Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Significance of Place: The Effect of Place on Status, Characteristics and Events in the Torah of the Maharal

Significance of Place: The Effect of Place on Status, Characteristics and Events in the Torah of the Maharal
By Eliakim Willner
Eliakim Willner is author of “Nesivos Olam – Nesiv HaTorah: An Appreciation of Torah Study”, a translation with commentary of a work by the Maharal of Prague, published by Artscroll/Mesorah. This article is adapted from his forthcoming continuation of the Nesivos Olam series, “Nesivos Olam – Nesiv HaAvodah: The Philosophy and Practice of Prayer”.

Introduction
In the summer months many of us leave our homes and travels to other places, near and far, to get a break from our regular routines. We are off our regular orbits. And that leads to the question, does place matter? Is there a halachic and hashkafic significance to our “home” place, or to other places? Indeed there is, and we examine the subject from various angles through the lens of the Maharal.
Where You Stand is Where You Stand
In Bamidbar 10:32 Rashi writes that the fertile area of Yericho was set aside as future compensation for the tribe in whose territory the Temple would ultimately be built, since the Temple land would be “nationalized” and would no longer be the property of the tribe originally holding it. The Maharal in Gur Aryeh on that verse notes that the area of Yericho that was designated as the “swap land” was relatively small and seems to be poor compensation for the land that was nationalized for the Temple. How, he asks, is that a fair exchange? He answers that the value of the land was inherent in its status – the status it obtained by being designated as “swap land” for the Temple – and in the fact that its status was testimony to the high standing of the land’s occupiers. Thus even though the fertile area of Yericho was relatively small, it had a high property value. The Maharal states as a principle that place is an indicator of the standing of the persons occupying the space.
Indeed, the word for place, makom, also carries an implication of standing, as in the phrase, mimalei makom avosav, used in Kesubos 103b as a reference to someone who lives up to the standing, or status, of his forefathers.
You Are Where You Stand
In fact, the Maharal on that Rashi goes further and states that the land a person occupies is not only a status indicator, it is a status determinant – prestige and blessing emanate from the land to the land’s occupants. The land’s inherent status transfers to the persons occupying the land.
Land also affects a person’s physical characteristics. When Moshe sent spies to scout out Israel and its inhabitants prior to Yisroel’s planned entry and conquest, he commanded them (Bamidbar 13:18),  “And you should see what kind of land it is…”, on which Rashi comments, “Some countries rear strong people, and some countries rear weak people; some produce large populations and some small populations”. The Maharal in Gur Aryeh on that verse explains that land is one of the factors that actually determine strength and prolificity and he instructed the spies to explore that factor with respect to the land of Israel, along with other factors that affect strength and prolificity, such as ethnological background.
The Gemara in Shabbos 31a tells of an individual who asked Hillel patently silly questions in an unsuccessful attempt to test his patience. Two of the questions were, why do the residents of Tardum have straight eyes, and why do the residents of Africa have wide feet? Hillel responded that these characteristics were a result of the conditions prevalent in those locales – and the Maharal in Chidushei Aggados on that Gemara explains that it is the same concept at play; the ability of land to affect a person’s physical characteristics.
As the Maharal writes in Netzach Yisroel, chapter 28, land also affects spiritual characteristics. There are places that are notable for their tendency to bring about an extremely high level of sanctity, and he cites as an example the cave where Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai hid from the Romans for twelve years. During that time he immersed himself in Torah study and became proficient in the hidden areas of the Torah, received revelations from Eliyahu and experienced miracles. The “atmosphere” of the cave was a factor in these events.
The Maharal continues to develop this concept in Gevuros Hashem, Chapter 19, where he writes that not only can place affect a person’s status and characteristics, but the nature of a place is also a causative factor for events. As an example he explains that a well gives rise to marriage pairings and that is why Yitzchok, Yaakov and Moshe found their betrothed by wells. In Chidushei Aggados on Horios 12a the Maharal explains that kings were anointed adjacent to wellsprings because those places mitigate toward longevity and anointing kings there facilitated the longevity of their reigns. In Chidushei Aggados on Sanhedrin 96a the Maharal writes that when Avraham encountered the land-portion of the tribe of Dan in Israel he felt weak, because that particular plot of land has a property that fosters idol-worship. (The reference is to the idolatrous golden calves that the evil king Yeravam ben Nevat erected there.)
Spiritual Counterparts to Physical Plots of Land
Physical plots of land have their spiritual counterparts which share their characteristics, and which impart those characteristics in the spiritual realm. For example, the Maharal writes in Gur Aryeh, Beraishis 23:2, that the city Kiryas Arba (the city of four, also known as Chevron) was called that because the land’s character begat four physical giants who lived there. In the spiritual realm of the afterlife, that property of the land translates to an affinity for spiritual, rather than physical, greatness, so the land became the burial place of spiritually great people, including our forefathers; it is the location of the Meoras HaMachpela
The concept of spiritual counterparts to physical places is further discussed in Gevuros Hashem, Chapter 47 where the Maharal explains that this applies in both positive and negative ways. On the positive side is the famous Medrash (Mechilta, Beshalach 9) that says that the spiritual Temple is “aligned” with the physical Temple, both of which exude holiness. Conversely, on the negative side, the valley outside of Yerushalayim called Gai ben Hinom is “aligned” with Gehinnom and exhibits physical characteristics that derive from that correspondence.
When Avraham first entered Israel he passed through the city of Shchem, and Rashi points out (Beraishis 12:6) that he saw in a prophetic vision the nearby mountains of Gerizim and Aival where Yisroel were destined to accept the Torah on themselves with an oath, prior to their entering Israel for the first time. The reason for this prophetic vision, explains the Maharal in Gur Aryeh on that verse, was to show Avraham the bond between places in Israel and their spiritual counterparts. Gerizim and Aival were not selected at random as the place for the Torah acceptance oath. Rather the characteristics of their spiritual counterpart “places” made them particularly suitable for their respective roles. Moreover, the Maharal states that when Avraham passed through those areas, it was precisely their spiritual characteristics that sparked his prophecy.
Place as Home Territory; The Transient Nature of Galus
In Gur Aryeh, Shmos 12:40 the Maharal articulates the concept of a person or nation’s “home” territory. When a person is elsewhere than his “home” territory he does not lose his attachment to it; he is considered a temporary sojourner even if his absence from home is extended. As long as he is away from home he is in a continual state of imbalance and there is a continual “draw” back to his home territory even if it cannot be actualized, via a return home, for a period of time.
In fact, writes the Maharal in Netzach Yisroel, Chapter 1, Yisroel in galus, exile, is a classic example of this condition; our “home base” is the land of Israel and when we are elsewhere we are fish out of water, under a continual “pull” towards home. This is why galus is inherently a temporary situation. The natural order is for things to revert to their proper place. Only then do they return to a state of equilibrium. It is therefore unavoidable for our return to Israel to be actualized, may it be soon!
