Shiur #15: Torah Study and Nature
Appreciation
By Rav Moshe Taragin
This shiur is dedicated in memory of Dr. William Major z"l.
The seventh mishna of the third perek cites an
astonishing position in the name of Rebbi Shimon. He claimed that a person who
interrupts his Torah study to appreciate nature is 'considered' someone who is
chayav mita (punishable by death). Judaism recognizes Torah study as the
most direct manner of uncovering God and thereby knowing and loving Him. Yet it
also recognizes additional routes which, though subsidiary, nonetheless deepen
our appreciation of Him. A well-known ruling of the Rambam in Hilkhot Yesodei
Ha-torah (2:2) describes the manner of achieving ahavat Hashem (love of
God). The Rambam's premise is that love must be founded upon knowledge.
Effectively then, the Rambam presents his recipe toward attaining knowledge of
Hashem: “When a person studies His wondrous 'acts and creations' acknowledging
their inner and unlimited wisdom, he immediately loves and desires praise …”
Whether or not this Rambam is the MOST effective manner of achieving love and
knowledge of God, undoubtedly, studying God's world forms an invaluable
instrument toward greater love and knowledge. Had the mishna in Avot
COMPARED Torah study and appreciation of nature and merely PRIORITIZED the
former, it would not be so astonishing. What astounds is the severity of
judgment regarding the person who confuses their relative worth. Describing a
person who confuses the two as someone deserving death seems very harsh.
Several early commentaries attempted to moderate this message,
seeing in the mishna's harsh judgment, a slightly different message and a
condemnation of a different crime- far more severe than merely appreciating
nature at the cost of torah study. Foremost is Rashi's approach which reads the
mishna as practical advice but not as an example of religious
malfunction. The literal reading of the mishna refers to one who TRAVELS
while learning and interrupts his learning to study nature. Even though each
religious experience is valid in its own right, Torah study provides additional
unique 'coverage' against accidents – which commonly occurred during TRAVEL. By
supplanting Torah study with nature appreciation, a person exposes himself to
natural 'accidents' which may have been prevented through the merit of Torah
study.
After all, the fourth mishna of this perek
records Rebbi Chanina's practical warning against – among other things - walking
alone at night. Whether he was concerned with physical vulnerability or
unnecessary exposure to harmful spirits, Rebbi Chanina registers concern at a
practical and not a moral level. Yet he employs the term 'he deserves to be
killed' to capture the practical danger of unaccompanied night travel in ancient
periods. Rashi believes that Rebbi Shimon addressed similar practical concerns
when he cautioned against interrupting torah study for nature appreciation when
TRAVELING!!
To be sure, even according to Rashi's interpretation, Torah
study remains superior to nature appreciation. However, this superiority does
not warrant a death sentence for a person who ignores Torah's supremacy. The
harsh outcome is merely a product of surrendering the unique protective capacity
of Torah study. That unique protection, in and of itself, also speaks to Torah's
moral and religious superiority, though not to its being a clearer instrument
toward knowledge of the Divine.
Rashi's reading would demand a slight emendation to the actual
text of the mishna as recorded in our editions. The current edition reads
that the person is considered guilty by death by the Torah. Though the
mishna itself does not cite a pasuk, several SCRIPTURAL sources
speaking to the severity of Torah neglect with grave consequences 'as if it were
punishable by death,' readily present themselves. Rashi, however, claims that
the potential death is not a sentence but rather a natural outcome. Rashi,
indeed, expunges this phrase "the Torah sentences him to death,” thereby
allowing his novel reading.
Yet a different reading is supplied by Rabbenu Yonah. The
mishna does not necessarily devalue nature appreciation or even forbid it
when it conflicts with Torah study. Rather it portrays a situation of lethargic
involvement in Torah study as EVIDENCED by the easy loss of attention and
diversion to nature appreciation. Perhaps nature study is sanctioned, but when a
person is immersed in Torah study he should achieve an intellectual focus and an
emotional intensity which is not easily interrupted by passing amusements.
Perhaps (though the Rabbenu Yonah does not specifically mention
this) the scenario of nature's interruption of Torah study specifically while a
person is TRAVELING, connotes this impression as well. Nature can be studied and
'mined' for religious inspiration and it can also form a manner of passing time.
The image of a person studying nature while traveling may suggest the latter
rather than the former. The religious 'lover of nature' seeks out his landscape,
while the easily diverted mind merely attaches itself to whichever scene appears
before his lens.
Travel in particular, challenges us to employ time
constructively, rather than idle it away with distraction. Perhaps, in some
manner, the Torah itself addresses this challenge when it summons us to Torah
study 'while we reside in our homes and while we travel along the road’
(be-shivtekha be-veitekha u've-lekhtekha va-derekh (Devarim 6:7)!! As
human beings spend a not insignificant portion of their lives on the road, this
challenge becomes crucial.
Yet a third 'reading' of this mishna may imply that the
crime relates, not to the choice, but to the absence of any religious outcome of
the nature experience. The mishna describes someone who interrupts his
learning to appreciate nature – and does not record any religious response to
the encounter with nature. It merely portrays someone who beholds a tree or a
meadow and extols its beauty without tracing this aesthetic experience toward
the Divine master. Not only has he squandered a religious moment but he has also
derailed a prior religious experience of Torah study. This missed opportunity,
coupled with the departure from Torah study, may warrant severe consequences.
The same may not necessarily apply to someone who genuinely probes nature for
the religious meaning that it contains even theoretically if it comes at the
cost of potential torah study.
Assuredly though, despite the various 'readings' and
interpretations - each of them conveying important religious morals in their own
right - the mishna does provide a stark hierarchy - even if it employs
the tool of hyperbole to convey its message. Even in our attempts to broaden our
religious horizons and encounter Hashem through various different interfaces and
multi-layered experiences, we cannot blur the primacy of Torah study - both
intellectually and spiritually. Intellectually, in that God's will reveals Him
more directly than His creation, and religiously, because we are commanded to
study Torah and merely ‘invited’ to encounter nature. Though misunderstanding
this hierarchy may not warrant an actual death sentence, Chazal, left no doubt
as to the true 'field' of our primary religious efforts.