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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
DEVELOPING
A TORAH PERSONALITY
Yeshivat Har Etzion
Based on addresses by
Harav Aharon Lichtenstein
Adapted by Rav Reuven
Ziegler
LECTURE #1
To Cultivate and to Guard: The
Universal Duties of Mankind
When seeking to shape our personalities according to
Torah values, we must relate to at least three levels of expectation and
responsibility. These can be regarded as concentric circles, moving from the
broader to the more specific:
1) the universal demands placed upon one simply as a
human being;
2) the demands of a Jew;
3) the responsibilities of a ben-Torah, one
who makes Torah study a central part of his life and embodies its
values.
I wish to deal now with the first level. What are the basic, cardinal,
universal values for which every person should strive?
TWO TASKS
Let us open a Chumash (Pentateuch) to the
chapter describing the creation of man and see what task was assigned to him.
The Lord God took the man and placed him in the
Garden of Eden to cultivate it and to guard it. And the Lord God commanded the
man, saying, “Of every tree of the garden you are to eat; but as for the tree of
knowledge of good and evil, you must not eat of it; for as soon as you eat of
it, you shall die.” (Bereishit 2:15-17)
In the seventh chapter of Sanhedrin, the Gemara derives the
seven universal Noachide Laws from the last two of these verses. However, I
would like to address the first of these verses: God placed man (Adam) in the
garden “le-ovdah u-leshomrah,” to work or cultivate the garden and to
guard it. Here we have two distinct tasks. One, “le-shomrah,” is largely
conservative, aimed at preserving nature. It means to guard the world, to watch
it—and watching is essentially a static occupation, seeing to it that things do
not change, that they remain as they are. This is what Adam was expected to do,
and part of our task in the world is indeed to guard that which we have been
given: our natural environment, our social setting, our religious
heritage.
In a sense, we are expected also to be a shomer (guard) of the
Torah itself. What do Anshei Kenesset Ha-gedola, the sages of the Great
Assembly, mean when they instruct us to “Make a fence around the Torah” (Avot
1:1)? They mean to guard it, to watch it. Similarly, Chazal speak of
“Asu mishmeret le-mishmarti, Set a guard around My guard” (Mo’ed Katan
5a, Yevamot 21a). We often use the term shomer mitzva to
describe someone. This doesn’t just mean that he does what the Shulchan Arukh
says, but also that he guards it; he sees to it that the mitzva as an
entity, as a reality, remains pure; he envisions himself as having a sense of
responsibility towards it. All this is included in the term “le-shomrah”
(to guard it).
At the same time, there is the task of “le-ovdah” (to cultivate
it), which is essentially creative: to develop, to work, to innovate. This
applied even in the Garden of Eden, which, according to some of the
midrashim, was already a perfect environment.
Here we have, then, two foci of our primary obligation: a) to guard, to
have a sense of responsibility in relation to that which we have been given; and
b) to work and to develop. Although Adam was commanded specifically to till and
guard the Garden of Eden, I think that we would not be stretching things too far
if we were to understand that this mandate applies far beyond that particular
little corner of the Garden where Adam and Eve were placed. What we have here is
a definition of how man is to be perceived in general: as a shomer and as
an oved.
PART
1:
Le-shomrah—To Honor, Protect and
Preserve
WHO IS THE MASTER?
As I said, the mandate to guard relates in part to
the natural world; the concern for ecology has some basis in this. To some
extent, this mandate extends to the society one is in. But to a great extent, it
applies in relation to oneself. One must guard the human personality itself and
everything appended to it, one’s dalet amot (four cubits) which he
assumes to be his own private domain.
Now, this is of great importance and needs to be stressed, because we are
dealing here with a fundamentally religious perception that runs counter to the
notions prevalent within the widely secular society in which we find ourselves.
The essence of modern secular culture is the notion of human sovereignty;
individual man is master over himself, and collective man is master over his
collective. This creates problems as to where the line is to be drawn between
individual and collective man, and that issue is the crux of much of modern
socio-political theory—when the state can and cannot interfere. But the common
denominator of all these discussions is that they think fundamentally in terms
of human sovereignty, the question being whether you speak of humanity or of a
particular person.
From a religious point of view, of course, eilu va-eilu divrei avoda
zara—both approaches are idolatrous. Here one establishes individual man as
an idol, and there one idolizes, in humanistic terms, humanity as a whole. The
basis of any religious perception of human existence is the sense that man is
not a master: neither a master over the world around him, nor a master over
himself.
“THE EARTH IS THE LORD’S”
Of course, this is not to say that the notion of
private property does not exist. It certainly exists within religious thought
generally, and within Judaism specifically; the notion of private property is a
very central concept in Halakha, and large sections of the Talmud are devoted to
it. Rather, what this means is that the notion of property is never absolute. It
is always relative; ultimately, “La-Hashem ha-aretz u-melo’ah, The Earth
is the Lord’s and all that it holds” (Tehillim 24:1). But within the
world in which we exist, we can say that relative to Shimon, Reuven has been
granted ownership, or that relative to the individual, the community has been
granted authority.
