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Torah
LishmaH – A
new Horizon
By
Rav Elyakim
Krumbein
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This
shiur is dedicated in memory of Shmuel b'reb David Ehrenhalt, z"l,
father
of our alumnus Steve. May the entire Ehrenhalt family be comforted among the
mourners of Tzion and Yerushalayim.
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Yeshivat
Har Etzion mourns the death of Yona Baumel, z"l. Mr. Baumol died on Friday,
without fulfilling his heart's deepest desire: to discover the fate of
his son – and our talmid - Zecharia, last seen on the Sultan Yakoub
battlefield in Lebanon 27 years ago. We
continue to pray for Zecharia's return.
HaMakom yenakhem etkhem be-tokh she'ar avelei Tzion
veYerushalayim.
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Lecture
#15:
THE
ETHICAL FOUNDATION OF TORAH AND ITS STUDY
I.
"The soul of the Torah" – the idea and its concrete
expression
Let
us briefly go back to the end of the previous shiur, and then mark the
path ahead.
We
ended the last shiur with Rav Kook's commentary on birkot
ha-Torah, the blessings recited over the Torah. Rav Kook said that while
Torah is indeed an object of rational study, this external reality conceals its
truer content: the Torah is "the source of life" that embraces all of life. This
is evident in the fact that the term "study" ("limmud") is merely one of
a variety of concepts appearing in birkot ha-Torah to describe the union
of the people of Israel and the Torah. Along with "study," we find "occupation"
("issuk") in Torah, "pleasantness in our mouths," and "its being given to
us." Even though in practice it takes up the majority of our time and
effort, the cognitive act of Torah study constitutes only one aspect of a
multi-faceted relationship.
It
is interesting to note that Rav Kook applied this idea in a halakhic context as
well (Responsa Orach Mishpat, no. 11). The Ramban maintains that the
obligation to recite birkat ha-Torah is by Torah law. Rav Kook argues
that according to this position the blessing is fundamentally not a "blessing
recited over a mitzva" that relates to a specific act of study. Rather,
it refers "to the entirety of the great goodness that God, blessed be He,
illuminated our darkness with the light of the Torah." Only at a later stage did
Chazal, who established that every mitzva requires a blessing, add
to birkat ha-Torah the dimension of "a blessing recited over a
mitzva," which requires that it be said prior to learning, just as every
other mitzva requires a blessing prior to its performance.
As
we have seen, this understanding of the Torah is what makes study
lishmah. But the understanding alone, of course, is insufficient. This
truth needs to be internalized in the various areas of one's life, and not just
in the beit midrash, in order for it to serve as a source of deeper
involvement. In a way reminiscent of Nefesh Ha-chayim, we see here that
the deep connection to Torah study is generated by assimilating the meaning of
the Torah in broader areas of existence. A person whose entire life is
illuminated with the light of the Torah, based on a living relationship with its
presence as "the Divine soul of the perfect world," can attain this level of
lishmah.
However,
in order for these words to proceed beyond the level of mere slogans, we must go
into further detail: What does Rav Kook mean when he speaks of life in the light
of the Torah? How does one live such a life?
From
the perspective of Jewish ethics, the task before us is not exceptional. One of
the guiding principles running through our ethical literature is that general
ideas must be translated into particulars, or else they will have little
practical significance. If a lofty idea is not brought down to concrete reality,
it will remain detached and it will lack any hold on concrete reality.
This is especially critical in the case of the teachings of Rav Kook, whose
modes of expression tend to sweeping poetic vision. For him, the term "meaning"
is a double-edged sword: It is indeed necessary to ground ideas in concrete
reality, but practical and factual details lose their meaning and "dry up," when
they are not infused with a great spirit, born of the higher planes of
existence. Though Rav Kook concedes these two aspects of “meaning,” his writings
give more weight to spiritual flight than to the practical language needed to
connect to the real world. For this reason, illustrating his ideas demands
special effort. Let us now begin.
II.
Torah is the foundation of personal ethics
The
"soul of the perfect world," that cosmic force that strives to elevate the
universe – where do we find its immediate expression; where does it touch most
closely upon the life of the individual? In the realm of personal ethics. We
shall first present a general exposition of this principle, and then examine its
reflection in Rav Kook's writings.
