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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
The Kuzari Yeshivat Har Etzion
Shiur #19: The
Mitzvot (Part I)
Rav Itamar
Eldar
Before we begin our discussion of this topic, let us survey the
difficulties that stand before anyone trying to understand the role and
significance of the mitzvot.
The Jewish philosophers of the Middle Ages had to ward off two sharp
attacks in their attempts to defend the mitzvot.
The first is a
fundamental question that arises with respect to the entire relationship between
man and God, but it is most intense with respect to the Divine commands. How is
it possible to say that God, who is holy and transcendent, approaches a material
creature of flesh and blood? And not only does He turn to him, He even commands
him to do perform certain actions?! I dealt with this issue in the past, and
therefore I shall focus on the second question, which is directly connected to
the mitzvot.
The second question relates to the assumption that the material actions
of man impact upon the spiritual and the Divine. This question has two
parts.
First, how is it possible to say that a human action is meaningful to an
exalted God? Such a claim, argued the philosophers, involves a significant
personification of God. The assumption that a physical act leaves a spiritual
impression and influences processes that are part of the Divine stratum of
reality lowers the realm of the Divine to the level of physical
matter.
This difficulty and its resolution are discussed in the following passage
in the midrash:
Rav said: The
commandments were only given to refine man through them. For what difference
does it make to the Holy One, blessed be He, whether an animal is slaughtered
from the throat or from the back of the neck? Surely the commandments were only
given to refine man through them. (Bereishit Rabba 44,
1)
Rav refuses to accept that the manner of an animal's slaughter has any
objective importance to God. Hence, the purpose of the mitzvot is to
refine man, that is to say, to bring him to accept the yoke and lordship of
Heaven - not because of the meaning of the mitzvot, but rather
because of the obedience that they demand.
This is the accepted understanding of Rav's dictum: "The commandments were only
given to refine man through them."
The Ramban in his commentary to the Torah understood the words of Rav in
a different manner:
But in my opinion, these
Aggadic statements, presenting difficulty to the Rabbi [Rambam], express the
following idea: The benefit from the commandments is not derived by the Holy
One, Himself, blessed be He. Rather, the advantage is to man, to prevent him
from suffering injury or some evil belief, or unfit character trait, or to
recall the miracles and wonders of the Creator, blessed be He, in order to know
God. This is what the Rabbis meant [when they said] that the commandments were
given "to refine man," namely, that they should become like refined silver. For
he who refines silver does not act without purpose, but to remove all impurity
from it. So, too, the commandments remove all evil beliefs from our hearts and
teach us the truth, so that we may remember it always. (Ramban, commentary to
Devarim 22:6)
The mitzvot, according to the Ramban, are not meant for God's
benefit, and He does not delight more in their performance than in their
neglect. The mitzvot are directed at man, but not as the Rambam
understood the words of Rav – in the sense of bringing him to accept God's
authority – but rather in the sense of refining and perfecting man.
This is the first difficulty regarding the impact of a physical act on
the realm of the spirit, but there is another dimension to the problem relating
to man himself: How can a physical act influence and perfect the spiritual soul
of man?
In order to deal with this problem, most medieval Jewish philosophers
adopted a similar approach, namely, the spiritualization of the
mitzvot.
The religious act in and of itself is devoid of value, but it can educate
man and guide him down the right path. The Rambam writes as
follows:
Rather, things are
indubitably as we have mentioned: every commandment from among these six hundred
and thirteen commandments exist either with a view to communicating a correct
opinion, or to putting an end to an unhealthy opinion, or to communicating a
rule of justice, or to warding off an injustice, or to endowing men with a noble
moral quality, or to warning them against an evil moral quality. Thus, all [the
commandments] are bound up with three things: opinions, moral qualities, and
political civil actions. (Moreh Nevukhim, III, 31)
All the mitzvot educate man and bring him to correct beliefs and
opinions, a befitting personal and societal life style, and the perfection of
his moral character.
This approach attempts to bridge the gap between a physical act and
spiritual influence. It is not the physical act in itself that repairs spiritual
failings, but rather the spiritual position out of which this act develops. The
idea to which the act alludes is the goal towards which man must
strive.
A danger lies at the door of this approach. As one spiritualizes the
mitzvot, one constricts and even cancels altogether the significance of
the physical act itself, paving the way for the suggestion that there might be
other possible ways to achieve the same spiritual goal.
