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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
DEVELOPING A TORAH
PERSONALITY
Yeshivat Har Etzion
Based on addresses by
Harav Aharon Lichtenstein
Adapted by Rav Reuven
Ziegler
LECTURE #6
Being Frum and Being
Good:
On the Relationship Between
Religion and Morality
PART
1:
God’s Will and the
Good
How are we to understand the relationship between
being frum and being good? The answer depends, of course, on how we
understand these two terms.
Popularly or sociologically defined, frumkeit (loosely,
“religiosity”) and goodness are neither quite the same nor opposed. We all know
people who are absolute apikorsim (disbelievers) and whom we would
nevertheless define as being “good” by virtue of their high moral standards.
Conversely, we also unfortunately know others whom we would surely designate as
frum (observant)—they keep Shabbat and are scrupulous in their
kashrut—but who are nevertheless ruthless or dishonest in personal and
commercial relations. That, of course, hardly fits our conception of goodness.
So, although popularly defined, these two terms are simply independent of one
another, we are concerned with philosophical rather than sociological
definitions, and on that level the relation between these two terms is less
certain.
DEFINING GOODNESS
Let us begin therefore with definition. Both our
referents, frumkeit and goodness, have historically been exhaustively
analyzed. In the twentieth century in particular, a whole literature—largely
fathered by G.E. Moore’s Principia Ethica at the turn of the century and
subsequently stimulated by the school of linguistic analysis—has sought to
explore and define what is “the good.” For our purposes, we need not enter into
the minutiae of this discussion, other than to stress a cardinal, albeit
possibly obvious point: the term “good” has both a functional, pragmatic sense
and a moral, axiological sense. On the one hand, it relates to the effectiveness
of an object or a person; on the other hand, to its value. We may, for instance,
speak of a “good” pistol which can shoot to kill efficiently, and therefore can
be employed very effectively for implementing evil purposes. And straddling both
spheres, the functional and the moral, there is also an aesthetic
sense.
Thus, to look back at Parashat Bereishit (2:9), we hear first of a
fruit which is tov le-ma’akhal, good for eating in a pragmatic sense;
surely there is no moral attribute attached to that. Subsequently, we hear of
etz ha-da’at tov va-ra, the tree of knowledge of good and evil, where the
moral sense is intended. In certain verses, the meaning may be ambiguous or
multiple—for instance, “Lo tov heyot ha-adam levado, It is not good for
man to be alone” (ibid. 2:18). My understanding of the intent of this
verse is that it is neither good psychologically nor good
morally.
In our context, while being mindful of the various senses of the word, we
shall be focusing primarily and directly upon the moral sense. That is, we shall
try to define what we understand by a “good” person and how we relate to him or
her (not in the functional sense of a “good” parent or a “good” citizen). We
understand goodness to be that which is intrinsically morally good; not
something which factually is desired, but something inherently valuable and
desirable.
DEFINING FRUMKEIT
Likewise, the term “frumkeit” or “religion”
has to be thoroughly analyzed. Here, too, for our purposes I will content myself
with a general concept. But even in dealing with very general terms, we surely
need to differentiate between several strands. The term signifies first an
existential and experiential connection to God—emuna (faith), and beyond
that, yira, ahava, deveikut (fear, love, cleaving). Second, and this is
particularly true within a Jewish and halakhic context, that relation to God
needs to translate into an obedient and obeisant response to His normative
demands. The interrelation between these two elements as being part of a single
concept is made very clear in the verse in Ekev:
And now, O Israel, what does the Lord your God demand
of you? Only this: to fear the Lord your God, to walk in all His paths, to love
Him, and to serve the Lord your God with all your heart and soul; to keep the
Lord’s commandments and laws, which I enjoin upon you today, for your good.
(Devarim 10:12)
The gemara understands from this verse that God has one
fundamental demand of us: yirat Shamayim (fear of Heaven).
Rav Yochanan said in the name of Rabbi Elazar: God
has in this world fear of Heaven alone, as it says, “And now, O Israel, what
does the Lord your God demand of you? Only this: to fear the Lord your God,
etc.” It is further written (Iyyov 28:28), “Indeed (hen), fear of
God is wisdom,” and in Greek “hen” means “one.” (Shabbat
31b)
Although the gemara says we are dealing with a single entity, the
verse seems to specify a whole list of demands: fear of God, walking in His
paths, love, service, keeping His commandments. The reason for this is that
fundamentally we can speak of one category, but one which then has several
components. These components break down into the two elements that I mentioned
earlier: the existential, experiential relationship to God (love and fear), and
the response to God’s commands (keeping His mitzvot). The latter takes
place both in broader terms (“walking in all His paths and serving Him”) and in
the specific details of Halakha (“to keep the Lord’s commandments and laws,
which I enjoin upon you today”).
For us, it is the combination of these two elements which constitutes
frumkeit. In the famous penultimate verse in Kohelet, we again
find a single focus on the conjunction of these two elements:
The sum of the matter, when all is said and done:
Fear God and observe all His commandments, for this is the whole of man.
(Kohelet 12:13)
Both the inner and outer responses to God’s normative demands, their
acceptance and implementation, are central. “Nullify your will before His will”
(Avot 2:4), both inwardly and in terms of practice. The move from an
anthropocentric to a theocentric existence is the essence of halakhic living. As
the Torah, particularly in Sefer Devarim, repeatedly emphasizes, the
central category of Judaism is mitzva. As we discussed in an earlier lecture,
religious human existence, not to mention Jewish existence, begins with the
verse (Bereishit 2:16): “Va-yetzav Hashem E-lokim al haadam, And
the Lord God commanded the man.” Frumkeit for us surely does not exhaust
itself in an emotional experience, but also responds to a divine call and
transcendental demands.
THE CENTRALITY OF
COMMANDMENT
Moreover, for us, God’s normative commandment frames
the totality of our existence, even with respect to presumably “neutral” areas.
I think that it is in this vein that the first commandment to Adam is to be
understood. There is something strange about the
formulation,
Of every tree of the garden you are free to eat; but
as for the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, you must not eat of it. . .
(Bereishit 2:16-17)
We might have expected the verse to impose certain
limitations upon man, to command him merely not to eat of the tree of knowledge.
He had been told a long time ago that he could eat from the rest of the trees.
So why repeat this permission here—is there a mitzva to eat from the other
trees?
