Why Did Rashi Say That?
How does a person go from simply easing up on learning to not believing in Hashem at all? Why does Rashi trace spiritual collapse not to dramatic rebellion but to something as quiet as relaxing your effort? And what does it mean that the unraveling can span generations — by the time anyone notices, it's already someone else's crisis? Rashi reveals that the opening words of Bechukosai — im bechukosai telechu — don't mean following the rules. They mean toiling in Torah, actively wrestling with it. And from there Rashi maps a chain almost unbearable to trace: not being amel leads to not fulfilling mitzvos, which leads to hating them, which leads to causing others to abandon them, which ends — mamish — at a kofer b'ikur, someone who stops believing entirely. Rabbi Klapper draws out the devastating logic: this isn't someone who gets angry and walks away. It's someone on a downward escalator who never notices which way it's moving. The Haskalah is the proof — people who thought they were modernizing Judaism watched their grandchildren marry out, because once you loosen your grip on Torah itself, the ground keeps moving beneath you. Discover that Rashi's chain runs in both directions — the logic of collapse is equally the logic of growth. Learn that the standard isn't scholarship; it's honest effort, because genuine effort is what keeps you moving against the current. Uncover what's actually at stake in your Torah today — you're not just living your own life, you're building the foundation the people after you will stand on. Hosted by Rabbi Ari Klapper and produced by Eli Podcast Productions, this episode is part of the Why Did Rashi Say That series, available on RealJudaism.org. Don't forget to subscribe and share to stay connected with our weekly Torah insights!
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