Sunday 27 December 2020

Rabbi Akiva, free will and God's foresight again: a mishnah for the month of Ellul

Our previous post looked at one of Rabbi Akiva's somewhat enigmatic teachings, one that has been given all sorts of interpretations over the generations because no-one knows what he had in mind when he taught it. Because it is so vague, its flexibility allows it to be applied to situations and scenarios that lie entirely outside the traditional scope of Avot. For example, the table below relates Rabbi Akiva’s words to the period between the beginning of the Hebrew month of Elul (a period traditionally marked by introspection and self-improvement) and Yom Kippur.

Time

Avot 3:19

Relevance

Chodesh Elul

Everything is foreseen but free will is given

Man must examine his past deeds and future plans honestly, since God knows them too. Does he have the willpower to break bad habits or to take new and better commitments upon himself?

Rosh Hashanah

The world is judged for good

We reappoint God as King and accept Him as our judge, praying that He will fasten on to our good points and forgive those that are not.

Yom Kippur

Everything depends on the rov hama’aseh

God weighs us in the balance. If the preponderance of our deeds and intentions are good, we trust that we will be acquitted


Readers are invited to try their hand and find their own scenarios in which the great rabbi's words can shed some quite unexpected light.

Friday 18 December 2020

A rabbi? Not quite

Perusing Rabbi Irving Greenberg's popular commentary on Avot, Sage Advice, my eye was drawn to a footnote (there aren't that many in this readable tome) that referred to the source of a quote. This quote came from "Rabbi Travers Herford, Pirkei Aboth: Ethics of the Talmud: Sayings of the Fathers". 

I know this book because I possess a copy of it, am very fond of it and have literally read it to pieces. However, the reason why I am mentioning it is because it illustrates a point that has frequently troubled me: the dangers that lurk behind initials.

The book itself describes the author as "R. Travers Herford". Many people use R. or R' as an informal abbreviation of "Rabbi", and it is not unreasonable to assume that the "R." here means exactly that. The real story, as you may by now have guessed, is different. In this context, "R." stands for "Robert", a fairly common forename and not as memorable as "Travers". The man himself does have semichah -- of a sort. He was not a rabbi, but an ordained minister of the Unitarian Church. His book on Avot is unusual, in that part of his aim was to persuade fellow Christians that they should read and appreciate Jewish texts from the perspective of the Pharisees (i.e. guardians of Judaism based on both the Tanach and rabbinical law), rather than read and condemn it because it is not in accord with Christian doctrine.  

Rabbi Akiva, free will and God's foresight

Avot 3:19 is one of the most enigmatic of Rabbi Akiva's teachings. In short, he says: "Everything is foreseen, and freedom of choice is granted. The world is judged with goodness, and everything is according with the majority of the deed". 

The flexibility of Rabbi Akiva’s dictum offers great opportunities to vest his words with meaning. The table below shows how this mishnah in its entirety can be contrasted with an earlier mishnah (Avot 1:18) taught by his younger near-contemporary, Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel: ""he world is kept going by three things: truth, justice and peace".

Avot 3:19 (Rabbi Akiva)

Avot 1:18 (Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel)

Significance of contrasting content

Subject: the world, as viewed by man, which is full of doubt and uncertainty

Subject: the world, as viewed by God, which stands on three fixed pillars

God sees and knows all, while man’s knowledge is limited in time, space and depth of intellectual capacity

Everything is foreseen but free will is given

Truth

God, who knows all truths, makes man responsible for his actions by giving him free will

The world is judged for good

Justice

God, knowing all, is entirely just. Lacking such knowledge, man must give others the benefit of the doubt

Everything depends on the rov hama’aseh (literally "the majority of the deed")

Peace

God makes perfect peace in Heaven and on Earth; man-made peace is a compromise, depending on what the majority are prepared to accept

 On this reading, we see that Rabbi Akiva teaches how complex and baffling is the real world in which we live: we daily face unresolvable problems. We have to accept that, while nothing happens in the world unless God wills it, we have free will—or at least the illusion that it exists. We are required to be just, but our judgements are clouded by ignorance and uncertainty. We crave peace but know too well that one man’s peace (and indeed one nation’s peace) may be incompatible with another’s—and that even what appears to be genuine peace may be quite meaningless. Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel however shows us how these same issues can be viewed, when considered from God’s perspective. To Him, truth, justice and peace are absolutes. They can be achieved if only we can approach them from God’s standpoint and not from ours. 

The point that we cannot understand God’s ways is poignantly recalled when we reflect on Rabbi Akiva’s own fate, as a faithful and brilliant Torah scholar who met a martyr’s death at the hands of Israel’s Roman conquerors. From Rav Yehudah’s aggadic account (below) of his martyrdom in the Talmud we see how this explanation of Rabbi Akiva’s own words applies: his death is foreseen though he still had the option not to teach Torah; God’s judgement is for the good even though we cannot understand how or why this is so, and the Romans followed the usual path of executing troublesome enemies in order to maintain peace in Israel in the form of the pax Romana, this being man’s path to peace but not that of God.

