Chasidut על מדות 4:8
Kedushat Levi
An alternate explanation of the line commencing with: גור אריה יהודה מטרף בני עלית. We base this on a statement of our sages in Midot 4,7 where the Mishnah says: “just as a lion is broad in front and narrow in its rear, so the main structure of the Holy Temple, the one known as היכל, Sanctuary, was broad at its entrance, whereas the two Sanctuaries, including the קדשי קדשים at the rear of the structure, was narrow.” The symbolism derived from this appearance of the Temple is that when G’d appears to shower the gentile nations with all kinds of material blessings, the reason is that He wishes to reward them for whatever good they have done while on earth before they die, so that He does not have to recompense them in the Hereafter. The very opposite is the case in G’d’s relations with the Jewish people. G’d wishes to store up as much of the reward due to his faithful Jews for the Hereafter as is compatible with their lives on earth remaining tolerable. When Yaakov says to Yehudah that he had arisen, i.e. done repentance from his misguided treatment of his brother Joseph whom he had treated as if he were the loot captured in a hunt, this assured him of ample reward in the hereafter. We have confirmation of that concept when the Talmud in B’rachot 34 states that the ethical platform occupied by repentant sinners is far higher than the platform occupied by people who have never sinned, and who therefore never had to repent.
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