Missing links - Frequently asked questions
Q I am a good person, I know I try to do the right thing. sometimes I succeed and sometimes I do not. Hashem forgives me when I do teshuva. Do I really have to comprehend the intricasies of my thoughts and my error? Are you saying that I cannot use the power that Hashem gives me to serve Him completely if I do not comprehend the free will point before me?
A.Teshuva is more than I made a mistake and maybe I won't make that mistake again. We all have areas that we fail with again and again, and Hashem is very patient. He waits a lifetime for us to fix our mistake. We can shorten the time it takes if we are willing to dig a little deeper into our negative and constricted places, enough to find the place where we are thinking a thought that is an aveira. Every negative thought and emotion has at its root something through which the yetzer hara draws us away from Torah. That is what makes it so human, so comprehensible, that is why the yetzer hara's meanderings in our subconscious seem even so legitimate. But an aveira it still is. When we are honest enough to find the erroneous thought, and when we love Hashem totally, we can then take responsibility to use our soul power as it was intended to be used by us, to choose to re-connect the energy that is being drawn into aveira back into doing what is good and right in Hashem's eyes.
Q. Why should I care so much about using the power Hashem gives me to choose to serve Him?
A. At every moment, our relationship with Hashem provides our incentive and intention. It is the way we direct our power that Ramchal teaches us determines the manner in which Hashem sustains us and the world. The greatest pleasure that a person can have is the spiritual pleasure of touching Hashem, Who is perfect. In so doing, we acquire eternal reward and perfection for ourselves. In truth, the answer to this question can best be understood by re-phrasing it, "why should I care so much about using the power Hashem gives me to receive the greatest pleasure imaginable in this world and the next?"
Q If this is natural to me because of my upbringing, and I really am not doing aveiras, do I really need to comprehend the mechanics of it?
A The answer to this question depends on whether a person would like to experience more pleasure in this world. If a person does what is good and right because of one's upbringing, but does not form intention through which a person's heart says "I am doing this because I love Hashem" or through which a person's mind says "I am doing this because I know that the place of the world is Hashem and that all there is in the world is His simple unity -Hashem Echad" perhaps the experience of pleasure in serving Hashem, and the involvement and commitment in doing so, will be missing from a person's life. We often have social groupings, families and communities that compensate for this, and that is great. How much greater for each person to see his or her own power in obtaining spiritual delight and pleasure through the effort of choosing to direct one's actions alone! That is the greatest sense of self we can experience, the free willed choice to acknowledge our sense of self as part of His world, to align our will with Hashem's for the purpose of loving Hashem and expressing gratitude to Hashem and acknowledging His Omnipotence.



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