The Maharal of Prague understood what brought Jewish philosophers to
explain the mitzvot in this manner, but he disagrees with this approach,
well-aware of the danger that it involves:
After these things have
been explained to you, let us also explain the first question: how does a person
acquire success through a Torah act? … The scholars, whom we mentioned above,
attribute majesty to the intellect and [argue that] through the rational ideas a
person acquires eternity. They turn the good and upright actions into a ladder
through which one can reach the rational ideas. But they fell from this ladder.
We, the disciples of Moshe Rabbenu, may he rest in peace, have risen and stood
erect through God's Torah and mitzvot. What brought them to this was that
they found it difficult that a material action should lead to the success of the
spiritual soul, and therefore they abandoned the human act, and relied on the
intellect. (Tiferet Yisrael, chap. 9)
The Maharal's solution will be examined later, but there is no doubt that
he followed in the footsteps of R. Yehuda Halevi, whose position was different
than that of his colleagues, the philosophers.
THE RIHAL'S
POSITION
As we saw in earlier lectures, man and Israel strive, according to Rihal,
to reach the highest level of joining with the Divine influence – prophecy,
revelation, and all that follows from them.
The road to God is comprised of three factors, as the Rihal illustrates
through the analogy to a vineyard:
The Rabbi: How about the
hill on which you say that the vines thrive so well? If it had not been properly
planted and cultivated, it would never produce grapes. Priority belongs, in the
first instance, to the people which, as stated before, is the essence and kernel
[of the nations]. In the second instance, it would belong to the country, and
also to the religious acts connected with it, which I would compare to the
cultivation of the vineyard. (II, 12)
The first condition is the unique essence that was given to the chosen
people, the second condition is the location – Eretz Yisrael – and the
third condition is the cultivation of the vineyard – performance of the
mitzvot. Already with these words, Rihal bestows an important role upon
the mitzvot: "The approach to God is only possible through the medium of
God's command" (III, 53).
The goal of the mitzvot, then, is to bring man to the highest
level and thus cause the Divine influence to rest upon
him.
As we shall see later, Rihal is unwilling to compromise either with
respect to the goal of the mitzvot or with respect to their necessity and
their being the only way to achieve their goal. Rihal's declaration of
intentions is found already at the beginning of the book with the repetition of
the Khazar king's dream, in which the king is told that his intentions are
worthy, but his actions are not. This link is connected to Rihal's understanding
of the mitzvot, found in the words of the Khazar king at the highpoint of
the discussion regarding the mitzvot:
The Khazar king: The
theory I had formed, and the opinion of what I saw in my dream you now confirm,
viz. that man can only merit Divine influence by acting according to God's
commands. Were this not so, most men would attain it, for they all strive to
serve God to the best of their understanding, even astrologers, magicians, fire
and sun worshippers, dualists etc. (I, 98)
Already here Rihal tries to remove from the discussion the argument
raised above against the approach taken by the medieval philosophers, that when
we shift the center of gravity from the act itself to the intention, contents,
and meaning of the mitzva, we cancel the value of the act. A person's
intentions may be worthy, and his ideas may reach the height of rationality, but
all this will not bring him to join with the Divine influence. The Rambam, who
sees in the mitzvot a means for perfecting man's outlook, his character
traits, and his conduct, must consider the fact that Aristotle was, without a
doubt, according to him, on the highest intellectual, moral, and spiritual
level, but he nevertheless did not attain prophecy and closeness to God at the
level of the prophets of Israel or of those who only merited the holy spirit.
According to Rihal, as we shall see below, the road to God passes exclusively
through man's actions. These actions, according to Rihal, have value in and of
themselves; therefore, without the actions, there can be no spiritual
attainments.
The assumption that the physical act itself, without its
spiritualization, can lead, in one way or another, to spiritual attainment, is
an assumption that comes under frontal attack from the world of philosophy.
Rihal builds layers of defense step by step against this attack.
The Rabbi: Certainly;
but the elements, moon, sun and stars have powers such as warming, cooling,
moistening, drying, etc., but do not merit that wisdom should be ascribed to
them, or be reckoned more than a function. Forming, measuring, producing,
however, and all that shows an intention, can only be ascribed to the All-wise
and Almighty. There is no harm in calling the power which arranges matter by
means of heat and cooling, 'Nature,' but all intelligence must be denied it. So
must the faculty of creating the embryo be denied to human beings, because they
only aid matter in receiving human form from its wise Creator. You must not deem
it improbable that exalted Divine traces should be visible in this material
world, when this matter is prepared to receive them. Here are to be found the
roots of faith as well as of unbelief. (I, 77)
Through this analogy, taken from the world of nature, Rihal attempts to
prove that "exalted Divine traces should be visible in this material world, when
this matter is prepared to receive them." Rihal distinguishes between a
technical act, which he calls "a function," and the complex process of "forming,
measuring, producing, and all that shows an intention," which Rihal considers
"wisdom." The first he attributes to the world of nature, but the second he
attributes to its Master. Every action and every creation in the world is
comprised of cooperation between the two. Moreover, the world is made in such a
manner that without the act of nature that precedes the Divine wisdom, the
Divine act is impossible. This outlook, according to Rihal, does not see the
work of nature as the high point of creation, but it does see it as a necessary
condition:
It is here, as in the
formations of nature, which are composed of such minute elements that they defy
perception, and if their mutual relation suffered the smallest change, the whole
formation would be damaged, that plant or animal, or limb, would be imperfect
and non-existing. (I, 99)
Even the most complex matters that the human mind cannot even comprehend
are based on a material, physical actions.