In this manner, one can understand the gemara in Berakhot
(35a-b) which points out a seeming contradiction between two verses in
Tehillim: on the one hand, “The Heavens belong to the Lord, but the Earth
He gave over to man” (115:16), and on the other hand, “The Earth is the Lord’s
and all that it holds” (24:1). The gemara answers: “This is not really a
difficulty. One verse is speaking of the reality before a person has recited a
berakha (blessing), and the other verse is speaking of the reality after
a person has said a berakha.”
A person who partakes of the world without reciting a berakha has,
so to speak, stolen from God; he has committed an offense of me’ila
(misusing that which has been consecrated to God). However, when he
pronounces a berakha, this does not mean that the item is now absolutely
his. It is not like purchasing a loaf of bread from a storeowner, who then
disappears from the picture. Heaven forbid! “Mine is the silver and mine is the
gold, says the Lord of Hosts” (Chaggai 2:8). Rather, the gemara
teaches that, at an operational level, there are two different levels of
one’s mastery over the object, in terms of the permissibility for one to use it.
Initially, you cannot partake in any way. But once you say the berakha,
you have in effect recognized God’s ownership. You recognize His hegemony, you
accept the fact that you live subject to Him, you have acknowledged His
sovereignty, and now you partake of the world with His permission. Through our
reciting a berakha, God grants us permission the way a medieval king
might have delegated a fief to a particular person.
Regarding some forms of kodashim (sacred items), the gemara
says, “Mi-shulchan gavo’ah ka zakhu, They have acquired it from
Heaven’s table” (see Beitza 21a, Bava Metzia 92a). What the
gemara says in a narrow halakhic sense is true in a broader sense of our
ability to partake of the world. We are guests at God’s table. This means that
whatever we have in the world, we have as shomerim (guards)—it has been
given to us to guard and we are never truly masters.
Now, of course, there are different kinds of shomerim. There are
those who have only responsibilities and no rights, such as a shomer chinam
(unpaid guard) and a shomer sakhar (paid guard). On the other hand, a
sho’el (borrower) and a sokher (renter) have both chiyyuvim
and kinyanim (liabilities and rights). In the sense that we too have
both chiyyuvim and kinyanim, we are analogous to a sho’el
or sokher. (However, the analogy is not exact, since, unlike a
sho’el, we do not have rights against the Owner; we merely have rights to
use the property, given the Owner’s continuing consent.) And if this is true
regarding property, it is equally true of our own selves.
OWNERSHIP OF ONESELF
I mentioned earlier the prevalent secular conception
of one’s “ownership” of himself. One hears this argument in various contexts,
especially with regard to the question of abortion: it’s a woman’s right, it’s
her own body, she can do what she wants, etc. Years back, I was asked to testify
before a subcommittee of the Knesset which dealt with abortions. Among other
things, I mentioned that, leaving aside the significant question of whether it
is the woman’s body only or whether the fetus has some rights as well, there is
a more fundamental problem. Even if we were to accept that indeed it is the
woman’s own body, we totally reject the conception that she then can do with it
as she pleases. This is a completely anti-halakhic perception. It rests on a
secular assumption that, as it were, “My Nile is my own; I made it for myself”
(Yechezkel 29:3), as if we are the source of our own existence and
therefore the masters of our own being. This is assuredly not the case. In
absolute terms, a person does not own himself.
In fact, there are prohibitions that apply to how a person relates to
himself. Just as one is forbidden to injure or curse others, so is he forbidden
to injure himself or to curse himself.Similarly, the mitzva of “Ve-nishmartem
me’od le-nafshoteikhem, Take utmost care of yourselves” (Devarim
4:15) specifically prohibits a person from taking unnecessary risks, even
though he will not affect anybody else. The very notion that a person should be
free to do what he wants with relation to himself is at absolute odds with our
conception. We believe that you are never an independent entity, nor do you
“own” yourself; you are always a shomer appointed by God. That applies to
your “property,” to your own self, and certainly to your relationship to what
surrounds you.
HONOR GUARD
Let us now further refine our understanding of the
duty of “leshomrah.” It has not only a negative aspect, namely, that a
person does not have the right to dispose of objects arbitrarily or even to deal
with himself as he wishes. It has also a positive aspect: there is an obligation
to be a shomer, and not merely in order to avoid damage. Although this is
essentially a passive activity, there nevertheless is an active aspect to it as
well. The Rambam says:
The guarding of the Temple is a positive commandment.
This applies even though there is no fear of enemies or bandits, for its
guarding is in order to honor it. A palace with guards is not comparable to a
palace without guards. (Hilkhot Beit Habechira 8:1)
Even though there is no fear of invasion,
nevertheless the Mikdash (Temple) must have shomerim. Why? They
serve as an honor guard. Le-havdil, the Swiss Guards do not protect the
Vatican from enemies, nor do guards stand outside Buckingham Palace out of fear
that someone is going to enter. Rather, guards are stationed out of a sense of
kavod (honor) for the palterin shel melekh (palace of the king);
there is a sense of elevation, of nobility, of something unique that requires
guarding.