***************************

Rav Yehudah's account of the death of Rabbi Akiva (Menachot 29b)

Rav Yehudah said in the name of Rav: ‘When Moses ascended on High, he found the Holy One, Blessed be He, engaged in fixing crowns on to the letters [of the Torah]. Moses said, ‘Lord of the Universe, What’s holding things up?’ He answered: ‘A man will arise, after many generations—Akiva ben Yosef—who will expound, upon each little crown, heaps and heaps of laws.’ ‘Lord of the Universe,’ said Moses, ‘let me see him.’ [Moses then has a vision in which he finds himself sitting at the back of a Torah class which he could not understand at all]. They came to a certain subject and the disciples said to their teacher, ‘Where do you know this from?’ When the latter answered, ‘It is a law given to Moses at Sinai’ he was comforted. [Moses then exclaims], ‘Lord of the Universe, even though you have such a man, You give the Torah through me!’ God replies: ‘Be silent, for such is My decree.’ Then Moses said, ‘Lord of the Universe, You have shown me his Torah, so show me his reward.’ ‘[Moses then has another vision, in which Rabbi Akiva’s flesh is being weighed out on market stalls]. Moses cried out: ‘Lord of the Universe, this is Torah, and this is the reward?’ He replied, ‘Be silent, for such is My decree.’

Monday 14 December 2020

Time and tithe

In Avot 3:17 Rabbi Akiva mentions that the giving of tithes is a way to ringfence one's wealth. He does not go into detail. However, it is no secret that the laws relating to tithes are articulated in detail in both the Written and Oral Torah. These laws deal with what must be tithed, who must give them, to whom they must be given, how and when they are given, and so on. They are firmly focused on man’s physical environment and the people with whom he shares it. 

Is there any scope for considering if it is meaningful to talk of a person tithing his intangible resources too?

Some intangible assets may be quite suitable for tithing. An obvious example is one’s spare time. If you have, say, ten hours’ free and disposable time each week, you metaphorically tithe it by setting one hour aside and donating it for the benefit of others rather than indulging in an enjoyable pastime of your own choice. Other intangible assets may be less suitable, such as one’s intelligence, affection, patience or imagination. Some assets are both tangible and intangible: money has a physical format when it is represented by banknotes and coins, but for most people in the developed world it is intangible, being represented by electronically transferable debt and credit. The tithing of money is effectively required by the mitzvah of tzedakah (loosely translated as “charity” though the word’s Hebrew root has strong undertones of “justice” and “righteousness”): this is the setting aside of one tenth of one’s income for distribution to those who need it. Tzedakah gets several honorable mentions in Avot  and, while Rabbi Akiva does not list it in 3:17 among his “fences,” other rabbis do: Hillel teaches (Avot 2:8) that it is a sort of fence to peace in that, the more tzedakah one gives, the greater is the amount of peace in the world  and, if tzedakah falls within the general category of “good deeds,” it also acts as a shield against divine retribution. 

It cannot be said that the tithing of intangibles is what Rabbi Akiva had in mind. However, the overall principle is equally applicable to all assets, material and immaterial: if you give part of what you have and dedicate it to the benefit of others, should you not be entitled to expect not just God’s outline approval but a measure of assistance in maximising the benefit you derive from what you retain?


Friday 11 December 2020

Epispasm: no great disguise

Rabbi Eliezer HaModa'i has some strong things to say about people who prefer not to reflect Jewish identity and values. At Avot 3:15 he says:

The person who (i) desecrates those things which are holy, (ii) denigrates the festivals, (iii) embarrasses his friend in public, (iv) nullifies the covenant of our father Abraham and (v) reveals aspects of the Torah that are not in accordance with the law—even though he has Torah learning and good deeds in his hand, he has no portion in the World to Come.”

The fourth of these five items is generally understood to refer to epispasm, this being “a form of foreskin restoration to reverse circumcision, historically practiced among some Jews in Hellenistic and Roman societies.”  

This procedure is a curious way to conceal Jewish identity when one considers that, for centuries, the nations of the world appear to have had no difficulty in picking Jews out as being Jewish even when they are fully clothed.  However, the desire to assimilate into what appears to be a more sophisticated and successful society is, according to one midrashic tradition, something that Jews have had to resist even before the giving of the Torah. According to this tradition, after Joseph died the Children of Israel cancelled the practice of circumcision, saying “Let us be like the Egyptians!” This was the event that triggered a change in heart on the part of their Egyptian hosts, who ceased at that point to love the small tribe that nestled within their vast territory, despising them instead.

Rav Yosef Dov Ber Soloveitchik (Bet HaLevi, parashat Shemot) explains this Midrash as teaching that the Children of Israel did not just give up circumcision of their children: worried about their future in Egypt and concerned as to how they might make themselves more beloved to their hosts, they first performed the operation in order to fulfil the mitzvah but then carried out an epispasm—and it was this that caused the Egyptians to despise them. The message for all generations is clear: making oneself more like a prevailing non-Jewish culture is no guarantee of peace and happiness. This is particularly true when, in doing so, we appear to be deceitful, duplicitous, unprincipled and ready to put our obedience to God firmly in second place, behind our desire to be more like those who do not obey Him.

Not all commentators consider that this Mishnah refers to the practice of epispasm. One such view is that it relates to a refusal to circumcise at all;  such a person presumably would rather be attached to his foreskin than to his Creator.

Wednesday 9 December 2020

Competition among sages -- where is it?

Writing on Communal News platform, David Wexelman ("Competition Between Religions and Philosophies") states:

There is a teaching in the Ethics of the Fathers that competition between sages promotes more wisdom. The same is true in business where we see price wars. The supplier has to meet the demand at the best price. Also this is true in religion. Religions try to satisfy their followers to prevent them from looking somewhere else to be for them a connection to God.

The proposition that competition between sages promotes more wisdom is a good one, much in keeping with Jewish thought on the value that is placed upon the process by which sharpen their wits and improve their learning skills by pitting their brain-power against each other. I can't find a mishnah in Avot that says this, though. Which mishnah or mishnayot might the author have had in mind?

