The sicha for parshas Vayetze
is in Vol. X of Likkutei Sichos.
On the posuk, “vayetze Yakov
m’Beersheva,” the Midrash says, Yakov left Beersheva because he
wanted to get away from having to make a treaty with Avimelech, as
Avraham, so that Avimelech would not insist , make a treaty with me
as did your grandfather. Yakov said, if I made this treaty, then I
would delay the joy of my children for seven generations. What that
means is that when Avraham made a pact with Avimelech, because of
that peace treaty, it says that the Jewish people’s entry into the
Land of Israel was delayed seven generations - the seven generations
from Avraham until Moshe Rabbeinu fought the war with Og and Sichon,
and captured their land.
Then Yitzchak also made a
treaty with Avimelech, and delayed the settling into Eretz Israel
seven generations, which means he added another generation, since he
was one generation after Avraham. So seven generations from
Yitzchak, was when Yehoshua finally settled the land. Yakov was
therefore afraid that if he stayed in Beersheva, that Avimelech
would have him enter into a peace treaty with him, and that would
delay the settling into Eretz Israel of his children another
generation. That’s what the Midrash says.
Now we need to understand,
since both Avraham and Yitzchak did make a peace treaty with
Avimelech, and they were not concerned about the Jewish people
settling into Eretz Israel seven generations later, and they didn't
leave in order to avoid making that peace treaty, why was Yakov was
afraid of entering into a peace treaty with Avimelech. And on the
other hand, how is it that Avraham and Yitzchak were not worried or
concerned with the delay of the settling into Israel, that would put
off the joy of their children for seven generations? The difference
is in the levels and service of Avraham and Yitzchak compared those
of Yakov. And in this distinction, we will understand also why they
differed in their approach to Avimelech.
It says that Ishmael came out
of Avraham, and Esav came out of Yitzchak, which means that Ishmael
and Esav, although they were both children of Avraham and Yitzchak,
they “came out”, they went away from their connection to their
fathers, and went off on their own, unholy path. That's because the
holiness of Avraham and Yitzchak and their manner in which they
served G-d did not reach these children, and did not effect change
in them for good. But concerning Yakov it says, the greatness of
Yakov was that all his children were tzaddikim, meaning that his
form of avodah, of service, and his holiness reached and affected
all of his children, so that they were all tzaddikim.
Although all of the
Patriarchs, Avraham, Yitzchak and Yakov, were the absolute state of
holiness and each one of them, their neshamos were untainted by
their coming into the world, by their birth, yet there is a
difference in how they pursued holiness.
Yakov primarily worked at
elevating, refining and purifying the physical world. Whereas
Avraham and Yitzchak, their avodah was more a spiritual avodah. And
that's why even though Ishmael according to the Gemarrah did tshuva,
and according to some opinions Esav also did, that when he kissed
Yakov he meant it sincerely, but in both cases their tshuva didn't
last.
And although Avraham and
Yitzchak also elevated the world and affected the world, Avraham by
teaching the people, the passersby, the nomads, about G-d, and
Yitzchak, when he dug the wells, it is explained in Chassidus that
the digging of the wells meant bringing out the holiness, bringing
up the living waters in a
place that is the desert,
bringing
G-dliness to a desert. Yet their effect on the unholy was that they
silenced it, they rejected it, so that the unholy did not interfere
with holiness. But no change occurred, no essential transformation
happened to the unholy itself and it did not become holy.
So their relationship, Avraham
and Yitzchak’s, with unholiness was in that they rejected it and
silenced it, so that it did not interfere. Whereas Yakov, he had a
more positive and internal effect on the unholy, in that he
transformed it, elevated it and refined it and turned it into
holiness.
This is similar to the
distinction between tzaddikim and baalei tshuva. The tzaddik has no
real relationship with unholiness, not even with an unholy thought,
which doesn't occur to him of its own as explained in Tanya, whereas
the baal tshuva had a relationship, a connection to evil, to
unholiness, and turned it into kedusha, through their tshuva,
because the sins of the past become like mitzvahs.
