Rabbi Jonathan I. Rosenblatt
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Rabbi Yehuda Septimus
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Derashot haRan

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Compiled by Rabbi Gidon Rothstein

Shiur 13

Parshat Emor, 5764

255-275, 113-120

UNPACKING THE RABBAH B. NAHMANI STORY

Readers will recall that we ended last week with the story of Rabbah b. Nahmani, who was sitting and learning when he heard the Heavenly Academy arguing over the impurity of a certain lesion, with everyone other than God of the opinion that this lesion was impure.  They agreed that Rabbah b. Nahmani was the reigning expert on these kinds of issues; the Angel of Death was recruited to have him join the Heavenly Academy, and as Rabbah passed away, he said “Pure! Pure!”

Ran is bothered by two aspects of this story.  First, he does not understand why the souls of the departed would spend their time determining the purity of bodily lesions (since they do not have bodies).  Note Ran’s assumption that the term Heavenly Academy applies to a group at least primarily composed of departed souls (as opposed to the angels, for example).  This assumption, which to me seems not to be the simple reading of the term, suggests that Ran thought that only people and their deceased souls studied Torah, which would explain why they are the members of the Heavenly Academy (this fits well with midrashim that portray the angels as protesting God’s giving the Torah to people, arguing it should reside with them; Ran apparently understood those texts as meaning that the angels were left without Torah, not just that they had to share it with people).

 That midrashic view, then, is stating a more profound truth than just that people have to struggle with their evil inclination and therefore deserve Torah; it is saying that the experience of physicality might be essential to being able to experience Torah as well (which, in fact, might explain the view of those who believe that when the dead come back to life, they will no longer be bound by mitsvot.  Having shed their physicality, they can no longer experience command in the necessary way for Torah as properly lived).

Second, he wonders how the debate could continue once God had announced His view of the purity of the lesions in question.

THE IMPORTANCE OF THE PHYSICAL TO THE SOUL

For the first issue, Ran offers Ramban’s view of what happens to the soul after death.  Since souls have spent considerable time in the human body, they have become deeply attached to the physical despite their not actually being physical.  Because of that, for example, Ran assumes that Gan Eden, where souls stay until they will be reunited with bodies at the time of the resurrection of the dead, is an actual physical place on this world. 

Although I admit that that last piece, the earthly existence of a place where deceased souls wait for resurrection, is difficult to swallow, Ran’s and Ramban’s view of the deep interconnection between the body and the soul seems to me very in line with modern brain science.  Those who study victims of particular types of brain damage (there are numerous interesting books on the topic, including ones by Howard Gardner, Antonio Damasio, and Oliver Sacks) offer ample evidence that physical occurrences to the body (at least to the brain) affect not just the brain’s ability to function, but the personality of the victim.  Unless we argue that there is no such thing as a soul—as some would like to—the evidence seems to suggest that bodily injuries affect the very essence of the person, which would be in line with Ran’s view.

R. Aaron Soloveitchik, zt”l, once described his post-stroke experience of feeling alienated from the affected side of his body, as if it was an appendage to “him,” an example of seeing certain traumas as sundering or affecting the body/soul connection.

For Ran’s purposes here, the point of stressing that connection is to say that even once removed from the body, the soul does not become a purely spiritual entity (such as the angels, or the pristine soul it was before its time in the body); it remains deeply affected by its relationship to the body, and, indeed, maintains that connection.  As an example of that, Ran notes that the Talmud several times relates stories of people going to gravesites to ask a deceased person either for information or to intercede with God on some issue.  Ran says that they went to the grave itself (as opposed to just addressing the deceased person from home) because the soul is more connected to the gravesite than any other place in the world (a belief I have long known was a traditional one, but for which I had not remembered an explicit source).

Ran’s first answer, then, is that the souls of the deceased would study laws of lesions because they could not shed their physical connection.  The second answer—the one I would have thought would come first—was that souls have to be involved with Torah (since that’s where true wisdom comes from), an answer that assumes that the physical aspect of this piece of Torah was coincidental to the more important underlying aspect of these laws, an aspect that is equally relevant to nonphysical beings as to physical ones.  I thought this would come first because it seems more obvious to the Jewish idea of Torah—while it takes the form of numerous mundane physical things, it is actually about more fundamental principles, which all intelligent beings might study.

THE SECOND QUESTION: ARGUING WITH GOD

As to how the Academy could argue with God, Ran goes back to his distinction between the Torah of Truth and the Torah as understood by people.  Although as soon as God registered an opinion, the Heavenly Academy knew what the “original intent” of the Torah had been, they could still argue that that was not what the human intellect would have concluded following its ordinary logical process.  Turning to Rabbah b. Nahmani, they were seeking a human opinion.