Another analogy that Rihal makes and that he will harness in the next
step that he will take is the analogy of a man and a woman. The act of
copulation is an act that sets off a complex and wondrous chain of events that
will eventually turn two cells into a human being, the most complex being on
earth.
Can we attribute this process to the man and woman? Are they partners in
this process? Certainly not! Divine wisdom, asserts Rihal, is what leads and
guides the process step by step, but this wisdom could not be realized without
the simple, material, and physical act of copulation performed by the man and
the woman. We see, then, that "Divine traces are visible in this material world,
when this matter is prepared to receive them."
THE ROOT OF FAITH AND
THE ROOT OF UNBELIEF
Rihal, who struggles so hard to prove the argument that a physical
religious act impacts upon spiritual reality, was aware, as were his
philosophical colleagues, of the danger that lies at its door. The concern is
two-fold:
The Rabbi: These
conditions which render man fit to receive this Divine influence do not lie
within him. It is impossible for him to gauge their quantity or quality, and
even if their essence were known, yet neither their time, place, and connection,
nor suitability could be discovered. For this, inspired and detailed instruction
is necessary. He who has been thus inspired, and obeys the teaching in every
respect with a pure mind, is a believer. Whosoever strives by speculation and
deduction to prepare the conditions for the reception of this inspiration, or by
divining, as is found in the writings of astrologers, trying to call down
supernatural beings, or manufacturing talismans, such a man is an unbeliever. He
may bring offerings and burn incense in the name of speculation and conjecture,
while he is in reality ignorant of that which he should do, how much, in which
way, by what means, in which place, by whom, in which manner, and many other
details, the enumeration of which would lead too far. (I,
79)
Casting everything on man's actions is liable to bring a person to the
sin of arrogance, should he assume that it is within his intellectual grasp to
determine which actions will bring him to the desired spiritual
level.
According to the pretentious outlook of the philosophers, which tries to
explain the entire system through the spiritualization of the mitzvot, we
understand the psychological position that demands the right to find the path
appropriate for it to reach its objective. In contrast, Rihal's outlook is based
on an assumption that nips this motivation in the bud:
Religious ceremonies
are, like the work of nature, entirely determined by God, but beyond the power
of man. Formations of nature, are, as you can see, composed of accurately
measured proportions of the four elements. A trifle renders them perfect and
gives them their proper animal or plant form. Every mixture receives the shape
beseeming it, but can also lose it through a trifle. The egg may be spoiled by
the slight accident of too much heat or cold, or a movement, and become unable
to receive the form of a chicken which otherwise the hen achieves by sitting on
it three weeks. Who, then, can weigh actions upon which the Divine Influence
rest, save God alone? This is the error committed by alchemists and
necromancers. The former thought, indeed, that they could weigh the elementary
fire on their scales, and produce what they wished, and thus alter the nature of
materials, as is done in living beings by natural heat which transforms food
into blood, flesh, bone and other organs. They toil to discover a fire of the
same kind, but are misled by accidental results of their experiments, not based
on calculation, just in the same manner as the discovery was made that from the
planting of seed within the womb man arises. When those necromancers heard that
the appearance of the Divinity from Adam down to the children of Israel was
gained by sacrifices, they thought it was the result of meditation and research;
that the prophets were but deeply learned persons who accomplished these wonders
by means of calculation. Then they, on their part, were anxious to fix
sacrifices to be offered up at certain times and astrological opportunities,
accompanied by ceremonies and burning of incense which their calculations
prescribed. They even composed astrological books and other matters the mention
of which is forbidden. (III, 53)
Rihal uses the analogy to prove that there is a connection of preparation
and result between a simple physical act and the creation of a complex form.