Note that the Maharal is discussing a different dimension of “place” here than we outlined in previous sections. There the focus was on the effect of place on personal or national character, or on events, and in some of the examples cited the effect did not require a long-term or intrinsic relationship between the place and its occupants – for example the tendency of a well to give rise to marriage pairings, or the spiritual effect of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai’s cave, were effective even if the association between person and place was transient. Here, however, the Maharal is talking about an intrinsic and enduring relationship between a nation and a land, without specific regard to any effect the land might have on the nation. In fact, however, the land does have an effect on the nation; in Nesivos Olam, Nesiv HaAvodah Chapter 5 the Maharal quotes a Gemara in Brachos 8a:
“They told Rabbi Yochanan,  ‘There are extremely old people living in Babylonia’. He was incredulous, remarking, ‘Does not the verse say (Devarim 11:21),  ‘… so that your days and the days of your children be lengthened in the land…’ implying in the land specifically and not outside the land?’ When they explained to him that these people come to the house of prayer early and depart from it late, he exclaimed, ‘This is what saves them!’ This is as Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi instructed his sons: ‘Go to the house of prayer early and leave it late so that your days may be lengthened.’”
Thus Israel, the land native to the Jewish nation, promotes longevity, to the extent that Rabbi Yochanan was actually incredulous when he heard that Jews were living to a ripe old age outside Israel! He was mollified only when he was given to understand that prolonging one’s time in a shul has a similar effect on longevity. The Maharal elaborates on this concept in Nesivos Olam, Nesiv HaAvodah Chapter 5 and further discusses the symbiosis between Yisroel, the nation, and Israel, the land in Chapter 18, sections 8 and 9, and elsewhere.
Place and Time
In Tiferes Yisroel, Chapter 25 the Maharal explains that there can be nothing coincidental about seminal world events, such as the giving of the Torah, and therefore the moment that the Torah was given was laden with significance. Similarly, he continues in Chapter 26, the place of the Torah-giving was also laden with significance. And he adds, “time and space are cut out of the same cloth, as those versed in Torah wisdom understand”. That is why the same verse specifies the significant time and the significant place of the Torah-giving (Shmos 19:1): “In the third month of Yisroel’s departure from Egypt, on this day they arrived in the desert of Sinai”.
On a simple level, time and place specifications are coordinates to precisely identify a point in our physical world that marks a significant event. In mathematical terminology this concept, which has evolved to a point of great sophistication, is known as “space-time”. Of course the mathematical model is a useful crutch to enable those of us who are not versed in Toras nistar to visualize the concept but we must not lose sight of the fact that the Maharal, who was versed in nistar, had a far deeper meaning in mind.
Not surprisingly, the Maharal writes in Gur Aryeh, Beraishis 1:5, in the context of the products of day 1 of creation, that just as place has an influence on its occupants, so does time. He expresses a similar concept in Gur Aryeh, Bamidbar 7:12 with respect to the order of the sacrifices brought by the Nesiim at the dedication of the Mishkan, in Netzach Yisroel, Chapter 8, in explaining why the events of Tisha B’Av and Shiva Assar b’Tamuz had to happen exactly on those days, in Tiferes Yisroel, Chapter 40, and in explaining the unique association between Yisroel and Shabbos, and elsewhere.
“Makom” as a Reference to Hashem and our Relationship to Hashem
Hashem is the “place” of reality as we know it since everything is an emanation from Hashem, as it were, and exists “within” Him. This is true in general of the universe but it is also true of every element in the universe and in particular, of every individual in the universe. In Gur Aryeh, Beraishis 37:33 the Maharal writes that every person has a “place” in the overall emanation from Hashem that constitutes the universe and thus every individual has a “place” in Hashem, as it were.
Since Hashem is continually sustaining the emanation-reality that constitutes the universe he is also sustaining every individual, in his or her unique “place”. Thus is can be said that a person’s “place” in the universe (which equates to his “place” in Hashem) sustains him – or in other words, where a person is positioned vis-a-vis Hashem determines the nature of his sustenance.
Thus, in the “place” model there are concepts of “closer to” or “further from” Hashem where “closer to” means a greater degree of divine protection and blessing and “further from” means less protection and blessing. The Maharal alludes to this concept in Chidushei Aggados on Gittin 68a.
There is also a concept of stability – one’s “place” can be fixed, secure and permanent, which again implies a greater degree of divine protection and blessing, or it can be unstable, insecure and transient, which implies a lesser degree of divine protection and blessing.
Our actions can affect where we stand with respect to closeness, as well as where we stand with respect to stability.
The Importance of Place in Halacha - Prayer
This is why the Shulchan Aruch and Mishnah Brurah in Orach Chaim 90:19 write that a person should be consistent with respect to his shul and with respect to his seat within the shul, and when he must pray at home he should also consistently pray in a place where he will not be disturbed. A person who does this is drawing on an established relationship with Hashem and is more likely to be answered.
In Nesivos Olam, Nesiv HaAvodah, chapter 4 the Maharal adds an additional dimension to this requirement, writing that prayer must be consistent and not haphazard in order for it to serve its primary purpose, which is to bring us close to Hashem. An important way to demonstrate that consistency is to maintain a consistent place for prayer.
Our Sages declared that such a person merits great things: he is considered a disciple of Avraham and achieves a closeness to Hashem akin to Avraham’s. He achieves humility and benevolence. His enemies fall before him.
Avraham merited continual assistance from Hashem because of his closeness to Him as evinced by his consistency with respect to his place of prayer. Avraham’s closeness was a product of his being the “first” creation in terms of importance. Those of us who are consistent about where we pray cannot claim to be “first” but by doing so we attach ourselves to Avraham’s merit as offshoots to a root and thereby lay claim to the benefits of closeness achieved by Avraham.
Maintaining consistency about where we pray helps us achieve great spiritual heights, especially in the areas of benevolence and humility, again by virtue of our attachment to the practices of our forefather, Avraham. These characteristics themselves help us to achieve a closer relationship with Hashem. See the Maharal text for more detail.
The Importance of Place in Halacha - Mazal
The Rama (Shulchan Aruch, Yore Deah 393:2) based on a Gemara in Moed Katan 23a, writes that it is customary for a mourner to change his place in shul for the entire mourning period. The rationale derives from a Gemara in Rosh HaShana 16b which enumerates four things that can cancel negative decrees: charity, prayer, name change and repentance – and, continues the Gemara, some add location change as a fifth item to the list. Since changing location can cancel a negative decree, and since the death of a close relative results from a negative decree, location-changing is recommended as one means of ending any negative decree that might be hanging over the mourner before it causes additional harm. Similarly the Yerushalmi on Shabbos 6:9 advises location change as a means of improving one’s mazal, or destiny. This concept is popularly known as meshaneh makom, meshaneh mazal.
How does changing location have an effect on negative decrees or on destiny? The Gemara in Rosh HaShana hints at the reasons by providing biblical references for the items enumerated. For example, with respect to name change, the Gemara references the change of name from Sarai to Sarah (Beraishis 17), which facilitated her transition from incapable of bearing children to capable of bearing children. The effect of name on mazal is beyond the scope of this article, but it is significant.
Building on this concept, the Maharal in Chidushei Aggados on the Gemara in Rosh HaShana writes that just as name is an integral part of a person’s identity, so is place, and in fact he notes that in a get (bill of divorce) the parties are identified as “so-and-so from such-and-such place”. The place designation is appended to the name as a means of further qualifying the person’s identity. It is identity that determines mazal. Changing place, like changing name, alters a person’s identity and thus refashions his mazal, and that is why one view in the Gemara counts place among the things that can affect a person’s destiny.
Conclusion