Although Ran doesn’t phrase it this way, a weakness in his interpretation is that Rabbah was still only one man, so that if the majority of rabbis on his court were to disagree with him, the law would follow them rather than him.  If so, in Ran’s reconstruction of the discussion in the Academy, their turning to one person is a flawed strategy, since what they really needed was a poll of scholars to decide the issue.

That problem aside—and its especially problematic since Rabbah decides that God is right, uncomfortably similar to R. Eliezer, whose views were rejected despite his according better with the Torah’s “original intent”—it leads Ran back to reminding us that had the majority determined the law differently, Rabbah and others would be liable to follow that wrong view because of the commandment of “Lo Tasur,” which has two applications.

THE RABBIS—INTERPRETERS AND LEGISLATORS

Lo Tasur, Ran says, involves both accepting the majority interpretation of Torah in each context (pure/impure, liable/ guiltless, etc.) as well as—and this is the bigger novelty—their determination as to what boundaries/additional practices are needed to safeguard the Torah’s goals and values.  In that sense, even if one transgresses a derabannan prohibition of Shabbat (such as carrying muktseh items), in this view—and Ran cites Rambam as holding this view as well—is also transgressing a Torah prohibition of lo tasur.  (Those interested in the lomdus applications of such ideas can wonder whether Ran means that a person who carries muktseh has transgressed Shabbat on a Torah level, or has transgressed the obligation to listen to the Sages.  Rambam, who refused to count Rabbinic enactments in his 613 mitsvot, seems to have assumed the latter, so that all Rabbinic commandments have a Torah element to them, but it is the one large rubric of lo tasur).

As to why we find so many distinctions drawn between Rabbinic commandments and Torah commandments—the most famous being that doubts in derabannan matters are decided le-kula, leniently—Ran says that that is only because the Rabbis decided to enact them that way.

Ran then questions himself from a central source on the issue of lo tasur, the gemara’s discussion of the blessing said over Hanukkah candles, asher kideshanu be-mitsvotav ve-tsivanu, Who has sanctified us with His mitsvot and commanded us, etc.  The gemara questions how we can say that about a clearly Rabbinic enactment, and offers two answers, with R. Avya saying lo tasur and R. Nahman b. Yitshaq citing a verse in Deuteronomy, she’al avikha ve-yagedkha, ask your father and he will tell you.  Since that latter verse is not a commandment—it is in Haazinu as part of the general advice of Moshe’s final shira/reminder/warning to the Jewish people—R. Avya would seem to mean lo tasur in a similarly nonlegal fashion.

ROOTED IN THE TORAH VS. NON-ROOTED

Ran answers that that debate only applied to Hanukkah (and similar rabbinic enactments) because it has no Torah source whatsoever.  In contrast to Rabbinic expansions of Shabbat, for example, where Hazal’s legislative power is used to expand already existing Torah law, Hanukkah is an area of law completely created by Hazal.  The former kinds of laws, Ran claims, were always recognized as falling under the rubric of lo tasur; it is only the all-new ones that R. Nahman b. Yitshaq debated.

Before we go on with Ran’s ideas, it’s interesting to contrast his assumption that expansive laws are more obviously part of lo tasur with Behag’s apparently reverse assumption.  Early in his introduction to the Sefer haMitsvot, Rambam took Behag to task for including Rabbinic commandments as mitsvot.  If Rabbinic rules count, Rambam said, all the various Rabbinic rulings on Shabbat, etc., should count as well, bringing the number well over the traditional 613.  I believe Behag would have differentiated along Ran’s lines, but the other way—expansions of other rules become, perhaps by way of lo tasur, part of the original rule (so, for example, if I eat hametz on the eighth day of Pesah outside of Israel, I suspect Behag would have said—and our instinct would be—that I have violated Pesah, not lo tasur).  Hanukkah, hand-washing, and other Rabbinic legislations, however, can only be grounded in lo tasur.

THE IMPORTANCE OF CREATIVITY OUTSIDE OF PREEXISTING HALAKHAH

Getting back to Ran, he then goes on to explicitly say something that I’ve been working on for a while now, that the main part of the Torah, and the central reward, is for where Hazal find areas to expand our religiosity that were not commanded by God.  Although he is not always clear as to whether he means things like protective fences around pre-existing prohibitions or completely novel enactments (or both), he is clear that it is the response to Hazal’s deciding that something is religiously important that garners special and particular merit.  From his perspective, then, Hashem gave the Torah as a starting point, expecting and hoping that Hazal would enrich that legacy in each generation.  (Not, I suspect, simply by prohibiting more actions, but by defining ever more fully the nature of a well-lived religious life).

