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Here is an amazing interpretation of the four tzaddiks who entered Gan Eden by Rabbi Shalom Aruch. Posted by Ruben Apaez from Beit Midrash San Antonio. I just had to share this with you.
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Here is Rabbi Shalom Arush's amazing interpretation of the allegorical Gemara passage about the four scholars who entered the esoteric portals of Torah knowledge...

The Gemara describes the four scholars who probed the inner dimension of Torah, metaphorically referred to as the Pardess, the orchard (see tractate Chagiga, 14b): "Rebbe Akiva entered in peace and exited in peace; Ben Azai peeked and was struck; Ben Zoma peeked and died; Acher [Elisha ben Abuya] chopped down the plantings."

Let's first examine the profile of Rebbe Akiva, who was able to enter the deepest portals of the Torah's secrets in peace and exit in peace as well. Rebbe Akiva not only had a prodigious intellect, but a most upright character. He emphasizes that loving one's neighbor as oneself is the essence of Torah. Rebbe Akiva is also the pillar of emuna, and he teaches us to say that whatever Hashem does is always for the best (see tractate Berachot 60b). Rebbe Akiva attained the highest levels of emuna and humility. The entire Oral Torah stems from him. Our sages say that he was worthy enough to have received the Torah on Mount Sinai.

Rebbe Akiva was not born with a silver spoon in his mouth. He was the son of converts, and until age 40, a simple laborer. He attained everything he had with dedication, hard work, and prayer. He cried to Hashem for he every morsel of Torah that he learned. He suffered unspeakable poverty. Yet, he served Hashem and studied Torah with all his heart. His disadvantages were his advantages, for his poverty and his modest background made his climb in Torah and spirituality all teh more remarkable. He became the great of our people, yet he never forgot where he came from.

Rebbe Akiva so humbly viewed himself as nothing without Hashem. Therefore, he prayed for everything. Since everything he attained was the result of prayer, it was all beneficial. As such, he was able to become privy to the loftiest secrets of Torah without losing his mind or becoming arrogant.

Rebbe Nachman teaches (Likutei Moharan I:31) that both Ben Azai and Ben Zoma were tzaddikim of the highest caliber, for our sages tell us, "One who sees Ben Azai in a dream can expect to receive piety; one who sees Ben Zoma in a dream can expect wisdom" (see Avot D'Rebbe Natan, ch. 40). Yet, despite their lofty level, they could not see what Rebbe Akiva saw without being damaged. Why?

Rebbe Natan of Breslev always reminds us that wherever there is deficiency, there is lack of prayer. Either a person didn't pray at all or didn't pray sufficiently. We cannot possibly say that these two holy Tannaic sages didn't pray; but, we can say that they didn't pray sufficiently, for if they prayed as much as Rebbe Akiva did, they too would have entered and exited in peace. Their deficiency of prayer left them with a deficiency, for they lacked the proper receptacle to handle such blinding Divine light.

In order to trod safely in the lofty spiritual places where these two holy sages trodded, one needs a prodigious amount of prayer. Ben Azai "peeked and was struck"; in other words, since he lacked the spiritual vessel strong enough to contain such strong light, or more simply, his soul could not cope with such awesome secrets of Torah, he became insane.

Anyone who doesn't strengthen his soul with sufficient prayer will not have the capability of learning Torah in a beneficial manner. When I was a young man, I lived in Bnei Brak. I had a neighbor who became totally disoriented from learning Gemara. He learned day and night until he virtually lost his mind. The rabbinical leaders who were involved in this case firmly decided to prohibit this individual from learning Gemara any further! They allowed him to work, to travel, to listen to music or to do anything else he wanted, just not to learn Torah. I have no doubt that if this individual would have implemented Rebbe Nachman's advice to pray before and after learning Torah, he too would have been successful. And, if Ben Azai "peeked and was struck", Ben Zoma "peeked and died." Ben Zoma lacked the wherewithal to deal with such strong Divine light, and he lost his life altogether.

Let's reemphasize that Ben Azai and Ben Zoma were two tzaddikim on levels beyond our comprehension. If they could be damaged by learning Torah without sufficient prayer, than what can we, the simple people of this generation, say? We certainly must invest concerted effort in prayer. "Tefilla L'Oni" elaborates that Ben Azai and Ben Zoma placed a greater emphasis on learning than they did on prayer; they were therefore exposed at the highest levels of Torah secrets without sufficient protection. We might compare their souls to a 100-Watt light bulb that suddenly receives 250 Watts of current; it's incapable of handling the load, so it explodes. So, if the greatest tzaddikim must strengthen their souls through prayer to be able to become worthy receptacles for the Torah's light, we certainly must!

Both the Babylonian and the Jerusalem Talmud elaborate on the reasons that led to Elisha Ben Abuya's downfall. When he became a total heretic, his holy contemporaries wouldn't even mention his name; they referred to him as Acher, "the other one." The beginning of his Torah career was not for Hashem's sake. When his father saw the prestige given to Torah scholars, he wanted his son to become a Torah scholar as well. Other accounts in the Talmud say that the circumstances of his conception were not holy and that when his mother was pregnant, she smelled the incense from a house of idolatry, both of which had ultimately tragic effects of her unborn son. Still another opinion says that Acher would listen to Greek music, and that he'd confuse young children with philosophical and existential questions as to the existence of G-d. Combined, all these factors led to his downfall.

If we say that BenAzai and Ben Zoma didn't pray sufficiently, we can say that Acher didn't pray at all. If he would have asked Hashem to lead him on the path of truth and righteousness, Hashem would have gladly complied. He wouldn't have met such a tragic and heretical fate.

