Midrasch zu Jeschijahu 5:18
ה֛וֹי מֹשְׁכֵ֥י הֶֽעָוֺ֖ן בְּחַבְלֵ֣י הַשָּׁ֑וְא וְכַעֲב֥וֹת הָעֲגָלָ֖ה חַטָּאָֽה׃
O über die, welche die Schuld an Banden des Trugs heranziehen und wie am Wagenseile die Sünde!
Ein Yaakov (Glick Edition)
We have a Baraitha coinciding with R. Chisda's opinion: "If one is walking in filthy alleys, he should not read the Sh'm'a; moreover, even if he were in the middle of his reading and should happen to find himself in a filthy street, he should stop." If he do not stop, what then? R. Meyasha the grandson of R. Joshua b. Levi said: It is of him that the passage says (Ezek. 20, 25.) "Wherefore I gave them also statutes that were not good, and ordinances whereby they could not live. R. Assi said from this (Is. 5, 18.) Woe unto those that draw iniquity with the cord of vanity. R. Ada b. Ahaba said from this (Num. 15, 31.) Because the word of the Lord hath he despised. And if he does stop what will his reward be? R. Abuhu said: "To him may be applied the passage (Deu. 32, 47.) And through this thing ye shall prolong your days."
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Ein Yaakov (Glick Edition)
What is the cause for the above mentioned mourning? R. Dosa and the Rabbis differ: One gives the reason that it [the mourning] is for the Messiah, the son of Joseph, who is to be killed; and the other gives the reason that it is for the evil inclination, which is to be killed. It is quite comprehensible according to the one who holds that it will be for the Messiah, the son of Joseph, as is said (Zech. 12, 10) And they will look up toward me [for every one] whom they have trust through, and they will lament for him, as one lamenteth for an only son, and weep bitterly for him, as one weepeth bitterly for the first-born; but ing to the one who holds that it is to be be for the death of the evil inclination, why mourn? On the contrary, it should be cause for rejoicing! This could be interpreted by the lecture of R. Juda b. Layi who said: "In the future the Holy One, praised be He! will bring the evil angel and slaughter him in the presence of both the upright and the wicked. To the former he will appear like a high mountain, and to the latter he will appear like a thin hair. Both, however, will cry. The upright will cry, saying: 'How could we have overpowered such a high mountain?' and the wicked will cry, saying: 'How could we not have subdued such a thin hair?' And the Holy One, praised be He! will also join them in wondering, as it is said (Zech. 8, 6) Thus hath said the Lord of hosts: If it should be marvellous in the eyes of the remnant of this people in those days, it should also be marvellous in My eyes." R. Assis said: "In the beginning, the evil inclination appears insignificant and thin as a cobweb, and finally he becomes as thick as a wagon-rope, as it is said (Is. 5, 18) Woe unto those that draw iniquity with the cords of falsehood, and as with a wagon-rope, sinfulness."
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Ein Yaakov (Glick Edition)
Our Rabbis were taught: (Num. 15, 30) "But the person that doth aught with a high hand; this refers to Menasseh b. Hezekiah who sat and lectured on topics with the object of fault-finding," saying, "Could not Moses have found something better than (Gen. 36, 22) "And Lotan's sister was Thimna, or, (Ib.) she was a concubine of Eliphaz b. Esau," or that of (Ib. 13, 14) "And Reuben went in the days of the wheat harvest and found mandrakes in the field." A heavenly voice was then heard saying (Ps. 50, 20) "Thou sittest and speakest against thy brother, against thy own mother's sons thou utterest slander, etc." And to him also applies the words of tradition: (Is. 5, 18) Wee unto those that draw iniquity with the cords of falsehood, and as with a wagon-rope, sinfulnesses." What does a wagon-rope mean? A. Assi said: "In the beginning, the evil inclination appears as thin as the thread of a spider's web; and finally he becomes as thick as a wagon rope." Since we have already arrived at it, let us see what does And Lotan's sister was Thimna really mean. Thimna was a princess, as it is written (Gen. 36, 40) Duke Thimna, and dukedom means a kingdom without a crown. She desired to become a proselyte, but Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob did not accept her. And she went and became the concubine of Eliphaz b. Esau, saying it is better to be a servant in this nation than to be a princess of another. And her offspring was Amalek, who troubled Israel as a punishment to their parents, who ought not to have driven her away.
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