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RAV KOOK’S LETTERS
By Rav Tamir Granot
Lecture #19a
Development of
Halakha – Part I
Focus of the Letter
– The Question of Development of Halakha
As noted, Rav Kook’s letters 89-90 are successive
both chronologically and biographically. In the time that elapsed in between
them, Seidel sent Rav Kook another letter in which he questioned further Rav
Kook’s responses concerning slavery, and especially the theoretical dimension of
the development of morality and Halakha’s attitude towards it.
In order to understand the focus of the letter, let
us consider two slightly provocative questions. First, what did Seidel
understand about development from Rav Kook’s words in letter 89? Second, did he
understand correctly?
I believe that Rav Kook’s words at the beginning of
Section E. of the letter allude quite clearly to Seidel’s understanding:
“You said that
according to my words the Torah is continually developing; Heaven forbid that I
should say something so foreign.”
The first part of the sentence talks about Seidel’s
understanding – that “the Torah is continually developing.” From the
continuation, it is clear that the focus of the problem is the possibility of
change on the legal level. Unquestionably, what is written in the Torah does not
change; the text is fixed. The question is whether the normative law is fixed
and eternal, or whether it is subject to time. Of course, this is a crucial
question, pertaining to the foundations of faith.
The religious consciousness used to maintain – and
perhaps continues to maintain – the following equation:
Permanence = eternity = Divinity
Development = temporality = human Torah
If it is correct, this equation rejects out of hand
any positive discussion of the possibility of change. If development in the law
of the Torah requires acknowledgment that it is human – as God revealed Himself
once, and that revelation occurred in the past, while only human rulings are
made in the present – then faith in the Divinely-given Torah rejects any
discussion of development. Indeed, from the sentence quoted above, it would seem
that Rav Kook himself recoils from the thought that any such possibility could
be understood from his words.
Background to the
Problem in Classical Jewish Philosophy
The background to Rav Kook’s words, which we shall
get to later on, is important for our understanding of them. The most thorough
discussion on the subject is presented by the Rambam in his Moreh Nevukhim
(Guide of the Perplexed), and we shall now review what he says there in
order to mark out the coordinates within which the problem may be understood.
The Rambam’s
Position
The Rambam was the first to formulate a “historicist”
theory in explaining the reasons for the commandments. He happened upon the
Book of the Sabeans, which he describes as an ancient work about ancient
cultures and their ways of worship. In this book, the Rambam found parallels and
echoes of various mitzvot, especially the laws pertaining to sacrifices:
… and the book by
Yitzchak the Sabean, with the proofs of the Sabean nation, and his great work on
the laws of the Sabeans and the details of their religion, festivals,
sacrifices, and prayers, and other matters relating to their faith. All of these
which I have mentioned are books of idolatry which have been translated into
Arabic. Unquestionably, they are only a small portion in relation to that which
has not been translated and is also no longer extant, but rather has been lost
over the course of time. Those which are still extant today include most of the
opinions of the Sabeans and their practices, some of which are still prevalent
in the world – such as the construction of temples and the images of metal and
stone placed in them, and the construction of altars and the offering of
sacrifices or various foods upon them, and the celebration of festivals, and the
gathering for prayers and for various types of service in those temples; the
apportioning of highly consecrated places with them, and calling them temples of
intellectual forms, and placing images upon the high mountains, etc., and the
honoring of those asherot and the establishment of the pillars, and other
such things which you can see in those books which I have mentioned. And the
knowledge of those opinions and those practices is of very great importance in
explaining the reasons for the mitzvot, for the whole essence of the
Torah and the axis upon which it turns is the erasing of such ideas from our
thoughts, and the remnants [of those practices] from our reality. Concerning the
erasure of the ideas from our thoughts, the Torah says, “Lest your heart be
tempted…” (Devarim 11:16), and “…whose heart turns away today” (ibid.
29:17). Concerning the erasure of the remnants of the practices from our
reality, the Torah says, “You shall destroy their altars and burn their groves…”
(Devarim 7:5), and “And you shall cause their name to be forgotten from
that place.” (Moreh Nevukhim III:29).
The Rambam pondered
the connection between the Torah and these ancient pagan sources, and this led
him to formulate the following world-view:
·
The Torah related
to the cultural and spiritual reality prevailing at that time.
