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Torah
LishmaH – A
new Horizon
Rav
Elyakim
Krumbein
Lecture
17:
"Belovedness" versus "Alienation"
I.
TORAH AS THE REMEDY OF ALIENATION
Though
Rav Kook has few rivals in the profundity of his ideas, he usually does not
present them in a well-developed format or in concrete detail. Let us,
therefore, continue our study of a chapter from Rav Shlomo Wolbe’s book "Alei
Shur,"
where the treatment is more systematic. The assumption that underlies his
discussion is that the Torah's presence in the lives of its students must go
well beyond the realm of study itself. It must embrace all of life's
experiences, and especially all of a person's observance of mitzvot and
worship of God. Rav Wolbe's teachings will bring us back again to the ideas of
Rav Kook.
As
we saw in the previous shiur, Rav Wolbe's point of departure is the
problem of emotional distance from the Torah, a disturbing reality which is the
lot of many who devote themselves to Torah study. Rav Wolbe identifies this
distance from the Torah with the well-known human problem: alienation. The
phenomenon of a person's detachment from himself seems to be a universal dilemma
that is unrelated to any moral deficiency or to the need to connect to Torah.
But as a thinker of the mussar movement, Rav Wolbe is convinced that the
source of this syndrome lies in base personality traits and moral flaws. When
evil desires and passions take hold of a person, and he becomes addicted to
goals that are not really beneficial to him on the fundamental level, that do
not advance his development or the realization of his innate “image of God,”
then he effectively denies his very essence and distances himself from his true
nature. In the words of Chazal, the evil inclination is a "strange god"
(Shabbat 105b [see previous shiur]) dwelling in man's heart. As
Rav Wolbe puts it, this force is liable to turn a person
into
a real stranger… devoid of feeling, understanding, connectedness, and
love.
The alienated person may not necessarily feel the depth of the
entanglement into which he has fallen. He lives his life without meeting
himself, and his mind is diverted in strange and sundry directions. When does he
begin to feel discomfort or to suffer from distress the source of which he does
not understand? When he engages in Torah study, or in general – when he prays or
performs a mitzva. Whether
he is aware of this or not, these actions bring him into close contact with the
world that is closest to him, and through which he is meant to express his
personality and intimate experience, but he doesn't know how to do this. Most of
his life is dedicated to superficial desires; he is incapable of lifting his
hand in order to take hold of the outstretched palm of the
Torah.
We
have already learned from Rav Kook that the spirit of the Torah is the fullness
of life, that is to say, the vitality of perfection and benevolence that
penetrates all corners of existence. Therefore, even on the individual level,
the Torah is "on my side," and not "against me," and essentially there is
nothing more "on my side" than it is. Rav Wolbe expresses a similar idea through
the following passage from Chazal. The Rabbis here repeatedly use the
term “yedid” – beloved – in an opening cryptic statement, which is then
homiletically deciphered:
Let
the beloved (yedid) son of the beloved come and build the beloved for the
beloved in the portion of the beloved and let the beloved (yedidim)
achieve atonement. "Let the beloved (yedid)" – this is King Shelomo,
about whom it is written: "And he sent by the hand of Natan the prophet; and he
called his name Yedidya, for the Lord's sake" (II Shemuel 12:25); "son of
the beloved" – this is Avraham, as it is written: "What has my beloved
(yedidi) to do in my house" (Yirmiyahu 11:15); "and build the
beloved" – this is the Temple, as it is written: "How lovely (yedidot)
are Your dwelling places" (Tehilim 84:2); "for the beloved" – this is the
Holy One, blessed be He, as it is written: "Now I will sing to my well-beloved
(li-yedidi)" (Yeshayahu 5:1); "in the portion of the beloved" –
this is Binyamin, as it is stated: "And to Binyamin he said, The beloved of the
Lord" (Devarim 33:12); "and let the beloved (yedidim) achieve
atonement" – this refers to Israel, as it is written: "I have given the dearly
beloved (yedidut) of my soul into the hand of her enemies" (Yirmiyahu
12:8). (Menachot 53a)
The
Torah is a world filled with love, peace, and good relations: between man and
his Creator, his fellow, the world, and himself. It is possible to study Torah,
to pray and to observe mitzvot in any situation, but this experience of
belovedness is reserved for one who is not under the domination of the idol of
"strangeness." The Gemara in Yoma (72b) brings the words of Rabbi
Yochanan, who expounds the word "zer" in the verse, "And you shall make
upon it a rim (zer) of gold round about" (Shemot 25:12), regarding
the ark in which the tablets of the covenant rest, by way of keri u-khetiv
(varying the reading by changing the vowels of the text’s
letter-consonants):
If
you are worthy (zakha), [the Torah] will be to you a crown (zer);
if you are not worthy, it will be strange (zar) to you.
In order to escape the alienation that detaches a person from the Torah,
it is necessary for a person "lizkot," that is to say, to purify
himself.
