Fear (יִרְאָה, yirah) is a theme that runs through Pirkei Avot. We meet it first at Avot 1:3, where Antigonos Ish Socho counsels:
וִיהִי מוֹרָא
שָׁמַֽיִם עֲלֵיכֶם
And let the fear of Heaven be
upon you.
At Avot 2:11 the highest accolade that Rabban Yochanan ben Zakkai
can give to one of his leading talmidim. Rabbi Shimon ben Netanel, is to
describe him as a יְרֵא חֵטְא (“a fearer of sin”). In the baraitot at
the end of the tractate, to be בְּיִרְאָה (“in a state of fear”)
is one of the 48 modes by which one acquires Torah—and there are other
references to fear. But what does the word mean, both inherently and to us now?
Our sages have had much to say about fear. They have taught
us to distinguish between fear of punishment, fear of actually doing wrong and
the sort of fear one experiences (which we probably equate with awe) when in
the presence of something so great that we simply can’t take it in, something
that, we intuitively feel, substantiates our belief in God’s role as Creator of
the world or His immanent presence. When used by our Sages, the word yirah,
in one context or another, seems to span a vast range of human emotions: at one
extreme it is a deep sense of terror while, at the other, it is more like a
profound form of respect.
What I want to ask here is not what yirah means but
whether we really feel it the same way as the early audience of Avot students
would have done. This question is sparked off by a comment made by Rabbi Yisroel
Miller, The Wisdom of Avos, on Avot 2:1—a mishnah that doesn’t even contain
the word yirah. He writes:
“[I] believe without question
that on Rosh Hashanah my life hangs in the balance as Hashem decides my fate
for the coming year, and yet I do not tremble as much as I did when a policeman
once pulled me over for a traffic violation!”
This leads to another question: what is the role of fear in
our lives today? Is it to be reserved for threats to our physical and economic
well-being, leaving us to rely on the censure of our fellow humans and peer
pressure instead? And have we really forgotten how to fear?
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