Now, this sense of palterin shel melekh which requires guarding is
presumably part of the mandate Adam initially received. When he was placed in
the Garden “le-ovdah u-leshomrah,” against whom was it being guarded? The
animals were part of the Garden, and there was nobody else around, no one to
invade. Rather, you guard something which you value and appreciate; you hover
over it constantly. While, of course, the Mikdash is palterin shel
Melekh in a very special sense, the world as a whole is also palterin
shel Melekh: “The heaven is My throne and the earth is My footstool”
(Yeshayahu 66:1). In this sense, we must all cultivate a concern for and
a sensitivity to the natural order as a whole, to that Garden of Eden into which
we have been placed. This is part of kevod Shamayim, yirat Shamayim
and malkhut Shamayim (the honor, fear and sovereignty of Heaven). In
fact, our responsibility with respect to the orders of creation—natural, human,
social and personal— is now heightened, since, subsequent to Adam’s sin, there
are indeed real dangers which threaten them.
There is a term which Chazal (the Sages) always apply in relation
to shomerim: achrayut, responsibility. In our capacity as
shomerim, we must live with a sense of responsibility, obligation and
demands. What is demanded is not simply a kind of passive awareness, but rather
the application of consciousness. What does a shomer have to do? He must
be alert. His human self must be asserted, that part of him which can watch,
which is intelligent, which guards. One guards with intelligence. When he
combines his intelligence, sensitivity and awareness of the importance of what
he is guarding with a sense of duty and readiness—that is what being a shomer
is all about.
PART
2:
Le-ovdah—The Work Ethic
The sense of duty I mentioned above with regard to
“le-shomrah” applies likewise to the first component of Adam’s mandate—“
le-ovdah.” It is not enough to guard; one needs also to develop and to
create. Let us be mindful that this applied even in what seemingly had been a
perfect world! “And God saw all that He had made and found it very good”
(Bereishit 1:31). If all is wonderful and perfect, what need is there for
“le-ovdah?” There are two possible answers. Although the difference
between them is of great significance in many areas, I would prefer not to focus
on the clash between them, but rather to see them both as being
correct.
MAINTAINING THE WORLD
The first answer is that, indeed, the world was
created perfect— but part of that perfection, and one of the components within
that order, is human activity. Part of “And He found it very good” is man, not
existing simply as a biological being enjoying the world, but rather as a
functional being who con- tributes, creates and works. The need for man to work
is not part of the curse subsequent to the sin; man was originally placed in the
Garden in order to cultivate it. The curse was that man would have to battle
with an unwilling earth: “Thorns and thistles shall it sprout for you. . . . By
the sweat of your brow shall you get bread to eat” (Bereishit 3:18-19).
But the fact that one needs to work at all is part of the primeval, primordial
order, irrespective of any element of sin. This had been intended from the
beginning. Simply put, this is indeed a perfect order, provided that man does
his part. If man does not, then one of the pieces of the picture has fallen out,
and the world is no longer perfect.
According to this approach, both “le-ovdah” and
“le-shomrah” are designed to maintain the world at its present level, and
this entails two components: passively guarding against damage and actively
working in order to replenish. We need to work so that the natural processes
repeat themselves; if you do not contribute your share, the seasons come and go,
but nature does not replenish itself.
PERFECTING THE WORLD
The second approach assumes that “le-ovdah” is
a mandate to go beyond the original state of creation. “Le-ovdah” is not
meant simply to maintain the original standard; rather, we have been given the
right and the duty to try to transcend it. While the former approach asserts
that man was asked to maintain the world as God had created it, this answer
claims that man was empowered and enjoined to create something better, as it
were.
Although this approach is audacious, we find it advanced by Chazal
in several places. Perhaps the most celebrated is the midrash
(Tanchuma, Parashat Tazria) which speaks of the encounter
between the Roman governor Turnus Rufus and Rabbi Akiva. Turnus Rufus asked
Rabbi Akiva, “If God wanted man to be circumcised, then why did He not create
him that way?” Rabbi Akiva responded, “Bring me some wheat.” Then he said,
“Bring me a loaf of bread.” He asked, “Which do you prefer to eat, the bread or
the wheat?” “Naturally, the bread,” Turnus Rufus replied. Rabbi Akiva retorted,
“Do you not see now that the works of flesh and blood are more pleasant than
those of God?” There is a certain audacity here, but these are the words of
Rabbi Akiva! What you have here is an assertion of human ability and grandeur,
and of human responsibility to engage in this kind of
improvement.
The extent to which this particular view is accepted depends on whether
one adopts, to a greater or lesser degree, a humanistic perspective. Humanists
talk a great deal about man placing his imprint upon the world, improving it,
building it, and so on. When I say humanists, I am not talking only about
secular humanists; I mean religious humanists within our world as well. Rav
Yosef Dov Soloveitchik and Rav Meir Simcha of Dvinsk, for example, talk a great
deal about the need for man to create.
Historically, this debate has found expression in some very strange
contexts. In late seventeenth-century England, there was a vigorous debate about
the hills and valleys. Some assumed that in the Newtonian world of mathematical
precision, a perfect world presumably would be perfectly shaped. How, then, to
explain the indentations of hills and valleys which seem to mar what should be a
perfectly round globe? People with a more Romantic perspective said that it’s
nicer this way, with some variety; who would want the whole world to be as flat
as the New Jersey Turnpike? Others gave a more theological interpretation:
really, a perfect world would be a perfect globe without any ups and downs, but
God made the mountains and the valleys so that man should have the challenge of
flattening everything. To us, this debate seems curious, but the basic notion is
clear.
