Shabbat      06/11/11
      
     (aka      Derech      Eretz )
      
           
     Shalom      my dear Chaverim, Talmidim, v' Rabbanim, friends, students and fellow      rabbis.
      
     An oneg, joy-filled, Shabbat,      Sabbath, this coming weekend... and Shavuah Tov to you for a good      and peaceful week. And a Happy Shavuot      Holiday!
      
     We      continue with our exploration into the Talmudic Tractates of Derek Eretz      Zuta and Rabbah. (aka Derech Eretz Zuta, aka Derech Eretz Rabbah.      As was mentioned, zuta is Aramaic for 'small', and rabbah is      'large').
      
     Remember that Derek Eretz is not about      Jewish ritual. It is about how we are to treat one another and what      traits of character, middot, we are to try to develop. The lessons are      universal and ecumenical.      
      
     For      those new to the class, Baruch ha Ba! Welcome! You can access last      week's class       at        
                
     From      here you will find links to preceding classes in this       series. So,  together we      continue:
      
     TALMUD      BAVLI
      
     TRACTATE      DEREK      
      
     ERETZ      ZUTA
      
     (aka      Derech      Eretz)
      
     Today      we will continue with CHAPTER      2.
     Talmud      Bavli Tractate Derek Eretz Zuta Verse        2:5 
      
      ''Accept the words of Torah, even      when you are in affliction. Do not seek to wrong him who wronged you. Let      thy accounts always be correct, and thy conduct excellent. Keep thy promise.      Love the Torah, righteousness, rebukes,      straightforwardness.''
      
      
     If we look at this verse closely, it is all      about living a life with complete trust, faith and belief in the Divine.      Many in this class, even many of my fellow rabbanim in this      class, admit they are agnostic or atheist or humanistic. Pure Judaism      is fine with this. It is how we behave that matters in the long      run. If we 'act as if' and live with the above, our lives go      smoother.
      
     For the many of the over 1500 folks taking      this class, from all continents except Antarctica, who have known me a long      time,[ some from elementary school], they can share with you, that I used to      live doing the exact opposite of the above, and my life now, is free, full      of joy and      happiness.
      
     ''Accept the words of Torah, even when you      are in affliction.'' I know that it is very easy to say we love God, when      things are going well in our lives. One of the hardest prayers to say, is      Blessing God for being the True Judge, Dayan HaEmet, as we are at the grave      site of a loved one. To  truly be able to live, accepting God's unity,      and accepting that this is God's Universe, with us mere mortals never being      able to fully understand it, takes courage. When we understand that Gamzu      L'Tovah, that all is for the good, that all things work out in God's      time, with time, effort and experience, our lives are filled      less with angst and more with      bliss. 
      
     In reality, whether we believe it or not,      living with the opposites beliefs , have us become bitter, angry, mean      spirited individuals. We hate God, yet deny God.  Hence were      are in constant conflict with our fellows, on whom we take this anger      out.
      
     And this leads us to the next sentence of      Talmud Bavli Tractate Derek Eretz      2:5:
      
     ''Do not seek to wrong him who wronged      you.'' Note how we are instructed not just to extract revenge and wrong      someone who has wronged us, but we are not to seek to do it.      
      
     Have you every been on a board, let's say a      synagogue board,  with some cantankerous, mega-ego, folks who just say      the most awful things? Then at night you're lying in bed,      not sleeping, running videos in your head, of all the things you could      have smartly retorted?  Or has someone harmed you and day dream,      thinking of ways to get even? Well this is the      'seeking.'
      
     I can assure that those who do harm,      have so much ego, and are so disconnected spiritually, that they are      not in bed loosing sleep thinking of us. Keeping these sad folks in our      heads, especially when they aren't paying rent to live there, only hurts      us. As I have written  before, a resentment is an acid that eats      away at the      container.  
      
     The Talmud teaches that a wise person      learns from everyone. (Bavli Tractate Pirkei Avot 4:1). This doesn't mean      that everyone is a fantastic teacher of what to do correctly. Many folks are      fantastic teachers of how to behave incorrectly. Learn from these folks of      what NOT to do. And pray for them as you would for any one with a terminal      illness.
      
     ''Let thy accounts always be correct, and      thy conduct excellent. Keep thy promise.'' Regardless of how the universe is      treating us, if we are spiritually connected, we just cannot back slide and      behave poorly. I had written a few years back that when the economy was      failing, we would see some of the worst behavior from persons, who when      things were going well, seemed like ethical pillars of the community. And      unfortunately, my prediction was correct.      
      
