The Commandment of Seeing
The mechanical transition from religious isolation to the functional embodiment of Divine Providence.
In the structural mapping of the spirit, the fundamental basis of Torah study is not the accumulation of information, but the cultivation of Attention. It is the refusal to avert one’s gaze, the refusal to hide behind habits, and the courage to look at the world without judgment. The Source “looks into the heart,” perceiving all from the Inside. As beings created in that Image, we are called to emulate this movement—not as a philosophical idea, but as a living motion of total Presence.
Avoiding the gaze of another person under the guise of religious restriction, or dismissing them through judgment, creates a technical rupture in our mission. Every soul walking this earth is a part of the Whole—the singular Soul—and when we ignore a part, we strengthen Separation (Pirud). I am not speaking of witnessing vulgarity, but of the deep understanding that we are here as Emissaries (Shlichim). We are sent to see, to feel, and to listen to that which cannot be heard in words.
According to the Zohar and the writings of Yehuda Ashlag, every soul is a component of the collective. When we truly see another, we strengthen Connection (Chibur) and draw down Mercy (Rachamim) instead of Judgment (Din). The nation of Israel is defined by the ability to animate reality through the smallest details: a look, a word, a presence. A person does not need grand gestures; they need to be felt. They need someone to look at them with the quality of Divine Providence (Hashgacha).
We are the physical containers for the “Portion of God” within the body. We serve the Source by acquiring the attribute of Presence so absolute that the person standing before us sees hope through us. This hope is not a future expectation, but a light transmitted in a single moment of recognition. To see another as a manifestation of the Divine is to resurrect a soul. We are only truly alive when we are animating others. Anything less is a failure to begin living.