Sunday 6 December 2020

"Stolen" Torah: more on Shammai and making Torah "fixed"

The previous post ('Shammai and the Three Pillars on Which the World Stands', here) discussed his teaching at Avot 1:15 about (i) making one's Torah "fixed", (ii) saying a little but doing a lot, and (iii) greeting other people with a happy, smiling face.

My copy of the Breslov commentary (featuring Rabbis Nachman and Natan) has an unexpected insight into making one's Torah "fixed" -- which is that the mishnah doesn't mean "fixed" at all -- it means "stolen". My first inclination was to dismiss this as a bit of fluffy Chasidut, but further reflection led to the conclusion that there was a rock-solid basis for this. The word ×§ְבַ×¢, translated as "fixed" does not have that meaning in the Tanach. Its root is found in only two uses in the Written Torah, both in the late book of Malachi, and on both occasions the word means "steal".  The meaning "fixed" is not found until it is used in later Hebrew, in mishnaic and midrashic texts. 

The idea of making one's Torah "stolen" is the exact opposite of "fixed". Rather than have regular times for learning Torah (which one should ideally have anyway), one should "steal" moments of learning time from other activities, thus both showing one's dedication to learning Torah and gaining a little more precious time for that purpose. 

Thursday 3 December 2020

Shammai and the three pillars on which the World stands

The only mishnah in Avot that is attributed to Shammai is found in the first perek, at Avot 1:15.  There, he teaches three things: (i) one should make one's Torah "fixed", which is usually taken to mean either that one should fix regular times for one's Torah learning or that one's fulfilment of its precepts should be constant rather than wavering in accordance with the company one keeps or other influentual variables; (ii) one should say a little but do a lot, and (iii) one should greet other people with a happy, smiling face.

It occurred to me that these three pieces of stand-alone advice somewhat mirror the content of another, earlier mishnah in Avot in which Shimon HaTzaddik lists the three things: (i) Torah, (ii) avodah (literally "service", meaning one's service to God) and (iii) the performance of acts of kindness (Avot 1:2). 

These two mishnayot actually complement each other quite neatly, though this is not a point that seems to have been picked up by earlier commentators [can readers please get in touch if they find anyone who has already made this point?]. "Torah" and "fixing" one's Torah are obviously on the same topic; acts of kindness and greeting people cheerfully both involve an element of respect and concern for other people. That leaves only "service" and saying little but doing a lot. If "service" in context is taken to mean serving God by performing his mitzvot, it makes sense to teach that service of this nature is rendered by doing, by real action, not by talking at length about what one plans to do. This forges a three-ply link between the two mishnayot.

Tuesday 1 December 2020

Avot in Retrospect: a summary of last month's blogposts

 In case you missed them, here's a list of items posted on Avot Today in November 2020:

Thursday 26 November 2020: Righteous and Righteouser: two types of servant explained. 
We look at servants who serve (i) without making a stipulation that they should receive a reward or (ii) after stipulating that they will only serve if they do not received a reward. What can we learn from the Noam Elimelech?

Sunday 22 November 2020: Not Considering Oneself Wicked: a response to PaulDoes Rabbi Shimon ben Netanel have a theological point to prove when urging people not to see themselves as being wicked?

Wednesday 18 November 2020: Kavod v Mussar: contrasting cases: an observation on how, while honor runs away from people who chase it, chastisement chases after people who seek to avoid it.

Sunday 15 November 2020: Ten Tests for Abraham -- but why not for Jacob too? A mishnah in the fifth perek of Avot famously mentions the fact that Abraham passes 10 tests from God. It would seem though that Jacob faced more tests, yet he gets no mention at all. Why?

Thursday 12 November 2020: Loving Rebukes: what does this mean? Avot 6:6 lists "loving rebukes" as one of the 48 means through which Torah is acquired. But what do we understand from this?

Thursday 12 November 2020: Rabbi Sacks. A brief acknowledgement of a great loss.

Friday 6 November 2020: All Creatures Great and Small: good examples for the Torah scholar.  In Avot 5:23 Yehudah ben Teyma cites the leopard, eagle, deer and lion as "role models" for the ideal servant of God. Rabbi Eliezer Papo has a novel slant on this mishnah.

Wednesday 4 November 2020: Trial and ErrorMore thoughts on the Ten Tests of Abraham in Avot 5:4. Is it irrelevant what they are? And what are they supposed to prove?


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Avot Today blogposts for October 2020 here
Avot Today blogposts for September 2020 here
Avot Today blogposts for August 2020 here
Avot Today blogposts for July 2020 here
Avot Today blogposts for June 2020 here
Avot Today blogposts for May 2020 here

Thursday 26 November 2020

Righteous and righteouser? Two types of servant explained

The third mishnah in Avot features the controversial teaching of Antigonus ish Socho that, when serving God, a person should be like a servant who works for his master with no expectation of receiving a reward. There are many commentaries on this mishnah, but I came across one from the Noam Elimelech (on parashat Terumah) that was quite new to me. In short:

An analytical device often employed by Rabbi Elimelech of Lizhensk involves the explanation of contrasting clauses in a teaching by postulating the existence of two or more classes of tzaddik who function at different levels of righteousness. He uses this device to explain the difference between the servants in this mishnah.  

The first type of tzaddik is meticulous in his performance of mitzvot and in the avoidance of averot: he serves his master through punctilious observance of every last detail. Yet, for all that, he still lacks the highest degree of devekut, of cleaving closely to God, and of desire for Him. He must await his expected pay-off in the World to Come. 