The debate about the role of art similarly reflects these two basic
positions about man’s relation to the world. Plato claimed that artists
misrepresent reality. He believed that the ultimate reality is the world of
ideas, of which our world is just a kind of reflection or image. Now, says
Plato, what does the poet or the artist do? He has the image of the image, and
is now two steps removed from reality, instead of being one step away. So he
banished all of them from his ideal republic. One response was given to this by
Plotinus. The best known statement of this response in English is Sir Philip
Sidney’s “The Defense of Poesy,” an essay written in the late sixteenth century.
Sidney says that Plato’s perception is wrong: the poet does not imitate nature,
he goes beyond nature. The natural world, he says, is brass, but the poet’s
world is gold.
THE IMPORTANCE OF WORK
For our purposes, however, both of these approaches
to the value of labor can be regarded as correct. What is important is the sense
of human responsibility and the recognition of the importance of building the
world and improving society. To us, work is indeed a central value. Chazal
have numerous statements to this effect. For example, just as there is an
obligation to rest on Shabbat, there is also an obligation that “Six days shall
you labor and do all your work” (Shemot 20:9); the two are somewhat
interrelated (see Avot De-Rabbi Natan, version B, chap. 21, and
Mekhilta de-Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai on Shemot
20:9).
In a famous statement, the Rambam spoke of this in a halakhic context.
The gemara (Sanhedrin 25b) says that a dice-player (i.e. a
gambler) is disqualified from giving testimony in court. Two reasons are offered
for this. One opinion is that he is a sort of thief, because of the halakhic
principle that “asmakhta lo kanya.” Whoever gambles does so because he
assumes he is going to win, and if he knew that he would lose he wouldn’t
gamble.
Thus, he gambles based upon an asmakhta, relying on an implicit
condition. Therefore, the loser does not really transfer ownership of the money,
and the winner does not legally acquire it. The second opinion disqualifies a
gambler because “eino osek be-yishuvo shel olam,” he is not involved in
developing the world constructively. The gemara then brings a practical
distinction between these two opinions. According to the first reason
(asmakhta), even a person who gambles only occasionally is ineligible to
give testimony. However, according to the second approach, only a professional
gambler is disqualified—someone who has no other profession, but rather spends
his entire day at the racetrack, or doing something similarly
non-constructive.
The Rambam rules according to the latter opinion, but he takes the
occasion to generalize:
One who plays dice with a gentile does not transgress
the prohibition of stealing, but he does transgress the prohibition of occupying
oneself with worthless things, for it is not suitable for a person to occupy
himself all the days of his life with anything other than matters of wisdom and
the developing of the world. (Hilkhot Gezeila 6:11)
I won’t deal now with the reason the Rambam thinks
that the problem of asmakhta doesn’t apply to this case. What is relevant
to us is his definition of the two things a person should be engaged in:
divrei chokhma (matters of wisdom) and yishuvo shel olam (the
developing of the world).
WHY WORK?
This notion of the significance of work per
se, of engaging in yishuvo shel olam, of “le-ovdah,” has
several bases. First, in a purely psychological sense, in terms of mental
health, one’s self-fulfillment comes through work. For instance, the mishna
(Ketubot 5:5, 59b) says that if a woman marries, she is expected to
per- form certain tasks in the house, but if she brings servants with her, she
does not have to do them. The gemara (ibid.) adds that the more
servants she brings, the less she has to do, because they will take care of the
needs of the household. However, beyond a certain point, this does not apply;
her husband can demand that she do something—anything—because, Rabbi Eliezer
says, “Idleness leads to lewdness;” it leads to a loose, lascivious life. Rabban
Shimon ben Gamliel offers a different reason: “A husband who takes an oath that
his wife should do no work, should divorce her and pay her ketuba, since
idleness leads to shi’amum.” Shi’amum can be understood either as
insanity or as boredom, ennui, a sense of spiritual degradation. Even if she’s
as wealthy as Midas, she has to do some kind of work, lest idleness lead to
psychological and spiritual problems.
There is also, of course, a social basis to our emphasis on work. The
fact is that work needs to be done. A society in which people work is, in terms
of its basic structure and values, very different from one in which they do not.
The midrash at the beginning of Lekh Lekha asks: When God told
Avraham, “Go forth from your native land . . . to the land which I will show
you” (Bereishit 12:1), how did Avraham know when he had arrived at the
right place? From a mystical point of view, one might assume that he was
attracted by the kedusha (sanctity) inherent within the land. But the
midrash gives a very non-mystical explanation:
Rabbi Levi said: When Avram walked through Aram
Naharayim and Aram Nachor, he saw the people there eating, drinking and acting
loosely. Avram said to himself, “I hope that I do not have a portion in this
land.” When he arrived at the cliffs of Tyre (what is now called Rosh Ha-nikra,
at the northern border of Israel), he saw people busying themselves with weeding
during the season for weeding, hoeing during the time for hoeing, etc. He said
to himself, “I hope that I will have a portion in this land.” (Bereishit
Rabba 39:8)
When Avraham saw people lounging around, eating and drinking and having a
good time, he knew that he had not yet arrived. But when he saw people
performing agricultural tasks that needed to be done, he sensed that he had come
to the promised land. That is what attracted him. This was not a land whose
people were devoted to the quest for pleasure but rather to commitment, work and
responsibility. These are the things that define a
culture.
