Welcome to our daily Bitachon. We are currently in the midst of our Sha'ar HaBechina series, recognizing the wisdom of God in creation. Now, in the fourth chapter, the Chovot HaLevavot charges us with the responsibility to examine seven areas of wisdom in the natural world. For the next little while, we will focus on the fourth area: the wisdom of God found in living creatures, whether large or small. He breaks these living creatures into four categories: The ones that fly: Birds and insects. The ones that swim: Fish and aquatic mammals. The ones that crawl and slither: Reptiles and creeping things. The ones that walk on fours: Land mammals. In these four areas, he wants us to understand their specific form (physical structure and anatomy), their qualities (specific traits), their functions (how they operate), the tools they use, their pleasures (how these functions benefit them), and lastly, their purpose—how they benefit the world and the role they serve in the greater ecosystem. This approach should not be strange to us; Iyov did the very same thing. In the final chapters of the book of Iyov , he recounts many things he saw in creation and derived lessons from them. It starts with the lion. We are now at the end of Chapter 38 of Iyov . I will be reading some Pesukim with light commentary where God challenges Iyov: "Will you trap prey for a lion or fill the needs of lion whelps?" —whelps being a word for baby lions— "When they hunch over in their lairs, lie low in their den and wait?" The challenge to Iyov is clear: Do you provide food for the wildlife, or does Hashem instill in them the instinct to catch their prey? Lions and other carnivorous animals instinctively possess the patience to lie in wait until they can pounce. This is wisdom number one that God instilled in the lion. The next challenge to Iyov: "Who prepares nourishment for the raven when its young ones call out to God, helpless without food?" As we will see later, the Chovot HaLevavot notes that even when raven parents fail to provide, the chicks cry out to God and find food. If even the most "cruel" or neglected bird is fed, a person should realize he is never abandoned. God takes care of the raven's children in wondrous ways. Next: "Do you know the time when the mountain goats give birth or anticipate the labor pains of the gazelle? Did you count the months as they come to term to know the moment of their birth? They crouch and expel their offspring, they rid themselves of their agonies." The Radak explains that mountain goats give birth in steep, dangerous places where the newborns are at risk of falling to their deaths, but Hashem protects these helpless kids. God knows the exact moment of every birth when His intervention is indispensable. Similarly, the gazelle has a narrow birth canal, yet God arranges for it to give birth safely. Could Iyov know these moments or intervene to prevent loss of life? Clearly, it is God's hand at work. Next, God asks: "Who set the wild donkey free and who loosened the bonds of the wild donkey? To whom I designated the desert as his home, his habitat in arid lands." These wild donkeys, unlike their domesticated cousins, do not submit to a master. They could be fed generously if they submitted to man, but they prefer the freedom of the desert where they must scavenge. God then turns to the wild ox, an animal much stronger than a donkey and just as resistant to human domination. Then, He contrasts the stork and the ostrich. The stork has a powerful wing that enables flight, while the ostrich, when attacked, simply runs away and ignores its young. The ostrich lacks the instinct to protect its eggs, yet Hashem protects them so they can hatch. Once again, Iyov is being taught from the wild how Hashem cares for everything. He continues with the horse— "Did you give the horse his strength?" —and the hawk and eagle: "Is it by your wisdom the hawk hovers... Is it by your command that the eagle soars and makes its nest on high?" Finally, He speaks of the Behemoth and the Leviathan . All of this serves to prove the point of the Chovot HaLevavot : God wants us to look into creation, analyze it, and learn from it. That is what we will be doing, be'ezrat Hashem , in these upcoming lessons—following the command to look into creation as he has broken it down for us.