The second type of tzaddik is equally dedicated to serving God, but he experiences such a high level of happiness and excitement at being able to serve Him, and such a lofty level of devekut, that he feels that he has already received in this World the reward that was coming to him in the World to Come and therefore expects no further reward. It is to this second class of tzaddik that a chasid should aspire to belong.

A good message, but a challenging one for anyone to live up to, I think.

Sunday 22 November 2020

Not considering oneself wicked: a response to Paul?


At Avot 2:18 Rabbi Shimon ben Netanel says: "Do not be wicked in your own eyes". Unsurprisingly there are many explanations of what he means. A superficially surprising and almost irrelevant comment on this part of the Mishnah comes from Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch, writing in the later part of the 19th century: 

The Mishnah does not mention guilt or intercession, so why does Rabbi Hirsch? 

Do not allow yourself to be taken in by the erroneous idea advanced by alien philosophies that man on his own must of necessity be crushed by the weight of his guilt, and that it is solely through the gracious intercession of another that he can gain control over evil and be delivered from the burden of sin.

On closer reflection his comment is both pertinent and relevant: its subject is Jewish conversions to Christianity. In the nineteenth century, the defection of Jews from orthodox religious practice took more than one form. For some, the less stringent demands of the Reform movement enabled them to combine a more relaxed and assimilated lifestyle with a sentiment of identification with their Jewish roots and some of their most cherished customs and traditions.  For others, advancement in society required not merely assimilation with the majority Christian culture but admission to it. Many accordingly opted for baptism and a complete change of allegiance.

Christianity is alluded to through Rabbi Hirsch's references to man being crushed by the weight of his own sin (i.e. to man being born in a state of sin and incapable of achieving his own salvation) and to the gracious intercession of another (i.e. to grace in the form of salvation through Jesus). But what connection is there between Rabbi Shimon ben Netanel and the threat that Jews might turn to Christianity over 1,800 years before Rabbi Hirsch’s day?

One of the earliest Christian apostles and a major source of the doctrine of original sin —the idea that man is born in a state of sin and requires salvation through the grace of Jesus—was Paul of Tarsus.  Paul, Jewish by birth and named Sha’ul, learned Torah with the first Rabban Gamliel.  

Sha’ul/Paul and Rabbi Shimon ben Netanel were exact contemporaries.  Would they have known one another? Very likely, if the Shimon ben Netanel who married Rabban Gamliel’s daughter was the same person as the Rabbi Shimon ben Netanel who authored the dictum under discussion here. If Rabbi Shimon ben Netanel had witnessed at first hand the splintering of the Jewish community under Roman rule and the growing popularity of the teachings of Sha’ul/Paul and those who thought like him, it would not be implausible that this Mishnah meant exactly what Rabbi Hirsch said it did—and its controversial content might explain why Rabbi Shimon ben Netanel was so carefully allusive and non-explicit in his choice of words.


Wednesday 18 November 2020

Kavod versus mussar: contrasting cases

 The baraita in the final perek of Avot lists, among the 48 ways of acquiring Torah, the requirement of distancing oneself from kavod ("honour").  It is well known that, if you run after honour, it runs away from you whereas, if you run away from honour, it will pursue you. 

Mussar -- moral chastisement -- works in a different mode. People who most need it tend to run away from it, although they often run with all due haste if they think they have spotted an opportunity to administer it to others.




Sunday 15 November 2020

Ten tests for Abraham -- but why not Jacob too?

Mishnah 5:4 of Avot cites the ten tests of Abraham, which he passes and which demonstrate the great love between him and God.

Abraham is the only one of the three Patriarchs to feature in Avot; there is no mention of Isaac or Jacob, notwithstanding their importance and notwithstanding the many lessons we learn from studying their lives. God speaks to all three and there is no reason to doubt either His love for them or their love for Him. We know relatively little of Isaac’s life, but Jacob is by far the best-chronicled Patriarch: the narrative of his life and death occupies more than half the Book of Genesis, rather more than twice as much space as is given to the Torah’s account of Abraham. From this narrative it is clear that Jacob faced at least ten tests of his own [listed below], yet these are not mentioned as such in Avot or in the commentaries on it. Why should this be?

In the absence of guidance from our Sages, we can only offer rationalizations for the fact that Avot does not teach us anything about Jacob’s tests. Possible explanations are that 

(i) what applies to Abraham applies equally to Jacob, so there is no need to repeat the lesson; 

(ii) the reason why Jacob passed his ten tests was because, in some way, his task was made easier by the knowledge that his grandfather had been tested ten times and had come away successful; 

(iii) Jacob did not pass his tests with the same high level of trust in God as Abraham possessed and his tests therefore provided a less powerful lesson; 

(iv) while, from our perspective, Jacob passed all his tests, God in some way expected more from him.

Looking at the Patriarchs at a distance of three millennia or so, it is easier for us to recognize the high level of faith, love and confidence in God that Abraham possessed, but to identify with Jacob—a more frail and troubled personality, whose anxieties and life experiences more closely resemble our own. Reading the Torah, one never expects Abraham to fall short of the mark. Jacob however stumbles through from crisis to crisis, much as so many of us do in our own lives.  If we accept the notion that every one of us will have our own “ten tests” to cope with, Jacob epitomizes the fate we share with him. We have to cope with trials and tribulations, whether forced upon us or of our own making—and none of us can expect to be praised and held up as examples from whom later generations can learn. However, as Avot reminds us, the rewards we receive for passing our tests are commensurate with our struggle to pass them, as was the case with Jacob himself.

