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The Midrash recounts the following dialogue on the significance
of sin:
Wisdom was asked: What is the fate of the transgressor?
Wisdom replied: Evil pursues iniquity (Proverbs
13:21).
Prophecy was asked: What is the fate of the transgressor?
Prophecy replied: The soul that sins, it shall die
(Ezekiel 18:20).
The Torah was asked: What is the fate of the transgressor?
Torah replied: He shall bring a guilt-offering, and it shall
atone for him (Leviticus, ch. 5).
G-d was asked: What is the fate of the transgressor? G-d
replied: He shall do teshuvah, and it shall atone for him.[1]
The Philosophical Perspective
The concept of reward and punishment is one of
the fundamental principles of Jewish faith.[2] But punishment for wrongdoing,
say our sages, is no more G-ds revenge than
falling to the ground is divine retribution for jumping out
the window. Just as the Creator established certain laws of
cause and effect that define the natural behavior of the physical
universe, so, too, did He establish a spiritual-moral nature,
by which doing good results in a good and fulfilling life
and doing evil results in negative and strifeful experiences.[3]
This is the philosophical perspective on sin and punishment,
expressed by King Solomon in the above-quoted verse from Proverbs.
Evil pursues iniquitythe adverse effects
of sin are the natural consequences of acts that run contrary
to the Creators design for life.
The Prophets View
Prophecy, which is G-ds endowment of man with the capacity
to cleave to and commune with Him,[4] has a deeper insight into the significance of
sin.
The essence of life is connection with G-d. And you
who cleave to G-d, says Moses to the people of Israel,
are all alive today.[5]
Love the L-rd your G-d, he also enjoins them,
for He is your life.[6]
So a transgression is more than a spiritually unhealthy
deedit is an act of spiritual suicide. In the words
of the prophet Ezekiel, The soul that sins, it shall
die, for to transgress the divine will is to sabotage
the lifeline of vitality that connects the soul to its source.
Our sages echo the prophet's perspective on sin when they
state: The wicked, even in their lifetimes, are considered
dead.... The righteous, even in death, are considered alive.[7]
The Guilt-Offering
The Torah has yet a more penetrating view on the nature of
transgression. It, too, recognizes that the essence of a persons
life is his relationship with G-d. But the Torah also perceives
the superficiality of evilthe fact that a person
does not sin unless a spirit of insanity enters into him.[8]
The soul of man, which is literally a part of G-d above,[9]
neither desires, nor is able, to separate itself from
G-d.[10]
It is only a persons animal selfthe material and
selfish drives which overlay his G-dly soulwhich might,
at times, take control of his life and compel him to act in
a manner that is completely at odds with his true self and
will.[11]
Because the Torah perceives the superficiality of sin, it
can guide the transgressor through a process by which he can
undo the negative effects of his transgressiona process
by which the transgressor recognizes the folly and self-destructiveness
of his deed and reinstates his true, G-dly self as the sovereign
of his life. This process culminates with the transgressors
bringing of a korban (animal sacrifice) as an offering
to G-d, signifying his subjugation of his own animal self
to the spark of G-dliness within him.[12]
In this way, the guilt-offering achieves atonement
for sin. Only the most external self was involved in the transgression
in the first place; by renouncing the deed as animal
behavior and subjugating the beast within to serve the
souls G-dly aims, the transgressor restores the integrity
of his relationship with G-d.
The Fourth Perspective
There is one thing, however, that the philosophical, prophetic
and Torah perspectives on sin have in common: the transgression
was, and remains, a negative occurrence.
Wisdom sees it as the harbinger of misfortune
in a persons life. Prophecy sees it as antithetical
to life itself. Torah delves deeper yet, revealing the root
cause of sin and providing the key to the transgressors
rehabilitation; but even after the atonement prescribed by
the Torah, the transgression itself remains a negative event.
Torah itself defines certain deeds as contrary to the divine
will; so nothing in Torah can change the fact that
a transgression constitutes a betrayal of the relationship
between G-d and man.
G-d, as the author of wisdom, the bestower of prophecy and
the commander of Torah, is the source of all three perspectives.
But He also harbors a fourth vision of sin, a vision that
transcends the three venues of relationship with man which
He established, a vision that is His alone: sin as the potential
for teshuvah.
The Forbidden Realm
What is teshuvah? To understand the fourth, supra-Torah
dimension of sin, we must first take a closer look at the
significance of sin according to Torah.
The commandments of the Torah categorize the universe into
two domains: the permissible and the forbidden. Beef is permissible,
pork is forbidden; the trait of compassion is to be cultivated,
and that of haughtiness is to be eliminated; and so on.
Chassidic teaching explains that this is more than a list
of dos and dontsit is also a catalog of
realizable and unrealizable potentials.
Every created entity possesses a spark of divine
energy that constitutes its essence and soul. When a person
utilizes somethingbe it a physical object or force,
a trait or feeling, or a cultural phenomenontoward a
G-dly end, he brings to light the divine spark at its core,
manifesting and realizing the purpose for which it was created.
