An Avot mishnah for Shabbat (Parashat Devarim)
Continuing our series of erev Shabbat posts on the perek of the week, we go back once again to Perek 3.
At Avot 3:17 Rabbi Akiva, having cautioned about the slippery slope leading from jest and frivolity down to sexual impropriety, promotes the efficacy of four “fences” in protecting higher values. He says:
מַסֹּֽרֶת סְיָג לַתּוֹרָה, מַעְשְׂרוֹת סְיָג לָעֹֽשֶׁר,
נְדָרִים סְיָג לַפְּרִישׁוּת, סְיָג לַחָכְמָה שְׁתִיקָה
Tradition is a fence to Torah, tithing is a fence
to wealth, vows are a fence for abstinence; a fence for wisdom is silence.
To the practising Jew of today’s world, the importance and
practical utility of Torah, wealth and wisdom need neither explanation or
justification. But what do we make of vows and abstinence? These are not part
of our daily vocabulary. We no longer make the sort of vows that feature in the
Torah, and abstinence is an unfashionable concept in any open society where self-indulgence,
and indeed overindulgence, have become the norm. But if a teaching from Avot
does not offer us an immediately relevant meaning, we do not jettison it or
consign it to the museum of religious curiosities. We must look more closely at
it and understand it more fully.
All of us make resolutions from time to time. These are not formal vows or oaths made in God’s name, and they usually relate to things that are either unregulated by the Torah or which are so prevalent that it is hard to avoid them. Typical examples might be resolving to limit one’s intake of alcohol at meals or parties, not to eat a second piece of cake at the shul’s kiddush, to get to bed by midnight or to try to avoid speaking about one’s friends behind their backs. If we mean these resolutions and take them seriously, we feel annoyed with ourselves if we break them—but it doesn’t cost us anything if we do and we do not incur any liability for which we would be obliged to offer a Temple sacrifice, a major deterrent to breaking one’s vows.
R' Yisroel Miller cites an idea expressed by R’ Yehoshua
Heller in his Divrei Yehoshua that offers a simple way to apply our mishnah
in the context of our own lives. He writes:
“Rather than vowing to keep to
your resolution, vow that each time you break it you will give a certain amount
of money to tzedakah (enough to hurt, but not enough to bankrupt you). A
modified version of this is not to make an actual vow but merely a commitment
to give the money each time you break your resolution. This sensitizes us and
heightens our awareness of our actions, reinforcing our resolve”.
This creates a sort of win-win situation. If we keep our
resolutions, we have money in our pockets and the satisfaction of demonstrating
that we are strong because our self-discipline is in working order (see Avot
4:1). But if we fail, we are credited with the mitzvah of tzedakah and one or
more charitable causes will be fortunate to benefit from it.
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