                                                 ***************************
 The tests, in chronological order, look like this: 

(i) having to masquerade as Esau in order to obtain the latter’s blessing; 

(ii) having to flee from his home to escape the threat of being murdered by Esau; 

(iii) having to work a full seven years for the hand of his promised bride Rachel; 

(iv) waking up the morning after his marriage to discover that his wife was not Rachel but her sister Leah; 

(v) having his wages constantly changed by Laban; 

(vi) having to face Esau and his militia after leaving Laban, 

(vii) Rachel’s death in the course of Jacob's travels; 

(viii) the abduction and rape of his daughter Dinah; 

(ix) the loss, presumed dead, of his favourite son Joseph; 

(x) having to part with his youngest son Benjamin in exchange for food. 

One can add further tests that are based on the Torah text, without the need to draw on midrashic teachings: for example, Jacob’s fight with the angelic stranger and his being told to leave Israel in the knowledge that he would not see his Promised Land again.

Thursday 12 November 2020

Loving rebukes: what does this mean?

One of the 48 ways of acquiring Torah, listed in Avot 6:6, is "loving rebukes". Most commentaries have relatively little to say about the fascinating topic of tochachah, so I've put some thoughts of my own in writing, drawing on traditional Torah scholarship too. My thoughts (so far) run along the following lines:

For many people, being rebuked by others can be a painful experience. The fact that the person who administers the rebuke loves the person who receives it and cares greatly for their welfare makes no difference. This is perfectly natural. A child will frequently cry when told off by a parent, even in gentle tones, and a teenager may explode with anger: these reactions are innate and remain with us in later life, though we ideally learn to control them as we become more mature. 

Not all rebukes are received in the same way. A person learning drive may receive a stern admonition from the driving instructor along the lines of “What you just did was really careless. If you do that again, you could do yourself serious harm and even kill yourself”. The response to such a rebuke is usually one of gratitude which is genuinely felt and sincerely expressed. However, when we are seeking to perform a mitzvah and a stranger rebukes us for doing it incorrectly, our response is often quite different. A whole range of possible responses flashes through our minds. For example: (i) “this is what I’ve always done in the past and no-one has ever complained before”; (ii) “this is how my rabbi/teacher/chavruta said I should do it, so it’s not my fault”; (iii) “what makes you think you are right and I am wrong anyway?”  It is only when all the other options have been considered and rejected that we might concede that we were in need of rebuke  and then try to summon up some begrudging gratitude. 

If we are honest with ourselves, this contrast between our reactions to the rebuke of the driving instructor and that of the stranger pinpoints a failure in our own priorities. The avoidance of errors when we drive, however commendable, is a matter that concerns our physical integrity in this World. However, our ability to perform a mitzvah or escape from transgressing an averah may have repercussions for the eternal life of a Jewish soul in the World to Come. On this basis we should welcome the rebuke from the stranger with at least as much warmth as we welcome the guidance of our driving instructor. We should feel happy.  And if a person can truly say that he loves the Torah, it is reasonable to assume that this love will rub off on to someone who points him back on to any path of Torah learning from which he has wandered.

Everyone makes mistakes—even the greatest chacham, armed with a vast array of Torah learning—and this has been the lot of man since the Creation. However, someone who truly values the greatness of his Torah learning and will welcome being put right. Acting on a rebuke that one has received may also constitute the mitzvah of repentance.

A person should love to rebuke himself, and also love to administer rebukes to others  and not worry that this requirement is in conflict with an earlier item on the list, that one must be loved by others.  It is easy to make oneself unpopular by telling others that they are making mistakes; it is far simpler to smile winningly at them, retaining their friendship and thinking to oneself “I’m all right, even if they aren’t. Why should I risk incurring their wrath by telling them?” This is not the way to behave if you love another person, and this is why a good parent is prepared to risk a flood of tears from an infant rather than condone the eating of candies at bedtime and after the child’s teeth have been brushed for the night.

If you have any comments or reflections on the foregoing, do please share them!

Rabbi Sacks

 It was with shock and with great sadness that I learned of the death of Lord Sacks. Jonathan Sacks was an outstanding commentator on the ethical dimension of the Torah and a philosopher whose theoretical analyses never lacked a practical outcome. He was truly a Pirkei Avot man, as this video clip of his daughter Gila indicates. He was however a good deal more than that, as the flood of testimonials and tributes has shown.

For four years during the 1990s I worked with Rabbi Sacks, during the transition of the Chief Rabbinate in the UK from Lord Jakobovits. He was a wonderful work colleague: cheerful, positive, polite, caring, accessible and humble. While many have praised his oratory and presentational skills, I recall that he was also an attentive and sympathetic listener -- a skill which, unlike speaking, cannot be easily recorded for posterity by modern technology.

May his family and friends be comforted in their memories of a truly great figure.



Friday 6 November 2020

All creatures great and small: good examples for the Torah scholar

Yehudah ben Teyma (Avot 5:23) teaches that, in order to do God's will, a person should be as brazen as a leopard, as light as an eagle, as swift as a deer and as strong as a lion.  Much literature has been generated by this mishnah, some of it relating to the creatures themselves, some relating to their real or hypothetical qualities and some relating to their symbolism.

