Hebräische Bibel
Hebräische Bibel

Chasidut zu Mischlej 1:5

יִשְׁמַ֣ע חָ֭כָם וְי֣וֹסֶף לֶ֑קַח וְ֝נָב֗וֹן תַּחְבֻּל֥וֹת יִקְנֶֽה׃

Damit der Weise hört und mehr lernt, und der Mann des Verstehens zu weisen Ratschlägen gelangt;

Kedushat Levi

Levitcus 19,2. “Be holy, etc.!” Vayikra Rabbah ‎‎24,9, considering the words: ‎כי קדוש אני‎, “for I am holy,” asks ‎whether it is possible that the Torah demands that we, the Jewish ‎people, are to be as holy as He is? The Midrash’s answer is ‎that, on the contrary, the words ‎כי קדוש אני‎, indicate that true ‎sanctity is something reserved for the Creator alone. However ‎holy we can become, His holiness will always be superior to ‎ours.
Earlier commentators have already dealt with the ‎meaning of this verse at length, i.e. the question of how serving ‎the Lord can be performed by means of holiness, and they ‎concluded that this refers to serving the Lord with one’s heart. As ‎to precisely how this is to be done, we have learned in ‎‎Taanit 2 that prayer is the best means of serving the Lord ‎with one’s heart. The “prayer” meant by the Talmud there is not ‎that we address our requests to the Lord, but that we express ‎our awareness of His greatness and at the same time our ‎inadequacy to express with words what we really feel about Him. ‎By stating that compared to Him we are only dust and ashes, that ‎we are sullied by our sins, and that we accept the yoke of serving ‎Him as our Master, we can begin to gradually develop the level of ‎holiness that it is possible for any of His creatures to attain.‎
When Solomon in Proverbs 1,5 speaks of ‎ישמע חכם ויוסף לקח‎, a ‎wise man will hear and (each time) increase his learning, he ‎speaks of how continuous, and even more so, repetitive Torah ‎study will increase our level of spirituality, holiness.‎
In this connection our author refers to the well known ‎dispute about the proper procedure in lighting the ‎‎Chanukah candles. (Shabbat 21) The school of ‎Shammai held that we start with eight candles on the first night ‎and progressively light one candle less each evening. The school ‎of Hillel takes the opposite view, ruling that we light only one ‎candle on the first night but increase this by an additional candle ‎each night until on the last night we light eight candles. The ‎school of Hillel explains that the reason why they want to ‎increase the number of lights each night, is although the amount ‎of miracle oil has steadily declined, the appreciation of the miracle ‎increases with each night that we pronounce the blessing when ‎lighting the candles as an act of gratitude for G’d’s miracle at the ‎time. With increasing recognition of the miracle of Chanukah ‎there comes an increased awareness of our relationship to the ‎Creator, or expressed differently, ‎מצוה גוררת מצוה‎, “the ‎performance of one of G’d’s commandments brings in its wake ‎the desire to fulfill more of His commandments.” Recognition of ‎the greatness of G’d inevitably leads to an awareness of the ‎puniness of man when compared to Him. It is this awareness of ‎our own limitations that gradually brings us closer to ‎understanding and emulating the virtue of the ‎אין סוף‎, ultimate ‎form of humility. The school of Hillel, disciples of Hillel who was ‎world renowned for his personal modesty and humility, followed ‎their mentor when they formulated the concept of ‎מוסיף והולך‎, ‎that a spark of holiness feeds upon itself and makes ripples like a ‎pebble thrown on the surface of the water.‎
This idea is also reflected in the opening words of our portion ‎קדושים תהיו‎, “commence the process to become holy, as it is ‎continuous and feeds on itself.” An additional factor helping you ‎to progress along this route is ‎כי קדוש אני‎, “for I am holy,” i.e. ‎when you contemplate My holiness this will inspire you to ‎emulate My holiness to the extent that this is humanly possible. ‎In fact, G’d says that His own holiness will increase proportionate ‎to the amount of holiness to be found amongst His people on ‎earth.
[This is not a surprising statement, as in matters of ‎purity and impurity as well as in matters of holiness and ‎secularity we do not apply objective yardsticks but subjective, ‎relative ones. A good example is to be found in Leviticus 14,36 ‎where despite the fact that according to reason the furnishings in ‎the afflicted house would be ritually impure as the house is ‎impure, the inhabitants are allowed to remove them before the ‎arrival of the priest. Ed.]
One of the most welcome phenomena on earth that G’d looks ‎upon with the greatest pleasure is the virtue of humility. This ‎thought is reflected in Proverbs 22,4 ‎עקב ענוה יראת ה'‏‎, “the natural ‎result of humility is fear of the Lord; the more people practice ‎humility the greater the holiness of G’d.”
[The virtue of humility is not only great but is most ‎difficult to acquire. First one must possess qualities that are the ‎result of building one’s character; once one does possess these ‎qualities which others boast about, one must go about one’s ‎business as if unaware of possessing such qualities. If Moses had ‎responded to the accusation of his sister Miriam (had he heard ‎them), he would have done so at the expense of his humility. ‎Ed.]‎‎‎ ‎
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