Just as man cannot climb beyond the plain of simple physical acts that are
called "functions" and imitate the complex act of creation, he cannot determine
the way to bring the Divine influence to rest upon him.
Man's way of looking at things is empirical, and so he can only learn from
experience which action will bring him to the desired level and which will not,
and not from rational investigation.
Do not raise the
objection that these people are able to produce animals and living beings, as
bees from flesh and gnats from wine. These are not the consequences of their
calculations and agency, but of experiments. It was found that cohabitation was
followed by the birth of a child; man, however, does but plant the seed in the
soil prepared to receive and develop it. The calculation of proportions which
give the human form belongs exclusively to the Creator. (III, 23)
The sin of arrogance is one danger arising from casting the entire weight
on the religious act itself. There is, however, a second danger, namely, the sin
of personification.
When the medieval
philosophers chose to shift the focus from the act itself and turn it into a
means in the spiritual process that a person undergoes, they were aware of the
danger of personification. Placing the emphasis on the act is liable to bring a
person to assume that the Divine spiritual process takes place within the act
itself.
Like unto the patients
duped by the ignoramus, so were men, with few exceptions, before the time of
Moses. They were deceived by astrological and physical rules, wandered from law
to law, from god to god, or adopted a plurality at the same time. They forgot
their guide and master, and regarded their false gods as helping causes, while
they are in reality damaging causes, according to their construction and
arrangement. Profitable on its own account is the Divine influence,
hurtful on its own account the absence thereof.
(I, 79)
Rihal clarifies that casting the entire weight on the act relates
exclusively to its being a necessary condition for preparing the ground for the
resting of the Divine influence, but the operative element, for better or for
worse, is the Divine influence.
The spiritual step demanded of one who sees that a certain act leads to
the Divine influence is to praise and revere Him who commanded man to perform
that act, and not to see the act itself as bearing the Divine influence. Once
again, this is based on the assumption that man does not understand how the act
works, and he therefore cannot assess it, but he is also not permitted to assume
that the act itself is what led to the wondrous result.
Beside these, the adepts
of magic formulas, having heard that a prophet had been spoken to in this or
that manner, or had experienced a miracle, imagined that the words were the
cause of the miracle. They therefore endeavored to accomplish a similar feat.
The artificial is not like the natural. Religious deeds are, however, like
nature. Being ignorant of their designs, one thinks it but play till the results
becomes apparent. Then one praises their guide and mover, and professes belief
in Him. (III, 53)
With these words, Rihal tries to hold on to the rope from both ends. On
the one hand, he refuses to accept the position that sees the religious act
merely as accelerating and impelling the spiritual process that a person must
undergo in order to achieve a spiritual level. According to him, the act itself
creates a new reality that makes it possible for the person to rise. Intellect
and consciousness are pushed to the side of the religious act while the act
itself is what drives the process, and not the consciousness that results from
it. On the other hand, Rihal warns about the inference that might be drawn
through a superficial view that sees the spiritual level in the religious act
itself. So we are in fact dealing with a tool and a means.
Rihal is also afraid that his words are liable to lead to ideas that will
equate the Divine influence to inferior matter and see it as being influenced by
it. He therefore sharpens this distinction. A specific example that can be used
to illustrate his point of view relates to the question of
sacrifices.
The Rambam's position, according to which sacrifices educate a person
toward correct cognition and understanding, is well known. In the case of
sacrifices, the Rambam went even further and brought the entire system into a
historical context related to the culture of offering
sacrifices.
At that time, the way of
life generally accepted and customary in the whole world and the universal
service upon which we were raised consisted in offering various species of
living beings in the temples in which images were set up, in worshipping the
latter, and in burning incense before them – the pious ones and the ascetics
being at that time, as we have explained, the people who were devoted to the
service of the temples consecrated to the stars. His wisdom, may He be exalted,
and His gracious ruse, which is manifest in regard to all His creatures, did not
require that He give us a Law prescribing the rejection, abandonment, and
abolition of all these kinds of worship. For one could not then conceive the
acceptance of [such a Law], considering the nature of man, which always likes
that to which it is accustomed. As that time, this would have been similar to
the appearance of a prophet in these times who, calling upon the people to
worship God, would say, "God has given you a Law forbidding you to pray to Him,
to fast, to call upon Him for help in misfortune. Your worship should consist
solely in meditation without any works at all." Therefore He, may He be exalted,
suffered the above mentioned kinds of worship to remain, but transferred them
from created or imaginary and unreal things to His own name, may He be exalted,
commanding us to practice them with regard to Him, may He be exalted. (III,
32)
The Rambam's motivation in this case is even more evident than with
respect to other mitzvot. Rav's question, "For what difference does it
make to the Holy One, blessed be He, whether an animal is slaughtered from the
throat or from the back of the neck?" cries out here with greater intensity.