I think that the point here is very clear. The Torah is telling us that
the moment that the category of commandment appears as an essential component of
human existence and experience, this fact has implications not only for devar
ha-mitzva (obligatory actions or prohibitions), but also for devar
ha-reshut (non-obligatory actions). So long as man does not live under the
impact of “va-yetzav,” all his actions are the product of absolute
freedom (understood as taking what one likes). But the moment the category of
“va-yetzav” presents itself, it then defines man’s existence not only
within the parameters of a particular commandment, but within the totality of
his existence. Once there is a “va-yetzav,” then when one imbibes of the
devar reshut, that too becomes an act of moral choice. One now needs to
ask himself: Is this particular action a devar reshut or does it fall
under the tzav; is it subject to individual choice or to a divine
command?
In other words, the “va-yetzav” addresses itself not only to the
tree of knowledge, but rather to all the trees of the garden. The fact that we
live, in Milton’s phrase, “as ever in my great Taskmaster’s eye,” constantly
under tzav, is to us the central, cardinal fact of our existence as a
whole. This is what we are to understand by frumkeit specifically:
“Be-khol derakhekha da’ehu”—Know God in all your
actions.
SOCRATES’ QUESTION
However, to understand frumkeit in these
terms, as a single concept with two components, as the abnegation of our will in
response to our acceptance of God’s normative will—this only begs the question.
At the heart of the problem of the relationship between frumkeit and
goodness, or, if you will, between religion and morality, lies the question
which Socrates poses to Euthyphro. In trying to define piety, Euthyphro explains
that piety is that which the gods want us to do. Socrates then asks him whether
the gods love piety because it is pious, or is it pious because they love it? We
can reframe the question with God, le-havdil, in the
singular.
Are we to understand the content, value and significance of mitzva, of
“the good,” as simply deriving from the fact that God wants it? He may wish it
for purely arbitrary reasons guided by no criteria, bound by no standards,
impelled by no reasons. Or do we believe that there is some antecedent reason
inherent in a particular phenomenon which “leads” or “impels” God to decide upon
it? Are we to understand that, at the Divine level, there is a kind of moral
relativism where everything is equally good or bad and God has chosen between
them arbitrarily? Or do we believe that His will is not purely arbitrary, but
rather guided by certain standards, and God has commanded us based on these
criteria?
This question has been the subject of protracted and at times intensive
controversy throughout the history of Western thought. In medieval times,
William of Ockham championed the voluntarist position, namely, that God’s will
is indeed boundless and limitless, and that nothing is either good or bad but
God’s wishing makes it so. In contrast, Aquinas contended that there are
inherent truths and values which are to be found in certain phenomena and that
these are the subject of God’s choice, not by accident but by dint of their very
being.
Similar controversies are to be found subsequently in the seventeenth
century, not only at the moral level but at the level of fact. Descartes, for
instance, contended that had God so desired, two times two would not have
equaled four. What we have here essentially is a conflict between two
fundamental tendencies which, to a great extent, are rooted in different
conceptions of God.
THE POWER AND THE BEAUTY: TWO CONCEPTIONS OF
GOD
The verse says (Tehillim 29:4), “Kol Hashem
ba-ko’ach; kol Hashem be-hadar—The voice of God is power; the voice of God
is splendor.” We perceive God in one sense as boundless, unbridled power. In
another sense, we perceive Him in terms of values, of truth and goodness. To the
extent that our perception of God and our relation to Him is primarily in terms
of power, then surely we will regard as anathema the notion that somehow His
will is guided or impelled. The sense of power is most keenly felt precisely
when it is arbitrarily exercised, when one need not answer to any kind of
standard, when nothing but sheer will is being expressed.
On the other hand, one thinks in terms of “Kol Hashem behadar.”
Hadar is presumably some kind of objective beauty, a moral beauty, a
beauty of truth. If so, then one is appalled at the thought God could have
commanded to kill as easily as He commanded not to kill.
Those who indeed relate to God primarily out of a sense of His awesome
power and their own weakness and impotence, are perhaps likely to move in the
direction of the voluntarist position. On the other hand, those who take a more
rational and moral position contend that rationality and goodness are part of
God’s very essence. It is true, therefore, that certain things are simply
inconceivable for Him; but this is not an external constraint, and therefore we
need not be shaken by the thought that somehow His power is not
boundless.
GOD’S MORAL ESSENCE
If the issues, as I have said, have been subject to
protracted controversy—one writer once described the answer as being the line
which divides Eastern from Western religious thought—I think that the Jewish
position is absolutely unequivocal. We indeed hold that God’s will, His Being,
is moral and rational; that He does act, and will, in accordance with certain
standards. By virtue of His very essence, certain things not only shall not but
cannot be willed by Him. God and moral evil are simply and purely
incompatible.
Chabakuk (1:13) describes God as, “You whose eyes are too pure to look
upon evil, who cannot countenance wrongdoing.” But why wait until Chabakuk? The
Torah itself states (Devarim 32:4): “A faithful God, never false, true
and upright is He.” Indeed, this position had already been assumed by Avraham.
One of the seventeenth-century Cambridge Platonists, Benjamin Whichcote, pointed
out that when Avraham questioned God (in his pleading against the destruction of
Sodom), “Shall not the Judge of all the earth deal justly?” (Bereishit
18:25), this implied that there is a standard of justice to which God,
ki-veyakhol, can be held accountable. One can ask: Is God’s plan
regarding Sodom compatible with justice? This position is likewise implicit in
the recurrent formulations of the problem of tzaddik ve-ra lo, rasha ve-tov
lo, the suffering of the righteous and prosperity of the
wicked.
If we move from morality to the related sphere of rationality, these
limits (so to speak) upon God’s will are the basis of the persistent quest for
ta’amei ha-mitzvot (reasons for the commandments) chronicled in Yitzchak
Heinemann’s book, Ta’amei Hamitzvot Be-sifrut Yisrael. The controversy
over ta’amei ha-mitzvot has centered upon the legitimacy and advisability
of our seeking and suggesting reasons, and not upon their very existence. The
Gemara (Sanhedrin 21b) asks: Why were the reasons for the Torah
not revealed? Because once they are revealed, there is a risk that someone will
think he can transgress the commandment without violating the reason behind it.
