people are trying to justify their not wanting to go to vote.

             However the point seems valid. So why is it that one vote maters and how could we understand why the gemara tries to convince us that all we need is one mitzvah to tip the scale?

            There is a story told of a messenger who once came to a poor city and announced that the king was coming to visit in one year’s time. Immediately the city council got together and had a meeting to try to figure out what it would cost to put together a nice welcoming ceremony for the king when he would arrive. They calculated that they would be able to do some extra fundraising and use some of the money from the city’s emergency stash, however there was no way that they would be able to fit into their small budget wine to put out for the king’s arrival. After much thought, one of the council members had an idea. They set up a massive empty barrel in the center of town and ordered that each family in the city put in just one cup of their wine. Surely after a year the huge barrel would fill up and they would be prepared to welcome the king properly. Indeed, every day for that year there was a line in the town square with people pouring their cup of wine contribution into the barrel. Finally, the year came to an end and the day came of the king’s arrival. The king came to the small city, and after a beautiful welcome speech by the mayor, the king was given the honor of getting the first cup of wine. They held the kings goblet up high and poured into it from the barrel. However, to everyone’s shock and embarrassment, all that came out was pure clear water.

            What happened was that each person reasoned that his single cup of wine would not make any difference in the massive barrel. It would not be adding anything. Therefore, he might as well pour in a cup of water instead. Such a minute amount of water in such a large barrel of wine would not dilute the wine at all. The perspective each person had was that his single cup of wine does not make a difference. However, they missed the big picture. By them acting as they did, they were individually endorsing the perspective that one cup of water does not make a difference – even if each and every person believes so for himself.

            The lesson of the Kli Yakar is to rescue us from such a mindset. We are tasked with understanding that when we each “re’eh” – look at ourselves and our actions we must look at them from the perspective of being “lifneichem” – in front of all of B’nei Yisroel. One person’s single mitzvah is enough to tip a personal scale, the nation’s scale, and the world scale to the side of merit and therefore everyone is responsible to have this perspective.

            We must realize that at no point should we feel like it is too late with complete depression and despair. Rather, at any point we have the ability to pick ourselves up and imagine ourselves in the center of the balance scale with the belief that all we need is one mitzvah to tip not only our own scale to the side of merit, but the world scale as well. With this approach of looking within oneself and seeing the two paths before him and choosing the life of beracha, one has the ability to grow one step at a time.

            As the month of Elul approaches, this lesson from the gemara that the Kli Yakar brings, is an important one to internalize. The Yomim Noraim (Days of Awe, namely Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur) often seem too foreign to us to appreciate or prepare for; and even basic teshuva (repentance) is so difficult to achieve when we look at the muck we have gotten ourselves into and how helpless we feel getting out of it. However, if we enter the month of Elul with a personal imaginary scale with ourselves placed as perfectly center on the balance scale and that all it takes is one mitzvah to tilt it in our favor, that small repeated decision could go a long way.

            May Hashem help us individually and communally grow in Torah and mitzvos during this z’man so we could enter and experience the yomim noraim as a meritorious nation.






[1] Devarim 11:26
[2] Kiddushin 40b

Photo Credit: http://blog.memberclicks.com/bid/251450/Striking-the-work-life-balance

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