An Avot mishnah for Shabbat: Perek 3 (parashat Emor)
Continuing our series of erev Shabbat posts on the perek of the week, we now turn to Perek 3.
Rabbi Akiva is universally acknowledged in the Jewish world
as one of our greatest and most influential scholars. He is also the most
prominent contributor to this week’s Perek, providing four of its 23 mishnayot.
We are fortunate that so much of his learning has been preserved for us in the
Mishnah and Talmud—but unfortunate in that we no longer have a full
understanding and appreciation of his teachings.
An example of this is the three-part mishnah of Avot 3:19:
הַכֹּל צָפוּי, וְהָרְשׁוּת נְתוּנָה, וּבְטוֹב
הָעוֹלָם נִדּוֹן, וְהַכֹּל לְפִי רוֹב הַמַּעֲשֶׂה
Everything is foreseen, but
freedom of choice is granted. The world is judged in goodness, and everything
is in accordance with the majority of the action.
The first part of this teaching is a conundrum, but at least we can see that it is so: the notion that we have absolute freedom to do what we want cannot be conveniently reconciled with God’s knowing in advance that this is exactly what we are going to do; Rambam tells us—as if we could not see for ourselves—that the way this works is beyond human comprehension. The second part can be comprehended as a proposition, but we have no indication as to what it means in cosmic terms or in our daily lives. The third part demands some sort of explanation because its meaning lies beyond us. Knowing Rabbi Akiva as we do, we appreciate that deep meaning lies locked away within his words—but we have lost the key.
This week’s mishnah has
generated volumes of learned commentary, much of which Rabbi Akiva might have
found quite surprising. Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi chose to include this teaching in
Avot even though Rabbi Akiva said many things that are apparently more relevant
(for example that “love your neighbour like yourself” is the great general
principle of the Torah). From this we may infer that this mishnah says something
about our role as humans. Even so, many explanations seemingly turn on global
considerations and do not appear to address the individual at all. Be that as
it may, each generation looks carefully at Rabbi Akiva’s words and we too
engage in this task. If we cannot pull his meaning out of it, we can at
least attempt to breathe meaning into it.
So this Shabbat let us ask ourselves: “What does this mishnah
say with regard to our role as individuals in a social context? How can it
improve us or aid us in the various roles we are required to fulfil?”
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