There is a third basis as well to the emphasis on work, and this is more
specifically religious in nature. A person who works is a partner to God in
ma’aseh bereishit (creation). In this respect, he is imitating God.
Usually we speak of imitating God by being merciful, or by performing acts of
chesed (kindness), but the midrash also tells us:
Rabbi Yehuda ben Rabbi Simon said: [The verse
states,] “After the Lord your God you shall walk” (Devarim 13:5) . . .
[What does this mandate of imitatio Dei entail?] At the beginning of the
world’s creation, the Holy One occupied Himself first with planting, as it says,
“And the Lord God planted a garden in Eden” (Bereishit 2:8); so too, when
you enter the Land [of Israel], occupy yourselves first with planting—and thus
it says (Vayikra 19:23), “When you enter the land and plant all
fruitbearing trees. . .” (Vayikra Rabba 25:3)
Of course, the trees are symbolic of man’s
contribution to this world, to nature—something which is planted by human
agency, rather than something which appears spontaneously. There are numerous
other midrashim in this general vein.
THE REDEMPTIVE QUALITY OF
WORK
The thrust of all this is that there is significance
to work, quite apart from the need to pay your bills. There is, if you will, a
certain redemptive quality to work, in psychological, social and religious
terms. This notion is not uniquely Jewish. When most people hear about the
importance of work, they immediately think of the Puritans and the Puritan work
ethic. The Puritans, of course, were very much influenced by Judaism. Certainly,
however, there are famous propagators of this general view in circles which are
neither Jewish nor Puritan.
In Thomas Carlyle’s early work Sartor Resartus, he describes his
own spiritual crisis. He speaks first of what he describes as “The Everlasting
No,” the voice of cynicism and skepticism, but even beyond that of ennui,
of a sense of the lack of purpose, meaning, direction and substance in life.
From there he moves on to describe “The Center of Indifference,” which is still
a very lowkey type of existence, and then progresses to “The Everlasting Yea,”
that which is assertive and positive in relation to the world and human
existence. At the heart of the chapter on “The Everlasting Yea” is the notion of
work. For Carlyle, the great prophet of work is the late eighteenth-century,
early nineteenth-century German writer Goethe. In a famous line, Carlyle says,
“Close thy Byron; open thy Goethe!” Work is central to “The Everlasting Yea”
precisely because of its redemptive capacity.
In that context, one can view work as part of the collective human
responsibility to establish human hegemony and to impose a certain character on
nature as a whole. The ennobling conception of work, the sense of challenge, the
work ethic (in contrast to a sybaritic, hedonistic existence) can also be found
in a secular context. But for us, this is not simply a question of engaging in a
great Romantic quest to place the world under human imprint. This is part of
what we are doing for God, part of our relationship to Him: we are His guards
and we are His laborers. This presents matters in a totally different
perspective.
A DIVINE MANDATE
Our attempt to place the human imprint on nature is
part of God’s mandate: “Fill the earth and master it, and rule over the fish of
the sea, the birds of the sky, and all living things that creep on earth”
(Bereishit 1:28). But whereas that mandate in the first chapter is
formulated in terms of rights, in the second chapter (“le-ovdah
u-leshomrah”) it is formulated in terms of obligation— it is part of our
responsibility, part of our task.
This notion of the centrality and importance of work, as opposed to
pursuing a life of leisure and hedonism, runs counter to the message that is
inundating the Western world. The implicit idea in all the crass advertising you
see is that, ideally, you shouldn’t work at all; ideally, you would retire when
you’re eighteen. Small wonder that many people have reached the conclusion that
the less they work, the better off they are. The notion of leisure has suddenly
become a problem in sociological and moral terms. There is a whole literature
about the problem of leisure, precisely because work is perceived as a necessary
evil, and not as spiritually redemptive.
For us, however, the sense of effort, of striving, above all of working
(in Milton’s phrase) “as ever in my great Taskmaster’s eye,” is very central.
“Le-ovdah u-leshomrah,” the sense of the importance of work and a
work-oriented life, is part of the universal mandate; it is part of what we, as
benei-Torah, understand to be central to our
being.
GLATT KOSHER HEDONISM
I mention this point particularly to an American
audience. In recent years, one observes on the American scene a terribly
disturbing phenomenon: the spread of hedonistic values, but with a kind of
glatt-kosher packaging. There was a time when the problem of hedonism for
religious Jews didn’t often arise, because even if you wanted to have the time
of your life, there wasn’t very much that you could do. The country clubs were
all barred to Jews, there weren’t many kosher restaurants, there were no kosher
nightclubs, etc. In the last decade or two, a whole culture has developed geared
towards frum Jews, where the message is enjoy, enjoy, enjoy, and
everything has a hekhsher (kosher certification) and a
super-hekhsher. The message is that whatever the gentiles have, we have
too. They have trips to the Virgin Islands, we have trips to the Virgin Islands.