We have seen that place in Judaism is significant both on a physical and metaphysical level, has individual and communal applications, and has halachic ramifications. In whatever place we may happen to be, may we each find our proper place in our avodas Hashem, and may klal Yisrael soon return to its proper place in eretz Yisroel b’bias goel tzedek!

Friday, March 18, 2016

When a Half is Better: An Appreciation of Machtzis HaShekel Based on the Torah of The Maharal

When a Half is Better: An Appreciation of Machtzis HaShekel Based on the Torah of The Maharal
By Eliakim Willner
Eliakim Willner is author of “Nesivos Olam – Nesiv HaTorah: An Appreciation of Torah Study”, a translation with commentary of a work by the Maharal of Prague, published by Artscroll/Mesorah. This article is adapted from his forthcoming continuation of the Nesivos Olam series, “Nesivos Olam – Nesiv HaAvodah: The Philosophy and Practice of Prayer”.


Fundraising for the Mishkan
When the Mishkan was constructed Yisroel were asked to donate three times. One set of donations was for the adonim, a set of bases for the cedar beams that constituted the frame of the Mishkan. This donation set was fixed at a half-shekel. A second set of donations was used to purchase the animals for the communal korbanos, sacrifices, that were mandated in the Mishkan. This set was also fixed at a half-shekel. The third donation set was comprised of the raw materials that were used in the construction of the Mishkan and for creating the clothing worn by the Kohanim, the priests. Here any Jew could give as much or as little as he or she wanted of any of the required materials.
The Maharal (Gur Aryeh, Shmos 25:2) explains that the Mishkan was an atonement for the sin of the eigel, the golden calf, which Yisroel participated in with the three components of their beings: their bodies, their spirits and their assets. By believing that the eigel had some kind of power external to Hashem, chas vesholom, they sinned with their spirits – that is, through their minds. By going through the physical motions of offering sacrifices to the eigel they sinned with their bodies. By offering their gold for the eigel they sinned with their assets.
For the Mishkan to properly atone for them they had to participate in its construction with the same three components they used to indulge in the sin in the first place. Each of the donation sets came from a different component and atoned for the sin-contribution of that component. Two of the components comprise a person’s actual being – his body and his soul (his assets are external to him). The two half-shekel donations corresponded to those two components and that is why each donation was only half a shekel. Each half-shekel represented one half of a person’s being, one for his body and the other for his spirit. Together they comprise his whole being.
Now, the Torah tells us (Shmos 30:15) that the sacrifices were “to provide atonement for your spirits”. Thus the half-shekel donation that went toward the communal sacrifices atoned for the spirit’s contribution to the sin of the eigel. The adonim were the foundation of the Mishkan; the “container” which provided the basis for the entire edifice. It is analogous to our physical bodies which are the “containers” for our selves. Thus the half-shekel donation that went towards the adonim atoned for the body’s contribution to the eigel. Finally the assets that were contributed toward the construction of the Mishkan atoned for the assets component of the sin of the eigel.
Moshe’s Half-Shekel Difficulty
Rashi on Shmos 30:13, based on a Medrash Rabbah, writes that Hashem showed Moshe a facsimile of a coin of fire amounting to a half-shekel and told him, “they should give the equivalent of this”.
There are other such Medrashim and Gemaros that describe how Hashem showed Moshe a fiery equivalent to clarify how a particular object should look or operate – for example, the Menorah, the new moon, permitted and non-permitted insects, the shechita process and others were all demonstrated to Moshe in this fashion. But in all those cases there were complexities that needed to be resolved through illustration. What, though, the Maharal asks, was the complexity that required a visual demonstration in the case of the half-shekel? It is, after all, merely a coin.
One answer the Maharal provides is that man-made objects never achieve an exact measure. Try as we might, our efforts to achieve exactitude always fall short. Thus our half-shekel coins may be just a bit more than a half-shekel in weight or they may be just a bit less, but they will never “hit it on the nose”. That limitation is inherent in our physical world and we live with it – the half-shekel coins we mint as currency are accepted as such despite the fact that they are by definition, imperfect.
On the other hand when Hashem shows a divine half-shekel we are guaranteed that it is a half-shekel without the slightest deviation in either direction. When Hashem showed Moshe the fiery half-shekel He was telling Moshe that the half-shekels to be used for counting could not be run-of-the-mill half-shekels. For counting Yisroel, exactitude was critical.
The Maharal’s answer, however, raises two additional questions. First, why was such a level of exactitude required? And second, how could it be achieved, given the limitations of the physical world? To give more potency to the both questions, consider that the utensils and artifacts of the Mishkan all had precise measurements specified for them in the Torah. Yet we do not find an insistence on attempting to achieve divine-level exactitude for them – in fact, the Gemara in Bechoros 17b specifically acknowledges that we are unable to achieve exactitude and declares that all the Torah expects of us is our best effort. Why, then, is more seemingly expected of us with respect to the half-shekel?
The Delicate Half-Shekel Balance
I would like to suggest two possible answers to these questions. First, as we mentioned earlier, the two half-shekels correspond to our body and spirit components. Now, we know that the conjoining of our bodies and spirits is a seeming contradiction in terms – it is nothing short of miraculous that such a feat is possible at all. Indeed, the asher yotzar bracha concludes with “u’mafli la’asos”, Hashem does wondrous things. What wondrous things are being referred to? The Rema in Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim 6 explains this as meaning that it is wondrous that the soul of man was “partnered” with his body – the coexistence of two opposites.
If in fact the two half-shekels represent this extremely delicate balance we can understand why Hashem wants us to be as meticulous as possible in assuring that the balance is maintained as accurately as possible. True, we cannot achieve divine perfection; this is understood. But the message of the fiery half-shekel is that we have to be even more painstaking with this particular “approximation” than we are with the others mentioned in the Gemara in Bechoros, so that we appreciate the extent of the mafli la’asos inherent in our creation.
No Jew is an Island
Another approach to answering the questions is via a commentary of the Chida on Shmos 30:13. He answers the question, why specifically a half-shekel, by pointing out that the lesson of the half-shekel is that no Jew can isolate himself and maintain that he is “self-contained” and can function independently of his co-religionists. As standalone entities we are only “halves”; to be complete we need the assistance of, and the society of, other Jews.
Consider what this means. At any moment of time any Jew may need the assistance of any other Jew and the other Jew has to be poised to provide it. In “half-shekel terms”, if each of us is represented by a half-shekel we have to “fit” with the half-shekel of any and every other Jew since we may need the assistance of, or be called upon to provide assistance to, any other Jew. This is only possible if our half-shekels are precise; only then can we be assured that we will be “whole” with the precise half-shekel of any other Jew. Thus, although theoretical precision is impossible, we have to go the extra mile to come as close as we can to it for this particular mitzvah.
This is an important lesson to keep in mind as Purim approaches since Haman understood that our weakness was disunity, as he said, “There is a certain people who are scattered and separate…” . To counter that Esther asked Mordechai to “Go, assemble together all the Jews”. We are in fact parts of an integral whole, not disparate individuals and this message is inherent in the half-shekel.
The Protective Effect of the Half-Shekel
The Torah tells us that the half-shekel has a powerful protective effect. When Yisroel had to be counted, half-shekels were used to protect them from the potential ayin horah that could be unleashed thereby – blessing is most prevalent in things that are hidden from the eye (Baba Metziah 42a) and counting is the antithesis of “hidden”. But when counting has to be done, doing it with the half-shekel shields from potential harm, as the Torah says (Shmos 30:12), “…then there will be no plague among them when they are counted”.
The Maharal in Ohr Chodosh (140) writes that this is so because the half-shekels were used for the purchase of sacrifices. To understand this we have to appreciate the underlying meaning of sacrifices. In Nesiv HaAvodah chapter 1 and similarly in Derech Chaim 1:2 the Maharal explains that a sacrifice is a statement that the offeror is a slave of the sacrifice “recipient” – that is, of Hashem; it is a statement that the offeror is transferring his animal to Hashem in the same way that the property of a slave transfers automatically to his master. My animal, declares the sacrifice offeror implicitly, is really Hashem’s animal because I myself belong to Hashem; my existence has no justification other than my servitude toward Hashem.
Donating the half-shekel for purchase of sacrifices thus conveys the same message: “I belong to Hashem and I exist to serve Him”! It is no wonder, then, that the half-shekels have such a powerful protective effect. And when they are donated by the entire nation en masse, as they were when the Mishkan was constructed and every Adar when the Bais HaMikdash stood, and as we commemorate on Taanis Esther even nowadays, they have an especially powerful protective effect. The Maharal explains that this is why Haman’s plot ultimately failed. Having handed ourselves over to Hashem, as it were, it is impossible for us to fall into the hands of Haman, and equally impossible for us to fall into the hands of the Satan.

