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The
Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Yeshivat Har Etzion
INTRODUCTION TO THE PHILOSOPHY OF RAV SOLOVEITCHIK
by Rav Ronnie Ziegler
LECTURE #5: "Majesty and Humility"
Part 1 of 2
The essay "Majesty and Humility," despite its brevity, presents
a number of the most important ideas in Rav Soloveitchik's philosophy.
It can serve as a key to understanding many of his more complex essays,
notably "The Lonely Man of Faith." When read in conjunction with
"Catharsis," it is a powerful statement of some of the most basic
principles of Judaism, yet formulated in a fresh and surprising way.
This essay's very title indicates two critical points which the
Rav wishes to emphasize:
1) The title refers to characteristics of both God and man. Human morality
must imitate God's qualities or actions; thus, since God displays the above-mentioned
characteristics (as the Rav will explain), so too must man.
2) The nature of human morality, like the nature of man himself, is
dialectical; it is composed of two opposing movements which must both be
maintained in a tense balance. In other words, the title teaches us that
BOTH majesty AND humility are necessary.
Before examining the essay itself, let us discuss the concepts of imitation
of God and of dialectic, which are two of the pillars upon which the Rav's
philosophy rests.
IMITATIO DEI
The principle of imitating God is known in philosophic parlance by the
Latin term "imitatio Dei," and in halakhic terms by the phrase
"Ve-halakhta bi-derakhav" ("You shall walk in His ways").
This concept appears explicitly in the Bible, is expanded upon by Chazal
(the talmudic sages), and receives its fullest treatment in the works of
the Rambam. The phrase "Ve-halakhta bi-derakhav" is taken from
the verse, "The Lord will establish you as His holy people, as He
swore to you, if you shall keep the commandments of the Lord your God and
if you shall walk in His ways" (Devarim 28:9). (Similar formulations
are found in Devarim 8:6, 10:12, 11:22, 13:5, 26:17, and 30:16.)
There are several problems with interpreting this verse as a commandment
to emulate God: 1) it is phrased as a conditional statement, not a command;
2) the phrase "to walk in His ways" is open to several interpretations;
and 3) it seems like a general guideline and not a specific commandment.
The Rambam's son, Rav Avraham, deals with these problems in his responsa
(#63, printed at the end of many editions of the Mishneh Torah). In order
not to go too far afield, we will leave his answers aside; but let us just
note that the Bible commands emulation of God in a more unequivocal fashion
in several other places: "You shall be holy, for I, the Lord your
God, am holy" (Vayikra 19:2); "For the Lord your God ... loves
the stranger, providing him with food and clothing; and you too must love
the stranger, for you yourselves were strangers in the land of Egypt"
(Devarim 10:17-19); "... I am the Lord who exercises loving-kindness,
judgment and righteousness in the earth; for these things I desire, says
the Lord" (Yirmiyahu 9:22).
The Sages develop imitatio Dei into a more general principle. At times,
they interpret it as a mandate to emulate certain characteristics attributed
to God:
"Just as He is called 'merciful,' so should you be merciful; just
as He is called 'gracious,' so should you be gracious ... just as He is
called 'righteous,' so should you be righteous ... just as He is called
'pious,' so should you be pious." (Sifri, Devarim 11:22; also Shabbat
133b)
As we shall see, Rav Soloveitchik (in "Halakhic Man" and elsewhere)
expands the list of divine qualities which man should emulate to include,
above all, creativity.
At other times, Chazal interpret imitatio Dei in terms of actions, not
character traits:
"Rabbi Chama the son of Rabbi Chanina said: What does it mean,
'After the Lord your God you shall walk' (Devarim 13:5)? Can a person indeed
walk after the Divine Presence? Does it not say, 'For the Lord your God
is a consuming fire' (Devarim 4:24)? Rather, walk after [i.e. emulate]
His qualities. Just as He clothes the naked ... visits the sick ... comforts
the mourners ... and buries the dead ... so should you." (Sota 14a)
Sometimes the actions recommended are at first glance surprising:
"Rabbi Yehuda the son of Rabbi Simon said: 'After the Lord your
God you shall walk' ... At the beginning of the world's creation, the Holy
One occupied Himself first with planting, as it says, 'And the Lord God
planted a garden in Eden' (Bereishit 2:8); so too, when you enter the Land
[of Israel], occupy yourselves first with planting - and thus it says,
'When you enter the land and plant all fruit-bearing trees...' (Vayikra
19:23)." (Vayikra Rabba 25:3)
[Of course, there are some characteristics ascribed by the Bible to
God which we should presumably not imitate, e.g. "a jealous and vengeful
God" (Nachum 1:2). There are several answers to this question; see,
for example, Rambam's Guide for the Perplexed I:54.]