Consequently, there has been a certain debasement of values, in which people
have a concern for the minutiae of Halakha (which, of course, one should be
concerned about), but with a complete lack of awareness of the extent to which
the underlying message is so totally non-halakhic and
anti-halakhic.
Don’t misunderstand me—I am not opposed to people enjoying themselves to
some extent. I am not arguing for a totally ascetic approach to life; I don’t
live that way myself, and what I don’t practice I certainly am not going to
preach. In a sense, I don’t practice it because I don’t really think that it is
demanded. (There certainly were gedolim [great rabbis] who did advocate
it, but others disagreed.) The question is something else entirely. The question
is not whether there is room in human life for a person to have a certain
measure of pleasure. Rather, the question is what is his basic perspective? How
much does he involve himself in this? Does he see himself as basically being
born to enjoy or to work?
There is nothing wrong with a person wanting to enjoy, to have a good
meal. But if you open up the food critic’s column in a newspaper it is simply
muktzeh machmat mi’us (untouchable because of being revolting)! A person
who is morally sensitive finds it impossible to read those columns. They begin
discussing, for example, the advantages of one airline food over another: here
the food was a little bit underdone, there a little bit overdone, the vegetables
were a little too fresh, not fresh enough; they begin to go into the finest
details. It is astonishing that a person should devote so much time and effort
and energy to these questions, and should assume that his readers are going to
do so as well, when it is all merely a matter of knowing exactly what the food
will be like when you happen to fly. To assign that kind of attention to this
kind of nonsense?
To some extent, this feeling has permeated our world: a whole culture of
enjoyment has begun to take hold. This is something which is recent, and with
which anyone who is a ben-Torah, certainly, should in no way identify or
associate. That whole culture advocates that man is born for pleasure, but
unfortunately has to work if he wants to enjoy. In contrast, we have to know
that “Adam le-amal yulad,” Man is born to do labor” (Iyyov
5:7).
MATTERS OF WISDOM
I’ve addressed myself here to one major question,
namely, the sense of a person’s existence in the service of God, and the
responsibilities and obligations which attend upon that existence: obligations
vis-a-vis God, the world and oneself. The importance of work, and of
constructive contribution through involvement in the world and society, is very,
very clear, and is a cardinal element in our basic worldview. There is, though,
another aspect to this question, which at this point I will simply mention. The
Rambam said above that a person should engage in only two things—divrei
chokhma and yishuvo shel olam. What he does not describe there is the
breakdown between these two.
Surely, this is a very major question for us, and it is a significant and
legitimate question at a universal level as well. To what extent should one
engage in work—and by work I mean not simply making money, but rather
constructive activity—and to what extent should he pursue wisdom? A gentile,
too, has a certain dimension of talmud Torah: “Rabbi Meir says: Even a
gentile who occupies himself with the Torah is like a High Priest” (Sanhedrin
59a). The gemara later understands this in terms of more universal
wisdom, the Seven Noachide Laws. Even secular advocates of the work ethic have
had to deal with the relation between work and other cultural, aesthetic or
moral values. How much more so for us, for whom Torah study is so central—“You
shall meditate upon it day and night” (Yehoshua 1:8). Thus, while our
position is clear regarding work versus hedonism, the question of work versus
Torah study is entirely different, and will be treated independently in the next
lecture.
APPENDIX TO LECTURE
ONE:
Does the Torah Supplant or
Supplement Universal Values?
At the beginning of this lecture, I proposed that we
deal with three levels of duty incumbent upon us: as human beings, as Jews, and
as benei-Torah. I then discussed the first of these, namely, our
general responsibilities as humans. However, this entire discussion entails the
assumption that, subsequent to the Jewish Nation’s keritat berit
(formulation of a covenant) with God, we are still bound by the more general
norms that preceded it. It is this assumption I would like now to
address.
NATURE AND GRACE
A berit (covenant) is something special and
unique; by definition, it delineates a particular relationship between God and a
specific community. What then happens to more universal elements? Do these fall
away because of the exclusivity of the new relationship? Or do we regard the new
relationship as being superimposed upon the old, but not at odds with
it?
Even according to the latter approach, at times there may be a conflict
between a universal value and a specific one. Fundamentally, however, this
approach regards the specific covenant as complementing and building on top of
the universal covenant, rather than replacing it and rendering it obsolete.
According to this approach, we do not believe that what existed until now was
merely scaffolding which was needed until the building was complete, but now
that the building is finished, everything else is insignificant. Instead, we
assume that whatever commitments, demands and obligations devolve upon a person
simply as a member of the universal community, will also apply to him within his
unique context as well; but in addition, there are also new
demands.
This question has been raised extensively within the Christian context,
where it is referred to as the issue of “nature and grace.” Does the order of
grace—which is the more specific relationship of a given community towards
God—do away with the order of nature: natural values, natural morality and
natural religion? Or is the order of nature fundamentally sound, significant and
normative, but in addition to it comes the order of grace? Broadly speaking,
within the Christian context, the more rationalistic and humanistic thinkers
have stressed that the universal component remains in force. Those who espoused
a more anti-humanistic and anti-rationalistic line generally felt that anything
which human reason develops, anything which is universal, anything which is not
part of the specific order of revelation, is absolutely meaningless and not
binding. In fact, they felt it may even be injurious, because it leads a person
to think that these kinds of universal values are significant, whereas in
reality the order of nature was good for one phase of human history but has been
totally replaced by the order of grace.
