B"H

Lessons for Friday, 26 Shevat, 5786 - February 13, 2026

Tanya
Hayom-Yom
Rambam



Hayom Yom

Hayom-Yom for 26, Shevat

25 Shevat, 5786 - February 12, 202627 Shevat, 5786 - February 14, 2026

Hayom Yom was written by the Lubavitcher Rebbe in 5703 (1942-43).
In this box we have listed the Torah Lessons for this year.
The Torah Lessons below in the text are as they were in the original edition.
Friday, 26 Shevat, 5786 - February 13, 2026
Torah Lessons
(5786)
Chumash: Mishpatim, 6th portion (Exod. 23:20-23:25) with Rashi.
Tehillim: Chapter 119 (verses 97-176)
Tanya: English text / Audio / MP3
Rambam:
     3 chapters: Hebrew / Audio / MP3,
     1 chapter: Hebrew / Audio / MP3,
     Sefer Hamitzvos: English / Audio / MP3

Monday Sh'vat 26 5703
Torah Lessons
(5703)
Chumash: Mishpatim, Sheini with Rashi.
Tehillim: 119, 97 to end.
Tanya: To be sure (p. 107)...as is known. (p. 107).

Ahava, affection, is the breath of life in the Avoda of Chassidus.

It is the thread that binds chassidim to each other, that binds Rebbe to chassidim and chassidim to Rebbe.

Ahava works in a direct way (initiated affection) and also in a reflective way (responding to the other's affection). It knows no barriers and transcends the limits of time and place.



[top]

Tanya
As Divided for a Regular Year

Tanya for 26 Shevat

25 Shevat, 5786 - February 12, 202627 Shevat, 5786 - February 14, 2026


Chapter Twenty-Eight

[In the previous chapter the Alter Rebbe taught that the Beinoni should not be distressed by the occurrence of sinful thoughts in his mind.

On the contrary, he ought to rejoice, for by repulsing these thoughts and promptly averting his mind from them, he fulfills the commandment of "not going astray after one's heart," and thereby crushes the spirit of the sitra achra, consequently causing intense Divine pleasure.

However, this reasoning can only be applied when such thoughts occur to the Beinoni while engaged in his material pursuits.

If, however, they occur to him while occupied in the service of G-d (e.g., while praying or studying the Torah), they are certainly no cause for rejoicing, since they distract him from his divine service. How is he to deal with them in this case? - This is the subject of chapter 28].

Even if lustful imaginings or other extraneous thoughts occur to him during his service of G-d - in Torah or in prayer with kavanah, he should pay them no attention, but avert his mind from them immediately.

Nor should he be so foolish as to engage in "sublimation of the middot" of the extraneous thought, as is known - [that one can overcome extraneous thoughts by elevating their source.

[For every such thought stems from one of the middot of the animal soul.

For example, the middah of love in the animal soul gives rise to one's lustful thoughts; the middah of fear gives rise to hatred, and to fears inappropriate to him; and so on.

It is therefore written [1] that when one is disturbed by such a thought, he should determine which middah is its source, and should then refocus that middah on the spiritual aspects of the object of his thoughts.

For example, if the extraneous thought is a desire for some physical object, one should contemplate that the desirability of the object which he craves is actually a manifestation of the Divine power that made it desirable - beautiful, tasty, or whatever.

Therefore, rather than applying his desire (i.e., his middah of love) to the object's physical sheath, he should direct it to the G-dliness that underlies it. He will thereby elevate the corresponding middah of his animal soul to its Divine source, and thus destroy the evil in the thoughts caused by the middah, leaving only the good - the "sparks" of holiness embedded in them.

This is what is meant by "sublimating the middot" in order to overcome extraneous thoughts.

For the Beinoni, however, such an exercise would be sheer foolishness, as the Alter Rebbe explains presently].

For such things were intended only for tzaddikim, in whom there do not occur any evil thoughts of their own evil middot, but only from the middot of others.