The Midrash (Yalkut Shimoni, Mishpatim) provides further proof of what we have said until now: Absalom, Doeg, Korach, Ahab and Elisha Ben Abuya were rescued from Purgatory by saying na'aseh venishma, we shall do and we shall heed." This amazing Midrash reveals a huge secret, namely, that the above-mentioned individuals were all extremely brilliant, yet as soon as they justified the stern judgment against them and took simple emuna upon themselves, their sentences were mitigated. The entire basis of na'aseh venishma, we shall do first and only afterwards we shall heed, means that way place emuna before intellectual prowess. In other words, prayer must precede Torah! Once a person understands this principle, stern judgments against him are mitigated as well. May we all grow in payer and in Torah, amen!
Boker tov AT family. A break in our heat today is truly welcomed. Baruch HaShem for the variety in weather that He provides.
Off to finish the chronological Bible today with my study partner, Betty.
Lunch with my dear friend, Pam.
Hebrew study with Eliyana this afternoon and Kings & Prophets study this evening. What a full and blessed day it will be!
Hope you all have a wonderful day as well😊
Just realized that it's yom Shli-shi! That means that tomorrow is WEDNESDAY (don't know the Hebrew word for that yet) and Cup of Joe with Jo. Okay, ladies of A-T, let's see your bright and shining faces tomorrow. We have such a great time just visiting about this and that. Please join us. We'd love to get to know you! 12:45pm CDT
@judy-howard and @julie-brunner : if you could both be on Cup of Joe today at 12:45 CDT, perhaps we could make a plan for the Level I Hebrew study? There might be others that would want to join us, too. I have some ideas that might be helpful. Hope to see you both there.
@amy-mccullar -- looking forward to seeing you very soon. Will be picking up our trailer sometime on July 3 and staying at the RV park with Brewers for about 10 days. Have missed you, my friend.
Posting from a post

The Two Faces of Cold Indifference

Amalek waged war against Israel and took back a captive from them.
(Bamidbar 21:1)

Amalek first attacked the Jewish people when they were on the way to receive the Torah and again as they were preparing to enter the Land of Israel.

Similarly, our inner Amalek first attempts to cool our enthusiasm toward G-d and His Torah. As long as we are fulfilling our religious obligations, this might not seem to pose such a problem. But if we approach our Divine mission without warmth and enthusiasm, we will eventually lose interest in it, seeking diversions that offer more immediate material or spiritual gratification.

If our inner Amalek fails to cool our enthusiasm, it will attempt to take over our life in the "land," i.e., the material life we enter after our daily prayers and studies. It will argue, "Be holy while you're praying and studying the Torah, but when you're earning your living and dealing with the physical world, live by my rules."

Although this may sound like the voice of a clever businessman, we must recognize it as the voice of Amalek. Despite its concessions to our spiritual endeavors, its goal is to destroy us. The only proper response to Amalek is to wipe it out, by constantly renewing our enthusiasm for G-d and His Torah, and our desire that G-d be our guide in all aspects of life.

--From Kehot's Daily Wisdom
If your children receive their education proper in [public] non-Jewish . . . institutions where the instruction ignores the Jewish element and . . . where, moreover, your children spend the greater and best part of the day; and if they then, having completed their homework and envying their colleagues their leisure, have to attend the lesson of a “Hebrew” teacher—who himself may be greatly inferior to the child’s other teachers in general education and knowledge, or who has in his heart no enthusiasm for the Judaism with which he is supposed to inspire his students—if thus general education is imparted by the best and most appropriate methods, while “Hebrew” has to be content with such time, energy and teaching as can be found for it after other subjects have taken off the cream, you will frequently learn to your distress that your children are interested in everything but Hebrew; that all their teachers are satisfied with your children except the “Hebrew” teacher; that instruction in all subjects bears fruit in your children while Hebrew instruction cannot even take root, and your children, being eternally and painfully tied down to elementary studies, learn to know Judaism and its study only as a nuisance. "Judaism eternal,I,171"
Victory or Truth Rebbe Nachman taught: Those who possess the evil characteristic of always desiring to outdo others cannot accept the truth. When people have the desire to always be right, even when the truth is plain before their eyes, they will distort it in order to maintain their imagined superiority. This applies in all areas of life (Likutey Moharan I, 122).
Alcohol and the Tree of Knowledge The Tree of Knowledge from which Adam ate was a grapevine. Sanhedrin 70a Reb Noson writes: Wine has two potential powers, one good and one evil. It comes from a very exalted source, as is evident in the Hebrew word for wine, yayin (ihh), which is numerically equal to 70. Wine thus corresponds to the “Seventy Facets” of Torah and to the “Seventy Elders” (“elders” indicates wisdom; see below, Chapter 34). Partaking of wine in purity and with holy joy can help one ascend to very lofty levels indeed. This is possible with the drinking of the sacramental wine of Kiddush on Shabbat and Festivals, on Purim or on the celebration of a mitzvah. But the power for evil inherent in wine and alcoholic beverages is also extremely potent. It can arouse a person’s lusts, especially the lust for immorality. The verse thus states (Proverbs 23:31), “Do not look upon wine when it is red.” Our Sages comment (Sanhedrin 70a), “For its end brings red [i.e., blood, judgments and suffering].” Alcohol abuse befuddles the mind as it enters the bloodstream. One may feel joyous when he is drunk, but this is so only because the wine “heats up” the blood, inciting one to immorality, strife and many other evils (Likutey Halakhot, Yayin Nesekh 4:1–6).
 
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