Two mishnayot in Avot discuss the relative importance of the many commandments that govern the life of the practising Jew. At 2:1 Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi says:
וֶהֱוֵי זָהִיר
בְּמִצְוָה קַלָּה כְּבַחֲמוּרָה, שֶׁאֵין אַתָּה יוֹדֵֽעַ מַתַּן שְׂכָרָן שֶׁל
מִצְוֹת, וֶהֱוֵי מְחַשֵּׁב הֶפְסֵד מִצְוָה כְּנֶֽגֶד שְׂכָרָהּ, וּשְׂכַר
עֲבֵרָה כְּנֶֽגֶד הֶפְסֵדָהּ
Be as careful with a minor
mitzvah as with a major one, for you do not know the rewards of the mitzvot.
Consider the cost of a mitzvah against its reward, and the reward of a
transgression against its cost.
Then, at 4:2 Ben Azzai adds:
הֱוֵי רָץ
לְמִצְוָה קַלָּה, וּבוֹרֵֽחַ מִן הָעֲבֵרָה, שֶׁמִּצְוָה גוֹרֶֽרֶת מִצְוָה,
וַעֲבֵרָה גוֹרֶֽרֶת עֲבֵרָה, שֶׁשְּׂכַר מִצְוָה מִצְוָה, וּשְׂכַר עֲבֵרָה
עֲבֵרָה
Run to pursue a
minor mitzvah but flee from a transgression, because a mitzvah brings
another mitzvah, and a transgression brings another transgression since the
reward of a mitzvah is a mitzvah, and the reward of transgression is
transgression.
The commentators concede that terms such as “minor mitzvah”
and “major mitzvah” demand explanation since God in His wisdom chose not to do
so. A stock explanation for this omission is that, if we knew which mitzvot
carried the big rewards and which the small rewards, we would naturally focus
on the big ones only and neglect the rest.
On the subject of rewards, many commentators make reference to the Jerusalem Talmud (Pe’ah 1:1), which points out that the same reward—a long life—is received for performing two mitzvot that are polar opposites, as it were: honouring one’s father and one’s mother (Shemot 20:12), which is reckoned to be one of the very hardest mitzvot to perform, and shooing away the mother bird before taking her eggs (Devarim 22:7), regarded as one of the very easiest. The conclusions we are invited to draw are that, as Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi says, we do not (and indeed cannot) know how God chooses to reward those who carry out His orders, and the reward cannot on the available evidence be related to the ease or hardship that attends their performance.
Honouring one’s parents and shooing away the mother bird are
often stated to be the only two mitzvot in the Torah that offer a long life in
return. But this is not so. There is a third and it is found in Devarim 25:13-15:
the commandment to have weights and scales for measuring one’s merchandise.
Now, if honouring one’s parents is a major mitzvah and
shooing away the mother bird is a minor one, where does that leave the mitzvah
of having just weighing apparatus? I have yet to find a commentator on Avot who
asks this question. It might be suggested that this mitzvah is sometimes hard
and sometimes easy to perform and that, therefore, the reward depends on the
level of effort or difficulty faced by the person keeping it. This answer has
the attraction that it invokes another mishnah in Avot, at the very end of the
fifth perek (5:26), where Ben He He teaches: לְפוּם צַעֲרָא אַגְרָא
(“According to the effort is the reward” or “where there is no pain there is no
gain”). However, this mishnah can also
be applied to honouring one’s parents and shooing away mother birds.
Maybe the solution lies in an explanation I heard Rabbi Yehoshua
Hartman give many years ago in a talk on the Maharal. It runs like this. Every
mitzvah attracts two rewards: there is a standard reward for the tick-the-box
act of completing the mitzvah, and there is a second reward which is attached
to a variable scale, depending on difficulty in completing it and on other
external factors. This would mean that “long life” (in the next world, I
believe) would be the standard rate for both honouring one’s parents and
shooing away the mother bird, while a further reward awaits those who struggled
to do so.
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