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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Understanding Aggada Yeshivat Har Etzion
Shiur #17a: Dealing With Contradictions
By Rav Yitzchak Blau
Rav Yehuda said in the name of Rav: "Remember this man
positively, and Chanania ben Chizkiya is his name. For if not for his efforts
the book of Yechezkel would have been hidden away as its words contradict
the words of Torah. What did he do? He took up three hundred bottles of oil to
his attic and he sat there until he expounded [in a way that resolved the
contradictions]." (Shabbat 13b)
Rav Yehuda the son of Rav Shemuel bar Shilat said in the name
of Rav: "The sages wanted to hide away the book of Kohelet because its
words contradict each other. Why did they not do so? Because it begins with
words of Torah and ends with words of Torah"...
And they also wanted to hide away the book of Mishlei
because its words contradict each other. Why did they not do so? They said: "Did
we not look into the book of Kohelet and find a way to explain it. Here
too let us delve into it." (Shabbat 30b)
Apparently, three different canonical works were
potential candidates for geniza due to problem of contradictions. In all
three cases, the problems were successfully resolved. Yet a number of
commentaries note that the resolution differs in the various cases. Chanania
solved the contradictions between Yechezkel and Chumash by
reconciling these two sources and showing that they truly compliment each other.
In contrast, the internal contradictions in Kohelet are initially dealt
with by pointing out that the book opens and closes on important religious
notes. Although the same gemara does proceed to resolve the Kohelet
contradictions as well, it implies that it was the religious messages found
at the book's twin poles that enabled it to get past the censor. If so, how did
two good sections overcome the problem of contradictions?
Maharsha (on 30b) explains that the sages knew
that Yechezkel was an established prophet and that his written words were
prophetic. Therefore they immediately had sufficient motivation to try to
resolve any problems in that work. Kohelet, on the other hand, was the
product of Shlomo's human wisdom. The sages might not have extended great effort
to make this work part of Tanakh were it not for the fact that it begins
and ends with significant themes. These two parts of Kohelet inspired the
sages to work out its contradictions and include in the canon.
R. Yaakov Reisher raises similar questions in his
Iyyun Yakkov (found in Ein Yaakov, on 30a). He also asks how two
good parts compensated for the internal inconsistencies. He answers that
contradictions are not sufficient reason to hide away a work. Only heretical
themes provide such a justification. According to R. Reisher, it was not the
contradictions themselves that worried the sages but the possible heretical
interpretations that would follow from those contradictions. Once the sages saw
the pure religious impulses of the book's opening and closing themes, they felt
assured that the middle sections also did not border on the heretical.
In support of this idea, note that another version of
this aggada found in Vayikra Rabba (28:1) explicitly says that the
problem of Kohelet was that its words seem to incline towards the
heretical. I would also add that R. Reisher might be making a more far-reaching
point. Conflicting themes are no reason to reject a work because the conflicts
may simply reflect the fact that our reality is complex, and that sometimes only
the tension of opposition conveys the truth of the matter. As Kohelet notes,
some forms of joy deserve approval and others do not. However, when the
complexity gives way to heresy, then the time has come to protest.
Let us now turn to the example of Mishlei. The sages did
not point to specific outstanding pesukim in this work but rather
mentioned the prior successful example of Kohelet. Apparently, their
success at resolving the problems of Kohelet filled them with confidence
about the ability to do so for Mishlei. I suggest that this serves as a
broader model for both our personal thinking about religion and for our
educational endeavors. We need not feel the need to resolve each and every
challenging religious question. Such a need would lead us to offer poor answers
when a humble confession of ignorance would be a far better response. What we do
need to accomplish is to explain enough of Torah in a profound and reasonable
fashion that a certain presumption of reasonableness spreads to the entirety of
Torah. When the bulk of Torah shines forth in all of its splendor, we can learn
to live with the sections whose light we find ourselves currently incapable of
seeing. |