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                   becoming influenced by the defilement there. This caused him to forget
                   the halachah. But Pinchas stood up from among the people. He had not
                   been involved in this give-and-take and was therefore unsullied by Zimri’s
                   corruption. Pinchas saw the act and remembered the halachah. He
                   remembered that one must not gaze at the countenance of a rasha, due to
                   the detrimental side-effects.
                   Moshe was reluctant to go to Pharaoh; for fear that gazing at a rasha
                   would prove detrimental. Only after Hashem’s promise of protection did
                   he agree to go.
                   Rabbi Meir learned Torah from Acher by eating of his fruit (i.e., his Torah
                   knowledge), and discarding his rind. He did not gaze at the face of this
                   wicked man, compared to a fruit peel. Because he was able to discern the
                   good from the bad, he was called “Nehorai” (light), for he lit up his
                   colleagues’ eyes in halachah.
                   The author of Arvei Nachal asks how the angels could imagine sending
                   Moshe away from Heaven; he had come at the behest of Hashem Himself!
                   Mankind is the conduit by which blessing rains down from Heaven upon
                   Creation. The angels could not understand how a person could be charged
                   with this exalted mission. When Moshe explained that he wished to bring
                   down the Torah, which deepens the connection between all worlds, they
                   were mollified. Even the Angel of Death shared the secrets of the ketoret
                   with Moshe.

                   The angels were afraid that gazing at a physical face would reduce their
                   holiness. For that reason, they wished to consume Moshe. Hashem assured
                   them that Moshe had reached the level of an angel, transforming his very
                   countenance into a spiritual entity.

                   Hashem placed the face of Avraham upon Moshe, in order to remind the
                   angels of the repast they had enjoyed in Avraham’s tent. That had been a
                   one-time experience. What should Bnei Yisrael do, when they are
                   constantly bombarded with foolishness and fleeting frivolities? They
                   certainly need the Torah’s protection.
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