THE TEST OF SHABBAT
Translating this into our categories, I recall years
back hearing a talk by mori ve-rabbi Rav Yitzchak Hutner zt”l
regarding the relationship between berit Avraham and berit Noach
(God’s covenants with Avraham and Noach). As he put it, did berit Avraham
come “on top” of the foundation of berit Noach, or was it meant to
replace it? Rav Hutner wished to learn from Rabbeinu Yona (Berakhot 49a)
that the latter was the case, and he took Shabbat as the test case. Jews, of
course, are commanded not to work on Shabbat. However, Chazal interpreted
the verse, “Summer and winter, day and night shall not cease” (Bereishit
8:22) as teaching us that Benei Noach (descendants of Noach, i.e.
general humanity) are always obligated to work; in fact, a gentile who refrains
from melakha (labor) on Shabbat is punished! (See Sanhedrin 58b.)
Evidently, concluded Rav Hutner, the universal value of “[They] shall not cease”
has been countervailed within our more specific Jewish context. Thus, the new
berit is meant to replace the old.
I do not adopt this general approach; in fact, I think quite the contrary
is true. Whatever is demanded of us as part of Kenesset Yisrael does not
negate what is demanded of us simply as human beings on a universal level, but
rather comes in addition. (Regarding Shabbat, let me just briefly note that the
sanctity of Shabbat does not abrogate the universal value of work, but rather
adds an additional element to the picture.)
RENEWING OR COMPLETING THE
TORAH
Similarly, I believe mattan Torah (the giving
of the Torah) also needs to be understood in a dual fashion. At one level,
mattan Torah was a wholly new departure; there was nothing like it
before. One can indeed speak of “Nittena Torah ve-nitchadsha halakha”—the
Torah was given and the law was renewed. In this vein, the Rambam states that
although some mitzvot (such as the seven Noachide laws) were given before
mattan Torah, we are obligated by them only because they were reiterated
at Sinai.As examples, he cites the prohibitions of eating ever min ha-chai
(a limb from a live animal) and gid ha-nasheh (the sciatic nerve),
and the commandment of circumcision. Although these appear previ- ously (with
regard to Noach, Ya’akov and Avraham respectively), our obligation is based
solely on the fact that they were reinforced through mattan
Torah.
In another sense, however, one can regard Torah not as a totally new
chapter in human history, but rather as the pinnacle of the earlier development.
Although in one perspective Torah can be seen as unique and relating only to
Kenesset Yisrael, there is another perspective in which one can view
Torah as being the highest stage in human development. The Rambam elsewhere
seems to speak in these terms, using a very telling phrase. When discussing the
evolution of Torah, he says:
Six precepts were given to Adam . . . An additional
commandment was given to Noach . . . So it was until the appearance of Avraham,
who, in addition to the aforementioned commandments, was charged to practice
circumcision. Moreover, Avraham instituted the Morning Prayer. Yitzchak tithed
and instituted the Afternoon Prayer. Ya’akov added [the prohibition of eating]
the sciatic nerve and he inaugurated the Evening Prayer. In Egypt, Amram
(Moshe’s father) was commanded additional mitzvot, until our master Moshe
arrived and the Torah was completed through him. (Hilkhot Melakhim
9:1)
The phrase, “nishlema al yado, it was completed through him,”
suggests that there were various stages and that Moshe is the pinnacle, not that
Moshe’s Torah simply disposes of everything which had preceded
it.
CAN THE TORAH PERMIT WHAT UNIVERSAL LAW
FORBIDS?
The major text dealing with the relationship between
Jewish law and universal law is the famous Mekhilta at the beginning of
Mishpatim which addresses the issue of one who kills a gentile. In
parashat Noach, there appears a general directive to humanity: “Whoever
sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed” (Bereishit 9:6).
However, a verse in Mishpatim (Shemot 21:14) seems to indicate a
Jew is put to death only if he murders a fellow Jew. How are we to understand
this?
Issi ben Akiva says: Before the giving of the Torah,
we were prohibited to murder. After the giving of the Torah, instead of being
more stringent, are we now more lenient!? (Mekhilta De-Rabbi Yishma’el,
Parasha 4, s.v. Ve-khi Yazid)
Issi ben Akiva finds it inconceivable that something which had previously
been forbidden to general humanity would now be permitted to Jews by the Torah.
The gemara applies this reasoning with regard to various laws, asking
simply, “Is it possible that there is anything at all which is permitted to a
Jew, yet nonetheless is prohibited to a non-Jew?”
The principle elucidated by Issi ben Akiva does not necessarily negate
the possibility that the new berit abolishes the old one. One may argue
that indeed the new berit supplants the old, and the Jew can approach God
only through God’s covenantal relationship with Kenesset Yisrael—but in
terms of its content, the new berit must be more demanding than the old
one.
