Showing posts with label Risk-taking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Risk-taking. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 January 2025

Taking a risk

Just last week we posted a discussion (“Material wealth, human needs: when does a luxury become a necessity?”, here) on Rabban Gamliel ben Rebbi’s dictum (Avot 2:2) on getting the right balance between learning Torah and earning a living:

יָפֶה תַּלְמוּד תּוֹרָה עִם דֶּֽרֶךְ אֶֽרֶץ, שֶׁיְּגִיעַת שְׁנֵיהֶם מַשְׁכַּֽחַת עָוֹן, וְכָל תּוֹרָה שֶׁאֵין עִמָּהּ מְלָאכָה סוֹפָהּ בְּטֵלָה וְגוֹרֶֽרֶת עָוֹן

Torah study is good together with earning a living, for the exertion of them both makes sin forgotten. All Torah study that is not joined with work will cease in the end, and leads to sin.

The earlier post addressed the extent to which one’s material wants and needs should be allowed to compete with the imperative requirement of learning Torah. I’ve just found a different slant on this teaching, focusing on the risk a Torah student takes in seeking to establish the right balance. This comes from Rabbi Norman Lamm—a champion of Torah Umadda—effectively the pursuit of all forms of knowledge for the purpose of enriching one’s Torah understanding and bringing one’s understanding to bear in the contemporary world. Rabbi Lamm’s premise is that, however important Torah learning may be, every community depends for its survival on some people working for a living and occupying themselves with acts that do not constitute Torah learning. This is a truism in respect of any and every Jewish community—we all need doctors, lawyers, accountants and others whose professional skill set lies outside the covers of the Talmud and its commentators. But ultimately the decision as to how to balance learning with work is placed on the shoulders of the individual and, for each of us, getting the right balance is just a euphemism for taking a risk and getting away with it.

In Foundation of Faith he comments on this mishnah:

“Yes, of course there are risks in Torah Umadda. Any knowledge that can never be dangerous is also never worth striving for. It is like anything else in life. Love, for example, is a great ideal, yet love can be very dangerous. You could love the wrong person or you could love illicitly. Peace is marvellous, Sim Shalom, but peace with the devil is dangerous. Democracy is a great idea, but democracy taken to an extreme means we can all vote to worship the Baal. Any great idea can be exploited and abused. All knowledge that is worthwhile can be dangerous, and a Torah Umadda approach means exposing students to the cultural winds that are current in the contemporary world. Not all of them are good, and not all of them are compatible with a Torah viewpoint”.

An educated, intelligent and perceptive Jew, comfortable with his Jewish knowledge base and secure in his own identity, should be able to weigh up the non-Jewish ideas he encounters when acquiring and practising a profession. But there is a warning:

“…[I]nstead of looking at [an idea that originates from a non-Torah source] critically, the student will embrace I, especially because Torah Jews are a cognitive minority … even within the Jewish community, and it is very difficult to live as a lone wolf, as it were, intellectually. So there is a tendency to give in, and that’s the danger”.

At this point the reader may be wondering why, given the risk of adopting ideas antithetical to the Torah, Rabbi Lamm should be so keen for a Torah-observant Jew to do so. Here’s his answer:

“[I]t’s worth taking that risk because doing the opposite means that we have given up our commission of being a goy kadosh umamlekhet kohanim. We are in danger of no longer being “a holy nation and a Kingdom of Priests” but, instead, becoming a safe sect and a denomination of Priests, and that is not exactly what we were told to do at Har Sinai”.

I wonder if I am alone in finding Rabbi Lamm’s argument, for all its power and passion, quite unpersuasive. Is it true in any meaningful sense that “any knowledge that can never be dangerous is also never worth striving for”? How does one go about verifying this assertion? Why is no apparent distinction drawn between “knowledge” and “ideas”?  And why are we any less a “holy nation and a Kingdom of Priests” if we absorb our own Jewish ideas and share them other nations? Thoughts, anyone?

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