While no existence is devoid of such a sparkindeed,
nothing can exist without the pinpoint of divinity that imbues
it with being and purposenot every spark can be actualized
through mans constructive use of the thing in which
it is invested. There are certain impregnable
elementselements with which the Torah has forbidden
our involvement, so that the sparks they contain are inaccessible
to us.
For example: when a person eats a piece of kosher meat and
then uses the energy gained from it to perform a mitzvah,
he thereby elevates the spark of divinity that
is the essence of the meat, freeing it of its mundane incarnation
and raising it to a state of fulfilled spirituality. However,
if he would do the same with a piece of non-kosher meatmeat
that G-d has forbidden us to consumeno such elevation
would take place. Even if he applied the energy to positive
and G-dly ends, this would not constitute a realization of
the divine purpose in the meats creation, since the
consumption of the meat was an express violation of the divine
will.
This is the deeper significance of the Hebrew terms assur
and mutar employed by Halachah (Torah law) for
the forbidden and the permissible. Assur, commonly
translated as forbidden, literally means bound;
this is the halachic term for those elements whose
sparks the Torah has deemed bound and imprisoned in a shell
of negativity and proscription. Mutar (permitted),
which literally means unbound, is the halachic
term for those sparks which the Torah has empowered us to
extricate from their mundane embodiment and actively involve
in our positive endeavors.
Obviously, the bound elements of creation also
have a role in the realization of the divine purpose outlined
by the Torah. But theirs is a negative rolethey
exist so that we should achieve a conquest of self by resisting
them. There is no Torah-authorized way in which they can actively
be involved in our development of creationno way in
which they may themselves become part of the dwelling
for G-d[13] that we are charged to make
of our world. Of these elements it is said, Their breaking
is their rectification.[14]
They exist to be rejected and defeated, and it is in their
defeat and exclusion from our lives that their raison detre
is realized.
The Man in the Desert
These are the rules that govern our existence and our service
of G-d. One who lives by these rules, establishing them as
the supreme authority over his behavior, attains the status
of tzaddik (perfectly righteous). Yet our
sages tell us that there is an even higher level of closeness
to G-dthat in the place where baalei teshuvah
(returnees; penitents) stand, utter tzaddikim
cannot stand.[15]
The tzaddik is one who has made the divine will the
very substance of his existence. Everything that becomes part
of his lifethe food he eats, the clothes he wears, the
ideas and experiences he garners from his surroundingsare
elevated, their sparks divested of their mundanity
and raised to their divine function. And he confines himself
to the permissible elements of creation, never digressing
from the boundaries that Torah sets for our involvement with
and development of G-ds world.
The baal teshuvah, on the other hand, is one who has
digressed; one who has ventured beyond the realm of the permissible
and has absorbed the irredeemable elements of creation into
his life. His digression was a wholly negative thing;[16]
but having occurred, it holds a unique potential: the potential
for teshuvah, return.
Teshuvah is fueled by the utter dejection experienced
by one who wakes to the realization that he has destroyed
all that is beautiful and sacred in his life; by the pain
of one who has cut himself off from his source of life and
well-being; by the alienation felt by one who finds himself
without cause or reason to live. Teshuvah is mans
amazing ability to translate these feelings of worthlessness,
alienation and pain into the drive for rediscovery and renewal.
The baal teshuvah is a person lost in the desert whose
thirst, amplified a thousandfold by the barrenness and aridity
of his surroundings, drives him to seek water with an intensity
that could never have been called forth by the most proficient
welldigger; a person whose very abandonment of G-d drives
him to seek Him with a passion the most saintly tzaddik
cannot know. A soul who, having stretched the cord that binds
it to its source to excruciating tautness, rebounds with a
force that exceeds anything experienced by those who never
leave the divine orbit.
In this way, the baal teshuvah accomplishes what the
most perfect tzaddik cannot: he liberates those sparks
of divinity imprisoned in the realm of the forbidden. In his
soul, the very negativity of these elements, their very contrariness
to the divine will, becomes a positive force, an intensifier
of his bond with G-d and his drive to do good.[17]
This is teshuvah, return, in its ultimate
sense: the reclaiming of the lost moments (or
days, or years) and energies of a negative past; the restoration
of sparks imprisoned in the lowliest realms of creation; the
magnified force of a rebounding soul.
Good and Evil
But what of the bindings that imprison these
sparks? If the tzaddik were to employ a forbidden thing
toward a positive end, he would fail to elevate it; indeed,
the deed would drag him down, distancing him from, rather
than bringing him closer to, the G-d he is presuming to serve.
From where derives the baal teshuvahs power to
redeem what the Torah has decreed bound and irredeemable?
In its commentary on the opening verses of Genesis, the Midrash
states:
At the onset of the worlds creation, G-d beheld
the deeds of the righteous and the deeds of the wicked....