·
In the period when
the Torah was given, the surrounding culture was mired in crude idolatry, which
also molded vulgar and/or tangible modes of pagan worship.
·
The Torah meant to
educate the people, and therefore it relates to the situation of the people at
that time, the modes of ritual known to them, and their religious conceptions.
·
The Torah proceeds
along the path of sublimation of existing habits: i.e., the use of existing
rituals with a change of their context and an adaption of them to the framework
of Divine worship.
The Rambam explains this development as
follows:
Many matters in our Torah follow the same principle
set down by the same Supreme Being, since it is impossible to go suddenly from
one extreme to the other, and thus it is not in accordance with human nature for
a person to suddenly abandon all that he is accustomed to. When God sent Moshe
to make of us a “kingdom of priests and a holy nation” through the knowledge of
God – as He explained, saying, “It has been shown to you that you might know…,”
“Know, therefore this day, and consider in your heart…,” and that we should
devote ourselves to His service – as He said, “And to serve Him with all your
hearts…,” and He said, “And you shall serve the Lord your God…,” and He said,
“And Him you shall serve…” - the prevailing custom practiced at the time
throughout the world, and the manner of service in which we had been brought up,
was the offering of all kinds of animals in those temples in which images had
been placed, and to bow down to them, and to offer incense before them.
Religious, ascetic individuals were at that time the ones devoted to service in
those temples made to honor the stars, as we have explained. Therefore, God in
His Divine wisdom and in His plan for all of His creatures, did not command us
to abandon all these forms of service and to forsake and nullify them, for that
would have been impossible for human nature – which is always comfortable with
that which is familiar – to accept. To do so then would be like a prophet coming
in our times and calling to serve God, saying, “Behold – God has commanded you
not to pray to Him, nor to fast, nor to cry out to Him in times of distress;
rather, your service of Him should be only in thought, without any action at
all.” Therefore, God permitted them these forms of service, transforming them
from the service of created beings and imaginary, unreal things, to service of
God. He accordingly commanded us to build a Temple for Him – “And you shall make
Me a Sanctuary…,” and that there should be an altar to His Name – “An altar of
earth shall you make for Me…,” and that sacrifices should be offered to Him –
“If someone from among you offers a sacrifice to God…,” and bowing down to Him,
and offering incense before Him, and He warned against performing such service
for other gods…” (ibid., III:32).
Thus, for example,
the Rambam explains, the source of the laws pertaining to the sacrifices is to
be found in pagan rituals which the Torah enlisted and altered for the purposes
of Divine worship. The offering of a sacrifice is, as it were, the offering of a
gift of food to God’s Table – i.e., it invokes a personal, tangible image of the
God Who is being served. To the Rambam’s view, a comparison with the Sabean
practices – the pagan religious literature that he cites – facilitates an
understanding of the Torah’s commandments pertaining to the blood, the
distinctions between the various parts of the animal sacrifice, and other
details:
We know that the idolaters tried to build their
temples and to place their images on the highest possible places, upon the
highest mountains. Therefore, Avraham Avinu sanctified Mount Moriah – because it
is the highest mountain there, and it was there that he proclaimed God’s Unity.
And he set down that the direction towards which he would pray would be the west
of that mountain, because the Holy of Holies is in the west – as Chazal
taught, “The Divine Presence rests in the west.” And Chazal also taught
in Massekhet Yoma that it was Avraham Avinu who established the direction
for prayer – i.e., the place of the Holy of Holies. The reason for this, to my
view, is that the prevailing custom in the world at the time was to worship the
sun, which was viewed as a deity. Unquestionably, all people would turn to the
east [to worship the sun], and therefore Avraham faced the west, at Mount Moriah
– i.e., at the site of the Temple, in order that his back would be towards the
sun. We see the inverse of this idea when Am Yisrael, at the time of
their wickedness and heresy and their backsliding to the earlier views, had
“their backs towards God’s Temple, and their faces forward, and they bowed down,
facing east, to the sun” (Yechezkel 8:15). (ibid., III:45)
Thus, the Rambam
presents a “historicist” theory, based on the assumption that the reasons for
the laws of the Torah are rooted in a particular historical reality. They have a
defined cultural context and are suited to a particular historical period.