And so in the avodah of
Avraham and Yitzchak, in rejecting and silencing the evil, the
existence of evil was not undone. It continued to exist. It's only
its behavior that was changed. It therefore remains possible, since
the unholy remains unholy, that eventually in their children, in
Ishmael and Esav, should remain also an unholiness that was not
elevated or refined through their parent’s holiness. And so there
was eventually a rebellion, and “Ishmael came out of Avraham,” and
“Esav came out of Yitzchak.”
But what we see is that both
Ishmael and Esav didn't do anything to interfere with
the avodah, with the service, with he
mitzvahs, with the
G-dliness and the lifestyle of Avraham and Yitzchak. They were
respectful of their parent’s G-dliness.
At any rate, the essence of
the unholiness itself, of the kelipah itself, when it has no
relationship with holiness, brings the benefit that it doesn't
interfere with holiness, but at the same time, because it has no
relationship, then the holiness does not effect it internally and
does not transform it into kedusha.
For example Avraham lived
among the bnei Cheis, and they even recognized him as a great man, a
holy and G-dly man, and yet we don't find anywhere that his living
there and being among the bnei Cheis changed them or transformed
them in any way, and they remained bnei Cheis, even after Avraham
had been there.
The fact that they sold him
the Maaras HaMachpelah in order to bury Sarah, that was only that
they didn't obstruct his avodah, not getting in the way of
what he needed to accomplish. They allowed
Avraham to be as
G-dly as he wanted but they did not become G-dly at all. Whereas
Yakov, the whole purpose of his avodah, the devotion of Yakov’s
avodah was to elevate and refine and to bring the unholy to
holiness. This means that when he got through with the unholy, there
was no kelipah left, no unholiness left and that reflected in his
children, in that all of his children were tzaddikim.
This can explain why Avraham
and Yitzchak made a peace treaty with Avimelech, Avimelech
representing unholiness. This treaty that they made with Avimelech
was that one should not interfere with the other, that holiness and
unholiness should not interfere with each other. And that was
accomplished, in that Avimelech was silenced in his objection to
holiness, so that the holiness could proceed without interference.
But on the other hand, the essence of Avimelech, the very fact that
he was unholy, remained and continued to exist.
That was Avraham and
Yitzchak’s avodah. Whereas with Yakov, since his devotion was to
completely undo the kelipah, not only to silence it, by denying it
and transforming it, therefore he could not make such an agreement
with Avimelech because that would leave Avimelech in his original,
unholy existence. And that goes against Yakov's grain to make peace
with unholiness, even if that silences the unholiness and removes
its objection and its resistance to holiness.
Then Torah says, “yayetze
Yakov m’Beersheva, vayelech Harana,” Yakov left Beersheva.Yakov left
that level, that state in which you can promise, make a deal with
unholiness, that the unholiness should not interfere with holiness,
that Yakov left and rejected. And where did he go when he left
Beersheva, he went “Harana”. He went to a place that is described as
the unholiness of the world. By going out of Beersheva, which means
G-dliness free of the interference of unholiness, by rejecting that
level of avodah, he pursued his kind of avodah and that is to go
down into the unholiness and there bring about a transformation.
The fact that Avraham and
Yitzchak did make a peace treaty with Avimelech and that resulted in
the delay of the coming into Eretz Israel seven generations, that
doesn't mean that because they made the peace treaty, they were
punished in some way that the coming into Eretz Israel was delayed.
It wasn't from the peace treaty, or because of the peace treaty that
the delay resulted. But rather from what had not happened. What
delayed the coming into Israel was that they didn't do more than
make the peace treaty. Since they hadn't really transformed the
unholy into holy, they hadn't really change the essence of kelipah,
but had allowed it to remain in existence, only weakened or softened
into silence, that's why it took seven more generations before Jews
could go into the land of Canaan and turn it into Eretz Israel. So
it's what wasn't happening, and not what Avraham and Yitzchak did.
