"For Instruction shall come forth from Zion, The word of the L-rd from Jerusalem." -- Isaiah 2:3

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DEUTERONOMY — 30:15 set

DEUT1612 ... a human being’s actions are entrusted to him. He chooses them as he pleases; They spring from his will and free choice. Accordingly, he is subject to reward and punishment for obedience and for transgression respectively, as it says: “See, I set before you this day life and good, death and evil” (Devarim 30:15); “Choose life” (ibid. 30:19); “This is your own doing” (Malachi 1:9); “For according to man's acts He pays him” (Iyov 34:11); “A man's folly warps his way” (Mishlei 19:3). All that is in our literature on the Torah, the commandments, and proper conduct confirms this; also what is mentioned in it regarding reward for obedience and punishment for transgression--all this indicates that a man's actions are entrusted to him, and that the Divine Glory is free from responsibility for his good or for his evil, for his righteous or corrupt actions.

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DEUTERONOMY — 30:15 set

DEUT1613 Let us now consider the role of reward and punishment in a theistic ethical system. What distinguishes man from animals is his need for, or at least his capacity to respond to, the Ultimate Power of the universe, an unseen reality whom he may inadequately but inevitably conceptualize as universal “Father” or “King.” Man alone experiences the presence of God and stands accountable to Him. If, as in a covenant ethic, God is Supreme Lawgiver, then good and evil become chesed [i.e., lovingkindness-AJL], faithfulness to and Chat [i.e., sin-AJL], betrayal of divine expectations. Reward and punishment remain a constant foundation of covenant ethics. At the “lowest” level man conceives of obedience and disobedience as a choice between plenty and drought, health and pestilence. “I have set before you this day life and prosperity, death and adversity...” (Deuteronomy 30:15) When in his personal life there seems to be no direct correlation between piety and reward, the religious man may conclude that he is less deserving than he imagines, for that reward is being deferred to some postmortal realm, or that God is testing him.

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DEUTERONOMY — 30:19 choose

DEUT1617 Animals are programmed from birth, and thus, their choices are limited. Animals are not capable of moral choices, and thus receive no reward for "doing the right thing" or punishment for acting immorally. Every human being faces many moral choices each day. Even though the Torah "commands" man to commit many moral acts or commandments, at the very end of the Torah, the Torah itself proclaims that man retains the right to reject God and these Commandments, and choose between right and wrong [Deuteronomy 30:15-19]. Of course, he will be rewarded or punished accordingly. This free choice and free will is described by Maimonides in detail (Maimonides, Hilchot Teshuva 5:1). It matters not with what tendencies and personality traits a human is born. He retains the ability to go on a moral or an immoral path, regardless of his environment or past history.

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DEUTERONOMY — 30:19 choose

DEUT1622 Our very humanness means we sometimes behave badly. Our teachers cared mightily that we live up to the high standards set by Jewish law and communal ideals. They couldn't easily rationalize how little good most of us actually do and how easily and regularly we fall into sin. Yet despite their unblinking look at how we actually behave, the rabbis remained optimistic, knowing that the Torah's positive influence upon our moral choices cannot be disputed: [this verse]. They attributed our chronic sinning to the powerful nature of the evil urge, a foe so wily and untiring that it can never be permanently defeated. Nonetheless, the Torah's teaching is plain: with God's help we can ally ourselves with God's goodness and rule humanity's evil streak. One of our sages actually pictured us as schizoid, with two yetzarim evenly split in their ability to dictate our actions: "As R. Levi taught: There are six parts of the body that serve a person; three are under his control and three are not. The eyes, the ears, and the nose are not under a person's control; he sees what he doesn't want to see, hears what he doesn't want to hear, and smells what he doesn't want to smell. The mouth, the hand, and the foot are under a person's control. If he wants he can use his mouth to study Torah or speak gossip and blasphemy. He can use his hand to give charity or steal and kill. He can use his feet to walk to synagogue or houses of study, or to brothels" (Gen. R. 67.3).

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