II. THe "Acquisition" of Torah
From
here Rav Wolbe derives the answer to his original question: Why are we not
naturally and with inner desire attracted to the Torah? Because "we are not yet
worthy, we have not yet refined ourselves." We must first purify ourselves from
superficial drives and passions and strengthen our true desires. Rav Wolbe
continues with a famous baraita, which can serve as an important source
for the entire approach. This baraita is found in the chapter that was
appended as the sixth chapter to tractate Avot, and deals with the
qualifications by virtue of which the Torah may be acquired. Tradition has
regarded it as the most important baraita of the entire chapter, and
because of it the chapter is known as "the chapter of Kinyan Torah
(acquisition of the Torah)." The term "kinyan" symbolizes a
relationship that goes beyond study, and it joins the variety of linguistic
expressions used by the Sages to describe our connection to Torah – as we have
already seen in the past. And so – if a person does not want to content himself
with the mere study of Torah, but rather wants to acquire it for his soul – what
exactly must he do?
The
baraita offers us forty-eight ways to acquire the Torah. Some of them are
closely related to the cognitive process – attentive listening, ordered speech,
close association with colleagues, attendance to scholars, and discussion with
students. Others are components of the "rational character" about which we have
learned in the past.
That is to say, a person must appreciate and esteem study and the search for
truth as a central value, and this attitude must translate into a willingness to
sacrifice on behalf of Torah study. Thus the baraita teaches that the
Torah is acquired through moderation in conversation, moderation in pleasure,
and the like.
But many of the means for acquiring the Torah are general character
traits:
Through
humility and cheerfulness… patience, a good heart… being content with one's lot…
claiming no credit for oneself, loving God, loving mankind, loving
righteousness, loving reproof…
The
acquisition of Torah values that are comprehended by way of the intellect is
connected to and unites with its living spirit, and this is conditioned on
emotional agreement. From this Rav Wolbe concludes that someone who wishes to
acquire the Torah must make a twofold effort: the toil of Torah study, and the
toil of acquiring positive character traits.
Rav
Wolbe found a midrash that illuminates the meaning of these qualifications by
virtue of which the Torah is acquired:
Forty-eight
times it says in the Torah "well" (be’er), corresponding to
the forty-eight qualifications by virtue of which the Torah is acquired. This is
what it says (Shir ha-Shirim 4:15): "A fountain of gardens, a well
(be'er) of living waters." (Shir ha-Shirim Rabba,
4)
In
the manifest Torah that we study there is a certain quality of immutability, of
eternal laws and statutes engraved in stone. But the spirit of the Torah
is a streaming well, whose waters are in constant motion. The verse in Shir
ha-Shirim ends with the words, "and streams from Lebanon." Seeing that we have entered
here into the world of midrashic imagery, it stands to reason that the
darshan assumes our familiarity with Chazal's identification of
"Lebanon" as a
metaphor for the Temple. The prophecy regarding "living waters"
flowing from Jerusalem (Zekharya 14:8) is also
associatively activated in our imaginative minds. The well of vitality stems
from the earthly place of the Shekhina, which symbolizes - in our
concrete world - the heart of cosmic reality. Our connection to the Torah in
this sense passes through forty-eight private "wells"; each good trait is a
well-spring.
Rav
Wolbe maintains that this characteristic of bubbling and streaming is a mark of
quality in cognitive study itself. He daringly asserts:
We
must annul the assumption that the Torah is studied only from books, and thus
the more books that a person knows, the greater he is in Torah. "Ligris"
("studying the material") must certainly be done from a book, but
"lemisbar" ("understanding") a person must do from himself. Regarding the
question, "From where did Avraham learn the Torah," Chazal answered: "He
learned Torah from himself" (Bereishit Rabba, 95, 2). And we must know
that even today a true Torah scholar learns from himself…. How does a person
learn Torah "from himself"?... Regarding this Chazal come to teach us
that a person digs these wells in his heart through the acquisition of the
forty-eight qualities, each one being "a well of living
water."
We
have here an alternate formulation of Rav Kook's assertion that repentance from
love –
raises
the entire contents 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; see shiur no. 15)
And
so too in his letter to Rav M.Y. Segel, which we cited in shiur no. 12,
Rav Kook explains at length and in simple language that developing the awe of
Divinity and personal morality are preconditions for fruitful
study.
In
short, the "Alei Shur" analyzes closeness to the Torah as an emotional
phenomenon, distinct from rational study. This dimension of closeness joins with
study in an organic manner, but in order to understand it and how to nurture it,
it is necessary to consider it as a separate entity. And in terms of our own
nomenclature, this is the dimension of lishmah. Study that is not
lishmah is study devoid of that great closeness, which is a person's
inner and natural mission. To study Torah lishmah is to study with as
full an understanding of the meaning of the Torah as is humanly possible, and
devotion to this meaning. This devotion is found in one's mind and in one's
heart and, as clearly emerges from the words of Rav Wolbe, also in the concrete
ways of one's life.