[Since the tzaddik has transformed the middot of his animal soul to good, no evil thoughts can arise from them.

Any evil thought that may arise in his mind stems from the middot of others.

For another individual, whose soul-root is connected with this tzaddik, finds himself in difficulty combating his own evil middot, and requires his assistance.

This person's evil thought is therefore planted in the mind of the tzaddik, though in the form of mere abstract "letters of thought," without any feeling of evil attached to it.

The tzaddik, recognizing the source of this thought, redirects it towards the spiritual realm (as explained above), and thereby elevates the middah whence it stems, thus enabling his fellow-Jew to overcome his own evil middot.

But *only* the tzaddik can accomplish this, since he himself possesses no evil middot].

But as for one, [i.e., a Beinoni], to whom there occurs an evil thought of his own, from the evil that is lodged in the left part of his heart [i.e., the evil middot of his animal soul], how can he raise it up [to the spiritual realm] when he himself is bound below [by his desire for the material?

It would therefore be foolish for the Beinoni to attempt to rid himself of extraneous thoughts by engaging in the sublimation of his middot].

Nevertheless, he must not be downhearted, nor feel dejected and despicable because of this [occurence of extraneous thoughts during] his service of G-d, when he ought to be most joyous.

On the contrary, he should draw fresh strength, and intensify his determination with all his power, to pray with concentration, with even greater joy and gladness, in the realization that the foreign thought which occurred to him derives from the kelipah of the left part of the heart, which wages war within the Beinoni against the divine soul within him.

It is known, that it is the way of combatants [who seek to destroy one another] and similarly of wrestlers [who aim merely to topple one another], that when one is gaining the upper hand, the other likewise exerts himself with all the resources of his strength in order to prevail.

Therefore, [in the battle between the divine soul and the animal soul], when the divine soul exerts itself and musters all its strength in prayer, [thereby to weaken or even vanquish the animal soul], the kelipah [of the animal soul] too gathers strength to counter it, aiming to confuse and topple the divine soul by means of a foreign thought of its own.

[The animal soul, sensing danger in the divine soul's increased efforts in prayer with devotion, contrives to jar one's concentration by conjuring up assorted foreign thoughts in his mind.

Thus, the appearance of an extraneous thought during prayer indicates that one's devotion was of sufficient quality to give the animal soul cause for concern; and this realization itself should gladden one and encourage him to continue his efforts].

   

Notes:

  1. (Back to text) Keter Shem Tov (collected teachings of the Baal Shem Tov) Sec. 171.



[top]

Rambam - Sefer HaMitzvos
As Divided for The Daily Learning Schedule

Positive Mitzvah 11

25 Shevat, 5786 - February 12, 202627 Shevat, 5786 - February 14, 2026


Positive Mitzvah 11: Studying and Teaching the Torah
Deuteronomy 6:7 "And you shall teach them diligently to your children."

Is your father a doctor? An accountant? A computer programmer?

The Torah actually encourages him to be a teacher, as well!

Besides the profession your father may have chosen, he is commanded to teach his children Torah.

He must also try to teach other Jews the Torah, because students are also called "children."

When you grow up, this same Mitzvah obligates you to study Torah yourself and to teach it to others.


When I first arrived at Yeshiva, I threw myself entirely into the experience. Soon I realized I had lost my balance. It was at that time that I heard these words of the Rebbe and they guided me:

The Talmud tells, "Four entered into the orchard (the mystical teachings). One died, one went mad and one became a heretic. Rabbi Akiva entered in peace and left in peace".

Why was Rabbi Akiva capable of leaving in peace? Because he entered in peace: He had made peace between his physical and spiritual worlds, between his body and his soul, and saw purpose in them both. So when he entered the spiritual he had in mind his return to the physical. And when he re-entered the physical he brought with him of the spiritual.

From: Bringing Heaven Down to Earth by Tzvi Freeman - tzvif@aol.com



[top]