I have just spotted a delightful comment on this mishnah from Rabbi Eliezer Papo (a.k.a. the Pele Yo'etz), who was born in Sarajevo and served as rabbi in the Bulgarian town of Silistra during the Napoleonic era. He did not write a full-blown commentary on Pirkei Avot, but his thoughts on the tractate have been compiled on a chapter-by-chapter basis and inserted within the body of the second volume of his Torah commentary Eleph HaMagen.

Much of the Eleph HaMagen is either kabbalistic or somewhat off-the-wall in comparison with the sort of Torah writing that occupies the mainstream of contemporary Torah literature. This comment on Avot 5:23 is however refreshingly accessible. It runs like this:

Many times the Torah is compared to great wealth, for example Proverbs 2:4 ("If you seek [the Torah] like silver, and search for it like hidden treasure..."). However, any comparison of the Torah with gold, silver or other material wealth faces four problems. The Pele Yo'etz lists them together with their solutions::

1. There are things that a person wouldn't even do for money because they'd be too embarrassed (e.g. being offered a large sum to go around naked in public). The leopard however is brazen and feels no shame or embarrassment. This is essential when learning Torah, if there are questions to  be asked that some may consider downright stupid;

2. A person may not want more money than others have, for the commendable reason that he is perfectly content with what he has. The eagle however aspires to soar above competing birds. This continuing aspiration to rise is a great motivating factor;

3. Running after money creates a poor impression. People usually prefer to seek it more discreetly, at a leisurely pace. The deer runs but, wherever it does so, it never forgets to run back to its home. The talmid's thoughts may run in many directions, but should always run back to the makom, the place, which is their source: the Torah;

4. When a person has material wealth, it is easy to become afraid of losing it and thus be preoccupied with ways and means of keeping it safe. Lions, being strong, are not afraid, particular when it comes to performing mitzvot.

This may not have been quite what the author of the mishnah had in mind, but it scores high in terms of relevance.

Wednesday 4 November 2020

Trial and error

Here's the text of a piece I wrote on the trials of Abraham which was hosted on Rabbi Shmuel Phillips's Judaism Reclaimed Facebook group (declaration of interest: Rabbi Phillips is my son). Since it's relevant to this week's Torah reading, I thought I'd post it here too:

Trial and Error 

Parashat Vayera includes two of the most vividly memorable events in Avraham’s life: his argument with God over the fate of the inhabitants of Sodom and the narrative of the Akedah, God’s instruction that Avraham bind his son Yitzchak and sacrifice him as a burnt offering. The Akedah is the only test of Avraham’s that the Torah mentions explicitly. The statement that Abraham was set 10 tests and passed them all is Mishnaic (Avot 5:4). We can ask three questions here: (i) why did God test Avraham; (ii) why does the Torah account for one test when the Mishnah mentions ten and (iii) is Avraham’s negotiation with God over the fate of Sodom not also a test?  

Why should God need to test Avraham at all? The normal function of any test is to obtain a result or outcome that would otherwise be unknown. Its circumstances and methodology should reflect the objective to be achieved: for example the person being tested should be known to have the capacity to pass it and should not know that he is being tested. However, an omniscient God who exists beyond time and who has already selected Abraham for his destined role does not need to test him in order to ascertain information and is in any event already in possession of it. The fact that Abraham was prepared to sacrifice his son was not something Abraham needed to be told either, since the Torah records his unswerving obedience to God’s commands. 

The inference we can draw is therefore that the function of the Akedah was to show us, being Avraham’s physical or metaphorical descendants through Yitzchak, something of the quality, the steadfastness under stress and the deep love for God which the Patriarchs possessed. This demonstration of Abraham’s mettle would also act as a lesson for all subsequent generations as to how we should serve God, with love, fear and complete trust. Rambam appears to take this approach (Moreh Nevuchim 3:24). Significantly, the Hebrew word nisayon (“test”) is related to nes (“banner”), a word that conveys the need to wave a flag, as it were, to make a prominent display of Abraham’s exceptional qualities. 

Why does the Mishnah mention 10 tests when the Torah identifies only one as being such? The answer here lies in the different functions served by the Torah and by the mishnayot of Avot. Avot 5:4 is a short mishnah because, though it mentions Avraham’s successful negotiation of 10 tests, it does not list them. Nor is there any rabbinical consensus as to what they are. If one reads the Torah narrative of Avraham’s life and the midrashic literature that is based upon it (on which many rabbis rely when compiling their lists of 10), it is easy to put together a list approaching 30 events that could fairly be construed as such.  

It is plain that, by not listing the tests, the author of this mishnah was teaching something other than what those tests were. The important part of the mishnah is the statement that Avraham passed them. By concealing their identity the mishnah alludes to the fact that their identity was concealed from Avraham too—and that is where his greatness lies. Where a person knows he or she is being tested, that is no real test.  

Of all the many commentators on the mishnah, Rambam is unique: he is the only one to choose 10 tests from the Torah alone, rather than opting for a blend of Torah and often more exciting tests drawn from midrashic sources. However, neither he nor any other major commentator includes as a test Avraham’s argument with God over the ethical consideration of destroying the righteous together with the wicked in the sinful cities of Sodom and Gemorrah. There is not even any discussion of why it should be omitted. Why should this be so? 

Another mishnah in Avot may provide a hint that leads to a possible answer.  In Avot 5:6 the mishnah repeats a verse from the Torah in which God, with justifiable anger, states that our ancestors tested Him ten times during their sojourn in the desert. This statement admits of the possibility not just of God testing man but of man testing God. When God tests us, it is to teach us a lesson about ourselves, but when we test Him we must be careful to do so leshem shamayim, for the right reasons. Here it is not God testing Avraham but Avraham who is testing God: if He is really the Judge of all the Earth, will He not do justice? God who is on trial, is being tested by the one mortal who has recognised Him in all His glory. God passes the test. 

