frumfiend wrote on 03 Sep 2010 14:52:
I think we should finally learn something from what was for most of us a very shocking response. We are messed up and we have lost the proper prospective on the severity of these sins naase lo keheter. A addict is powerless but he has bechira. Besides the fact that he has free choice now he definitely had it at one time. IIf someone commits suicide by jumping through the window. when he is flying through the air he also has no more free choice .
The great [Jewish] philosophers established bechira as the cornerstone for the whole
Torah.... But from this resulted a common misperception among the masses; that all
people actively choose their every act and every decision. This is a grievous error. (Alei
Schur, Vol. 1, p. 156)
What, then, is bechira? To answer this question, Rav Wolbe2 refers us to Rav Eliyahu Dessler's "phenomenal essay on
bechira." In this essay3 Rav Dessler explains that bechira is not a theoretical concept that can be applied to any
circumstance where a person can hypothetically choose between two options. Rather, it only applies to moral conflicts
where the two opposing forces are of approximately equal strength, the person is aware of the internal conflict, and he
makes a conscious decision in one direction. When a person does something over which he does not experience
conscious conflict, or if the compelling force on one side is significantly stronger than the other, the fact that he is
theoretically able to decide either way does not qualify his act as an expression of bechira.
A Jew who is growing up in a family devoid of Yiddishkeit does not experience conflict over driving on Shabbos. The
fact that he is physically able to refrain from driving does not qualify his act of driving as reflecting bechira. Likewise, a
tzaddik does not experience conflict over driving on Shabbos. The fact that he is physically able to drive, does not mean
that he was bochcr (chose) not to drive. He never even considered the option of driving.
Rav Wolbe4 makes a similar point. True bechira requires a deliberate and thoughtful decision-making process. When a
child does the right thing because of fear of punishment or even to please his parents, that is not true bechira.5 It is not
surprising, therefore, that Rav Wolbe concludes that for most people exercising bechira is not as common an event as
they might like to believe.
-From DrSorotzkin.com