As we donate our half-shekel coins let us remember the significance of this commemoration and mentally declare, as Jews have done through the centuries, “I belong to Hashem and I exist to serve Him!” – as a cog in the organism called klal Yisroel and not in isolation – and in that merit may Hashem protect us from our current day enemies as he protected us on Purim and throughout the millennia.

Monday, February 29, 2016

The Re-Invention of Yissachar-Zevulun: a “Push Button Judaism” Distortion

The Re-Invention of Yissachar-Zevulun:
a “Push Button Judaism” Distortion

By Eliakim Willner

It’s New! It’s Different! And It’s Wrong!

A recent article spoke glowingly about a “modern day version of the Torah’s Yissachar-Zevulun partnership”; an arrangement wherein members of a Kollel would daven for the success of a local businessman’s venture and would share in the profits if the venture succeeded.

Innovations in avodas Hashem always have to be very carefully scrutinized, especially when, as is the case with the aforementioned “partnership arrangement”, there were no hurdles precluding such “partnerships” a hundred or even a thousand years ago. Yet we have no prior record of such practices. Mosdos in earlier generations would presumably have latched on to such a potentially lucrative fund-raising tactic if it were legitimate.

In fact, this arrangement does not stand up to scrutiny. It exemplifies several hashkafic weaknesses that are symptomatic of the general 21st century mindset and which have begun to affect the thinking of our own community as well.

Yissachar and Zevulun Would Not Approve

We’ll begin with the 21st century tendency to gloss over accuracy for the sake of journalistic effect. Whatever the legitimacy of the “partnership arrangement” described in the article it is most assuredly not a Yissachar-Zevulun partnership, “modern day” or otherwise. The halachos of Yissachar-Zevulun relationships are complex but the fundamental structure is not: Zevulun provides sustenance to Yissachar, who spends his time learning Torah. Part of the reward for the Torah learning accrues to Zevulun in exchange for his material support of Yissachar.

The only reward Zevulun can count on from a bona fide Yissachar-Zevulun relationship is spiritual. In no way is he “buying” a guarantee of success in his business enterprises nor does he have grounds for complaint if he does not achieve success.  An arrangement whereby a businessman provides support for Torah study in expectation of material and not spiritual reward is emphatically not Yissachar-Zevulun. An arrangement whereby the support provided Yissachar is conditional on Zevulun’s material success or anything else is emphatically not Yissachar-Zevulun. Such arrangements are the antithesis of Yissachar-Zevulun. To use that term to describe them is a serious distortion that turns a venerable arrangement for support of Torah study on its head!

Yissachar-Zevulun Re-Invented: A Symptom of “Push-Button” Ruchnius

In fact it is questionable whether such an arrangement is legitimate or effective at all, whether it benefits the businessman providing the funds, whether it benefits the Kollel receiving them, and whether it benefits klal Yisroel.

It is a true that, as we learn in the haftorah of Shabbos HaGadol, one may, as it were, “test” Hashem by attaching conditions to tzdakah donations. However there are no guarantees regarding how the condition will be fulfilled, when it will be fulfilled and even, if it will be fulfilled.

We live in a push-button society. When we flick a switch we expect the light to go on – it almost always does and we are thus frustrated when it does not. When we press on the accelerator we expect the car to pick up speed and we are frustrated when it does not. We are, in general, a society that has become conditioned to expect instant gratification. “Click on the ‘Buy Now’ button to add the item to your shopping cart and it will be delivered tomorrow”.

However, cause and effect in ruchnius isn’t nearly so simple, immediate or obvious.  We understand the operation of a light switch and car; they are completely deterministic. But we understand very little about the ruchniusdike factors that underlie the hashgacha pratis that determines what happens to us. We do know that giving tzdakah conditionally, mitigates in favor of our condition being met. But we don’t know all the other factors at play and thus predictability in any sense is impossible. And immediate gratification is usually not forthcoming.