So the question, how could
Avraham and Yitzchak make a peace treaty knowing it’s going to delay
their children entering Israel, the answer is, it's not the peace
treaty that delayed it. It is simply the fact that the avodah of
Avraham and Yitzchak didn't do enough to change the physical world,
to make it possible for Jews to settle into Israel. Only with Yakov,
when he went down it the unholiness of the world, when he allowed
himself to reach down there, in order to change it internally,
permanently and thoroughly, only then did the world become ready for
the Jews to be able to settle into Eretz Israel.
And the same is true also in
the future, that through the avodah of Yakov, during these years of
golus, where we elevate and refine the most unholy parts of the
world and bring it to holiness, through this we will merit the third
Bais HaMikdash. And the third Bais HaMikdash is also unique in this
fashion. Avraham referred to the Bais HaMikdash as the mountain of
G-d, Yitzchak referred it as the field, and Yakov referred to it as
the house. A house represents a permanence – the third Bais
HaMikdash that will be permanent b’bias Moshiach Tzedkainu.
In Vol. III of Likkutei Sichos
on parshas Vayetze, the Rebbe quotes the Midrash on the verse, Yakov
came to the place and the sun set, and he slept there. The Torah
seems to be saying that he slept there, to the exclusion of sleeping
anywhere else. So the Midrash says, here Yakov slept, but the
fourteen years that he was in the yeshiva of Aver, there he didn’t
sleep at all. Another explanation the Midrash says is that here
Yakov slept, but the twenty years he worked for Lavan, he didn’t
sleep.
The question is, the fourteen
years that he spent in the yeshiva, the fact that he didn't sleep
there, is understandable. He didn't sleep because he was devoted to
study of Torah. But why would he have such mesiras nefesh, taking
care of Lavan’s sheep, that he wouldn't sleep for twenty years. But
according to what we said before this would be understandable. When
Yakov went to Haran, he went there in order to elevate the
unholiness of the world. That is to take holiness, as it is captured
in Lavan, release it from its captivity and bring it back to its
source - the hidden holiness in the unholy should be released and
brought back to holiness.
And that's why he didn't sleep
the entire time that he was there, because he had to constantly be
awake and alert to the resistance from Lavan’s resistance to
holiness. Lavan’s argument to Yakov was that his children and the
future generations don't belong to him. He said, in effect, you are
a traditional Jew, you were raised this way, and so this is what is
expected of you. You are of an older generation, of an earlier time,
and you can live a life of Torah and spend day and night studying
and doing mitzvahs, you can do whatever you want, but how can you
expect this of your children? Your children are born to the modern
times, they belong to the modern times, as Lavan in fact said, the
daughters are my daughters, and the sons are my sons. They belong to
my world. This was Lavan’s claim. They are young, why do you want to
burden them with the yoke of Torah and mitzvahs. So if you want to
teach them Yiddishkeit into modern way, on the modern level, that's
fine but why all this heaviness and seriousness of Torah and
mitzvahs.
The same is also true that
Lavan argued that even the sheep belong to me. This means that Lavan
was saying that when it comes to spiritual things, you decide how to
do it because that is where you are the expert, but when it comes to
physical things, when it comes to sheep, here I am the expert and if
you want to make sheep, you want make money, make a living, then you
have to do it my way, because when it comes to the physical, I am
the expert.
Lavan was saying when it comes
to business, you can't stop and worry about every detail of the laws
of honesty and proper ethics, you have to play the game the way the
game is played, so you have to indulge in a little bit of
exaggeration, competition and taking advantage of other people’s
weaknesses and so on, in order to make a living.
And for this Yakov had to stay
awake, he had to have mesiras nefesh, that he didn't sleep the
entire time that he was there. Not only for his concern for his
spiritual well-being, but also in his concern for accomplishing what
needs to be accomplished with the world around him, meaning firstly
his children, and secondly, his sheep. This claim that the children
belong to Lavan and that the sheep belong to Lavan, had to be undone
and even Lavan had to be convinced that it wasn't so.