Even if this is so, it does not matter much for our purposes. When trying
to understand what are the normative demands made upon us, there is not a great
difference between saying that the old berit is gone and the new one
comprehends all of the contents of the old, and saying that there exists a dual
level of responsibility. Practically speaking, both positions agree that
whatever is demanded of a person on a universal level is a priori
demanded of a Jew as well; Torah morality is at least as exacting as general
morality. The only difference is whether we formulate the demand as emanating
from a general covenant or from the specific berit. Thus, part of what is
demanded of a ben-Torah is simply, on an initial level, what is demanded
of every person as a human being.
DEREKH ERETZ KADMA
LA-TORAH
Broadly speaking, this is what is intended by the
celebrated phrase, “Derekh eretz kadma la-Torah” (“Civility preceded the
Torah”). Chazal (Vayikra Rabba 9:3) understood this in historical
terms: the Torah came twenty-six generations after the precepts of derekh
eretz had already been in effect. But there is another meaning to this
phrase, which refers to logical or axiological priority. The Maharal (Netivot
Ha-Torah, Netiv Derekh Eretz) understands it in this sense. The ben-Torah
in you is built on the spiritual person in you; if it is the other way
around, then you are walking on your head, so to speak.
Let me emphasize that this has nothing to do with the question of what is
more valuable. If we say that something is prior to something else, it does not
necessarily mean that it is more important. For example, there are two ways we
can understand Chazal’s requirement that someone who wants to be a
ben-Torah must be “yirato kodemet le-chokhmato—his fear [of
Heaven] must precede his wisdom” (Avot 3:9). It is entirely conceivable
that Chazal intend to say that ultimately the yira is really more
important than the chokhma (as important as the chokhma may be).
However, we can also understand this as referring to logical precedence; and
what serves as the basis is not necessarily the most important element. Although
foundations must precede a building both temporally and logically, no one would
imagine that they are more important than the building.
Chazal themselves may have been divided on this question, as would
appear in the following dialogue:
While Rabbi Simon and Rabbi Elazar were sitting,
Rabbi Ya’akov bar Acha passed in front of them. The one said to the other, “Let
us stand before him, because he is a man who fears sin.” The other said, “Let us
stand before him because he is a scholar.” He replied, “I tell you he fears sin
and you tell me he is a scholar!?” [In other words, I praise his fear of sin,
and you think that being a scholar is greater?] (Shabbat
31b)
The one who believes that chokhma is more important than yira
does not negate the fact that yira must precede chokhma. The
kind of chokhma which may be more important than yira is only one
which is rooted in yira. Chazal say (e.g. Ta’anit 7a) that
chokhma which is not rooted in yira, God forbid, is not an elixir
of life but rather a potion of death.
So, in speaking of “Derekh eretz kadma la-Torah,” we should not in
any way prejudge what is more or less important, simply because one precedes the
other. The question of importance is a totally independent issue. But as far as
kedima—what provides the matrix, the context, the foundation—one can
speak of the logical and not only the temporal priority of derekh eretz
over Torah.
A MENSCH AND A
BEN-TORAH
Thus, our specific Jewish commitment rests on our
universal commitment, and one cannot address oneself only to the specific
elements while totally ignoring the general and the universal ones. Therefore,
in delineating what a ben-Torah should be striving for, the initial level
of aspiration is a general one: to be a mensch, to hold basic universal
values, to meet normative universal demands.
This point has no bearing upon the question of the temporal sequence via
which a person attains his values. I mentioned before that Chazal say
there was a period stretching over millennia during which the world had
derekh eretz and didn’t have Torah. This does not mean that, moving from
the macrocosm to the microcosm, one therefore should practice the same while
educating his children, saying, “We’ll devote the first ten or so years to
making a mensch out of him, and then when he is bar-mitzva we will see to
it that he becomes an observant Jew as well.” Obviously, with- in the world in
which we live, this is not an advisable option. If you want your child to be a
ben-Torah and a shomer mitzvot, you have to imbue him with values
of Torah and yirat Shamayim from a very early age. But this still means
that as he grows and matures, he must be given to understand that he needs to
address himself to various levels of obligation, one being universal and the
other specific to him as a Jew.
NOTES
1 The second level of responsibility will be
addressed in lecture #3 and the third level in lecture #4.
2 This was later printed as, “Abortion: A Halakhic
Perspective,” Tradition 25 (1991), pp. 3-12, and appears on Yeshivat Har
Etzion’s Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash: http://www.vbm-torah.org/halakha/abortion.htm.
3 See Bava Kama 90b-91b and Rambam, Hilkhot
Chovel U-mazik 5:1.
4 Rambam, Hilkhot Sanhedrin 26:3.
5 Shabbat 135a, Bava Batra 110b.
6 Commentary on the Mishna, Chullin
7:6.
7 See, for example, Chullin 33a and
Sanhedrin 59a.
(Based on a transcript by Ramon
Widmonte.
This sicha was originally delivered to
first-year students at Yeshivat Har Etzion in Winter 5747 [1986-7]. It has not been reviewed by Harav
Lichtenstein.)
The lectures in this series have been collected into
a book entitled, By His Light: Character and Values in the Service of
God. It can be ordered from
here: http://www.vbm-torah.org/ralbooks.htm.
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