Bitachon: Yes. Instant Gratification: No

Bitachon is a cornerstone of yahadus – the proper attitude of a baal bitachon is to trust that Hashem is controlling events down to the last detail, that He “hears” our requests (and tzdakah conditions), that He wants to benefit us – and that He knows better than we do what is to our ultimate good. We may not get what we want when we want it, no matter how fervently we ask for it and no matter how much tzdakah we give. We are permitted, even required, to make our requests of Hashem. Having done so, we are required to assume an attitude of kol man d’avid Rachmana l’tav avid.

Being matzdik es haDin is a fundamental Jewish trait. We say, “Posaiach es yodecha u’masbiah l’chol chai ratzon”, G-d satisfies the desire of every living thing, and we follow it immediately with, “Tzadik Hashem b’chol drochov v’chasid b’chol maasav”, a declaration that all the ways of Hashem are righteous – even if an immediate desire is unfulfilled. When the Bais HaMikdosh was completed Shlomo Ha Melech asked Hashem to respond favorably to the requests of the non-Jews who came to pray there – knowing that, while non-Jews would lose faith if their prayers weren’t answered in an obvious way, Jews would not.

Faith, patience, acceptance, are characteristic of Jews. They are uncharacteristic of the general 21st century population. Thus we have to hold fast to our values or we risk being sucked into the vortex of the prevailing and antithetical 21st century value system.

Building Walls Against False Values

Indeed, these false values have already begun to leech into our thought processes, and the “partnership arrangement” described in the article is symptomatic of a creeping trend toward facile religious devices that are expected to yield instant and foolproof gratification. It is akin to other contemporary manifestations of the same disease: seeking “segulos” as a “push-button” means to achieve desires, consulting “mekubalim” in the expectation of immediate results, responding favorably to flyers from tzdakah organizations filled with “case studies” of people who, with disaster staring them in the face, make desperate pledges and are miraculously and instantly saved.

Like those other quick-fix religious tricks, the “partnership arrangement” sets false expectations. A businessman with an imminent deal is expecting a concrete positive outcome when he enters into this partnership – whatever the “fine print” of the “contract” may say. That expectation is reinforced when he is assured by Rabbis, whom he presumably respects, that this arrangement “works”.

What will his reaction be if and when the deal falls through – as it very well might, since, as noted earlier, Heaven cannot be manipulated by flicking a switch? A yeridah in bitachon is likely. A diminuition of respect for talmidei chachomim is inevitable.  And the more common such “partnerships” become, the more pervasive the yeridah in bitachon and diminuition of respect will become in our general society.

Moreover, conditioned now to view donations to mosdos as business deals more than as mitzvos, the businessman will be much less likely to make a donation in the future – after all, he’s seen that it’s a “bad deal”; why enter into it again?

Our Kollelim are supposed to be bastions of Torahs emes, beacons of light to their respective communities. It is saddening to see some of them inadvertently peddling spiritual snake oil instead.

A proponent of the “partnership arrangement” enthuses in the article, “The concept is to make Hashem your business partner. When you’re negotiating a deal you feel that Hakadosh Baruch Hu is with you. The extra confidence it brings is a wonderful feeling”.

May we all realize that Hashem is “with us” all the time, not just when we’ve pushed the right button, that davening earnestly to Hashem on our own behalf is far more effective than outsourcing the job to others, that proper hashkafos and bitachon provide all the “extra confidence” one could ever need – and may we be zoche to u’malah haaretz daiah es Hashem and to a complete geulah b’korov!

Sunday, February 28, 2016

The Power of Thought and Ayin HoRah

The Power of Thought and Ayin HoRah
By Eliakim Willner
Eliakim Willner is author of “Nesivos Olam – Nesiv HaTorah: An Appreciation of Torah Study”, a translation with commentary of a work by the Maharal of Prague, published by Artscroll Mesorah. This article is adapted from his forthcoming sequel, “Nesivos Olam – Nesiv HaAvodah: The Philosophy and Practice of Prayer”.