But I still do not know which of them He desires.... Then,
when it says, And G-d saw the light, that it is good,[18]
I know that He desires the deeds of the righteous, and does
not desire the deeds of the wicked.[19]
In other words, the only true definition of good
or evil is that good is what G-d desires
and evil is what is contrary to His will. The
fact that we instinctively sense certain deeds to be good
and others to be evilthe fact that certain deeds are
good and certain deeds are evilis the result
of G-d having chosen to desire certain deeds from man and
to not desire other deeds from man. We cannot, however, speak
of good and evil before G-d expressly chose the
deeds of the righteous. On this level, where there
is nothing to distinguish right from wrong, we cannot presume
to know what G-d will desire.
Therein lies the difference between the tzaddik and
the baal teshuvah.
The tzaddik relates to G-d through his fulfillment
of the divine will expressed in the Torah. Thus, his achievements
are defined and regulated by the divine will. When he does
what G-d has commanded to be done, he elevates those elements
of creation touched by his deeds. But those elements with
which the divine will forbids his involvement are closed to
him.
The baal teshuvah, however, relates to G-d Himself,
the formulator and professor of this will. Thus, he accesses
a divine potential that, by Torahs standards, is inaccessible.
Because his relationship with G-d is on a level that precedes
and supersedes the divine willa level on which one still
does not know which of them He desiresthere are
no bound elements, nothing to inhibit the actualization
of the divine potential in any of G-ds creations.
So when the baal teshuvah sublimates his negative deeds
and experiences to fuel his yearning and passion for good,
he brings to light the sparks of G-dliness they hold.
To Be and To Be Not
What enables the baal teshuvah to connect to G-d in
such a way? The tzaddiks ability to relate to
G-d through the fulfillment of His will was granted to each
and every one of us when G-d gave us the Torah at Mount Sinai.
But what empowers the baal teshuvah to reach the place
where utter tzaddikim cannot stand and tap the
pre-will essence of G-d?
The thrust of the baal teshuvahs life is the
very opposite of the tzaddiks. The tzaddik
is good, and the gist of everything he does is to amplify
that goodness. The baal teshuvah has departed from
the path of good, and the gist of everything he does is to
deconstruct and transform what he was. In other words, the
tzaddik is occupied with the development of self, and
the baal teshuvah, with the negation of self.
Thus the tzaddiks virtue is also what limits
him. True, his development of self is a wholly positive and
G-dly endeavorhe is developing the self that G-d wants
him to develop, and by developing this self he becomes one
with the will of G-d. But a sense of self is also the greatest
handicap to relating to the essence of G-d, which tolerates
no camouflaging or equivocation of the truth that there
is none else besides Him.[20]
The baal teshuvah, on the other hand, is one whose
every thought and endeavor is driven by the recognition that
he must depart from what he is in order to come close to G-d.
This perpetual abnegation of self allows him to relate to
G-d as G-d is, on a level that transcends G-ds specific
projection of Himself formulated in His Torah.
This is G-ds perspective on sin: sin as the
facilitator of teshuvah. Wisdom, prophecy
and Torah are all part of a reality polarized
by good and evil; they can perceive only the damage inflicted
by sin, or, at most (as in the case of Torah), the manner
by which this damage might be undone. G-ds reality,
however, is wholly and exclusively good. No evil resides
with You, sings the Psalmist.[21] In the words of Jeremiah, From the Supernal
do not stem both evil and good.[22]
From G-ds perspective, there is only the positive essence
of transgressionthe positive purpose for which He created
mans susceptibility to evil and his capacity for sin
in the first place. As viewed by its Creator, transgression
is the potential for a deeper bond between Himself and mana
bond borne out of the transformation of evil into good and
failure into achievement.
Based on the Rebbes writings and talks, including
a letter dated 8 Tishrei, 5712 (October 8, 1951) and an address
delivered on 9 Adar II, 5725 (March 13, 1965)[23]
Adapted from the teachings of the Rebbe
by Yanki Tauber
[1]. Yalkut Shimoni on Psalms 25.
[2]. The 11th of Maimonides Thirteen Principles.
[3]. Shaloh, Bayit Acharon 12a. See also Shaar HaTeshuvah,
part I, 6c and 50b; Likkutei Biurim on Tanya, vol. II, p.
129.
[4]. See ch. 7 of Maimonides Eight Chapters
of introduction to his commentary on Ethics of the Fathers.
[7]. Talmud, Berachot 18a-b.
[8]. Ibid., Sotah 3a, based on Numbers 5:12.
[9]. Tanya, ch. 2, after Job 31:2.
[10]. Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi.
[11]. See Crime and Punishment, WIR, vol. X,
no. 47.
[12]. See Talmud, Sotah 14a; Likkutei Torah, Vayikra
2b-d.
[13]. Midrash Tanchuma, Nasso 16; Tanya, ch. 36.
[14]. Paraphrase of Sifra, Shemini 7; see Sefer HaMaamarim
5654, p. 76.
[15]. Talmud, Berachot 34b.
[16]. Indeed, the Talmud (Yoma 85b) warns that one
who says, I shall sin and then repent is not
given the opportunity to repent.
[19]. Midrash Rabbah, Bereishit 2:7.
[23]. Igrot Kodesh, vol. V, p. 3; Likkutei Sichot,
vol. VII, pp. 22-23
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