     In business and in our personal      relationships our scales, as the Torah commands, must be accurate. We cannot      even own any thing that might be used to offset the scale, like fraudulent      weights.      
      
     The Hebrew word for accounts, for      inventory, is Chesbon or Cheshbon. As I have taught we are to daily do a      Chesbon ha Nefesh, an accounting of our souls and our actions, to make sure      they are correct. It is not just our business books that need to be correct,      but we must be principled in all of our affairs.      
      
     We will end today with the last part of the      verse: ''Love the Torah, righteousness, rebukes, straightforwardness.'' The      Torah, which  our sages took to mean the Talmud, Midrash, and other      spiritual texts, literally means ''instruction.'' Judaism is a way of life,      and much more than a religion. And the Talmud tells us without Derek      Eretz, proper relations with one another, there can be no Torah. [Ibid.      3:17].  אם אין דרך ארץ, אין
תורה      
     What is the point of honoring and      remembering Shabbat, if we turn our Onegs, (the coffee and cake social hour      after services) into a Lashon Ha Ra (gossip) hour? We immediately negate our      prayers for asking God to ''keep our tongues from evil,'' and erase all      blessings for      ''shalom.''
      
     We need to love the Torah, for without       her, the sages teach us we would have learned modesty,      tzni'ut, from a cat. [Talmud Bavli Tractate Eruvin      100b  ]
      
     Loving rebuke is hard sometimes. To fully      accept another's telling us how to improve we must be open to it. And the      prerequisites  to this openness, this nevi, is humility and      ego-deflation. Assuming someone is rebuking us out of love, and privately,      as we are commanded, we are very lucky. The Torah uses the word 'reprove'      which means gently instruct. Rebuke implies strict instruction. Either way,      if they are coming from love and truth, we must learn to accept them and      grow      spiritually.
      
     We need to love righteousness so much that      the Torah commands us to pursue it. And the Hebrew word for righteousness,      justice, is repeated. ''Tzedek, tzedek tirdof .'' [Deut. 16:20]. The Talmud      goes into many explanations of why this is so. The first is to judge by the      letter of the law, but more importantly, the repetition reminds us to live      by the spirit of the law. (Shnay Luchot HaBrit, Shoftim      101a)
      
     In fact the Talmud tells us what happens      when Jews stick to the letter of the law and not the spirit: For Rabbi      Johanan said: "Jerusalem was destroyed only because they gave judgments      therein in accordance with Biblical law ... they based their judgments      strictly upon Biblical law, and did not go beyond the letter of the law."      (Talmud Bavli Tractate Bava Metzia      30b).
      
     Loving straightforwardness is much more      than loving honesty. Many times we think we are honest when lying. We tell      half truths. We paint a situation better than it is to manipulate.      We answer a question with a non-answer. '' A man who tells lies, merely      hides the truth. But a man who tells half-lies has forgotten where he put      it.'' [Claude Rains as Dryden in Lawrence of Arabia (1962) ]      
      
     "When man      seeks truth, help comes from heaven, but the search must be sincere. When we      succeed we become partners with God, for we have found truth." (R' A.      Kahn).
      
     ''Loving kindness and truth meet      together;
righteousness and peace kiss each other.
Truth shall spring      from the earth;
and righteousness shall look down from heaven.
Also,      the Lord shall give that which is good;
and our land shall yield her      produce.''
  (Ps.      85:11-13)
      
     Have a spiritual meaningful      Shavuot!!
          or
           
      
      
     Next      week, Baruch ha Shem, we will continue with chapter two of       Derek Eretz Zuta      .
      
           
     What      are your ideas about letting the misdeeds of others flow off your back      and not holding grudges or taking revenge? How has learning to stay      spiritual even when things don't go our way helped you live a happier life?       How has understanding the spiritual and ethical teachings of      Judaism and keeping rigorously  honest  helped you live      a more      joyous life?
      
     Next      class, Baruch ha Shem, we will continue with Derek Eretz Zuta ,       continuing  Chapter Two. Thank you for joining      me.
      
           
      
     Shalom:
      
           
     If      visiting SC's Low Country, contact us for a Shabbat meal, in our home by the      sea, our beth      yam.
      
     Maker      of Shalom (Oseh Shalom) help make us deserving of Shalom beyond all human      comprehension!