The Ramban was very emphatic with regard to this point:
The intention of the Rabbis [in defining chukkim
as divine decrees for which there is no reason] was not that these are
decrees of the King of Kings for which there are no reasons whatever, “for every
word of God is pure” (Mishlei 30:5). [Rather, they meant] only that
chukkim are like the enactments which a king promulgates for his kingdom
without revealing their benefits to the people, and the people, not sensing
these reasons, entertain questions about them in their hearts but they accept
them nonetheless out of fear of the government. Similarly, the chukkim of
the Holy One, blessed be He, are His secrets in the Torah, which the people by
means of their thinking do not grasp as they do in the case of mishpatim
(laws whose rationale is more apparent). Yet they all have a proper reason
and perfect benefit. (Commentary on the Torah, Vayikra
19:19)
THE VALUE OF OBEDIENCE
To be sure, if we are dealing with ta’amei
ha-mitzvot, it is conceivable that another factor comes into play. Perhaps
the rationality of the commandment need not relate to the inherent value and
significance of a particular tzav. The midrash relates:
What does it matter to the Holy One, blessed be He,
whether we slaughter an animal from the front of the neck or its back? Rather,
the mitzvot were given in order to purify mankind. (Bereishit Rabba
44:1)
The Rambam (Guide of the Perplexed III:26) takes this to mean that
we cannot understand the reasons for the details of the commandments, and
perhaps there are no reasons for these. Why is shechita (slaughtering)
from the front of the neck, and melika (a method of killing birds for
sacrifices) from the back? As opposed to the kabbalists, the Rambam takes the
position that the details of mitzvot perhaps have no inherent
significance. It could have been just the reverse. (See Ramban, Devarim
22:6, for an opposing view.) But even for the Rambam, this does not mean
that the concept of shechita per se or melika per se has no
reason.
One might go beyond this and assume that inherently a particular mitzva
does not have a reason, but it is still meaningful. Let me quote you a passage
from a very fine little book by C.S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain:
It has sometimes been asked whether God commands
certain things because they are right, or whether certain things are right
because God commands them. With Hooker [a late sixteenth- century Anglican
theologian], and against Dr. Johnson, I emphatically embrace the first
alternative. The second might lead to the abominable conclusion (reached, I
think, by Paley [late eighteenth-century]) that charity is good only because God
arbitrarily commanded it—that He might equally well have commanded us to hate
Him and one another and that hatred would then have been right. I believe, on
the contrary, that [quoting Hooker], “they err who think that of the will of God
to do this or that there is no reason besides His will.” God’s will is
determined by His wisdom which always perceives, and His goodness which always
embraces, the intrinsically good. But when we have said that God commands things
only because they are good, we must add that one of the things intrinsically
good is that rational creatures should freely surrender themselves to their
Creator in obedience. The content of our obedience—the thing we are com- manded
to do—will always be something intrinsically good, something we ought to do even
if (by an impossible supposition) God had not commanded it. But in addition to
the content, the mere obeying is also intrinsically good, for, in obeying, a
rational creature consciously enacts its creaturely role, reverses the act by
which we fell, treads Adam’s dance backward, and returns.
(p.100)
I think one can go beyond Lewis and suggest that since, as he correctly
points out, one of the things which is intrinsically good is that a person
accustom himself to obeying God, perhaps certain things might have been
commanded simply in order to drill the habit into us. In fact, perhaps things
were commanded precisely because there is no apparent reason for them, and
therefore the habit of obedience is ingrained all the more deeply, to the extent
that no reason is perceived. To what can this be compared? A sergeant in the
army sometimes puts his soldiers through certain drills precisely to ingrain in
them the habit of obeying a commander. He orders them to do things for which
there is no apparent reason, and for which indeed there is no reason other than
the fact that they develop a habit. This is not equivalent to adopting the
voluntarist position. It is simply an expansion of the notion of what we are to
understand by that which is intrinsically valuable and
desirable.
Now, if we understand that God’s will and His mitzvot are grounded
in goodness, rationality and morality, then if we also submit that frumkeit
means doing God’s will, and that goodness is an integral component of that
will—then of course ideal and comprehensive frumkeit includes goodness.
It is not synonymous with goodness; it includes it, it comprehends it. To us,
certainly, this is a davar pashut, a simple, obvious
matter.
PART
2:
Frumkeit
Devoid of
Goodness
Although this may be true theoretically, frumkeit
is, of course, never ideal or comprehensive. We still need to ask ourselves,
both philosophically and educationally: How do we regard a frumkeit
devoid of goodness? Does it exist? Does it have merit?
TZADDIK RA, RASHA TOV
Presumably, the humanist or moralist in us is
inclined to hasten to reply, “Frumkeit without goodness is worthless! Can
someone see himself as relating only to one area of avodat Hashem (divine
service)? He follows the dictates only of bein adam la- Makom (mitzvot
between man and God) but not bein adam lechavero (interpersonal
mitzvot)? What kind of frumkeit is that!?”
But before we hasten to let the moralist and the humanist in us answer,
as benei Torah we need to confront the following
gemara:
Said Rava: Rav Idi explained this verse to me, “Say
of the righteous, when he is good, that they shall eat the fruit of their
doings” (Yeshayahu 3:10). Is there then a righteous man who is good and a
righteous man who is not good? Rather [explain thus:] He who is good to Heaven
and good to man, he is a righteous man who is good; good to Heaven but not good
to man, he is a righteous man who is not good. Similarly we read, “Woe unto the
wicked [man who is] evil; for the reward of his hands will be given unto him”
(ibid. 3:11): Is there then a wicked man who is evil and a wicked man who
is not evil? Rather [explain thus:] He who is evil to Heaven and evil to man, he
is a wicked man who is evil; he who is evil to Heaven but not evil to man, he is
a wicked man who is not evil. (Kiddushin 40a)
The gemara here apparently understands that the terms tzaddik
and rasha (righteous and wicked) are defined by a person’s conduct
with respect to the area bein adam la-Makom. Whether he is tov or
ra (good or evil) is a function of his conduct in the area of bein
adam le-chavero. One can therefore be a tzaddik ra and a rasha
tov.