The Rambam was the first to formulate "Ve-halakhta bi-derakhav"
as a specific biblical commandment to develop a virtuous personality. (The
Behag preceded him in counting it as one of the 613 biblical mitzvot, but
the Behag interpreted it in terms of performing specific altruistic actions,
not in terms of striving for the ideal of ethical perfection.) In fact,
the Rambam bases his entire system of ethics on this principle. According
to his reading, the "way" in which we are supposed to walk is
the middle path:
"The right way is the mean in each disposition ... namely, that
disposition which is equally distant from the two extremes ... This is
the way of the wise ... We are bidden to walk in the middle paths, which
are the right and proper ways, as it is written, 'And you shall walk in
His ways' ... and this path is called 'the way of God' ..." (Hilkhot
De'ot 1:4-7)
Rav Soloveitchik is reported once to have added an interesting twist
to the Rambam (see "For Further Reference," #3). Is the middle
path a tepid, middling position, a "pareve" form of mediocrity?
If we are to draw an analogy to God, the Rav claimed, then what emerges
is a dynamic middle. Just as God presents a constant dialectic between
immanence and transcendence, or between mercy and strict justice, so must
man walk down a dialectical median path, oscillating between two poles
and incorporating both. Although it seems to me that this is meant more
as a creative midrashic use of the Rambam, rather than a literal exposition
of his position, it leads us to another important motif in the Rav's philosophy.
TWO TYPES OF DIALECTIC
The pair of opposing concepts comprising a dialectic are known in philosophic
terminology as the "thesis" and "antithesis" (i.e.
the anti-thesis). When the tension between the two eventually leads to
a third hybrid position, it is labeled the "synthesis." A dialectic
consisting of only two sides, which never reaches a harmonious resolution,
is known as a Kierkegaardian dialectic (after the 19th-century Danish theologian
Soren Kierkegaard). If it consists of three positions, ending in synthesis
(which in turn can become the thesis of a new dialectic), it is termed
a Hegelian dialectic (after the 19th-century German philosopher Georg W.
F. Hegel).
The Rav takes a firmly Kierkegaardian stance in "Majesty and Humility":
"Judaic dialectic, unlike the Hegelian, is irreconcilable and hence
interminable... To Hegel, man and his history were just abstract ideas;
in the world of abstractions, synthesis is conceivable. To Judaism, man
has always been and still is a living reality... In the world of realities,
the harmony of opposites is an impossibility." (p. 25)
This kind of approach is rare in Jewish philosophy, which often tends
to be more harmonistic. It has roots, however, not just in modern philosophy,
but in the Rav's methodology of Talmud study. A "chakira," as
we have pointed out, is also an irreconcilable dialectic.
The Rav's staunchly Kierkegaardian approach here raises the question
of whether it ia motif in all of his philosophical writings. While "Majesty
and " and "The Lonely Man of Faith" present irreconcilable
dialectics, it seems that some of the Rav's other writings, such as "Halakhic
Man" and "U-vikkashtem Mi-sham," present more harmonious
portraits of personalities who have found a synthesis. (It is true that
halakhic man is first described as the product of a dialectic between scientific
and religious man; but the personality of the emergent halakhic man is
an entirely harmonious and tranquil one.) We will bear this question in
mind when examining the Rav's other writings, and return to consider it
then.
MAN AS A DIALECTICAL BEING
"Man is a dialectical being; an inner schism runs through his personality
at every level ... [T]he schism is willed by God as the source of man's
greatness and his election as a singular charismatic being. Man is a great
and creative being because he is torn by conflict and is always in a state
of ontological tenseness and perplexity. The fact that the creative gesture
is associated with agony is a result of this contradiction, which pervades
the whole personality of man." (p. 25)
Thus Rav Soloveitchik begins "Majesty and Humility." He does
not yet tell us what the dialectic is, nor does he begin by stating that
it is a reflection of a divine dialectic. Logically, it might have made
more sense to begin by stating, "God is a dialectical being, and so
too must man be," or, "God relates to man dialectically, because
man is dialectical." However, as always, the Rav proceeds from the
human perspective; he begins all his investigations with what is known
to man through his own experience.