Sunday 1 November 2020

Avot in Retrospect: a summary of last month's blogposts

In case you missed them, here's a list of items posted on Avot Today in October 2020:

Wednesday 28 October 2020: Light as an eagle? Surely not. Avot 5:23 urges us to be "light as an eagle" in doing God's will. But why should the mishnah pick on one of the heaviest birds for this simile?

Sunday 25 October 2020: Where are the Gaonim? Scholarship on Pirkei Avot rarely makes any reference to the period of the Gaonim and, in turn, the Gaonim do not appear to have had much to say about Avot. Is this actually so?

Wednesday 21 October 2020: Angry -- but with whom?  Avot 5:14 depicts four different types of human temperament and has harsh things to say about people who are quick to anger. The mishnah does not however specify against whom the anger is directed. There are three possibilities.

Friday 16 October 2020: Loud and Clear! The importance of speaking properlyA baraita in the 6th chapter of Avot lists "articulate speech" among the 48 ways of acquiring Torah learning. This post explains why it is so important.

Tuesday 13 October 2020: Mazikim and refusal to take responsibility for what happens in one's life. Avot 5:8 lists mazikim among the 10 things created just before Shabbat at the end of the Six Days of Creation. Do mazikim exist or are they a brilliant metaphor with a lesson to teach us?

Sunday 11 October 2020: Getting to grips with tongs made with tongsWhat is the significance of listing "tongs made with tongs" in Avot 5:8? Maybe the answer relates to the technology of innovation.

Friday 9 October 2020: Praying for the health of an ailing opponentUS President Donald Trump's coronavirus attack raises the question whether his opponents should rejoice over his illness or pray for his recovery. Does Avot 4:24 apply?

Wednesday 7 October 2020: Avot and leadership: practical applications for ancient advice. Links to a recent article that looks at contemporary business ethics in the light of the need to cultivate a "good heart" in Avot 2:13.

Monday 5 October  2020: How much work, and what sort of work, is an aspiring Torah scholar supposed to reduce?  What is the difference, in the context of Avot 6:6, between reducing one's derech eretz and reducing one's melachah?

Sunday 4 October 2020: Mitzvot and good deeds: don't forget your underwearAvot 2:1 urges people to chase God's commandments equally, whether they appear to be big or small. The Ma'amar Hakavod of the Pele Yo'etz offers a helpful metaphor to support this.

Thursday 1 October 2020: Lulav and lockdown: a positive perspectiveCelebrating Sukkot at home is a great opportunity to be happy with one's lot (Avot 4:1) and not cast envious eyes at someone else's bigger, better lulav.

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Avot Today blogposts for September 2020 here
Avot Today blogposts for August 2020 here
Avot Today blogposts for July 2020 here
Avot Today blogposts for June 2020 here
Avot Today blogposts for May 2020 here

Wednesday 28 October 2020

Light as an eagle? Surely not

Avot 5:23 reads as follows: 

Yehudah ben Tema says: “Be as bold as a leopard, light as an eagle, swift as a deer and strong as a lion to do the will of your Father in Heaven”.

What's the relevance of the eagle? 

Seven species of eagle are found in Israel today and it is probable that not only the Tannaim but also anyone who kept the sheep, goats or poultry on which they feed would have been highly familiar with them.  However, the simile here is puzzling. “Be light as an eagle” has an almost poetical quality to it, but something is wrong. Eagles are amongst the very heaviest birds that fly; by avian standards they are anything but light. One may as well say “Be light as a hippopotamus”. What, then, is our Tanna trying to tell us?

Fortunately there is a plausible explanation, though not one that is obvious to modern thinkers because it requires getting into the mindset of Sages and philosophers in the era of the Tannaim, some two millennia back. 

Imagine a world that is composed of four elements: earth, air (or wind), fire and water.  Not just the planet Earth but everything in it is comprised of anything between one and four of these elements which, combined in different proportions, have different characteristics. Thus, for example, a tomato has a higher ratio of water to earth while a potato is quite the opposite. A chilli pepper has a higher ratio of fire to air, while a meringue has a higher ratio of air to fire, and so on.  Man is also composed of these four elements. All humans differ in their composition and that explains their character: some are fiery, others sanguine; some live on a lofty spiritual plain while others appear to have no aspirations that rise above the fulfilment of their basic bodily functions.

Taking these four elements further, it is accepted that all the problems faced by mankind are caused by an imbalance between them. Fire leads to anger and arrogance; air leads to vacuity and idle chatter; water leads to wealth, jealousy, pleasures of the flesh and to indulgence in the material world; earth, the heaviest element of all, leads to depression, indolence and hopelessness. The very largest and heaviest birds—for example the ostrich, the emu and the cassowary—do not fly. They are literally earthbound. Of birds that fly, the eagle with its heavy body has to make a far greater effort than do smaller birds to overcome the pull of its own “earthiness” in order to generate flight.

Returning to our metaphor, we are told to be “light as the eagle”. Just as the eagle has to make so great an effort to overcome its “earthiness”, so too should we make a great effort, when doing God’s will, of overcoming our own “earthiness” and the feelings of depression, indolence and hopelessness that accompany it.

