Chapter I: Concerning Man's Duty in
the World
THE FOUNDATION OF SAINTLINESS and the root of perfection
in the service of God lies in a man's coming to see clearly and to recognize
as a truth the nature of his duty in the world and the end towards which
he should direct his vision and his aspiration in all of his labors all
the days of his life.
Our Sages of blessed memory have taught us that man was created for the
sole purpose of rejoicing in God and deriving pleasure from the splendor
of His Presence; for this is true joy and the greatest pleasure that can
be found. The place where this joy may truly be derived is the World to
Come, which was expressly created provide for it; but the path to the
object of our desires is this world, as our Sages of blessed memory have
said (Avoth 4:21), "This world is like a corridor to the World to
Come."
The means which lead a man to this goal are the mitzvoth, in relation
to which we were commanded by the Lord, may His Name be blessed. The place
of the performance of the mitzvoth is this world alone.
Therefore, man was placed in this world first - so that by these means,
which were provided for him here, he would be able to reach the place
which had been prepared for him, the World to Come, there to be sated
with the goodness which he acquired through them. As our Sages of blessed
memory have said (Eruvin 22a), "Today for their [the mitzvoth's]
performance and tomorrow for receiving their reward."
When you look further into the matter, you will see that only union with
God constitutes true perfection, as King David said (Psalms 73:28), "But
as for me, the nearness of God is my good," and (Psalms 27:4), "I
asked one thing from God; that will I seek - to dwell in God's house all
the days of my life.," For this alone is the true good, and anything
besides this which people deem good is nothing but emptiness and deceptive
worthlessness. For a man to attain this good, it is certainly fitting
that he first labor and persevere in his exertions to acquire it. That
is, he should persevere so as to unite himself with the Blessed One by
means of actions which result in this end. These actions are the mitzvoth.
The Holy One Blessed be He has put man in a place where the factors which
draw him further from the Blessed One are many. These are the earthy desires
which, if he is pulled after them, cause him to be drawn further from
and to depart from the true good. It is seen, then, that man is veritably
placed in the midst of a raging battle. For all the affairs of the world,
whether for the good or for the bad, are trials to a man: Poverty on the
one hand and wealth on the other, as Solomon said (Proverbs 30:9), "Lest
I become satiated and deny, saying, 'Who is God?’ or lest I. become
impoverished and steal..." Serenity on the one hand and suffering
on the other; so that the battle rages against him to the fore and to
the rear. If he is valorous, and victorious on all sides, he will be the
"Whole Man," who will succeed in uniting himself with his Creator,
and he will leave the corridor to enter into the Palace, to glow in the
light of life. To the extent that he has subdued his evil inclination
and his desires, and withdrawn from those factors which draw him further
from the good, and exerted himself to become united with it, to that extent
will he attain it and rejoice in it.
If you look more deeply into the matter, you will see that the world was
created for man's use. In truth, man is the center of a great balance.
For if he is pulled after the world and is drawn further from his Creator,
he is damaged, and he damages the world with him. And if he rules over
himself and unites himself with his Creator, and uses the world only to
aid him in the service of his Creator, he is uplifted and the world itself
is uplifted with him. For all creatures are greatly uplifted when they
serve the "Whole Man," who is sanctified with the holiness of
the Blessed One. It is as our Sages of blessed memory have said in relation
to the light that the Holy One Blessed be He stored away for the righteous
(Chagiga 12a): "When the Holy One Blessed be He saw the light that
He had stored away for the righteous, He rejoiced, as it is said (Proverbs
13:9), 'The light of the righteous rejoices.'"And in relation to
the "stones of the place" that Jacob took and put around his
head they said (Chulin 91b), "R. Yitzchak said, 'This teaches us
that they [the stones] gathered themselves into one spot, each one saying,
"Let the righteous one lay his head upon me." Our Sages of blessed
memory drew our attention to this principle in Midrash Koheleth, where
they said (Koheleth Rabbah 7:28) "'See the work of God...' (Ecclesiastes
7:13). When the Holy One Blessed be He created Adam, He took him and caused
him to pass before all the trees of the Garden of Eden. He said to him,
'See how beautiful and praiseworthy are my works; and all that I have
created, I have created for your sake. Take heed that you do not damage
and destroy my world.'"
