Originally published on a different website, now edited to belong here.
Rav Galinsky here in his sefer talks of an experience he had during his world travels to collect for his mosad. He once stayed at a fine man's house, a baal tzedaka, and he told him a vort. It was not meant as a criticism, it was just in response to something the man had said.
He began by saying that although we have tremendous potential, and every man should say "when can I be like Avraham, Yitzchak, and Yaakov," we also have terrible middos which are part of what it means to be human, and we have to constantly be on guard against them, and not be meyayeish if we have that feeling or thought. You just have to realize this is part of what it means to be a mixture of Heaven and Earth, and you should anticipate it, and face it, and overcome it.
He said that he once heard from Harav Chatzkel Levenstein on the topic, who said that every middah can be used in Avodas Hashem in some form. The Alter from Kelm said that this is why they're called middos. Middah means measure. Every middah, what we call good and what we call bad, is vitally important, but only in the right dose. 500 years ago, the Swiss physician and chemist Paracelsus formulated the basic principle of toxicology: “All things are poison and nothing is without poison; only the dose makes a thing not a poison.” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_intoxication) This is often condensed to: “The dose makes the poison.” (Anivus and rachamim can be deadly (ענוונותו של זכריה בן אבקילוס), and gaiva and achzariyus can be vitally important.
Rav Galinsky asked Reb Chatzkel, how can we possibly use the middah of "ולא תסורו אחרי לבבכם ואחרי עיניכם," the middos of Kefira? Reb Chatzkel famously answered that when a person is faced with a terrible challenge, he must have bitachon. When a person earns a living, he must have bitachon. But if a poor person comes to you, or someone that doesn't have a job and can't earn a living, comes to you for help, do not tell him to have bitachon. That should not be what you say, and it should not be how you feel. You should feel that if you don't help him, he will be hungry and he will suffer. That was one of my all time favorite New Yorker cartoons:
Rav Galinsky's host told him that they, Chasidim, had exactly the same idea, expressed differently. Someone came to the Baal Shem in terrible distress, saying that the army was going to quarter a soldier in every person's house. The concerns of kashrus, drunkeness, having women in the house, are self evident. It so happened that the Baal Shem's talmid was in the house, Reb Nachum of Horodna, or something like that, and he said, "Gam zu l'tova." The Baal Shem retorted "It is a good thing that you did not live at the time of Haman, because instead of eitzos and taanis and tefilla, you would have just said "Gam zu l'tova.""
(I heard this in the name of Reb Meir Simcha. At a kneisiah, the gedolim discussed all the terrible dangers facing the community, and one person said אין לנו להשען אלא על אבינו שבשמים. Reb Meir Simcha said that now he understands why that expression is in the Mishna that speaks of the terrible events of ikvesa d'meshicha. This, too is one of the terrible events, that the gedolim will throw their hands up in the air and say oy, אין לנו etc.)
The host then continued and said that he heard someone apply this to a passuk in our parsha, in Beshalach. It says ויהי בשלח פרעה את העם ולא נחם. The lesson is that when the tzibbur is faced with a crisis, you had better not act like נחום איש גמזו, that is not the time to say גם זו לטובה. That is pshat in the passuk. When it comes to את העם, when the tzibbur is facing hardships, then לא נחם, it is not the time for Nachum, it is not the time for pieties like gam zu l'tovah.
When I said this to my friend, he responded with a famous מעשה שהיה that never happened.
Reb Nachum the Darshan was chastising the community. As is often the case when the mussar is needed, his criticism offended some of the listeners. The insulted Baalei Batim got up in protest,shaking their fists at the Rov and one of them cried out "Who are you to criticise us? You're not God, לא נחם אלקים!" The Rov immediately responded, "דרך ארץ, פלשתים!!"
AN EXCELLENT MAREH MAKOM FROM ר' אברהם בוקספאן, from R Yaakov Yosef

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