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Social
Environment
Methods
for Changing Character #3
Social Environment
Jewish
ethical literature emphasizes the powerful
influence our social environment has on our
character, behavior, and spiritual lives.
Who we associate with is a big factor
in determining what kind of people we will
become. It follows that one way to change character
is to choose a social environment that will
strengthen positive values and character traits
and stay away from the opposite.
This
issue has massive ramifications for many major
life choices -- where to live and work, where
to educate children, who to marry, who to
develop friendships with, etc. Of course, multiple factors are part of every major decision,
and we here only deal with one topic – how
our social environment influences character.
Rav
Dessler has a number of strongly worded pieces
on the issue of environment in the first volume
of Mikhtav M’Eliahu (vol. 1, pp. 153-160).
He relates not only to how we are influenced
by our surroundings, but how and why we often
find the opposite happening.
The articles are based on shmuessen
given in England and in Bnei Brak.
Influenced
by Our Surroundings
Social environment’s heavy moral influence
is a common Biblical and Rabbinic theme:
- One
message of the Lot episode (Breishit 19)
is how crucial environmental influences
can be for someone with a weak moral consititution. Lot picked up Avraham’s hospitality, yet Sodom also leaves
its mark.
His daughters married Sodomites (who
died in the destruction), his wife turns
into a pillar of salt, and the last we meet
him in the Torah is drunk, his daughters
conceiving from him.
- The
Divinely mandated wars against the seven
Canaanite nations were left unfinished (Book
of Shoftim), leaving Israel full of pockets
of immoral idolaters.
Pagan influences – idolatry, hedonism,
immorality -- ate away at Jewish culture,
eventually leading to the destruction of
the first Jewish Commonwealth (Book of Melakhim).
- Tehillim
begins with, “Happy is he who does not follow
the counsel of the wicked, does not stand
in the path of the sinners, and does not
sit among the scoffers.
- The
opening chapters of Mishlei caution against
associations with negative influences.
One typical verse:
“My son, do not go in their way, keep your feet from their
path” (1:16).
- Rabbi
Yossi’s answer (Pirkei Avot 2:9) to, “What
is the proper path to take in life?” is,
“a good neighbor.”
- According
to the Rambam (Mishneh Torah, Hilkhot Deiot
6:1-2), society’s moral influence is a law
of nature.
“It is man’s nature to be drawn after
the character and actions of his friends
and companions, and to act like the people
of his country.” It follows that one should be as
connected as possible to righteous people
and avoid negative social influences at
all costs.
This is also the basis of the positive
mitzva to “Cling to Him” (Devarim 10:20).
One can cling to G-d by clinging
to and becoming influenced by good, righteous
people following His ways.
- Rav
Dessler, in his talks, points out how our
surroundings influence our inner selves
in very subtle ways.
Even watching the punishment of evildoers
can have destructive effects. “He who sees a sotah woman in her
state of ruin (she was proven to be an adulteress)
should take a nazirite vow (forbidden him
from wine – an extra precaution against
sin)” (Sota 2a).
Despite
Our Surroundings
Notwithstanding
all of the above, the opposite is often true.
We often find individuals who not only
resist societal influences but thrive in an
environment full of opposing moral influences. This does not detract from a heavily supported default position
of finding a supportive moral environment. Here are some of the sources collected by Rav Dessler that
illustrate the phenomenon:
- Avraham
not only came to belief in and service of
G-d in a completely hostile idolatrous environment;
moving away from the impurity of his surroundings
was actually a motivating factor in his
development. This is why we mention Terach, Avraham’s idolatrous father,
in the Pesach Hagada
- Moshe,
who became the humblest of men and the greatest
of prophets, grew up in the house of Pharaoh,
who had made himself a deity and was the
source of impurity.
- Ruth,
ancestor of David and the Mashiach, grew
up among the Moabites.
- “Let
Ovadia who lived between two reshaim (evildoers)
(Achav and Izevel) and did not learn from
them prophesy about Eisav who lived between
two tzaddikim (righteous ones) (Yitzchak
and Rivka) and did not learn from them.”
(Sanhedrin 39b)
- The
Mashiach, says the Gemara (Sanhedrin 98a),
will only come in a generation that is either
totally meritorious or totally culpable.
The first is obvious, but the second is strange. Explains Rav Dessler: When that generation who saw the
depths of sin repents, they will push away
from evil so powerfully that they will rise
to the highest heights.
One
note: All of the situations listed above do not involve a conscious
choice of environment. In
all of them, strong personalities with a clear
drive for good (or bad) were able to thrive
morally (or the opposite for Eisav) despite
the surroundings they were thrown into.
Rav Dessler’s theory is that it was not
despite their environment that they thrived
but because of an opposing environment.
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