We
are commanded to put tefillin on our left hand,
corresponding to the heart, and between our
eyes, corresponding to our mind.
One of the goals of tefillin is (as we
say in the prayer before putting on tefillin)
to subjugate our minds and hearts to G-d’s service. The mind is the seat of Chokhma (wisdom) and the heart is the
seat of Bina (understanding, used by the Ben
Ish Chai here also as intent and will power).
If these two powers within us are sanctified,
the rest of us will follow. Speech
is especially directly affected by the mind
and heart, for speech is an expression of our
inner intent, will, and ideas.
Therefore the Torah tells us that if
we put on tefillin on our arms and between our
eyes = if we sanctify our hearts and minds,
our mouths and speech will be sanctified and
“G-d’s Torah will be in our mouths.”
If, G-d forbid, the heart and mind are
flawed, there will be flaws in our speech and
Torah as well.
Understanding
our inner dynamics will help us function properly.
The heart and mind are intertwined, and
usually the gateway to the mind is the heart.
If we sanctify our hearts with proper
intent, our minds will be filled with proper
thoughts. The starting point is the heart, as the
Talmud (Sanhedrin 106b) says, “The All-Merciful-One
wants the heart.”
The
tefillin on our heads are referred to as “between
the eyes.”
Besides corresponding to the brain within,
they also directly correspond to the eyes.
Besides the heart-mind connection there
is also a heart-eyes connection. Just as there is a heart-mind dynamic there is a heart-eyes
dynamic.
The
heart’s chief agents are the eyes.
The Torah tells us to put the tefillin
between the eyes, teaching us that if we sanctify
our heart, our eyes will keep on the right track
and not become flawed. One who sanctifies his heart will also
sanctify his eyes and will merit Torah. [This
is hinted at through the following gematria
– numerology. The words eye and heart together (einayim lev) are numerically
equivalent to the word “rabbi” (reish bet yud),
the conventional Jewish way of referring to
a Torah scholarway of referring to a Torah scholar.]
Everything
begins with the heart.
Sanctifying our hearts with proper intent
leads to pure thoughts.
Sanctifying our hearts will keep our
eyes looking at the world positively.