Man's
need to elevate himself and reach a higher spiritual level is not a demand
imposed upon him from without, but rather a response to a drive found within
him. This drive is rooted in the fact that man is part of the universe, in which
is implanted this stream of perpetual elevation – which is nothing but the
spirit of the Torah. Life based on the desire to connect in the most practical
and detailed manner to this moral-vital force nurtures man's connection to the
Torah in an absolutely natural manner. And conversely - distancing oneself from
the desire to elevate oneself and achieve moral progress, and viewing goodness
and truth as an oppressive burden weighing down upon man, extinguishes the spark
of love for Torah and the ability to study it out of joy and emotional
involvement. It is the spirit of the Torah that invigorates the laws that a
person studies, analyzes and defines, laws that perfect the ways of the world in
accordance with the will of God as it is revealed in the Torah. That same spirit
of perfection is what animates the deeds of a person who strives to correct his
ways. It is impossible to separate between them.
Rav
Kook expresses this idea in various formulations, the common denominator being
the idea that if a person wishes to unite with the spirit of the Torah, he must
dedicate himself to repentance and personal ethical
perfection:
Paucity
of the sweet pleasantness of the Torah is caused by a deficiency in the Jewish
nature of the soul, which must be corrected by way of repentance that is
directed at this deficiency. Once attention is paid to correcting this
deficiency, the supernal light of the holy nature of the soul immediately begins
to shine, and the sweetness of the Torah begins to reveal itself. (Orot
ha-Torah, 7, 4)
An innate Jewish trait is the molding of a practical life-style that is
suffused with the spirit of lofty ideas. This is inherent in the idea of
mitzvot, a concept which traditionally is one of the most unacceptable to
and the most challenged by Christian-Western thought. To us, mitzvot are
the concrete world’s bridge to the spirit, and the real-life actualization of
the divine will. But to the non-Jewish outsider, mitzvot seem soulless
rote performances. General culture transposes onto mitzvot one of its own great maladies – the
spiritual desiccation of the real world, the habit of contemplating and talking
about great values, which are then quickly forgotten precisely when
circumstances cry out for their realization. A student of Torah who, having been
exposed to the non-Jewish viewpoint, conducts his personal life with this sense
of detachment, is incapable of tasting the sweetness of the Torah, in the
practical arena as well as in the study hall. But one who is imbued with the
authentic Israelite standpoint, excited by the promise – held out by the Torah -
of the elevation of life in all its details, can experience Torah’s sweetness as
he engages it cognitively.
III.
Repentance and Torah
The
conceptual proximity between repentance and Torah study at its highest level
expresses itself in Orot ha-Torah in a manner that is reminiscent of what
we learned in Nefesh ha-Chayim:
The
clarity of understanding what is studied will grow in correspondence to the
clarity of the repentance prior to study. The intellect rises in accordance with
the rising of the will, and it becomes clarified in accordance with the clarity
of the will.
Higher
repentance, that which is based on great love and clear cognition, raises the
entire content of study to a level of fruitfulness and welling forth that is
unparalleled in the study of any discipline by itself. (Orot ha-Torah, 6,
2-3)
Here Rav Kook adopts the guidance given by Rav Chayim of Volozhin – in
order to prepare oneself for Torah study, one should first meditate upon
repentance and the fear of heaven. One gets the impression that the connection
between repentance and Torah study is more comprehensive, and that it is not
limited to those moments of preparation for study. We already reached this
conclusion from the Nefesh ha-Chayim itself, based, among other things,
on the overall structure of the book. Rav Kook, however, proposes his own unique
understanding of the matter.