This exposition
gives rise to two questions:
1) Would it be
correct, according to the Rambam’s view, to say that the commandments of the
Torah – for example, the laws pertaining to the sacrifices – are not suited to a
cultural situation in which our religious perception has changed, and in which
religious images are abstract and ideal, rather than personal and
plastic? Is this
not, in fact, the supposition of a fundamental contingency on historical time?
2) Based on the
above, would it not be appropriate to assume (or at least to expect) the
possibility of change in the commandments of the Torah, facilitating the
achievements of its educational objectives within the new cultural situation?
It is important to
emphasize the distinction between these two questions. The first is
philosophical and hermeneutical, and a positive response would not necessarily
entail a positive response to the second question, which pertains to the
normative level, where other considerations must also be taken into account.
Further on, it appears that the Rambam did indeed draw a clear distinction
between the two questions.
His answer to the
first question is set forth in one of the best-known chapters of Moreh
Nevukhim. He writes that indeed the Torah cannot be expected to adapt itself
to every person and to every period of time. The nature of the law is that it is
suited to the “majority,” not to everyone, and there may well exist a
socio-cultural reality and/or certain individuals for whom the Torah’s law is
unsuited, in the sense that it cannot fulfill its educational, religious
function with regard to them:
It is also important to know that the Torah does
not focus on individual cases, nor does it address itself to situations which
are rare. Rather, concerning whatever is desirable to achieve – whether it be a
positive intellectual, moral, or practical end – we focus on the majority and do
not pay attention to the exceptional or individual, nor to the injury to the
individual resulting from the decree and prescription of the Torah. For the
Torah is the Divine word, and if we consider the practical realm we find that
generally positive things sometimes involve individual injury – as we and others
have explained. On the basis of this distinction, it should not come as a
surprise that the aims of the Torah are not fulfilled in each and every
individual; rather, it is inevitable that there will be people for whom the
prescriptions of the Torah do not bring perfection, just as there
are beings which do not receive from the specific
forms in Nature all that they require. For all emanates from one God, a single
Source, “All given from the same Shepherd”… as God said, “For the congregation –
there shall be a single law for you” – but they are aimed towards the general
benefit, which means towards the majority, as we have explained. (ibid., III:34)
To the Rambam’s
view, this is a fundamental quality of the law. A law which has no rules is not
law; it contradicts itself. But rules, by their very nature, cannot be suited to
every possible situation. Therefore, the best arrangement that may be attained
is for them to be suited to the greatest majority of people and to the greatest
variety of situations:
It is impossible that it would be
otherwise; and we have already explained that that which is impossible has a
fixed nature and never changes. Further, it follows that the commandments cannot
vary according to changes in the conditions of people and of the times, like the
composition of a medication, which is specific to a person depending on his
constitution at a particular time. Rather, the guidance of the Torah must be
absolute and general, even though it may be positive in relation to some people
while not having the same positive effect on others. For if the Torah were
adapted in accordance with each individual, it would be imperfect in its
totality, with everything left to personal discretion. For this reason, it is
not proper that the fundamental principles of the Torah should be specific to
either a particular time or place; rather, the laws should absolute and general.
(ibid.)
At this point, we
encounter the second question: Could we not then accept, theoretically, the
Rambam’s jurisprudential argument concerning the generality of the law, while at
the same time maintaining legitimate procedures for replacing one rule by
another – to serve, from that point onwards, as a fixed rule with absolute
validity? The old, non-relevant law would not then necessarily merit greater
status than the new law, which is relevant. Many systems of law include rules
for change and amendment; they thereby preserve the general nature of the laws
while at the same time allowing for the possibility of change. Moreover, does
the Torah itself not provide for such procedures in authorizing the battei
din of every generation to rule in matters of law (Devarim 17:8-13)?
Does the rabbinical power of “hora’at sha’ah” (the temporary abrogation
of a law as an extraordinary measure to address a particular situation) not in
fact represent just such a procedure?