“THOUGH YOU PRAY AT LENGTH, I WILL NOT
LISTEN”
Nevertheless, I do not think that our instincts are
all that wrong. Moreover, they are not just our instincts. It is not just the
humanist in us which somehow rises against the possibility of frumkeit
which is antithetical to and devoid of goodness. From where did Western
culture absorb the cardinal truth that frumkeit without goodness is
meaningless and at times worse, if not from Judaism? We all know the famous
words of the prophet Yeshayahu:
What need have I of all your sacrifices? says the
Lord. I am sated with burnt offerings of rams, and suet of fatlings, and blood
of bulls; and I have no delight in lambs and he-goats. When you come to appear
before Me—who asked this of you, to trample My courts? Cease bringing futile
oblations; your incense is offensive to Me. New moon and Sabbath, proclaiming of
solemnities, assemblies with iniquity, I cannot abide. Your new moons and fixed
seasons fill Me with loathing; they have become a burden to Me, I cannot endure
them. And when you lift up your hands, I will turn My eyes away from you; though
you pray at length, I will not listen, for your hands are stained with blood.
Wash yourselves clean; put your evil things away from My sight! Cease to do
evil; learn to do good. Devote yourselves to justice; aid the wronged. Uphold
the rights of the orphan; defend the cause of the widow! (Yeshayahu
1:11-17)
This is the prophet’s message. To be sure, these verses focus primarily
upon avoda: sacrifices, prayer, the Temple service. When these are
attempted by a person devoid of goodness, they are particularly problematic,
inasmuch as they entail an audacious advance towards God, an attempt at a
rendezvous with Him. Here the governing principle is, “One may not approach the
king’s gate in sackcloth” (Esther 4:2), actual or figurative. To the
extent that one penetrates (so to speak) God’s domain, one must be not only
physically but also morally pure: “Prepare for your God, Israel” (Amos
4:12)—not only in terms of clothing and physical purification, but in terms
of one’s inner being. Hence, we encounter in a particularly sharp form the
revulsion against avoda which is unaccompanied by inner purity: “The
offering of evildoers is an abomination” (Mishlei 21:27). With regard
also to prayer, there is a concept of to’eva (abomination), a term which
is not equally applicable to other mitzvot.
Nevertheless, the conjunction of frumkeit and goodness, the sense
that goodness is both a component and a condition of frumkeit, does
surely apply to other mitzvot as well. There is another chapter in
Yeshayahu, which we read on Yom Kippur:
Is such the fast I desire, a day for men to starve
their bodies? Is it bowing the head like a bulrush and lying in sackcloth and
ashes? Do you call that a fast, a day when the Lord is favorable? No, this is
the fast I desire: to unlock the shackles of wickedness and untie the cords of
the yoke, to let the oppressed go free and to break off every yoke. It is to
share your bread with the hungry, and to take the wretched poor into your home;
when you see the naked, to clothe him, and not to ignore your own kin.
(Yeshayahu 58:5-7)
“HIS MITZVOT ARE THROWN BACK IN HIS
FACE”
The Rambam develops the notion that when a person
lacks moral consistency, then beyond a certain point one cannot see him simply
as observing half of Torah but missing the other half (i.e. being frum
but having no goodness), but in fact the absence of one component totally
invalidates his performance of the other component:
How exalted is the level of repentance! Only
yesterday, this [sinner] was divided from God, the Lord of Israel, as it is
written (Yeshayahu 59:2), “Your sins were dividing between you and your
God.” He would call out [to God] without being answered, as it says
(ibid. 1:15), “Though you pray at length, I will not listen.” He would
perform mitzvot, only to have them thrown back in his face, as it says
(ibid. 1:12), “Who asked this of you, to trample My courts?” and it says
(Malakhi 1:10), “O that there were one among you who would shut the doors
[that you might not kindle fire on My altar for no reason! I have no pleasure in
you, says the Lord of Hosts, nor will I accept an offering from your hand].”
Today, [after having repented,] he clings to the Divine Presence, as it is
written (Devarim 4:4), “And you who cling to the Lord, your God.” He
calls out [to God] and is answered immediately, etc. (Hilkhot Teshuva
7:7)
There is a certain situation wherein a person performs mitzvot and
they are thrown back in his face. How are we to regard the person who relates
solely to the area of bein adam la-Makom and is totally oblivious to the
area of bein adam le-chavero? Is he not separated from God, the Lord of
Israel?
I do not want to get involved in the question, which we ought certainly
to avoid, of the respective importance of bein adam la-Makom versus
bein adam le-chavero. (Although if we got involved in that issue, we
might look at the Rosh in the beginning of Pe’a who says that bein
adam le-chavero is more important.) Regardless of that question, it seems
inconceivable that a person who is lacking a whole area of mitzvot would
not be regarded as being separated from God. But the question persists. How do
we resolve the inherent contradiction between the gemara in
Kiddushin, on the one hand, and the verses in Yeshayahu and the
evident extension of them by the Rambam, on the other?
ACTIVE EVIL AND
OBLIVIOUSNESS
Ithink that we have to distinguish between two kinds
of obliviousness or insensitivity to the area of bein adam le-chavero. I
find it inconceivable from a Jewish perspective to refer to a person as a
tzaddik, albeit a tzaddik ra, if he is mehader (excessive)
in the area of bein adam la-Makom—he has Rabbeinu Tam tefillin,
kaful shemoneh tzitzit (ritual objects conforming to stringent opinions)
and eats only hand-baked matza and glatt meat—but within the area of
bein adam le-chavero he tramples everything underfoot. Is it really
possible that a person who is a thief, murderer, liar and cheat can be described
as a tzaddik (but a tzaddik ra) all because he has fancy
tefillin?
I think the gemara in Kiddushin is referring to something
else: not a person who tramples underfoot the whole area of bein adam
le-chavero, but a person who is simply oblivious to it. He pours his
energies into and concentrates upon the area of bein adam la-Makom to
such an extent that he has neither the energy, resources, nor motivation to work
within the area of bein adam le-chavero as well. It is in this sense that
he is ra la-beriyot (evil to mankind). He does nothing for them. He has
no social conscience and is insensitive to the needs of others. He is totally
concerned with the area of being tov la-Shamayim (good to
Heaven).
This person represents a partial and limited frumkeit, but a
legitimate frumkeit. This is not to say that it is in any sense ideal,
nor is it recommended. After all, we need to strive not only to be tzaddikim
but tzaddikim tovim. But, insofar as it goes, it is legitimate and
real. Were a person, however, to be evil in an active sense—he wrongs others,
injures them knowingly, willfully, viciously—then he surely could not be defined
as a tzaddik in any sense, and of him it is said that his mitzvot
“are thrown back in his face.” He buys Rabbeinu Tam tefillin and he
has kaful shemoneh tzitzit, “and they are thrown back in his
face.”