We have already encountered Rav Kook's view that the fear of heaven is
the key to successful Torah study, and the two paragraphs cited above expand on this. They speak of
repentance characterized by "clarity" – clarity of the intellect (clear
recognition) and clarity of the will – as a significant qualitative contribution
to study. In addition, Rav Kook introduces an important emotional dimension:
repentance based on love, and even "great love." As for clarity, it seems from
here that clarity is a quality that is not subject to compartmentalization. A
"clear" person is clear in all areas: in his ethical thinking and in the conduct
of his life based on clear judgment and consideration, and devoid of conscious
or unconscious self-deception. This clarity also reveals itself in his
intellectual studies. On the other hand, a person whose objectives in life are
unclear and whose moral values are distorted, who substitutes evil for good and
secondary for primary – his way of seeing things is unclear, and this trait will
also impair his ability to reach the depth of truth regarding any Torah
matter.
The second idea, repentance based on love, is connected here to unmatched
fruitfulness and welling forth. Rav Kook asserts that this creativity comes from
a plane that is above the learning act in itself. Once again we come to the
essence of the Torah, the vital fountain, the identification with which allows
man to take part in the stream of universal ascent. One of the conditions for
such identification, argues Rav Kook, is “higher” repentance – repentance based
on love. When projected onto the life of the individual, the inclination toward
perfection of the world is translated into a desire for personal spiritual
perfection.
Why specifically repentance "based on love"? Because in order to reach
repentance based on love, a person must wean himself from the feeling that the
Torah comes to crush the vigor of human life. This secret had not been revealed
to the Haskala authors whose writings we have examined; for them the
clash between the Torah and life was a given. Rav Kook agrees that this idea
impairs the creativity and the streaming current of study, just as it impairs
life itself. But a person who recognizes the truth engages in repentance based
on love. He says to himself: "The Torah is not against me – it is for me." All
of the demands of Halakha and the Torah's ethics are meant to bring man to his
full stature and to realize his unique potential.
IV.
Repentance and the faculty of memory
In
another passage Rav Kook explains a famous rabbinic statement which explicitly
connects the moral level of the Torah student to his cognitive achievements, and
especially to the sharpness of his memory:
When
a person rises to elevated ideas, and adjusts his ways in accordance with them,
in the depths of his spirit, he reaches the root of the Torah, in its highest
form, the objective of which is to raise the world to its intended supremacy.
And thus whatever he learns of the particulars of the Torah, it is not new to
him, but rather like remembering something that he already potentially knows.
This is the mystery of "because they are pious, their Torah is preserved"
(Berakhot 32b). (Orot ha-Torah, 6, 4)
On the face of it, it would seem that every new Torah particular that a
person learns is new to him, something that he did not previously know. Yet all
of these particulars are part of the grand vision that will eventually be
realized, but already exists in potentia now.
On the other hand, establishing practical life on the foundations of the Torah's
morality creates closeness between man and the transcendent "root of the Torah."
Since the student's soul is close to the "the root of the Torah," he carries
within him the identification with this potential. Hence the new knowledge
belongs to the basic structure which is internally “programmed.” It is preserved
because it is not entirely new, but rather a refreshing of existing
knowledge.
V.
The novelty in Rav Kook's understanding as opposed to the Nefesh
ha-Chayim
The
main point that we have seen here is that fear of heaven (or religious morality)
is not only a necessary introduction to Torah study, the two values constituting
discrete elements that relate to each other reciprocally. Rather, through the
concept of "soul" or "root" of the Torah, Rav Kook shows that personal moral
progress and the teachings learned from the Torah are cut from the very same
cloth. The Torah is the total experience of life. But this totality does not
refer to the cloistering of oneself within the walls of the Bet Midrash and the
shutting-out of the rest of the world (as is common today in the Lithuanian
"yeshiva world"). What it means is that Torah is the pulse of the entirety of
life, and especially the life of Divine service in its broad sense. This idea is
further sharpened in the following words of Rav Kook:
…
Through the increase of the Torah and the light of its life, man and the entire
world become elevated. Without the light of the Torah in all the visions and
feelings of God-fearing and of prayer, evil would be able to penetrate into the
world, giving off its rot and decay, even though the spiritual impression is
great and strong. But to the extent that the Torah connects with it, goodness
and the splendor of sanctity will reveal themselves. (Orot ha-Torah, 11,
9)
Rav Kook knows that it is possible to relate to prayer and religious
service independently, apart from the Torah, in the spirit of the words of the
Sages: "There are three things upon which the world stands: the Torah, Divine
service and acts of loving-kindness." Even from this perspective, which
delineates separate realms of the activity of the spirit, one can reach a "great
and strong" level. But if we wish to reach a level of sanctity that washes away
all the dross and all the evil, we must see all Divine service as illuminated by
the light of the Torah, which is an undefeatable, universal force that
constantly strives to elevate all of existence.
