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This shiur examines a fundamental question raised by the Chazon Ish about the nature of middos (character traits): why do we treat virtues like courage, humility, or temperance as separate good qualities when being truly good requires all of them together? The discussion challenges the common assumption that you can work on individual middos separately, arguing instead that genuine virtue is unified - either you're guided by intellect and reason (and thus have all good middos), or you're driven by natural inclinations (and your seemingly "good" traits are just natural dispositions, not real virtues). Drawing on Socratic and Aristotelian philosophy, the shiur distinguishes between natural traits that happen to look good and authentic moral excellence that comes from living according to reason, ultimately questioning whether the standard mussar approach of working on one middah per month makes philosophical sense.
This lecture covers Bamidbar Chapter 23, focusing on Bilam's first two prophecies and the setup for the third. The chapter reveals that sacrifices serve as a vehicle for receiving prophecy, details how Bilam receives divine messages through meditation and walking, and presents the content of his two blessings—emphasizing Israel's separateness, multitude, and God's unchanging commitment to them despite Balak's attempts to curse them from different geographical locations. The narrative follows a three-part cycle structure where each attempt involves new locations (Bamos Baal, Sedei Tzofim, and Rosh HaPeor), ritual sacrifices, and increasingly frustrated exchanges between Balak and Bilam about why the curses become blessings.
This lecture examines the fundamental shift in Jewish ideals from the classical emphasis on Torah study and mitzvah observance (the Talmid Chacham ideal) to modern movements that prioritize internal states—Chassidus's focus on dveykus (cleaving to God) and the Mussar movement's emphasis on middos (character traits). The Chazon Ish emerges as a rare modern thinker who recognized that halacha contains far more sophisticated understanding of human nature and reality than simplistic ethical frameworks, though he struggled to articulate this insight without resorting to divine command theory. The core argument is that traditional Jewish law accounts for vastly more complexity and variables in human behavior than contemporary approaches that reduce everything to feelings, biases, or therapeutic categories—making halacha more intellectually serious than modern alternatives, not because of its divine origin, but because it represents millennia of careful thinking about actual human situations.
This lecture covers Bamidbar Chapter 22, the beginning of the Balak and Bilaam narrative. The story fulfills the prophecy from Shirat Hayam about nations fearing Israel, serving to raise the morale of the Israelites as they approach the Promised Land. The chapter details Balak's attempts to hire the prophet Bilaam to curse Israel, Bilaam's consultations with God who forbids and then permits the journey, and the famous episode where Bilaam's donkey sees an angel blocking their path and speaks to rebuke him.