I believe that one point should be added. I have distinguished here
between a kind of aseh ra (actively doing evil) and an insensitivity to
the area of good and evil. I believe that there is a level of insensitivity, of
egocentric religiosity, of concern and involvement solely with oneself and with
what one understands to be one’s relationship to God, at which the obliviousness
to others becomes so complete that passive insensitivity translates into a kind
of active evil. There are areas in Halakha where a specific demand is made to do
something, and where passively not doing anything is conceived as being a
positive evil: “Do not stand by your brother’s blood” (Vayikra 19:16);
“You may not ignore it” (with regard to returning lost objects—Devarim
22:3). The rabbis extended this concept to other areas. To take one radical
example, Ben Azzai says (Yevamot 63b) that whoever can have children and
does not—he is like one who sheds blood, a murderer. He could have built, and he
didn’t. So there is, I believe, a level of inactivity and insensitivity at which
one’s mere passive absence is in itself a positive evil. I do not want now to
offer any suggestions regarding where that line is to be drawn. I do believe,
however, that in principle this is the case.
INTERIM SUMMARY
Thus, we need to strive first for frumkeit in
its totality, and that of course means frumkeit including goodness—a
goodness which, I repeat, is not synonymous with frumkeit but included
within it. We need to strive for both components of that frumkeit, “Fear
God and keep His commandments,” but of course by way of understanding its scope.
Our aim, both for ourselves and for our children and students, is to be
formulated in terms of the gemara in Shabbat (31b): the central,
overriding aim is yirat Shamayim, and all other values are constituent
elements within it. There is educational merit in understanding that indeed
there is an unum necessarium, one thing necessary, and this is yirat
Shamayim. But we must simultaneously recognize that inasmuch as moral
goodness is part of God’s will, and inasmuch as yirat Shamayim means
accepting and responding to His will, then moral goodness is part of what we
understand by yirat Shamayim and part of what we strive for when we talk
about frumkeit.
Nevertheless, while this aim can be easily stated,
(a) its implementation is very difficult, and (b) there are a number of
educational and philosophic problems which arise. Therefore, I now want to focus
on those problems which I believe have specific and immediate educational
ramifications.
PART
3:
Goodness Devoid of
Frumkeit
“WITHOUT GOD, EVERYTHING IS
LAWFUL”
We spoke previously of the problem of frumkeit
devoid of goodness. Now I would like to address the reverse phenomenon: How
do we relate—personally, philosophically, professionally—to goodness devoid of
frumkeit, to a secular moral idealism?
Of course, some people question whether such a phenomenon can even exist.
They argue that morality without religion is simply inconceivable, a position
succinctly summarized by Ivan Karamazov (in Dostoyevsky’s novel): “Without God,
everything is lawful.” This claim is made on a philosophical plane. Others,
however, argue from a practical standpoint: even if, conceptually, goodness can
exist independently of a religious outlook, on a practical level a person or a
society can arrive at morality only through religion.
Regarding the philosophical argument, it is perhaps true that a strong
case can be made for the notion that without God everything is lawful. First,
one could argue that the substance of morality derives only from God’s will; but
we have already discussed this position and have established that Judaism
rejects it. Alternatively, one could contend that objective goodness can exist
only within a universe where one postulates the existence of God and the
existence of man as a spiritual being. If one were to think only in secular
terms, regarding man as nothing more than “a kind of combination of carbon and
water” (in Bertrand Russell’s phrase), then in such a universe there cannot be
any good or bad because there is no ultimate end or purpose for
man.
But even if one were to concur with this philosophical argument, can we
factually deny that there exist people who are totally removed from religion yet
nonetheless act in accordance with high moral standards? Perhaps they are
logically inconsistent; perhaps if they were deeper philosophers, they would be
worse people. Yet they regard themselves, and we would regard them too, as moral
individuals. We cannot be oblivious to the existence of this phenomenon. How,
then, do we relate to it?
IMMORAL REJOICING
Before answering this question, I would like to
address the above-mentioned claim that religion is necessary in order to arrive
at morality. This argument has been advanced frequently in the modern period. It
is a reflection of the secularization of modern culture that religion needs to
be sold to masses on the basis of its contribution to morality. In
eighteenth-century England, the novelist Henry Fielding advanced this claim; in
the nineteenth century, Cardinal Newman rejected it precisely because he said it
was a debasement of religion: you are basing religion’s legitimacy purely upon
its moral significance.
Nonetheless, I encounter this argument all the time in Israel among
religious educators. In order to impress upon everyone the importance of
religious education, they enumerate its benefits to society. “Do you want people
to be loyal citizens? Make them religious. Do you want them to be honest? Make
them religious. Do you want them to have a sense of purpose in life? Make them
religious.” Whenever new statistics are published about the degree of sexual
licentiousness or drug addiction or some other kind of delinquency within the
secular schools, even within the elite schools, there is jubilation among these
educators. (This is akin to the rejoicing you encounter among certain staunch
advocates of aliya every time they read about a murder in Brooklyn or
Long Beach; they make sure to republish it in their newspaper in large type.)
Brandishing these statistics, they argue: “Do you see what happens in your
secular education? You get drug addicts; you get thieves; you get young people
stabbing each other. If you want the stabbing and the drug addiction to
stop—send the kids to us and we will make menschen out of
them.”
Let me make it clear that we must categorically reject this attitude. Is
this what we want? Should we be happy every time a higher degree of corruption
and greater depths of delinquency are discovered in some secular school!? Who
are those delinquents? Our brothers! In order to score points and to increase
registration at our religious schools, are we to gloat that the system of
secular education is presumably crumbling? That it no longer turns out
idealists? That it only produces pragmatists? We should
weep!
Thus, returning to our original question, we surely should not dismiss
nor denigrate moral idealism simply because it springs (in certain cases) from
secular sources. Certainly, we believe deeply that a moral idealist would be at
a much higher level were his morality rooted in yirat Shamayim, were it
grounded in a perception of his relation to God and of the nature of a man as a
respondent and obedient being. But that surely is not to say that we therefore
ought to dismiss totally the possibility or the reality of secular morality.
First, we should not do this because it is simply untrue—there are genuinely
moral people within the secular community. Second, we ought not do this because,
after all, the results are not what we should be seeking. Whether we score
points here or there is not crucial. In the process of “scoring points,” we
increase sinat achim (fraternal hatred), we sharpen divisions, we
heighten tensions; and that is, in and of itself, a moral and ethical
problem.