The Rambam’s answer
here is no less surprising than it is sharp:
Concerning a zaken mamrei
(rebellious elder): Since God knew that the laws of the Torah will always need
to be applied, in every place and time, in accordance with the changes of place
and events and the circumstances, requiring additions in some cases and
detractions in others, He therefore cautioned against such additions and
detractions, saying, “You shall not add to it, nor shall you detract from it” –
because this would lead to the collapse of the entire system of the Torah’s laws
and to the belief that it was not given by God. At the same time, permission was
given to the Sages of each generation – i.e., to the Sanhedrin – to create
fences for the protection of these Torah laws through enactments which they
would introduce so as to close loopholes. And these “fences” would be set down
for all generations to come, as the mishna teaches: “And make a fence
around the Torah.” And they were similarly permitted to dispense with some
actions prescribed by the Torah, or to permit some actions which the Torah
forbids, in a specific situation and in response to a specific event – but this
would not apply for all future generations, as we explained in the Introduction
to the Commentary on the Mishnah concerning hora’at sha’ah. By means of
this arrangement, the Torah remains forever the same, while it is applied to
each time period and every situation in accordance with its conditions. If every
individual sage had possessed this license and power, people would be lost in
the resulting multitude of disputes and differences of opinion.” (ibid., III:41)
The Rambam states
that the Torah is strict with its rules for change, and sets down, “You shall
not add to it, nor shall you detract from it” (Devarim 13:1) –
specifically because from a philosophical point of view (i.e., from the
perspective of the reasons for the mitzvot) there is justification for
change and development in the Torah. In other words, Torah law is protected from
change not because there is no positive justification for change, but rather the
opposite: it is specifically because such justification is easily perceived, but
its implementation on the normative level would violate the principle of the
Divinity of the Torah.
Hans Kelsen, a
prominent 20th century legal philosopher, developed the concept of
the “basic norms” of a legal system. For example, the basic norm of the legal
system in Israel is that the Knesset is the sole source of laws, and all
legislation derives its authority – or “bindingness” – from this presupposed
basic norm.
A simple example
will demonstrate the importance of recognizing the “basic norm.” Let us suppose
that a regular citizen petitions the High Court of Justice against some piece of
legislation that, to his mind, violates his rights. For example, the Ministry of
the Interior set down a timetable for submitting applications; this person was
late in his submission, and therefore forfeited certain benefits. He has some
justified reason, which is not specified in the law, for his delay; for the
purposes of our demonstration, we will suppose further that his reason is
explicitly rejected as a legitimate reason in the law. In this case, the High
Court must weigh whether to rule against the existing law, because it believes
that this citizen is right (exercising actual justice in a positive problem), or
to accept the ruling of the legislator, even though it is not just. If the court
rules for the law and against positive justice, it is only because it seeks to
fortify the “basic norm” of the legal system, which sets down the primary status
of the Knesset as the source of all legislation.
Returning to our
discussion, the “basic norm” of the halakhic system is the obligation to obey
the Divine command as expressed in the Torah. Any other legislation is validated
by virtue of the Divine command and its authority. Thus, for example, the
validity of a rabbinical enactment flows from the authority invested in the
rabbis by the Torah to enact takkanot. This may be compared to municipal
by-laws in Israel, whose validity flows from legislation by the Knesset.
Undermining the Divine status of the Torah therefore damages the “basic norm,”
thereby undermining the foundations of the entire system of Halakha. Since the
Divine laws are identified with eternity – i.e., the concept of being above time
and hence not subject to change – the Torah prevents the possibility of change
even by a beit din, with the commandment, “You shall not add… nor shall
you detract…” The status of rabbinical legislation throughout the generations –
including rabbinical enactments (gezerot), amendments (takkanot),
and temporary emergency measures (horaot sha’ah) – remains secondary.
To complete the
picture, we must mention that the Rambam negates the legitimacy of legislation
based on revelation; no prophet is entitled to introduce any law by virtue of
his prophecy. This position fits in with his general view, which awards eternal
validity to the laws of the Torah.
In summary, we may
say that the Rambam’s approach highlights the difference between the philosophy
and sociology of the commandments and their legal status. From the philosophical
point of view, the Rambam was the first to point out the historical context of
the Torah’s commandments, long before modern discoveries – of the Hammurabi Code
and of the laws of ancient worship – confirmed his exposition. From the point of
view of law, it was the same Rambam who, in the normative sphere, sealed any
crack that might have led to the possibility of change in the laws of the Torah
– at least on the formal level.
(To be continued)
Translated by Kaeren Fish
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