To summarize, a man was created not for his station in this world, but
for his station in the World to Come. It is only that his station in this
world is a means towards his station in the World to Come, which is the
ultimate goal. This accounts for numerous statements of our Sages of blessed
memory, all in a similar vein, likening this world to the place and time
of preparation, and the next world to the place which has been set aside
for rest and for the eating of what has already been prepared. This is
their intent in saying (Avoth 4:21), "This world is similar to a
corridor ...," as our Sages of blessed memory have said (Eruvin 22a),
"Today for their performance and tomorrow to receive their reward,"
"He who exerted himself on Friday will eat on the Sabbath" (Avodah
Zarah 3a), "This world is like the shore and the World to Come like
the sea ..," (Koheleth Rabbah 1:36), and many other statements along
the same lines.
And in truth, no reasoning being can believe that the purpose of man's
creation relates to his station in this world. For what is a man's life
in this world! Who is truly happy and content in this world? "The
days of our life are seventy years, and, if exceedingly vigorous, eighty
years, and their persistence is but labor and foolishness" (Psalms
90:10). How many different kinds of suffering, and sicknesses, and pains
and burdens! And after all this - death! Not one in a thousand is to be
found to whom the world has yielded a superabundance of gratifications
and true contentment. And even such a one, though he attain to the age
of one hundred years, passes and vanishes from the world.
Furthermore, if man had been created solely for the sake of this world,
he would have had no need of being inspired with a soul so precious and
exalted as to be greater than the angels themselves; especially so in
that it derives no satisfaction whatsoever from all of the pleasures of
this world. This is what our Sages of blessed memory teach us in Midrash
(Koheleth Rabbah), “’And also the soul will not be filled’”
(Eccelesiastes 6:7) What is this analogous to? To the case of a city dweller
who married a princess, If he brought her all that the world possessed,
it would mean nothing to her, by virtue of her being a king's daughter.
So is it with the soul. If it were to be brought all the delights of the
world, they would be as nothing to it, in view of its pertaining to the
higher elements." And so do our Sages of blessed memory say (Avoth
4:29), "Against your will were you created, and against your will
were you born." For the soul has no love at all for this world. To
the contrary, it despises it. The Creator, Blessed be His Name, certainly
would never have created something for an end which ran contrary to its
nature and which it despised.
Man was created, then, for the sake of his station in the World to Come.
Therefore, this soul was placed in him. For it befits the soul to serve
God; and through it a man may be rewarded in his place and in his time.
And rather than the world's being despicable to the soul, it is, to the
contrary, to be loved and desired by it. This is self-evident.
After recognizing this we will immediately appreciate the greatness of
the obligation that the mitzvoth place upon us and the preciousness of
the Divine service which lies in our hands. For these are the means which
bring us to true perfection, a state which, without them, is unattainable.
It is understood, however, that the attainment of a goal results only
from a consolidation of all the available means employable towards its
attainment, that the nature of a result is determined by the effectiveness
and manner of employment of the means utilized towards its achievement,
and that the slightest differentiation in the means will very noticeably
affect the result to which they give rise upon the fruition of the aforementioned
consolidation. This is self-evident.
It is obvious, then, that we must be extremely exacting in relation to
the mitzvoth and the service of God, just as the weighers of gold and
pearls are exacting because of the preciousness of these commodities.
For their fruits result in true perfection and eternal wealth, than which
nothing is more precious.
We thus derive that the essence of a man's existence in this world is
solely the fulfilling of mitzvoth, the serving of God and the withstanding
of trials, and that the world's pleasures should serve only the purpose
of aiding and assisting him, by way of providing him with the contentment
and peace of mind requisite for the freeing of his heart for the service
which devolves upon him. It is indeed fitting that his every inclination
be towards the Creator, may His Name be blessed, and that his every action,
great or small, be motivated by no purpose other than that of drawing
near to the Blessed One and breaking all the barriers (all the earthy
elements and their concomitants) that stand between him and his Possessor,
until he is pulled towards the Blessed One just as iron to a magnet. Anything
that might possibly be a means to acquiring this closeness, he should
pursue and clutch, and not let go of; and anything which might be considered
a deterrent to it, he should flee as from a fire. As it is stated (Psalms
63:9), "My soul clings to You; Your right hand sustains me."
For a man enters the world only for this purpose - to achieve this closeness
by rescuing his soul from all the deterrents to it and from all that detracts
from it.
After we have recognized the truth of this principle, and it has become
clear to us, we must investigate its details according to its stages,
from beginning to end, as they were arranged by R. Pinchas ben Yair in
the statement which has already been referred to in our introduction.
These stages are: Watchfulness, Zeal, Cleanliness, Separation, Purity,
Saintliness, Humility, Fear of Sin, and Holiness. And now, with the aid
of Heaven, we will explain them one by one.
Source: Moshe Chayim Luzzatto, “Mesillat Yesharim”,
translated by Shraga Silverstein, Boys Town Jerusalem, Yaakov Feldheim.