PART
4:
Conflicts Between Religion and
Morality
“THE DUNGHILL OF MORALITY”
Having addressed the phenomena of frumkeit
devoid of goodness and of goodness devoid of frumkeit, I would like
to move on to the next issue. I emphasized before that frumkeit and
goodness are not synonymous; rather, goodness is ideally to be included within
frumkeit. But if they are not to be regarded as synonymous, is there a
possibility that frumkeit and goodness can sometimes be
antonymous?
There is such a possibility, and we should confront it. At one level,
there is a question as to whether the quest for morality somehow conflicts with
one’s religious commitment. Some would claim that the focus on developing one’s
character undercuts the central experience of one’s religious being, namely,
relating directly and submitting to God. This point of view was expressed in
early Christianity, and it reared its head again during the sixteenth and early
seventeenth centuries within the Protestant world. In the controversy regarding
salvation through faith or through works (i.e. deeds), those works which were
rejected most sharply were the moral works. In this perspective, morality is
regarded as an audacious human undertaking, a challenge to God, where one stakes
out an independent moral area instead of gearing one’s entire spiritual being to
submitting to God. Puritan preachers used to describe works as “the dunghill of
morality” and regarded them simply as a spiritual abomination. For them, being
good was indeed antonymous to being frum, because via “morality” you set
yourself up as an alternative to the eved Hashem (servant of God) in
you.
This notion has a history in Christianity, but it surely has no place
within our beit midrash. Our conception of religious life highlights
man’s free will and emphasizes our efforts to build ourselves spiritually. As I
mentioned before, these certainly include an emphasis upon morality. Therefore,
this kind of tension between morality and religion is not a significant factor
for us.
THE AKEIDA
However, there is a second kind of conflict, a
different sort of tension. I mentioned before that the quest for goodness is an
integral component of frumkeit. Generally speaking, this is true. But
regarding certain particular tzivuyyim (divine commands), surely we find
instances in which obedient response to God’s normative demands stands in
apparent opposition to what we conceive to be good and, if you will, to what we
understand that God conceives to be good. Here, a problem arises: How do we
relate to this?
What makes this problem more acute is the fact that it arises
particularly in individuals who are morally and spiritually sensitive. Those who
are relatively coarse are not concerned with these issues. Who is troubled by
the command to wipe out Amalek? Those people who have succeeded in developing
the kind of moral sensitivity that is important to us.
When there is a conflict between the tzav and the moral order,
what do we do about it? For us, the answer is perhaps practically difficult, but
surely it is conceptually clear and unequivocal. This, after all, is what the
akeida (sacrifice of Yitzchak—Bereishit 22) is all about.
Kierkegaard emphasized that the akeida represents a conflict between
Avraham’s moral sense and the divine command; as far as understanding the
problem, he was unquestionably correct. On the one hand, Avraham is commanded to
offer his son to God (which, at this point, he understands to mean “Slaughter
him,” not “Offer him”). On the other hand, he knows that murder is forbidden.
The message of the akeida is clear: God’s command takes precedence, in
every respect, over our moral sensibility and our conscientious
objections.
This is not to say that in such a context there is no room for moral
sensibility. Surely, in relating to Halakha, including those areas which one may
find morally difficult, there is some role for conscience, some role for the
goodness in us, particularly in an interpretive capacity. Conscience does and
legitimately can have a role in helping us to understand the content and
substance of the tzav. In the Midrash, Chazal depict
Avraham’s thoughts during his three-day journey to the akeida. He tried
to understand God’s command: perhaps God meant something else. Surely, one can,
and presumably should, walk the last mile in order to try in every way to avoid
a conflict. But even when one has walked the last mile, at times the conflict
may remain, and—as in the akeida—the decisive element is clear. It was
only a tzav of God, or of the angel sent by God, which was able to
countermand the command to sacrifice Yitzchak.
The task before us is multifaceted. As those who educate towards yirat
Shamayim, we must communicate the message of the akeida—boldly,
loudly and clearly. On the other hand, as those who do seek to ingrain moral
sensitivity in ourselves and in our children, we need not dismiss the
ambivalences, the difficulties and contradictions (at the initial level,
surely). We need not wish away Avraham’s three days of spiritual groping. We
need not dismiss the wrestling and grappling as being a reflection of poor
yirat Shamayim, of spiritual shallowness, or of a lack of
frumkeit. Inasmuch as goodness itself is an inherent component of
frumkeit, the goodness which is at the root of the problems, struggles
and tensions is itself part of yirat Shamayim—and a legitimate part. If
the sense of moral goodness is legitimate, then the questing and the grappling
are also legitimate.
But, of course, the resolution must be clear, and the grappling must all
be done within the parameters of the understanding that, however much I wrestle,
I do not for a moment question the authenticity or the authority of the
tzav. I do not judge God. I assume, a priori, that “His deeds are
perfect, for all His ways are just; a faithful God, without iniquity, righteous
and upright is He” (Devarim 32:4). If He commands, “Take your son and
offer him as a sacrifice,” then it must be good (in a sense which perhaps, at
the moment, I do not understand). But within the context of my a priori obedient
submission, I may try to understand. I may grope, I may ask, and I may
ultimately seek resolution.
PART
5:
Risks and
Priorities
INNER CONSTRAINT
Ispoke before of the importance of morality and the
need to emphasize it. There are, to be sure, certain risks involved. First,
there is indeed a risk that if you sensitize people morally and ethi- cally,
they will then have difficulty with certain areas of Halakha. Presumably, if
Elisha ben Avuya had been less sensitive to the problem of God’s justice and
consistency, then he would not have become an apostate. If Voltaire had believed
from the outset in a Calvinist God, rather than in one who is just and decent,
the Lisbon earthquake might not have unsettled him. We must be conscious of this
risk.
Second, when emphasizing the relationship of goodness to frumkeit,
we may also face the opposite kind of risk: that one will then think that the
only significance of the moral element is that it is part of the divine command.
At the end of the war in Lebanon, some cast doubt on the halakhic severity of
the prohibition of killing non-Jews. My colleague Rav Yehuda Amital spoke out
very forcefully on this issue,and among other things, he quoted the opinion of
the Ra’avan (Bava Kama 113a) that this is an issur de-oraita
(biblical prohibition). I recall that someone was critical of this, and he
said, “What kind of education is this? It teaches the student that whether or
not he’s going to kill a gentile should be dependent upon a Ra’avan in Bava
Kama!”