Finally, while it is possible that this four-element theory, despite its apparently non-Jewish origin, would have been known to a Torah scholar, it is also possible that it actually originates from a Jewish source. An anonymous author on the Daat Emet website writes:

… Josephus (who lived in the first century CE and was commander of the Galilean forces during the Great Revolt — History of the wars of the Jews and the Romans, book 5, chapter 5:4) explains why the covering which divided the sanctuary from the Holy of Holies in the Temple was made of four threads of color: blue, purple, scarlet, and white. He claimed that the four colors represented the four elements in order to show a model of the world. Blue, the color of the skies, represents air, scarlet represents fire, purple is produced from a mollusk and represents the water from which it came, and white linen comes from the earth and represents it.

Sunday 25 October 2020

Where are the Geonim?

 Flicking through the pages of Rav Sa'adya Gaon's Sefer Emunot veDe'ot the other day, I started to pay attention to the sources he cites in this fascinating philosophical work. I noticed that he drew extensively on Tehillim (Psalms), the Prophets and the Book of Job. However, there were very few references to earlier rabbinical teachings. Some Talmudical tractates were cited, but I spotted no citations from Pirkei Avot. Considering that Rav Sa'adya's work deals with ethical matters and topics such as reward and punishment which are central to Avot, this surprised me greatly.

It then occurred to me that, in all the decades in which I have been pursuing my interest in Avot, I can hardly recall reading anything by or making reference to the scholarship of the Gaonic period (589 to 1038 CE). It would be surprising if no Jewish scholars had anything to say on this most popular and accessible of mishnaic topics for some four and a half centuries. 

If any reader can point me to anything I may have missed, I should be grateful. Likewise, if there is an explanation for this apparent dearth of commentaries, please tell me.

Wednesday 21 October 2020

Angry -- but with whom?

Mishnah 5:14 of Pirkei Avot talks of people being classified into four types of temperament:

(i)  The person who is easily angered but easily placated—his reward is offset by his loss. 

(ii) The person whom it is hard to anger but hard to placate—his loss is offset by his reward.

(iii)  The person whom it is hard to anger but easy to placate is a chassid, a pious person.

(iv)  The person whom it is easy to anger but hard to placate is wicked.

The Mishnah is usually assumed to be referring to a person who gets angry with other people. The plain text does not demand that this be so. Sometimes a person gets angry with God, and sometimes with himself. Does this Mishnah apply equally to these scenarios? 

In principle there is no reason why it should not. If anger is a corrosive and damaging emotion, it will adversely affect the well-being of the person who feels it regardless of the cause of that anger.  However, there is a difference. However much anyone rages against God, there is absolutely no way that this anger, or the person who feels it, can do to hurt or harm Him. When angry with oneself, any damage done is counterproductive since the object and the subject of the rage are one and the time. It is only when anger is directed against fellow humans that it can lead to the sort of destructive and vengeful action that can undermine the social basis of human civilization.

Friday 16 October 2020

Loud and clear! The importance of speaking properly

Of all the 48 items relating to acquisition of the Torah in Avot 6:6, articulate speech is that which by its nature lies closest the heart of the transmission of the Torah sheb’al peh, the Oral Torah, in that the word “oral” demands speech.  Even though the writing down of the Oral Law and the subsequent invention of the printing press appeared to relegate the spoken word to a position of relative unimportance, the astonishing speed at which communication technologies have developed from the late 20th century onwards has placed the spoken word front and centre in the promulgation of Torah to a wider audience. The list of roles for the spoken word is impressive: at one end of the scale are modest activities such as learning by telephone and the production of recorded shiurim. At the other end is an ever-growing volume of online interactive and set-piece lectures via Zoom and Skype, classes and discussion groups, video productions that can be streamed or downloaded and podcasts. The spoken word has dramatically re-established its position in Torah learning, and demand for it has skyrocketed during the Covid-19 pandemic since many people are unable to access traditional printed books and other printed texts.

There are many dimensions to articulate speech which combine to assist a serious student navigate the path towards becoming a Torah scholar, as we have already learned.  These include the following Ten Commandments: 

(i) think about what you are going to say before you open your mouth so that your words will be the right ones,  

(ii) choose the right words with which to express what you mean, 

(iii) know when to stop speaking, 

(iv) make yourself audible, 

(v) clearly articulate consonants and vowels so that the listener will be able to recognize the spoken word, 

(vi) take the trouble to pronounce words correctly so that they will not be misunderstood or mistaken for other words, 

(vii) speak at a speed at which a listener can comprehend what is being said, 

(viii) repeat yourself only when it is necessary to do so, (ix) refrain from speaking any word if you are unsure of its meaning, and 

(x) if necessary, prepare and rehearse the words you intend to speak, so as to say them with meaning and feeling, thus maximizing their impact.

Unless a person suffers from a physical or psychological defect that cannot be remedied with the aid of a suitably qualified speech therapist, there is no excuse for failing to observe these rules. Contrary to the opinion of some people I have encountered, it is neither frum nor a sign of one’s humility to mumble when talking to others or giving a shiur. It is an acute discourtesy. Another egregious form of discourtesy is speaking to another person or to an audience in a language that you know they do not understand, when you are perfectly capable of speaking to them in a language you share with them.

Anyone who studies Torah and takes the correct articulation of his words seriously is set to receive many benefits. For example: (i) saying words aloud makes them easier to recall than merely scanning them with one’s eyes;  (ii) words misspoken can be helpfully corrected by one’s teacher or chavruta; (iii) by repeating his words enough times, a person can quote them both accurately  and fluently;  (iv) one’s learning can be more effectively internalized and understood.