Showing posts with label Popularity with man. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Popularity with man. Show all posts

Tuesday, 11 March 2025

Mordechai: loved by not quite all?

The hero of Purim, Mordechai, slips quietly into the end of the long baraita at Avot 6:6 that enumerates the 48 qualities that facilitate kinyan haTorah—acquisition of Torah learning. Although in our tradition Mordechai was a Talmid Chacham of sufficient status to be counted as a member of the Anshei Knesset HaGedolah (“The Men of the Great Assembly”: see Bartenura at Avot 1:1), we don’t actually learn anything from him in his cameo appearance in Avot—he appears in a proof verse that praises Esther for telling Achashverosh, in Mordechai’s name, of the regicidal plot hatched by Bigtan and Teresh (see Esther 2:22). But Mordechai has a handy didactic role in helping us understand a curious mishnah in Avot

In Avot 3:13 Rabbi Chanina ben Dosa teaches:

כֹּל שֶׁרֽוּחַ הַבְּרִיּוֹת נוֹחָה הֵימֶֽנּוּ, רֽוּחַ הַמָּקוֹם נוֹחָה הֵימֶֽנּוּ. וְכֹל שֶׁאֵין רֽוּחַ הַבְּרִיּוֹת נוֹחָה הֵימֶֽנּוּ, אֵין רֽוּחַ הַמָּקוֹם נוֹחָה הֵימֶֽנּוּ

Everyone who is pleasing to his fellow humans is pleasing to God. But everyone who does not please his fellow men does not please God.

Rabbi Chaim Druckman (Avot leBanim) quotes the 14th century Spanish scholar Rabbi Yosef Even Nachmias, whose explanation of this mishnah—which he heard from the mouth of Rabbi Yitzchak Melamed—has been preserved for us in Midrash Shmuel.

Rabbi Nachmias points to the famous verse in Megillat Esther (Esther 10:3) that bemoans the fact that even Mordechai—who saved the Jews of Persia from genocide—was unable to achieve total popularity:

כִּ֣י  מׇרְדֳּכַ֣י הַיְּהוּדִ֗י מִשְׁנֶה֙ לַמֶּ֣לֶךְ אֲחַשְׁוֵר֔וֹשׁ וְגָדוֹל֙ לַיְּהוּדִ֔ים וְרָצ֖וּי לְרֹ֣ב אֶחָ֑יו דֹּרֵ֥שׁ טוֹב֙ לְעַמּ֔וֹ וְדֹבֵ֥ר שָׁל֖וֹם לְכׇל־זַרְעֽוֹ


For Mordechai the Jew was second to King Achashverosh, and great among the Jews and in favour with many of his brothers, for he worked for the good of his people and spoke for the peace of his whole nation.

Says Rabbi Nachmias, look closely at the words of Rabbi Chanina ben Dosa. He talks of כֹּל שֶׁרֽוּחַ הַבְּרִיּוֹת נוֹחָה הֵימֶֽנּו (“Everyone who is pleasing to his fellow humans”). What he does not say is כֹּל שֶׁרֽוּחַ כֹּל הַבְּרִיּוֹת נוֹחָה הֵימֶֽנּו (“Everyone who is pleasing to all his fellow humans”). In other words, however popular you are, there will always be someone whose feelings will run to contrary effect. This is human nature. You do your best but, as secular wisdom succinctly expresses it:

“You can please some of the people all of the time, you can please all of the people some of the time, but you can’t please all of the people all of the time”.

God knows the truth of this aphorism and Mordechai experiences it.

If you don’t believe this, try an experiment. Go to your browser and search “most popular people in the world”. Your results will include the following:

  • Barack Obama
  • Elon Musk
  • Justin Bieber
  • Taylor Swift
  • Jennifer Lopez
  • Jeff Bezos
  • Dwayne Johnson
  • Beyoncé

Even allowing for the eccentricities of Google Chrome, how many of these people can you honestly say is pleasing to you? If your score is lower than 8, you’ve proved the mishnah’s point.

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Thursday, 18 June 2020

Does popularity with man bring about popularity with God?

There's a Mishnah in the third perek of Avot in which Rabbi Chanina ben Dosa teaches as follows:

כֹּל שֶׁרֽוּחַ הַבְּרִיּוֹת נוֹחָה הֵימֶֽנּוּ, רֽוּחַ הַמָּקוֹם נוֹחָה הֵימֶֽנּוּ. וְכֹל שֶׁאֵין רֽוּחַ הַבְּרִיּוֹת נוֹחָה הֵימֶֽנּוּ, אֵין רֽוּחַ הַמָּקוֹם נוֹחָה הֵימֶֽנּוּ  

This is usually translated non-literally, often along the lines of:

"One who is pleasing to his fellow men, he is pleasing to God. But one who is not pleasing to his fellow men, he is not pleasing to God",


However, in truth, when we stop to reflect for a moment, it is apparent that the notion that one who is popular with his fellows will also be loved by God raises problems.  The first problem is that of establishing and justifying any causal connection between people being popular with their peers and their being popular, as it were, with God.  When we humans like other people, it can be both because of their qualities or despite them – and we might like them for quite the wrong reasons.  This is why we have such a deep and irrational fascination and sometimes affection for rogues and villains. We would expect God, whose knowledge and understanding quite exceeds our own, to make better judgements than we do.  Why should God’s spirit rest more on a charismatic rogue than on someone who is socially awkward but possessed of finer inner qualities?

A second problem is that our own literature does not appear to support this simple view of the Mishnah. A case in point involves two of the most outstanding personalities within Jewish culture, Moses and Aaron.  There is no doubt that these two individuals were loved by God: they possessed remarkable human qualities and dedicated their lives to unselfish service of their Maker.  However, while Aaron was greatly loved and deeply mourned by a fickle and demanding public, Moses was of necessity a remote and distant figure, a stranger to the masses, respected and feared rather than loved. Indeed, he feared that they were ready to kill him.  It is difficult to reconcile a simple understanding of the words of this Mishnah with the notion that God’s warm favour and affection is only directed towards those who are popular with their fellow men. We might also contemplate the cases of Noah (an object of ridicule and derision who finds favour in God’s eyes), Jeremiah (subjected to vilification and physical abuse but gifted with prophecy by God) and Shimon ben Kosevah (‘Bar Kochba’, the charismatic leader of a popular revolt against Roman rule but who did not receive God’s support).
Thoughts, anyone?