Now we will also understand
what the Midrash goes on to say about Yakov, that he didn't sleep
the twenty years that he was there by Lavan, and what was Yakov
doing during those years when he wasn’t sleeping, the Midrash says
that he was saying the fifteen chapters of Tehillim that begin with
shir haamalot. Another opinion says that he was saying the entire
Tehillim.
So we need understand this
because the question itself, “what was Yakov saying ” during those
twenty years needs explanation. In the simple, literal meaning of
the Torah, he didn't sleep for twenty years because he was busy
taking care the sheep, not because he was saying something. So
obviously, we see from this back to stay up and not sleep for twenty
years in order to take care sheep is not what Yakov's avodah is all
about.
Instead as we said before, he
was awake because of his avodah. His devotion was to elevating the
divine sparks, the holiness that was trapped or entrapped by Lavan,
and to the constant struggle against Lavan, and against his
resistance to holiness - that's what kept him awake. So the Midrash
in asking the question, “what was he saying”, was really asking,
what gave Yakov the strength to succeed in such an impossible task?
How was it that living in Lavan's house, in his world, he was not
only not affected by Lavan, not dragged down or discouraged in his
avodah by Lavan, but in fact was able to elevate the holiness that
existed in Lavan. So we need to know from where did he get the
strength?
That is what the Midrash is
asking “what was Yakov saying”, what did he say that gave him
strength, from where did he draw the strength? The Midrash answers
that he got it from the Tehillim, from the shir haamalot. In the
shir haamalot we read “m’ayin yavo ezri,” which the simply
translated means, from where will my salvation come, from where will
I get help. But on a deeper level, m’ayin means, from my own bittul,
from my own insignificance. Yakov knew that with his own efforts,
and talents, he could not accomplish what he needed to, and in that
humility, in that bittul, “m’ayin”, from that feeling of
nothingness, yavo ezri, that’s from where the strength came. He knew
that G-d had to help him, and that the blessing had to come from
G-d, “ezri m’im Hashem” that the help comes from G-d, to such a
degree that “ osay shamayim v’aretz” that he was able to effect not
only shamayim, spiritual things, and maintain in his own holiness,
but also aretz, he was able to effect the world of Haran, the world
of Lavan and bring out the holiness that was buried there as well.
Therefore we see from all this
that before a Jew attempts to change the world, he has to know two
things. First of all he has to spend a lot of time absorbed in the
world of Torah. Before he goes out into the world of Haran, he has
to be awake, as Yakov was awake for fourteen years, studying and
absorbing Torah, or being absorbed in the world of Torah and
davening, as we find, v’yivga b’makom, the Gemarrah says that meant
that he davened there. Yakov was absorbed, immersed in the world of
Torah and davening for a long time before he attempted to take on
the world of Haran and the world of Lavan.
The second thing is that even
when you're already in the world of Haran, you are out there trying
to make a living and dealing with the world, trying to elevate the
world, you have to remember to say Tehillim, or words of holiness,
to be connected and draw strength from Above, knowing that only
through the Abeshter’s blessing can we accomplish and succeed in the
physical.
The same is also true on a
daily basis; not only in the course of a life, but in each day. Each
day has begin, before we take on the physical world, and go out into
the world of Haran, we first have to daven and learn the daily
portions of Torah that we are capable of learning, and be immersed
in that part of the day, and absorb the attitude and the flavor and
the inspiration of Torah. Then we can go into the world, into the
business part of our day without dragging our mind and soul into the
business, but to do it only with our hands, yiguius k’pacha, only
the hands are involved in the physical world, while the mind and the
heart are still connected to the Chumash, the Tehillim and the Tanya
that was the beginning of the day.
And only in that way, can we
hope to accomplish the avodah of b’chol derechecha d’chechu, that
wherever we go and whatever we do in the physical world, we bring
with us an awareness, d’chechu, of G-d’s presence, an awareness of
the purpose for which we are going into Haran. Not only, not to lose
the holiness that we have, that we absorbed at the beginning of the
day and at the beginning of our lives, but in fact bring that
knowledge and that awareness into the world and to make the world a
dira lo Hisborach b’tachtonim.