Rabbi Jonathan Rietti
Enjoying the Banquet of Life
ויהי העם כמתאננים...זכרנו את הדגה...את הקישואים... ועתה נפשנו יבשה אין כל
The people took to complaining…we remember the fish, the cucumbers… But now, our life is parched, there is nothing (Bamidbar 11:1-6)
Where in the Torah do we find a mitzvah to be happy? Where does Hashem hold us accountable and responsible for simcha?
In Parashat Ki Tavo, probably the most heart-rending section of the Torah, we find our answer. In explanation for why ninety-eight curses will, chas v’shalom, befall the Jewish people, the Torah states, “תחת אשר לא עבדת את ד' אלקיך בשמחה...” – “Because you did not serve Hashem out of happiness…” (Devarim 28:47). Failure to perform Hashem’s mitzvot with a sense of joy brings in its wake the greatest of calamities.
But the Pasuk does not end there. The Torah continues to elaborate on the reason why tragedy may strike: “ובטוב לבב מרוב כל.” This phrase is typically translated to mean, “[Because you did not serve Hashem] with a good heart when everything was abundant.” What, though, does this exactly mean?
The Arizal observed that the word “בשמחה” (happiness) shares the same letters as “מחשבה” (thoughts). Happiness is not defined by what happens to you or what you have in life. Nor is it determined by your health, wealth or children. Those are all wonderful amenities to have and certainly make it easier to achieve contentment. However, they are not the ultimate reasons for which happiness or the lack thereof is experienced. Happiness is an attitude, a mindset determined by what we choose to focus on. Being happy, or שמח, is comprised of the same letters which spell “שם מח” (sham mo’ach, “there is the mind”). What we choose to focus our attention on will determine our simcha.
As to how we achieve this positive mindset, the Torah does not let us down. It provides two clues. Let us address the first: Tuv Levav. What does this mean?
Fundamentally speaking, the first usage of a word in the Torah reveals the essence of that particular item or trait. The first mention of the word lev is in the context of mankind deserving to be destroyed by the Flood of Noach. The Torah states, “V’chol yetzer machshavot libo rak ra kol hayom”–“And every product of the thoughts of his heart was but evil always” (Bereishit 6:5). Classically understood, this Pasuk speaks of the wickedness of man’s “heart” during that generation. However, a much more accurate rendering of the verse would lead us to translate lev as mind. The thoughts of the people living in that generation were preoccupied with negativity all day long.
Why, though, would the Torah capture the intellectual thoughts of the mind with the word “heart,” the seat of emotions?
Rav Avigdor Miller zt”l explains that the Torah wishes to underscore the importance of passionately and excitedly carrying out Hashem’s will. We are not meant to perfunctorily perform mitzvot without any enthusiasm. Quite to the contrary, our intellectual investment in the Torah’s commandments is to be coupled with heartfelt enthusiasm and zest.
Consider some examples where the metaphor of “heart” in fact refers to the mind. Shlomo Hamelech states, “Guard, my son, the mitzvot of your father and do not deviate from the teachings of your mother. Tie them on your lev all the time” (Mishlei 6:20-21). In this instance, the word “lev” most accurately refers to one’s mind. We are constantly to be thinking about the ideas and values we have learned and inculcated from home.
Here’s another Pasuk.
“Write them [words of Torah] on the wall of your lev” (ibid., 3:3). This is a beautiful metaphor. What are the pictures we hang on the wall of our mind? Are they pleasant pictures of our family and accomplishments or are they unhappy pictures of the complaints we have? Shlomo Hamelech cautions us to have words of Torah written there. That is what should be hung on the most precious place in our being.
And lastly, “All the days of a poor man are bad” (ibid., 15:15). Do we need the towering personality of Shlomo Hamelech to tell us this basic fact that the days of a poor man are wretched? Obviously not. But look at the end of the Pasuk. There we are informed what type of poverty is being referred to here. “Tov lev mishteh tamid” – “A good lev enjoys a constant banquet.” A mind which is filled with good thoughts is always celebrating life. He is always enjoying that which he has. Someone, however, who occupies his mind and focuses his attention on that which is negative in his life will be poverty-stricken. Since he is fixated on the negative, he lives his days impoverished of the beauty of life. He misses out on noticing the joys and blessings of existence.
Let’s go one step further.
After finishing to describe the six days of Creation, the Torah states, “And Hashem saw all that He had made, and behold it was very good” (Bereishit 1:31). Few things are referred to by Hashem as “good,” let alone “very good.” If that is the case of the creation of the world, it must be something very special. This is the meaning of the indictment mentioned in Parashat Ki Tavo – “me’rov kol,” an abundant good. We are held responsible for living a happy life amidst the bounty of good that the world provides us with. Although life inescapably includes moments of misfortune and discomfort, the abundant good of life is so much greater.
Imagine the follow scene. At the joyous occasion of a close friend’s wedding, you make your way over to the table and pour yourself a drink. Just as you are about to recite a blessing, the glass breaks and leaves a slight cut on your finger. Grabbing some tissue, you press it against your finger and stop it from bleeding.
Here is the dilemma. At the wedding, there is beautiful music, fantastic company and superb food. All the conditions are conducive to having a wonderful time. But your finger is pounding painfully. The throbbing is palpable and cannot be ignored. Now you have a choice. Do you choose to allow the pain in your finger to drown out the compounded simcha of good company, great music and delicious food? Or will the pain be drowned out due to the abundant good that is present at the party? You have a mental decision to make: should I let this pain mar my happiness or let the abundance of joy overshadow the discomfort?
Shlomo Hamelech tells us that we always have this choice in life. We can decide to live mentally poverty-stricken and miserably focus on the negativity and deficiencies before us. Or, we can choose to look at everything radically differently and instead turn our life into one long banquet. The decision is ours. What will be our attitude and mindset? We would be prudent to follow the words of the wisest of men and enjoy one long life of simcha.