Introduction
The secular world views thought as an intangible brain activity with no implication beyond micro-current flowing through neurons. It is actions that count, they say, and thoughts that do not lead to actions have no import and are therefore meaningless.
This, however, is not the Jewish perspective on thought. The subject is wide-ranging and is worthy of a book in its own right. In this article we will summarize the Jewish perspective on thought with a focus on ayin hora, or evil eye – one of the better known areas where the reality of thought plays a significant role.
The Reality and Potency of Thought
The 10th of the Rambam’s 13 principles of faith is that Hashem, “…knows all the deeds of human beings and their thoughts…”. This is evident in that there are commandments that are purely thought-based, such as belief in Hashem. There are also prohibitions that are triggered by motivation such as, “Do not… place a stumbling block before the blind” (Vayikra 19:14) which encompasses intentionally giving bad advice in order to achieve personal gain. The verse continues, “and you shall fear your G-d”. Rashi explains that the verse adds this phrase as a wake-up call to the advice-giver. He might want to claim that his advice was well-meant and not intended for his own benefit, so the verse exhorts him to remember that Hashem knows his motivations and thoughts and if they are in fact selfish he will have to face the consequences. It is clear that our thoughts are not ours alone. They are known outside of ourselves.
Beyond that, thoughts have an effect on the physical world. See Nefesh HaChaim, Shaar Aleph, and in particular chapters 4 and 14, where Rav Chaim Volozhiner explains that our actions, words and thoughts have the power to affect the celestial worlds, and that since the celestial worlds control the flow of Hashem’s beneficence to our own world, improper thoughts and motivations can negatively affect events in our physical world, and proper thoughts and motivations can positively affect events in our physical world. He cites the verse, “He forms their hearts together, He understands all their deeds” (Tehillim 33:15) – the same verse cited by the Rambam in support of his 10th principle.
Thoughts, then, have both a reality and a potency outside our minds. Not only do they accrue merit or demerit to their “owners” but they also affect the world-at-large as well.
The Power of an Individual’s Thoughts and the Evil Eye
It is also possible for an individual’s thoughts to have a positive or negative effect even on specific people. In Michtav MiEliyahu v.3 pages 96-97 Rav Eliyahu Dessler explains that Hashem created man, as the Torah teaches, “in the image of G-d” (Beraishis 9:6) and that means that Hashem gave man capabilities “resembling” His own, as it were. Now, Hashem created the world by willing it into existence (in ten “steps”, as discussed by our Sages). We were granted a similar power to affect reality by willing things to happen. Our thoughts actually create an “energy” that triggers events.
From a practical standpoint these events often do not come to fruition because the object of our wish may himself have wishes that run counter to our own and the energy created by his wishes may overpower and negate the energy of our own wishes. Possibly he has merits that shield him from the negative effects of our wishes.
Nonetheless, even if the energy does not come to fruition on its intended object, it remains in existence and must find an “outlet”. The Maharal in Chapter 2 of Beer Hagolah compares this pent-up energy to throwing a rock with force. If it hits its target the force is expended but if it is blocked it bounces back and rebounds on the person who did the throwing.
The Maharal explains how this works in the context of the aidim zomimim (false witness) laws. The Torah specifies that false witnesses suffer the sentence that would have been imposed on their scapegoat had their testimony not been disproven. However this applies only if the sentence on the intended scapegoat had not already been carried out. For example, if the false witnesses testified that their scapegoat killed someone – a capital offense – and their testimony was discredited, the false witnesses would themselves be subject to capital punishment, but only if their scapegoat had not yet been executed. If he had been executed the false witnesses would not be executed.
This provision seems counter-intuitive. It would seem that the harsher punishment should apply if the scapegoat had been executed rather than only when he was still alive! The Maharal explains that the will of the false witnesses to harm the scapegoat generates a fatal negative energy that must find release. If the scapegoat is in fact killed that negative energy was expended. If their intent to harm the scapegoat was not actualized, however, the negative energy is active and it bounces back on the false witnesses themselves, causing them to suffer the fate they intended for their scapegoat – like the analogy of a rock thrown with force hitting a wall and ricocheting back on the thrower.
Rav Dessler writes that if all humankind joined in willing a common goal it would be in its power to bring it about since there would be no counter for all the common thought-energy created thereby. Because that common goal might not be a good one, Hashem blocked such events from taking place by making it impossible for mankind to unite for an evil common goal – this is the underlying explanation of the events of the tower of Bavel (see Beraishis 11). Humankind will only be able to join in a common goal at the end of days when all will join in service to Hashem and there will no longer be a motivation toward evil.
Rav Chaim Friedlander, citing Rav Dessler and the Chazon Ish, whom we will quote shortly, discusses this as well in Sifsei Chaim, Pirkei Emunah V’Hashgacha, page 393 and explains that this concept is the basis behind ayin horah, or “evil eye”. A very common impetus for willing something negative to happen to another person is jealousy or simply an inability to begrudge someone else their good fortune. The negative energy released is real and dangerous and thus our Sages urge us to be circumspect about our possessions and good fortune and avoid ostentation and braggadocio. (It is called “evil eye” and not “evil thought” because the process of casting ill-will on a person begins with seeing him or his possessions, as we will explain).
What are the mechanics behind this negative thought energy and its ability to have a harmful effect on others? Rav Dessler, in Michtav MiEliyahu 4, p. 6, explains that no man is a spiritual island; we are all interconnected at our spiritual roots and are therefore interdependent. We all derive some degree of spiritual energy from every other being. People who do not begrudge others their good fortune, whose very existence bothers them, blot these others out from any of their emanations of positive spiritual energy. Therefore, to the extent that the web of interdependencies that sustains the evil eye victim relies on the evil eye perpetrator, the victim is cut off from a vital life source. He is weakened, vulnerable and susceptible to harm.
In this light we understand that ayin horah is very real and not at all a “superstition”. It is discussed in Gemara and cited as a factor affecting Jewish law – halacha. For example, one may not display a lost object, even for its own benefit (air it out, etc.) if visitors are present because it may be damaged, as Rashi explains, by ayin horah of the visitors (Baba Metziah 30a). One may not stand in the field of his fellow when the crop is ripe because, as Rashi explains, he may damage it through his ayin horah (Baba Basra 2b). Two brothers, or a father and son, may not be called consecutively to the Torah because of ayin horah (Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim 141:6). And, soberingly, the Gemara in Baba Metziah 107b says that Rav went to a cemetery, recited incantations over the individual graves to ascertain the cause of death and reported that ninety-nine percent died through ayin horah, and only one percent through natural causes.
The Chazon Ish discusses the power of thought to affect events in Likutim, Baba Basra 14, #21. He writes, citing several sources in the Gemara, that a person’s thoughts can imperceptibly trigger real-world events and that this is one of the enigmatic aspects of creation. A fleeting thought, he says, can wreak serious destruction on substantial physical structures. Therefore when people gossip about a successful venture, they jeopardize it since that can cause jealousy and result in the evil eye.
Evil Eye in the Context of Divine Justice