There is a point to this. Emphasizing the integration of frumkeit
and goodness harbors the risk that the inherent significance of goodness
somehow will get lost. The Rambam in Shemoneh Perakim (Chapter Six)
certainly does not favor that. He asks whether a person ideally should constrain
himself from transgressing a Torah law only because of the tzav, the
divine command, or whether he should feel that even had there been no
tzav, he would not transgress it simply because it is bad. The Rambam
answers that with regard to mishpatim, or areas bein adam lechavero
(between man and his fellow), certainly a person should not feel constrained
solely by the tzav, but rather should feel an inner constraint because of
the moral element per se. The conjunction of frumkeit and goodness
can undercut this sense.
AN EDUCATIONAL DIFFERENCE?
There is a third risk as well. I spoke before of
accepting the problem of the akeida, of recognizing a certain conflict
here between morality and mitzva, and of granting legitimacy to one’s grappling
with this issue. This too can present an educational problem. Let me illustrate
with an incident which occurred to me during the Lebanon
War.
After the massacre at Sabra and Shatila, I published an open letter to
the Prime Minister.Among other things, this letter dealt with the use of force
and the motivation behind it. I asked: Why was it that King Shaul was punished
for not killing Agag, King of Amalek? Was it simply for not having killed the
last remaining Amalekite? I suggested that he was punished not just for sparing
Agag, but because the fact that he refused to kill Agag placed in a totally
different light his killing of all the other Amalekites
beforehand.
Shaul had been commanded to take a whole people and kill them—and this
is, morally, a frightful thing. The only justification lies in it being a
response to an unequivocal divine command. Therefore, if Shaul had been
motivated in his actions purely by fear of God, by obedience to the tzav,
then he should have followed the command to the letter. God didn’t say, “Kill
Amalek but spare Agag.” Now, if he didn’t kill Agag but killed everybody else,
what does that indicate? It indicates that what motivated him in killing the
others was not the tzav of God, but rather some baser impulse, some
instinctive violence. And the proof is that he killed everyone, but spared his
peer, his royal comrade. If that is the case, then Shaul was not punished for
sparing Agag: rather, he had to be punished because of the Amalekites he did
kill! Why? Because he killed them not purely due to a divine command (which is
the only thing that can overcome the moral consideration), but rather out of
military, diplomatic or political considerations.
Subsequently, I heard that a leading Religious Zionist rabbi in a
prominent yeshiva had taken thirty minutes out of his Gemara shiur in
order to attack what I had said. I called and asked him, “What did I say that
merits this great wrath?” He replied, “I think it is a terrible thing to speak
in this way, describing the divine command to destroy Amalek as asking a person
to do something which ordinarily is not moral. This poses an ethical
problem.”
I said to him, “Wiping out Amalek does not conform to what we would
normally expect a person to do. Normally, you should not be killing ‘from child
to suckling babe.’ But I’m not saying, God forbid, that it is immoral in our
case, where God has specifically commanded the destruction of Amalek—‘A faithful
God, without iniquity, righteous and upright is He’ (Devarim 32:4).
Although generally such an act would be considered immoral, it assumes a
different character when God, from His perception and perspective, commands it.
The same holds true of the akeida—it demanded that Avraham do something
which normally is immoral. But in the context of the divine command, surely it
partakes of the goodness and morality of God. We must admit, though, that there
is a conflict in this case between the usual moral norm and the immediate
tzav given here.”
He said, “Yes, but you shouldn’t describe it as being something which is
not moral in a sense.” So I asked him, “Do you agree that the tzav given
here is something which we would not normally encourage people to do, something
that we would normally consider to be immoral?” He said, “Yes, but it should not
be described that way.” And he added, “Yesh kan hevdel chinukhi—there is
an educational difference.”
I admit, there is something to this. The moment one speaks of a kind of
clash between the demands of yirat Shamayim and the demands of
morality—even given the qualifications which I mentioned—there is some kind of
problem. There are risks in this approach.
LOVE NOT MORALITY LESS, BUT PIETY
MORE
Nevertheless, I believe there is little choice. I
think that the importance of moral sensibility as the grounds for moral action
in our lives is of such scope, depth and magnitude that we need willingly to
accept certain risks. To be sure, we should try to minimize them, but I don’t
think we can avoid them. We avoid them only by, in effect, almost totally
neutralizing the moral element in our educational endeavors. What we need to do
is not to instill morality less, but yirat Shamayim
more.
I recall in my late adolescence there were certain problems which
perturbed me, the way they perturb many others. At the time, I resolved them all
in one fell swoop. I had just read Rav Zevin’s book, Ishim Ve-shitot. In
his essay on Rav Chayim Soloveitchik, he deals not only with his methodological
development, but also with his personality and gemilut chasadim (acts of
kindness). He recounted that Reb Chayim used to check every morning if some
unfortunate woman had placed an infant waif on his doorstep during the course of
the night. (In Brisk, it used to happen at times that a woman would give birth
illegitimately and leave her infant in the hands of Reb Chayim.) As I read the
stories about Reb Chayim’s extraordinary kindness, I said to myself: Do I
approach this level of gemilut chasadim? I don’t even dream of it! In
terms of moral sensibility, concern for human beings and sensitivity to human
suffering, I am nothing compared to Reb Chayim. Yet despite his moral
sensitivity, he managed to live, and live deeply, with the totality of
Halakha—including the commands to destroy the Seven Nations, Amalek and all the
other things which bother me. How? The answer, I thought, was obvious. It is not
that his moral sensitivity was less, but his yirat Shamayim, his
emuna, was so much more. The thing to do, then, is not to try to
neutralize or de-emphasize the moral element, but rather to deepen and increase
the element of yirat Shamayim, of emuna, deveikut and
bittachon.
I have subsequently thought of that experience on many occasions. I
recall once hearing someone, regarded as a philosopher of sorts, raise moral
criticisms of various halakhic practices. When asked about these criticisms, I
said, “I know that particular person. He doesn’t look for a foundling on his
doorstep every morning.”
So what we need to do, I think, is not to weaken our moral sense or that
of our children and students. Rather, we need to deepen and to intensify our
commitment, our faith, our sense of obedience, our yirat Shamayim. We
need to deepen our sense that God has nothing in this world besides yirat
Shamayim, and that our moral conscience needs to develop within its
context.
