|
YHE-HOLIDAY:
SHAVUOT 5769
"The Day that You
Stood before the Lord at Chorev"
HaRav Aharon
Lichtenstin Shlit"a
Summarized by
Shaul
Barth
Translated by
Kaeren
Fish
On Shavuot, we
celebrate kabbalat ha-Torah; but the word "kabbala" can be
understood in two different ways.
On the one hand, we
"received" the Torah as a gift. Indeed, the Torah is "more precious than fine
gold and pearls;" on Shavuot, we must thank God for the gift that He has
bestowed on us and for granting us the privilege of this great
treasure.
On the other hand, we
"accepted" the Torah. "Acceptance" can be understood as the internalization of a
value or idea. The expression "kabbala le-atid" – accepting a resolution
upon oneself for the future – implies the internalization of one's repentance
and an attempt to live accordingly in the future. According to this
interpretation, we must explain what exactly it was that Am Yisrael
accepted at that exalted occasion at Sinai. What was given to the nation as a
legacy for the future, continuing many generations after God’s revelation?
This question assumes
special significance in light of the fact that Ramban, in his glosses on
Rambam's Sefer Ha-Mitzvot (prohibitions, addition #2), counts the
remembering of the revelation at Sinai as a commandment: "Take heed to yourself,
and guard your soul diligently, lest you forget the things which your eyes have
seen, and lest they depart from your heart all the days of your life, but teach
them to your children and your childrens' children: the day that you stood
before the Lord your God at Chorev…" (Devarim 4:9-10). According to this
understanding, we must understand what it is that we are meant to remember.
Which values are we meant to internalize as part of our remembrance of the
acceptance of Torah?
There are a number of
points to which Am Yisrael committed themselves and which they accepted
upon themselves at Sinai.
As we know, there are
commandments that are not set down explicitly in the Torah; the Sages throughout
the generations have interpreted the Torah and revealed these commandments.
Seemingly, a person could claim that the system of Halakha as we know it is not
what he committed himself to at Sinai. There, we accepted the obligation of a
certain number of commandments, but we never committed ourselves to the
obligations imposed later by the Sages, such as, for example, the reading of the
megilla on Purim!
We therefore must
understand that at Sinai, the nation did not accept each individual commandment,
but rather the entire body of commandments as their subjugation to God. The very
first commitment of Am Yisrael at Sinai was towards the fulfillment of
that general system of Halakha, not each law individually. This idea is proposed
by R. Yosef Baer Soloveitchik (the Beit Ha-Levi) to resolve the
difficulties that he discerns in the obligation of Am Yisrael to all of
the commandments.
The gemara
(Shabbat 88b), in discussing the revelation at Sinai, tells us:
"They stood at the
foot of the mountain" - R. Avdimi bar Hama said: This teaches that God held the
mountain over them like a cask, and said to them: "If you accept the Torah [-
then well and good]; and if not – there you will be buried" … Rava said:
[Although it would seem that the Torah was accepted because of coercion],
nevertheless it was re-accepted [willingly] in the days of Achashverosh, as it
is written: "The Jews fulfilled and accepted" – they fulfilled that which they
had already accepted [at Sinai].
The generally
accepted meaning of this gemara is that at the time of Mordekhai and
Esther, the Jews willingly accepted upon themselves the Torah that they had
accepted through coercion at the time of the revelation at Sinai. However, we
may perhaps propose another interpretation which, to my view, reflects the
simple, literal meaning of the gemara. At the time of Mordekhai and
Esther, "the Jews fulfilled that which they had already accepted." Until the
time of Esther, Am Yisrael fulfilled the commandments as part of the
overall subjugation to God to which they had committed themselves at the time of
accepting the Torah; from that time onward, they also committed themselves to
each and every individual law, so as to fulfill that which they had already
accepted in the general sense.
Furthermore, at
Sinai, the nation accepted upon itself not only the laws, but also God as
Creator and Master of the world; the nation accepted the Kingship of God, and
since that time this faith has been "the pillar of all wisdom and the foundation
of all foundations." The faith that the nation took upon itself was not limited
to the acceptance of God's existence, but also other beliefs that are integral
to Judaism. At Sinai, Am Yisrael accepted fundamental beliefs that remain
binding to this day, as part of the concepts and principles that are the "red
lines," the definitive framework of faith, in which every Jew
believes.
The last element that
we may list as a commitment by every Jew at Sinai is the belonging to the nation
of Israel and the concept of
the nation of Israel as a single body, with
everyone connected to everyone else. At Sinai, the status of Am Yisrael
was established as a special nation in which every individual is meant to feel a
part of, and connected to, his fellow; thus, a collection of individuals is
forged into a nation. From that time on, every individual Jew is obligated to
accept upon himself his belonging to the nation of Israel and to recognize that
all of us belong to the same entity, with each responsible for the other.
All of these elements
are contained in the command "Take heed … lest you forget … the day that you
stood before the Lord your God at Chorev"
(This sicha was
delivered on Shavuot 5763 [2003].)
|