One must keep in mind, the Chazon Ish, cautions, that Hashem’s will is behind all events and that if it were not the will of Hashem for damage to occur no evil eye could instigate it. The evil eye in this respect is one of the tools in Hashem’s arsenal, so to speak, that He uses to carry out His will. [It is no different from a gun wielded by a criminal – which also appears to cause harm even though it is also only an agent of Hashem in carrying out His will.]
In this light it is clear that one can only suffer from an evil eye as a result of a divine decree. Negative divine decrees are typically the outcome of improper actions. One way a person can bring evil eye vulnerability on himself is by ostentatiously flaunting possessions or attributes in a manner that evokes jealousy in others. While jealousy is improper, a jealous person nonetheless suffers and a person who causes others to be jealous is responsible for their suffering. This can activate the divine attribute of justice and cause a revaluation of his entitlement to the things he was flaunting, in light of the pain he caused to others by making them jealous of him – and to possibly lose those things (from Michtav MiEliyahu 3, p. 313).
(It is also plausible, the Chazon Ish says, that the greater the person, the greater the potency of his “eye” in both positive and negative senses. There are also factors that affect susceptibility to the evil eye – for example there are times when Hashem’s attribute of strict justice is dominant and people are judged more harshly than they would be otherwise. At such times the evil eye is more likely to have its negative effect.)
Evil Eye as a “Klippo”
Rav Shlomo Alkabetz, in his Kabbalah-based work Shoresh Yishai on Rus, associates the evil eye with a klippah, a spiritual entity rooted in impurity. Klippos, like all spiritual entities, are agents of Hashem, but these particular agents are enforcers when punishment is called for. The klippah associated with the evil eye is named Ra’ah, which means “evil”. It attaches itself to that which a miserly eye is cast upon, infecting it and using it as a “base” from which to emanate harm.
Why, asks Rav Alkabetz (on Rus 2:2), did Boaz warn Rus not to collect harvest leavings from fields other than his own? The answer is that some field owners resented the stricture to permit the poor to collect the leavings. They possessed an ayin ra’ah, or evil eye, and thereby invoked the klippah named Ra’ah, which attached itself to the leavings in their fields. Gathering and using those leavings would thus bring misfortune to the hapless poor person who collected them. Boaz was warning Rus to avoid those harmful leavings and to stick with those in his own field since, unlike some of the other field owners, Boaz had an ayin tova, a benevolent eye, and his leavings would thus not be harmful to the leaving-collectors.
The Maharal on Evil Eye
The Maharal devotes Nesiv Ayin Tov (“a good eye”) of Nesivos Olam to discussing this subject. Similar to Rav Alkabetz, but without referencing Klippos, he notes, based on a Gemara in Sotah 38b, that the evil eye has contaminating properties and substances infected with it are outside the pale. Attempting to benefit from these substances is equivalent to attempting to benefit from substances that are tameh, spiritually befouled, and is actually (per the Gemara) prohibited. Rav Dessler explains this to mean that since benevolence is one of the world’s foundations, a person who lacks it – such as a person who possesses an evil eye – shakes the world’s very foundations and weakens his own attachment to existence as well as the attachment of those who associate with him, by causing them to benefit from his evil-eye-infected possessions. The prohibition against benefiting from these substances is to safeguard people from this danger.
The Maharal also writes that the negative energy emanated by a person with an ayin horah is so palpable that birds can actually sense it and most of them will therefore avoid traps set for them because they can detect the negative energy of the bird-trappers. In discussing the relationship between ayin horah and the egla arufa ritual he states that ayin horah can kill – as borne out by the Gemara in Baba Metziah cited above – and he labels the person casting the ayin horah a murderer.
The Maharal concludes the Nesiv with, “A person should take extreme care to protect his possessions from ayin horah, as our Sages taught, ‘blessing devolves only on items that are hidden from the eye’ (Taanis 8b) as the verse indicates, ‘Hashem will order the blessing to be with you in your granaries’ (Devarim 28:8). [The blessing takes effect when the produce is hidden in the granaries and not when it is exposed.]
Antidotes for Evil Eye
The first line of defense against the evil eye is circumspection. As noted above, flying below the radar with respect to one’s possessions and attributes inoculates them against the evil eye. However we are not hermits and it is not always possible to avoid exposing one’s assets to others.
The Gemara in Brachos 55a prescribes advice for those who wish to protect themselves from the evil eye. It suggests that one should grasp his right thumb in [the palm of] his left hand, and his left thumb in [the palm of] his right hand and say, “anah ploni bar plonis mi’zarah d’Yosef k’asina, d’loh shalta bay aina bisha. “I, Ploni [his name] son of Plonis [his mother’s name] am a descendant of Yosef, who was immune to the evil eye”. The Gemara goes on to explain why Yosef was immune to the evil eye, as we will discuss shortly. The origin of this advice is a Gemara in Brachos 20a which states that Rabbi Yochanan did, for good reason, something that could cause the evil eye but claimed immunity from it as a descendant of Yosef. The commentators cite verses to explain that all Jews are considered the spiritual descendants of Yosef even if they are not his physical descendants, so we may all use this formula.
Rav Chaim Kanievsky shlita, as cited in Sefer Doleh U’Mashkeh p. 370 and in Sefer Segulas Rabboseinu p. 138 recommends this practice to those who fear the evil eye. He also specified that the mother’s name, rather than the father’s name (as some versions of the Gemara have it) be used in the formula.
The Ben Ish Chai in Sefer Ben Yehoyada on the Gemara in Brachos provides a Kabbalah-based reason for the grasping of the thumbs. He explains that the thumbs, which are separate from the other fingers, represent Yisroel, who are separate from the other nations. The other four fingers with the palm, in which the opposing thumb is grasped, contain thirteen joints (three on each finger plus the wrist) which is the Gematria numeric value of echod, one, and of ahava, love. Grasping the thumbs in the manner described creates a unity with a value of twenty-six (thirteen doubled) which is the Gematria value of Hashem’s ineffable name (yud followed by hai following by vov followed by hai). Presumably he means that this action envelopes Yisroel (thumbs) in our love of Hashem (who is One) and places us under the protection of Hashem via invocation of his ineffable name. More information on this intriguing shield against the evil eye can be found in Sefer Segulas Rabboseinu by Yishai Mazalmian (5763).
Finally, if we are claiming protection from the evil eye as descendants of Yosef it behooves us to understand why Yosef was immune to the evil eye and attempt to emulate him as best we can. The Gemaros in Brachos gives two  reasons. The first is based on the blessings Yaakov gave the sons of Yosef (Beraishis 48:16). In those blessings he compared the descendants of Yosef to fish, who are immune to the evil eye because they are concealed by the water. As explained above, concealment of one’s assets is the first line of defense against the evil eye.  The second reason is that Yosef steadfastly resisted the blandishments of the wife of Potiphar (Beraishis 39) and refused to sin with her – as the Gemara puts it, “the eye that refused to sate itself on that which did not belong to him is shielded from the evil eye”.
Rav Dessler (Michtav MiEliyahu 4 p. 6) explains that both properties derive from fish. Since they live under water, not only are they shielded from the gaze of others, but they live in their own world, isolated from the goings-on in the dry-land world around them. They are not seen by the “outside” and they do not see, and therefore cannot covet, what others have on the outside.
If we inculcate both these properties of Yosef into our own lives – that is, we are circumspect with our possessions and we build walls around ourselves to avoid the temptations of the outside world, and thus do not cast our eye on the possession of others – we will be secure, like Yosef, against ayin hora. In that event we can legitimately call ourselves Yosef’s descendants and utilize the Gemara’s segulah with a clean conscience.
May Hashem protect us from the ayin horah of others and bless us to project only ayin tov onto others.