DIVISION OF RESOURCES
There is, finally, another problem—one which affects
us within the Centrist Orthodox community more than others. Let me illustrate. I
remember some years back, when I was still living in America, a man who had
given a lot of money to the Skverer chassidic community invited my wife and
myself to see their institutions. When we came to the elementary school, we saw
the walls plastered with signs dealing with the mitzvot of hashavat
aveida (returning lost objects), bikkur cholim (visiting the sick),
gemilut chasadim, etc. I was struck by the fact that all the posters
dealt with the area of bein adam le-chavero—not a single mention of
Shabbat, tefillin or tzitzit! In any Centrist Orthodox school, you
would have seen posters only on the latter subjects (to the extent that there
would be posters dealing with mitzvot at all).
I immediately realized the reason for this difference. In the Skverer
community, you had children growing up in an environment where their teachers
could take Shabbat, tefillin and tzitzit absolutely for granted.
That was the given; the possibility that a person would reject these never
occurred to them. Therefore, they were able to focus all their energies upon
those areas within which even people who are practically and philosophically
committed to Shabbat and kashrut may nevertheless fail. This is something
which we, unfortunately, cannot do. Within both our educational and political
systems, we find ourselves driven repeatedly to safeguard the ritual area, which
we feel is uniquely ours. We channel so much of our energies and resources into
these particular elements both because they are distinctive to us, and because
we feel that unless we emphasize it massively, the kids will not get it at
all.
This judgment may well be correct. In part, we feel comfortable focusing
on the ritual because we assume that the students can learn morality elsewhere.
It is efshar la’asot al yedei acherim (capable of being done by
others)—they can read Camus or something similar. But we pay a great price for
this. First of all, it is not always efshar la’asot al yedei
acherim—perhaps instead of reading Camus they will read Ayn Rand. Even if
they don’t, the danger exists that there will be a bifurcation between
frumkeit and goodness within their minds and personalities. They might
regard these areas as being not only distinct but disjunct. This could lead them
to identify the world of Torah with only Yoreh De’a, Even Ha-ezer and
Orach Chayim (the largely ritual areas of Halakha), while ignoring all
the rest. Unfortunately, this danger is sometimes reinforced by the fact that,
at times, there are indeed communities within which this impression seems to be
the correct one. Certainly, we need and want to avoid
this.
So, quite apart from the problems I mentioned before, for us
specifically, within our community, the question of division of energy, time and
resources becomes a problem in its own right. It is exacerbated by the fact
that, in a certain sense, the whole concern with the moral realm is more
directly related to our community’s philosophy than it is to the philosophy of
those on the right. I say this for two reasons. First, we are, generally
speaking, more involved with the total, universal community. We feel closer to
universal human values than do those on the right. Second, we tend to be more
sensitive—and rightly so—to that area in our life within which the ethical is
more directly significant, namely, the area of devar ha-reshut (where
specific commands do not apply). We have a greater awareness of the significance
of this area. Defining something as devar reshut, of course, does not
mean that this is an area which is neutral and therefore it is immaterial what
you do. According to many Rishonim, whether a person injures himself is
defined as devar reshut. That hardly means that a person can wantonly and
willfully cut off a limb.
These factors sharpen the problem of how we are to divide our resources.
On the one hand, we appreciate more fully and encounter more immediately the
area of devar reshut, where moral factors often come into play. On the
other hand, our need to focus on the area of yirat Shamayim, narrowly
defined, is also greater. The question of division of resources thus becomes for
us that much more acute.
“ONE THING GOD HAS SPOKEN,TWO THINGS I HAVE
HEARD”
We have a problem that needs to be resolved
differently in different contexts, as, in general, the problem of priorities and
budgeting cannot be resolved from on high by some kind of universal fiat. What
is important for us, though, is that we learn to avoid the implications of the
question I mentioned at the outset. First, we must avoid the notion that—broadly
and generally speaking (whatever may be true of a particular instance)—there can
be any kind of antithesis between frumkeit and goodness. On the other
hand, we must learn to avoid the notion that the two are simply synonymous. They
are not; one is included within the other. Likewise, we must avoid the sense
that we need to bifurcate these areas and therefore to grade them: this is more
important and this is less. We need to have and to impart a very profound sense
not only of the centrality but of the unity of Torah. “One thing God has spoken;
two things I have heard” (Tehillim 62:12). There are many components, but
one overriding message, and for us one overriding duty—to emphasize the
interconnection between these two components, in the spirit of the gemara
in Kiddushin:
Ulla Rabba expounded at the entrance to the Nasi’s
house: What is meant by the verse (Tehillim 138:4), “All the kings of the
earth will acknowledge you, O Lord, for they have heard the statements of Your
mouth?” It does not say, “the statement of Your mouth,” but rather, “the
statements of Your mouth.” [This indicates that] when the Holy One,
blessed be He, proclaimed, “I am the Lord your God” and “You shall have no other
gods before Me,” the nations of the world said, “He is saying this merely for
His own honor.” But as soon as He declared, “Honor your father and your mother,”
they recanted and acknowledged the first two statements.
Rava said: [This may also be derived] from the
following verse (Tehillim 119:160): “The beginning of Your utterance is
true”—the beginning of Your utterance but not the end of Your
utterance? Rather, from the end of Your utterance (i.e. “Honor your father and
your mother”) it is evident that the beginning of Your utterance (i.e. “I am the
Lord” and “You shall have no other gods”) is true. (Kiddushin
31a)
Our sense of the truth and vitality of Torah is sharpened and deepened
through our recognition of its total unity. This means conceiving of the areas
of bein adam la-Makom and bein adam lechavero not as different or
conflicting elements, but rather as one central unity, albeit subdivided into
various components. “The beginning of Your utterance is true,” and “From the end
of Your utterance, it is evident that the beginning of Your utterance is
true.”
NOTES:
1 See his articles in Yeshivat Har Etzion’s Torah
journal, Alon Shevut #100 (Kislev 5743).
2 Ha-tzofeh, 10/15/82, p.
5.
(Based on an address to Yeshiva University Rabbinic
Alumni, November 1986 [5747].
This adaptation has not been reviewed by Harav
Lichtenstein.)
The lectures in this series have been collected into
a book entitled, By His Light: Character and Values in the Service of
God. It can be ordered from
here: http://www.vbm-torah.org/ralbooks.htm. |