"The offering of My bread," "a sweet savor to the Lord," are expressions that
raise the problem of personification to the extreme. But while running away from
one problem, the Rambam creates for himself a different problem, namely the
everlasting relevance of a mitzva that is based on a specific historical
context.
The Rambam, in his usual manner, explains the meaning of the
mitzva with respect to man's consciousness and he sees the religious act
as educating and directing a person to the correct
outlook.
Rihal relates to the issue of sacrifices as well. Consistent with his
position, he is not prepared to detract from the force of the religious act in
its own right:
The deeper significance
of this was to create a well arranged system, upon which the King should rest in
an exalted, but not local sense. (II, 26)
Since he is aware of the danger that is liable to develop from this idea,
he clarifies and sharpens what he says with the following
analogy:
As a symbol of the
Divine Influence, consider the reasoning soul which dwells in the perishable
body. If its physical and nobler faculties are properly distributed and
arranged, raising it high above the animal world, then it is a worthy dwelling
for King Reason, who will guide and direct it, and remain with it as long as the
harmony is undisturbed. As soon, however, as this is impaired, he departs from
it. A fool may imagine that Reason requires food, drink, and scents, because he
sees himself preserved as long as these are forthcoming, but would perish if
deprived of them. This is not the case. The Divine influence is beneficent, and
desirous of doing good to all. Wherever something is arranged and prepared to
receive His guidance, He does not refuse it, nor withhold it, nor hesitate to
shed light, wisdom, and inspiration on it. If, however, the order is disturbed,
it cannot receive this light, which is, then, lost. The Divine influence is
above change or damage. All that is contained in the "order of sacrificial
service," its proceedings, offerings, burning of incense, singing, eating,
drinking, is to be done in the utmost purity and holiness. It is called:
"Service of the Lord," "the bread of your God" (Bamidbar 8:11; Vayikra
21:8), and similar terms which relate to His pleasure in the beautiful
harmony prevailing among the people and priesthood. He, so to say, accepts their
hospitality and dwells among them in order to show them honor. He, however, is
most Holy, and far too exalted to find pleasure in their meat and drink. It is
for their own benefit. (ibid.)
With these words, Rihal rejects the mistaken understanding regarding the
relationship between the sacrificial act and the resting of the Shekhina,
but, as opposed to the Rambam, he does not propose an alternative. He merely
asserts that it is for Israel's benefit, in order to prepare them for the
resting of the Shekhina. We are not dealing with an educational process
that Israel must undergo, but rather with an act that creates a certain reality
that prepares the ground for the resting of the
Shekhina.
Rihal does not know how these things work, but he knows how they do not
work. In order to prevent incorrect ideas that lead to personification, he uses
the intellect. But he does not use it to try and understand how these matters
operate and influence the spiritual realm.
Using the language of Rav Nachman of Breslav, we can say that removing
the intellect from the religious act can raise man to the Divine, but on the
other hand it can also cast him down to the bestial, as it is exemplified in
idolatry. The intellect is what distinguishes between man and beast, but it is
also what distinguishes between the Divine and the human. When man loses his
intellect, he can raise the human image within him to the Divine image, but he
is also liable to lose his human image to the bestial.
As we shall see in the coming lectures, Rihal demands of man that he
surrender his intellect when fashioning his path toward the Divine. But the
intellect itself is what distinguishes man from animal, and man must use it to
prevent the lowering of the Divine to the material and to idolatry, which sees
matter and human action as constituting the entire
picture.
In the allegory of the ignoramus who goes into a doctor's pharmacy (I,
79), Rihal explains the absurdity of man's attempt to determine the manner and
dosage of the actions that are supposed to lead to union with the Divine
influence. The mitzvot, asserts Rihal, are the precise dosage needed by
man to strengthen and prepare matter to receive the Divine
form.
It is not possible for
man to determine the relative importance of each, without fearing deterioration
in them. (II, 56)
We are dealing with Divine wisdom that is incomprehensible to human
beings. This assertion has two acute ramifications.
The first, as we saw in this lecture, relates to the absence of any
option to find an alternative. The dosage is precise and any deviation from it,
to the right or to the left, will impair the chances for completing the course,
just as any deviation from the temperature of a chicken's egg will impair the
development of the chick inside.
The second, as we shall see in the next lecture, relates to the reasons
for the commandments.
(Translated by David
Strauss)
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