Furthermore, he is not yet interested in presenting to us the specific
dialectic upon which the essay will focus. He wishes first to establish
the fundamental fact that human nature is not tidy and harmonious, but
rather is conflicted at its very core. (This is the major theme of "The
Lonely Man of Faith.") However, although often perplexing and discomfiting,
this characteristic is the source of man's greatness - his creative power.
The harmonious person stagnates; the restless and conflicted person innovates.
Of course, some people may not be able to handle the tension successfully.
They will either abdicate responsibility by abandoning their commitment
to one side of the dialectic, or their personality may disintegrate altogether
under the pressure of the unavoidable tension. One of the roles of Halakha,
then, is to aid man in negotiating the dialectic by providing him with
practical guidelines for action. Let us now elaborate on this idea.
HALAKHA AS A RESPONSE
If the human personality is indeed dialectical, then it wishes to pursue
two different, perhaps incompatible, goals. Sensitive to this conflict,
the Halakha has thus formulated "a dialectical morality" - an
ethic of majesty and an ethic of humility. Halakha "did not discover
the synthesis, since the latter does not exist. It did, however, find a
way to enable man to respond to both calls" (p. 26). This response
is developed in the last pages of this essay, and is the focus of the essay
"Catharsis." [In the next several shiurim, we will analyze this
issue in detail.]
The Rav's characterization of Halakha here carries through many of his
writings. For example, in "Kol Dodi Dofek," Rav Soloveitchik
states that philosophic solutions to the problem of evil and suffering
are inadequate at both an intellectual level (because of man's finite intellect)
and at an emotional level (because they deny the legitimacy of man's experience
of suffering). The Halakha, on the other hand, provides a practical response
to this insoluble intellectual and experiential question, through the mandate
of repentance in response to suffering.
Repentance enables man to take cathartic, therapeutic action in response
to adversity, thereby turning a potentially destructive experience into
a redemptive one. By responding in a constructive manner, one maintains
his dignity in the face of absurdity; instead of being buffeted by blind
forces, he "takes control" of the situation by creating (i.e.
self-creation, which is the essence of repentance).
Just as Halakha provides a practical response to suffering without "solving"
the problem of evil, in "The Lonely Man of Faith" the Rav portrays
Halakha as providing a practical means of mediating the unavoidable tension
between the positions of Adam I and Adam II, without reaching a philosophical
synthesis of these two approaches. (We will examine both "Kol Dodi
Dofek" and "The Lonely Man of Faith" in later installments
in this series.)
Thus, Halakha responds to man's most urgent and deep-seated dilemmas;
instead of being paralyzed by dichotomies and intractable problems, man
is provided a means to respond to them practically and creatively. Halakha
does not deny man's desires and internal paradoxes. Rather, it confronts
reality unblinkingly, providing man a framework to help him negotiate his
internal conflicts and to sanctify his natural urges (instead of delegitimizing
or denying them).
It now remains for us to delineate the human dialectic between
majesty and humility and how Halakha responds to this duality. This will
be the subject of the next lecture.
FOR FURTHER REFERENCE:
1. Imitatio Dei: R. David Shapiro, "The Doctrine of the Image
of God and Imitatio Dei," in Contemporary Jewish Ethics, ed. M. Kellner
[NY, 1978], pp. 127-151; Shalom Rosenberg, "Ve-halakhta Bi-derakhav"
(Hebrew), in Pilosophia Yisraelit, ed. M. Halamish [Tel Aviv, 1982], pp.
72-91.
2. Rambam's Ethics: This subject is very complex and has been subject
to many conflicting interpretations. Some of the issues in dispute are
the relationship between the Rambam's "Middle Path" and Aristotle's
"Golden Mean;" the relationship between the chakham and chasid
(sage and saint) in Rambam's writings; the Rambam's different accounts
of his ethical system in his various works (Shemoneh Perakim, Mishneh Torah,
Moreh Nevukhim); and the Rambam's ideal of human perfection. For a presentation
of the various opinions on the last issue, and a treatment of the previous
issues, see Menachem Kellner, Maimonides on Human Perfection [Atlanta,
1990].
3. The Dialectical Nature of the "Middle Road": The interpretation
proposed by Rav Soloveitchik is recorded by Rav Walter Wurzburger in his
article, "Alienation and Exile," Tradition 6:2 (1964), reprinted
in A Treasury of Tradition, eds. R. N. Lamm and R. W. Wurzburger [NY, 1967],
pp. 93-103. It can also be found in Rav Wurzburger's book, Ethics of Responsibility
[Philadelphia, 1994], pp. 100-101.
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