As in the past, this idea as well has a precedent in the teachings of Rav
Chayim of Volozhin, and an examination of this precedent highlights Rav Kook's
contribution to the discussion. In contrast to Rav Kook, Rav Chayim wrote as
follows:
And
furthermore, that sanctity, and the vitality and light of the mitzvot,
which sanctify and invigorate the person who fulfills them, is taken exclusively
from the sanctity and light of the holy Torah. For a mitzva in itself has
no vitality or sanctity or light whatsoever, but only because of the sanctity of
the letters of the Torah written with regard to that mitzva… And the
reason for this is also as was explained above, that the mitzvot at their
root source are connected to and dependent upon the order of the supernal worlds
and forces. (But) the supreme source of the holy Torah is much higher than all
the worlds and forces, and it spreads through the inner essences of all of them,
and they receive their vitality and sanctity from it. Therefore it provides
vitality, sanctity and light to all the mitzvot. (Section 4, chapter
30)
Rav Chayim continues the "geographical" theme that we have previously
noted – the Torah is located at the highest point in the hierarchy of the
worlds, and therefore the sanctity of all the mitzvot stems from it
alone. In his commentary to Pirkei Avot, we find a precise formulation of
this idea, which essentially states that the words of Chazal regarding
the "three pillars of the world" are liable to be
misleading:
…
Accordingly, the Torah is not a third pillar standing by itself, but rather it
is all three pillars together, for without it nothing can stand.
(Ru'ach Chayim 1:2)
In Rav Kook, Rav Chayim's ideological statement assumes a vital and
existential dimension. The mitzvot flow from the Torah because the Torah
wishes to elevate and perfect man and the world, and this is the purpose of the
mitzvot. A person having this awareness experiences every mitzva
as growth and ascent. The "pleasantness" that rests in the Torah as a whole,
reveals itself tangibly in the particulars. Rav Kook wishes to take the mystical
teaching of the "vitality" that flows in the worlds and make it a fact of
life.
On second thought (and the final thought for this shiur), it is
clear that the more we examine the matter, the more it becomes evident that it
is difficult to find ideas in the writings of Rav Kook on this issue that are
not rooted in some way in the words of Rav Chayim of Volozhin. In one of his
glosses to Nefesh ha-Chayim, Rav Chayim relates to the experiential
feeling described above, when he explicates the blessing-formula recited over
mitzvot, "who has sanctified us with His
commandments":
…
From the moment that a person contemplates doing a mitzva, an impression
is immediately made above in its heavenly source, and from there he draws upon
himself an encompassing light, and supernal holiness rests upon him and
surrounds him… it also draws his heart to acquire a few more mitzvot,
since he is now sitting in the Garden of Eden, taking
shelter in the shadow of the wings of heavenly holiness. There is no way for the
evil inclination to rule over him, to incite or to seduce him. This is what they
said (Avot 4:2) that one mitzva draws another. If a person pays
attention when he performs a mitzva, he will understand and feel in his
soul that he is now surrounded and dressed in holiness, and a steadfast spirit
has been renewed within him. This is what Scripture says: "These are the
commandments that a man must do and live in them" (Vayikra 18:5) – "in
them" – literally, in the midst of them, for he is then surrounded with the
holiness of the mitzva and encompassed by the air of the Garden of
Eden.
(Nefesh ha-Chayim, section 1, chapter 1, author's
note)
Rav Chayim was already clearly aware of the experiential force concealed
in his teachings, and he instructs us to realize this potential. Rav Kook's
novel contribution was to take this "footnote" of the Nefesh ha-Chayim,
and turn it into the body of the text. This development stems of course from his
own thinking, but also reflects his sensitivity to the needs of his
time.
(Translated
by David Strauss)
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