Guard Torah in our hearts, nothing else
What does it mean to guard Torah in our hearts? Why does Torah have to be guarded in our hearts, of all places? It would seem that the mind is the faculty by which we participate in Torah activities. Yet we know that we all like to live in the emotions of our heart, which easily become covered over.
When it comes to Klal Yisrael and removing sinas chinim, it is important to bring Torah on that long but short road from the mind to the heart and guard it there.
Rabbi Nivin helps us dissolve negative charges when we have complaints with each other. There is no problem with seeing another Jew and thinking that he is 100% wrong. Rabbi Berkowitz in CCHF Program B describes this as okay too. The difficulty comes when we think that our negative emotions are productive in bringing about a desired result.
A negatively charged complaint is disempowering because the negative emotion itself comes from the yetzer hara and blocks our connection to Hashem. Seeing something wrong with another person is not a problem but rather it is the negative emotion or charge that is attached to it that is the problem. A person erroneously thinks it is productive to use a negative emotion.
Rabbi Avigdor Miller, in his commentaries on Duties of the Heart says as follows ”Not only does Hashem watch our physical behavior, He looks into our minds and our thoughts. When a person has an unworthy thoughts, he s is ashamed because he knows that Hashem knows his thoughts. ….You shall not hate your brother in your mind. Hashem looks into your mind and He sees.”
Dr. David Lieberman, who spoke at the CCHF Program B, explains that the ego is the yetzer hara and the soul is the part of us that truly wants to do what is right in Hashem’s eyes. When we hold a negative charge when trying to do what is right, we are forming negativity to fuel the purposes of the yetzer hara instead of forming positivity to accomplish the Will of Hashem
So let’s bring Hashem into the picture. Let’s be clear exactly how having emotional objections with other Jewish peopleis costing us. And be aware that Rabbi Eli Mansour, in the CCHF Program B, informs us that having emotional objections with other Jews stems all the way back to the story of Yosef and the shevatim, when Yosef was looking for his brothers. Rabbi Mansour said that Yosef was contemplating the lack of brotherhood and seeing it in terms of the destruction of the Temple.
Our negative charge is “a scam” by the yetzer hara. Our goal is to do what is good and right in Hashem’s eyes. There is no place for hatred or enmity. We may believe that a particular Jew is wrong, that is not a problem. Rabbi Berkowitz in the CCHF Program B shares that it is for us to see each other, to comprehend each other, and to extend ourselves compassionately.
The solidarity that we need does not require uniformity. Each of the tribes has its unique role.
Let’s bring Hashem into the picture and comprehend how our negativity interferes with our personal relationship with Hashem and more, it contributes our precious energy into the hands of the yetzer hara (we make a willing donation to the Yetzer Hara's causes) and from there, he is permitted chas v’chalila to use it to destroy us, our families, our communities, and ultimately Klal Yisrael if the wish emanates from Hashem. And who fueled it? Who created the energy at his resources? Not I, I pray.



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