Sunday, February 21, 2016

The Maharal on Milah and Redemption

The Maharal on Milah and Redemption
By Eliakim Willner
Eliakim Willner is author of “Nesivos Olam – Nesiv HaTorah: An Appreciation of Torah Study”, a translation with commentary of a work by the Maharal of Prague, published by Artscroll/Mesorah. This article is adapted from his forthcoming continuation of the Nesivos Olam series, “Nesivos Olam – Nesiv HaAvodah: The Philosophy and Practice of Prayer”.


Prior to our redemption from Egypt as discussed in this week’s parsha, we were commanded to perform two commandments that were blood-related – Milah, or circumcision, and Korban Pesach, the Pesach lamb sacrifice. What is the relationship of these two mitzvos to redemption from Egypt? In this article we will answer that question with a focus on the inner meaning of the mitzvah of Milah as explained by the Maharal in his various seforim.
Milah and the Land of Israel
We begin with a passage from the Maharal’s Nesiv HaAvodah, chapter 18:
“From chapter Shlosha SheAcholu (Brachos 48b): “We learned in a Braiso: … Nachum the Elder said, one must mention Bris [in the land blessing].”
“What is the relationship between Bris… to the land [of Israel], such that it is vital to the second blessing,? The answer centers around the fact that the land is sanctified, and apart from other lands. For this reason the nation that possesses the land similarly has to be apart from other nations. This is why Hashem commanded us to be circumcised. The land demands that its inhabitants be apart from other nations just as it is apart from other lands, and Milah, and the sanctity that it brings, are the only characteristics that definitively set Yisroel apart from the other nations. Milah is the excision of the foreskin, which represents lowliness, degradation, corporeality, physicality.  Its removal thus brings sanctity.  This is why we say [in the Milah blessing] asher kidash yedid mibeten, “…Who sanctified the beloved one from the womb”. (Rashi on the Gemara in Shabbos 137b that provides the text of this blessing explains these words to mean that from the time Avrohom was originally commanded to perform Milah all Jewish males are sanctified in potential form even while still in the womb, in anticipation of their forthcoming Milah.)
What does the Maharal mean? Although our entire bodies are physical the foreskin represents the depths of physicality, to the extent that it prevents our having a close relationship to Hashem. In Tiferes Yisroel chapter 19 the Maharal writes that the difference between our physical nature and Hashem’s purely spiritual nature made a relationship between man and Hashem impossible until the advent of Avrohom, who “discovered” Hashem and made a degree of closeness with Him possible. The totally physical nature of the foreskin precluded implementing that closeness so Hashem commanded Avrohom to remove his foreskin, thus doing away with the final impediment to achieving closeness with Hashem. Avrohom’s progeny, Yisroel, were commanded to maintain this practice so that they, too, could achieve closeness with Hashem. As the Zohar says (3:14a, 93b and 73b), “In what way does Yisroel form a bond with Hashem? Through the holy seal that is impressed on their flesh - their Bris Milah”. (As with many concepts in the Maharal, there are several “layers” of explanation that build one on another. We will add an additional dimension to the Bris of Avrohom later.)
Milah, which enables a closeness with Hashem, thus became the Bris, the covenant, that formalizes and finalizes our close relationship with Hashem. The Maharal elaborates on this concept further in Chidushei Aggados on Nedarim 31b, where he writes that Milah represents man’s “finishing touch”; an act by man, on his person, that completes Hashem’s creation of him. This “partnership” relationship, implemented in man’s person is the basis for the covenant “partnership”.
Now, the source for the Maharal’s statement that the land mandates Milah is a Medrash in Beraishis Rabbah 46:9 which says, “If Avrohom’s children uphold Bris Milah, they will enter the land and if not they will not enter the land”. Israel is the land where the Shechina resides, the land that is under Hashem’s direct supervision, as it were, as the Maharal explains in Gur Aryeh on Beraishis 17:8. Since Hashem “lives” in Israel and since He cannot interact with people who retain their foreskins, it follows that the nation that is destined to inherit the land and “coexist” there with Hashem must practice Milah.
Milah – Enabler of Existence
In addition to removing the barrier to a relationship between Hashem and Yisroel, Milah, on a general level, enables a relationship between Hashem and mankind. The Gemara in Nedarim 31b states that, “Milah is significant because if not for Milah Hashem would not have created His world”. The Maharal in Chidushei Aggados on that Gemara writes that the world would have no basis for existence without Milah because Milah is the covenant between Hashem and mankind and without it there would be no relationship between Hashem and mankind. Since the world was created for the sake of that relationship there would be no point in the world persisting otherwise. (As we discussed earlier, Yisroel is mankind’s “representative” in mankind’s relationship with Hashem which is why Milah is specifically mandated for Jews. See Rambam, Mishna Torah, Melachim 10:7.)
Targum Onkelos translates “Bris” as kayama, a force that maintains. Bris Milah is the “maintainer” of the relationship between Hashem and mankind.
Milah Prevents Destruction
The Maharal in Gur Aryeh on Beraishis 41:55 discusses why Yosef demanded that the Egyptians circumcise themselves prior to his selling them food during the years of famine. The intent was not conversion – we do not encourage non-Jews to convert – but rather, Yosef, with his divine vision, realized that the reason the produce that the Egyptians themselves hoarded for the famine rotted was because the Egyptians were uncircumcised. Milah is a “maintainer”; it promotes persistence. Lack of Milah – the presence of the foreskin – leads to the opposite: rotting and disintegration. That is why the private produce of the Egyptians rotted and that is why Yosef commanded them to circumcise themselves.
Milah – Our Connection with the Metaphysical
Although Milah is a physical act on a physical person it is essentially metaphysical in nature in that it elevates man to a state where he can have a connection with Hashem. In Chidushei Aggados on Nedarim 31a the Maharal writes that Milah is on the eighth day because eight is step beyond the physical world. The physical world is represented by seven – a central point (1) with arcs extending towards each of the four points of the compass (4), and up and down (2). The world, which was created in seven days, is bound by time and space. Eight projects us into a metaphysical world that is not limited by those boundaries.
The Maharal often distinguishes between matter and form. Matter is physical. Form is not. Eight-day Milah is in the category of metaphysical form.
The Gemara in Nedarim 31a declares, “Great is Milah in that it did not let pass a delay of even one hour on the part of the righteous Moshe”. The reference is to the incident described in Shmos 4:25-26 (see the commentary of Rashi) where, despite Moshe’s greatness, his life was at risk because he briefly tarried before performing Milah on his son. Why is this indicative of the greatness of Milah? The reason Milah is unforgiving of delay is because its origins are in a world that is beyond time – and this is its greatness.
Milah – Our Mark of Servitude to Hashem
As noted, Milah enables and establishes a covenantal relationship between Hashem and Yisroel. What is the nature of this relationship? Simply put, it is one of servant to Master. We, Yisroel, are the servants and Hashem is our Master. In his Drush L’Shabbos Shuva the Maharal writes that Milah “brands” us as servants of Hashem in the same manner that ordinary servants are customarily branded with the insignia of their human masters. Indeed, the Maharal writes in Tiferes Yisroel chapter 9 that Avrohom was the first to be commanded to perform Milah not simply because he was the first to establish the possibility of a relationship with Hashem, as mentioned earlier, but because he defined that relationship by referring to Hashem as adon, Master. We  recognize this aspect of Milah in one of the accompanying blessings: v’tzeetzaav chasam b’os bris kodeh, “… [Hashem] branded his [Yitzchok’s] offspring with the sign of the holy covenant”.
The Maharal in Gur Aryeh on Shmos 12:6 writes that in preparation for our exodus from Egypt Yisroel was commanded to perform Milah and the Pesach sacrifice. Since we were exiting servitude to Pharaoh and entering into servitude to Hashem we  were required to “rebrand” ourselves accordingly. That Milah constituted our formal entry into the service of Hashem. (The purpose of the Pesach sacrifice at that juncture was to initiate us into servitude with our first commanded act of service. This is why a non-circumcised person is forbidden to partake of the Pesach sacrifice – he has not entered himself into formal service to Hashem.)
Milah – Arouser of Divine Mercy
In Gevuros Hashem chapter 35 the Maharal presents another reason Milah was required before the redemption from Egypt and that is that the blood of Milah evokes divine mercy. Tehillim 44:23 says, “For it is for Your sake that we are killed all the time, [that] we are considered as sheep for the slaughter”. The Gemara in Gittin 57b applies this verse to Milah – throughout history Jews sacrificed to the point of death, ignoring the decrees of oppressors, in order to perform Milah. Milah “reminds” Hashem of our willingness to sacrifice for His sake and causes Hashem to be merciful to us and free us of oppression. It was thus an appropriate precursor to our exodus from Egypt.

May our continued perseverance against today’s Milah antagonists similarly evoke divine mercy and may we thereby merit a speedy redemption from our current exile!