III. Looking Back
We
have taken the discussion of Torah lishmah back to the root emotional
state which originally propelled us on our journey: emotional distance from
Torah study. But in light of what we have learned from Rav Kook and from the
"Alei Shur," it seems that the time has come to reevaluate some of the
way-stations through which we have passed.
Let us recall the foundation that we laid for understanding the issue of
Torah lishmah. We spoke of two elements that fashion the basic structure
of the "issue." First, there is the world of the will and personal existential
experience, and the assumption that this world must find expression in Torah
study; and second, there is the question debated in the classic literature – in
which specific direction should this existential world be turned when a person
is learning. Here we came across various different outlooks. Some said that the
student must set his vision on the realization of the Torah in actual life.
Others saw understanding of the words of the Torah themselves as the mission.
The Chasidim maintained that the goal is to reach communion with God and
self-effacement before Him. But in light of the teachings of Rav Kook, elements
of which were just now presented in a different style by Rav Wolbe, what is left
of all of that?
It is my sense that something is happening here to all the disagreement
regarding Torah lishmah. When the Torah appears before us in its grand
dimensions, in the depth of its imperative, the wisdom of its guidance and its
flowing vitality – it is impossible to connect to it without
self-sanctification. The attempt to relate to the Torah exclusively through
cognitive study is like trying to seize hold of it only with one’s fingertips,
while leaving one’s essential self behind at a tense and painful distance. These
pains register in our consciousness as feelings of frustration and emptiness.
Someone who wishes to achieve a full hold on the Torah, to adopt and embrace it
– must stop withholding his existential powers, his commitment, and his love.
Everything is included – reason, action, communion - everything flows from one
wellspring. Not only is it impossible to exclude any of these factors, but it is
even difficult to see them as having the status of "serving" the study itself,
as a mere preparation for it or something that makes it
possible.
We
can put it another way. When we began to acquaint ourselves with Rav Kook, we
noted that we do not find in his writings any isolation of the intellectual
dimension, that "dissociation principle" which can be detected in the words of
Rav Chayim of Volozhin. We said that in Rav Kook’s view, it would seem that the
cognitive effort is the very definition of Torah study, whereas when we speak of
"lishmah" as an added dimension that accompanies Torah study, we are
speaking about contact with "the soul of the Torah," when the person's
motivations are identical with the will of God that is embodied in the Torah. We
are still speaking about lishmah as an expression of the person's
motivations, that which brings him to the Torah study itself,
which is cognitive by nature. We could have stopped here, and then our
established conceptual models would have remained in
place.
But
it seems to me that the more we assimilate what we have been seeing in the last
few shiurim, we find ourselves thinking about the issue in a different
way. When we speak of study lishmah, we are really not talking any more
about an "added" dimension. Nor are we talking about the well-known triad – the
motivation for study, the study itself and the goal of study - as separate
concepts. The intuition that non-lishmah study leaves a gaping void in
the soul, turns that very distinction between the mitzva itself and the
objective or the motivation into an impossibility. And we understand that we
have no alternative but to define the obligation "to occupy oneself in the words
of the Torah" in a different manner.
We
now absorb the full significance of the phenomenon that was noted in the past,
that "study" is only one of the verbs used to describe our encounter with the
Torah. The Torah demands a variegated and multi-channeled encounter that
activates all of our emotional and practical faculties. The manifest focus of
the encounter, as is the case with every human encounter, is cognitive; and with
respect to the Torah, this cognitive dimension is scholarly, fruitful,
innovative, profound and precise. But this is only the manifest layer.
Underlying the analysis, dialectics and conceptualization, there is a stream of
emotional movement which is the source of the fertility of these things, and
this movement is filled with other verbs. Here we occupy ourselves in Torah,
acquire it, live it, love it, struggle with it, cling to it, suffer with it,
stand in awe of its commandments, realize and observe it – and all of these
words do not do justice to the thing itself. Torah study lishmah is not
cognition accompanied by a certain intention, but rather a different definition
of the encounter, a new understanding of the relationship.
Based
on this insight, let us stop for another look back on the long road that we have
traveled. Our eyes can still spot, on the distant horizon, the problem of
"triviality." Do you agree with me, that that we can now officially proclaim its
final demise? But now we are faced with an even greater problem – the very
opposite: How is it possible to live with such grandness, and how can one stand
before such absolute totality?
The
Torah's objective is perfection and benevolence, but living with it emphasizes
our own weakness and our inability to approach the spirituality which it wishes
to introduce into our world. This feeling is a trap, because it is liable to
push us away and set up a barrier. Are there ways to deal with and overcome this
obstacle? For the time being we will have to leave this as an open question, and
leave the attempt to answer this challenge for later.
(Translated
by David
Strauss)
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