Showing posts with label Pesach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pesach. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 August 2024

Why is this sponge different from all other sponges?

Pirkei Avot is a pretty serious tractate, but every so often a little gentle humour filters through. One such example is Avot 5:18, which likens aspiring Torah scholars to various utensils that are more often found in the kitchen than in the study halls:

אַרְבַּע מִדּוֹת בְּיוֹשְׁבִים לִפְנֵי חֲכָמִים: סְפוֹג, וּמַשְׁפֵּךְ, מְשַׁמֶּֽרֶת, וְנָפָה. סְפוֹג, שֶׁהוּא סוֹפֵג אֶת הַכֹּל. וּמַשְׁפֵּךְ, שֶׁמַּכְנִיס בְּזוֹ וּמוֹצִיא בְזוֹ. מְשַׁמֶּֽרֶת, שֶׁמּוֹצִיאָה אֶת הַיַּֽיִן וְקוֹלֶֽטֶת אֶת הַשְּׁמָרִים. וְנָפָה, שֶׁמּוֹצִיאָה אֶת הַקֶּֽמַח וְקוֹלֶֽטֶת אֶת הַסּֽוֹלֶת

There are four types among those who sit before the sages: the sponge, the funnel, the strainer and the sieve. The sponge absorbs everything. The funnel takes in at one end and lets it out the other. The strainer lets the wine pass through and retains the sediment. The sieve lets the coarse flour pass through and retains the fine flour.

What do the sages themselves think of this? Most agree that, while it is a very fine thing to be a sieve, there is less praise for the sponge, the funnel and the strainer. The funnel retains nothing: it represents the talmid whose learning goes “in one ear and out the other”. The strainer is even worse, retaining just the dregs of each class—the witticisms, the asides, the rabbi’s diversions—while keeping nothing of its subject matter. As for the sponge, typical of scholarship ancient and modern is this appraisal by R’ Shlomo Toperoff in his Lev Avot:

“[The sponge] is porous and easily absorbs all kinds of liquid, clean and unclean. Similarly the first type of disciple absorbs all things indiscriminately, the good and the bad; he does not distinguish between the essential and inessential”.

There is however plenty of scope for reappraisal of our four household items. Maybe they are all good, at least in potential. This seems to be the view of Rabbi Shmuel de Uçeda, who in his Midrash Shmuel explains the apparently superfluous words in this mishnah as a call for all four utensils to be explained twice over, once as praise and once as criticism. We discussed his approach, which is followed by Rabbi Avraham Azulai in his Ahavah BeTa’anugim, back in 2022 (see blogpost here, Facebook post with discussion here).

Here's another account of the four kitchen items from Rabbi Chaim Palagi, in his Einei Kol Chai, which I can’t resist bringing even though we still have most of a year till we get to Pesach.

The Passover Haggadah contains a passage that resonates with every child who is old enough to stay up for the Pesach Seder service. It speaks of four children—the wise, the wicked, the simple and the child who doesn’t even know how to ask what is happening around him. Can it be that these children correspond to the four types of student in our mishnah? It is speculated that the sponge represents the simple child, in that it absorbs but does not analyse. The funnel lets everything pass through without even asking why. The strainer, which retains only that which is of no value, is the wicked son. This leaves the sieve as the chacham, the wise and discerning son. Neat, isn’t it?

For comments and discussion of this post on Facebook, click here.

Sunday, 21 April 2024

Chag same'ach: a Happy Pesach to you all!

Tomorrow sees the beginning of Pesach—the Jewish Passover festival. Starting with the traditional seder service we mark the season of the redemption of the Jewish people and their going out from Egypt. It is a time for celebration and for gratitude to God for His indispensable role as our guide and miracle-maker. Pesach also marks the beginning of the traditional season for learning (or at least reading) Pirkei Avot, the assumption being that the stern words of warning and reproof offered by our sages will provide an effective antidote to the spring and summer season for sin.

Avot Today is delighted to say that we have made over 550 articles and discussions of Pirkei Avot available online, both on our blog at avot-today.com and on our interactive Facebook group at facebook.com/groups/avottoday. This makes it longer than most printed commentaries on Avot and, unlike books, our blog can be easily searched by text and by keyword, so you can either quickly find what you are looking for or save valuable time that might otherwise be wasted in seeking out something that’s not there. If you are committing yourself to study Pirkei Avot from now till Rosh Hashanah ushers in the New Year, feel free to make as much use of Avot Today as you like: if you already have a favourite Avot read, Avot Today can serve as a handy adjunct to it.

At this special point in the year, I’d like to thank those of you who have contributed to Avot Today, whether as guest authors or by posting comments. We are all enriched when we hear fresh ideas or test our own against others. Please keep posting your comments—and do contact us if you have a post of your own for us to host or are thinking of writing one.

We have actually had our best year yet in terms of readership. The Facebook Group now has over 330 members and the blog, starting from the summer of 2020, has now hosted over 65,000 page visits. I do hope that these encouraging figures reflect an increased interest in the Ethics of the Fathers and the wisdom of the ages, and that our emphasis on finding modern meaning in ancient words makes Avot easier to appreciate and to internalise.

May God grant us all a happy, kosher and above all peaceful Pesach!

PLEASE NOTE: AVOT TODAY WILL BE TAKING A BREAK FOR PESACH THE NEXT POST WILL BE, GOD WILLING, ON WEDNESDAY 1 MAY.

 For comments and discussion of this post on Facebook click here.