{"id":6104,"date":"2010-01-07T02:00:26","date_gmt":"2010-01-07T00:00:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/?p=6104"},"modified":"2018-05-24T11:20:28","modified_gmt":"2018-05-24T08:20:28","slug":"02-07-02","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/02-07-02\/","title":{"rendered":"02 – Dressing Modestly"},"content":{"rendered":"
When a person gets dressed, even when he is alone in his house, it is proper that he act modestly. He should not say, \u201cI am in the privacy of my own room; who can see me?\u201d for Hashem\u2019s greatness fills the whole world. Therefore, it is proper that one who sleeps without clothing be careful not to arise from his bed nude and then get dressed. Instead, he must partially dress under his blanket while still in bed, so that his ervah<\/i> (nakedness) will remain covered when he rises. Similarly, when one needs to change his underwear, it is proper to do so under a blanket, or while he is wearing a long robe that covers his ervah<\/i>. He may change his underwear in the bathroom or shower room, for those places are intended for that purpose – undressing there is not an affront to modesty.<\/p>\n
It is an extra pious act to be cautious that every part of the body that one respectfully covers when in the company of family and close friends is covered when one is alone as well. Therefore, it is an expression of piety not to be without an undershirt, even when alone in a room. If a person wants to change his undershirt, he demonstrates his piety by doing so only in the bathroom.<\/p>\n
When someone suffers greatly from the heat, even in accordance with the extra pious custom, he is permitted to remove his undershirt. However, he may certainly not expose his ervah<\/i>. Talmidei chachamim<\/i> (Torah scholars) are generally more stringent. Even on hot days when they are alone in their rooms, they do not remove their undershirts, nor sit in their house shirtless among their close friends or family members.<\/p>\n
All the circumstances mentioned above are situations in which there is no real need to expose one’s ervah<\/i>. However, when there is a necessity, such as for bathing or medical purposes, one is permitted to uncover his ervah<\/i> (Igrot Moshe<\/i>, Yoreh De\u2019ah<\/i>, part 3, 68:4).[1]<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n In order to slightly clarify the matter of modesty, it is necessary to initially state that in the beginning, when Adam was created, he was pure and clean, both spiritually and physically, and he did not feel a need to wear clothes. However, after the sin, he began to feel ashamed of his nudity. From then on, we all cover our bodies with clothes, especially those parts connected to the sexual drive and the disposal of waste.<\/p>\n The bare body emphasizes in an extreme manner the physical and animalistic side of humans. However, the form of the human body, with all the details and intricacies of its organs, also contains profound and phenomenal allusions to the soul, which the wisdom of the Kabbalah discusses in great length. It is the destiny of the body to reveal and actualize all those spiritual ideas. However, following Adam\u2019s sin, man\u2019s view of the world became more external. At first glance, we see only the corporeal component of the human body, which causes us to forget its spiritual core. Therefore, it is proper to hide the parts of the body that are normally covered, to better emphasize a person\u2019s inner spirituality, which is the source of his beauty, and thus allow this exalted spiritual beauty to extend over his whole body. That is what Chazal<\/i> infer when they state that it is in fact modesty which preserves beauty, by nourishing its eternal root (see Bamidbar<\/i> Rabbah<\/i> 1:3).<\/p>\n