As part of his proof, Ran notes a Mishnah in Avodah Zarah 29a where R. Yishmael was questioning R. Yehoshua as to the reason that the Rabbis prohibited the cheese of non-Jews.  After having a few answers rejected, R. Yehoshua, the Mishnah tells us, changed the topic of conversation, engaging R. Yehoshua in a discussion about the correct reading of Shir haShirim 1;2. Although the Mishnah makes it seem like just a diversionary tactic, Ran thinks he meant to hint to him the reading of the verse cited later in the gemara (35a), that the Jewish people were declaring their greater love for the words of the Rabbis than for the Torah itself.

PRIORITY OF COMMANDEDNESS?

Ran recognizes that the famous statement of the gemara that one who is commanded to perform a certain act is greater than one who is not commanded seems to contradict his view.  If the system prefers commandedness, following explicit mitsvot should be more important than obeying Hazal’s decisions as to where and how to best add to that structure.  Ran deals with this by offering three explanations for the principle of gadol hametsuveh, greater is the one commanded, each of which accepts the gemara’s view and yet shows how it is irrelevant to the general religious question of whether to prefer following explicit Divine commands or to prefer following humanly articulated ones.

First, he argues that the gemara’s statement was a reflection of the greater stress a commanded person will have over the fulfillment of the commandment (as do Tosafot).  In the nature of people, someone who is required to perform a certain act will worry more about making sure it gets done than one who does not.   For example, if two people intend to go to a Little League game but are very busy at work, the one who is a parent of a child playing in the game has a “command” (the feelings of the child) to get to the game; the other, just an adult in the community, would like to get to the game, but if it doesn’t work out, that’s the way it goes.  Their different experience of the need to fulfill a mitsvah caused the gemara’s statement about reward, since the Mishnah in Avot tells us that reward is affected by the level of angst and effort a person invests in their religious activity.

The second possibility Ran suggests is that mitsvot might be commanded to certain people and not others because of some inherent characteristic in those people.  Just like there are mitsvot that the Torah only saw as relevant in Israel, or at certain times of the year, there may be mitsvot that only apply to certain kinds of people.  If so, others who perform that mitsvah are not doing something wrong, but are not getting as much out of the act as the ones to whom it was directed.

Third, Ran notes that the performance of mitsvot isn’t important to God—it doesn’t help or hurt Him—so that the whole structure is one made for people.  When God promises reward, then, it is more like a gift from Him to the people involved.  That gift, however, was only offered to particular people or groups of people, so that others who choose to do the same act have no right to expect the same reward.  A parent who asks a child to do something may be pleased if another child also does it, but there is no reason for the parent to reward the child to the same extent as the commanded sibling. While this is similar to the previous answer—both argue that a mitzvah given to a particular person applies most to that person—this one focuses on the fact that reward for mitsvot is a gift from God, and that God chose to whom to give which opportunities for full reward.

Ran’s expression of the matter stresses Hazal’s going beyond the explicit Torah and the tradition, but he then cites R. Yonah in Gates of Repentance, who adduces similar sources about the Rabbis’ legislative function.  In R. Yonah’s view, cultivating fear/awe of God and the mitsvot is a central religious endeavor; since Hazal’s protective decrees foster that attitude, they become essential to religious life.

PUNISHMENT FOR IGNORING RABBINIC DECREES

In addition to seeing Rabbinic rules as more religiously essential, Ran also cites the Talmudic statement that one who transgresses such a rule is liable for death, but then immediately questions it.  On its face, it seems ridiculous to claim that violating a rabbinic rule deserves more punishment than a specifically commanded practice of the Torah.

To explain, Ran notes that the question misunderstands the punishment that accrues for various sins.  While it is true that the Torah sets up certain punishments for certain sins, that is only where the sin involves the act itself and nothing else—I give in to my desire for pig, so I get flogged (Ran seems to be assuming that the elaborate requirement for witnesses, warning, etc. before administering that punishment is only a way to verify that the sin was actually committed; it is possible, though, to see flogging as the punishment for willful public transgression, which would alter, but not destroy, his idea here).  If there are other factors to that transgression, such as a level of denigration for Torah itself, a different, harsher punishment would be appropriate.

It turns out, then, that there may be a punishment that can be prescribed for an act itself, but there will be levels of punishment that will depend on the person committing the sin, his or her motivation when committing that sin, and so on.  Any person who transgresses a Rabbinic commandment, in Ran’s view, is not just giving in to desire but is acting disrespectfully towards the Rabbis and, by extension, the entire structure of Torah, and therefore deserves death.

Ran is about to question the focus on fear/awe that he just accepted from R. Yonah, but before he does so, I’d like to point out some of the ramifications of the position he just espoused.  In noting that there is punishment for aspects of a sin that are inherently personal, Ran not only explained why the gemara would speak of capital liability for violating Rabbinic commandments, he also contributed greatly to the vexing question of how we could envision suffering as punishment for people who seem to be at least as righteous as everyone else. 

Ran’s view of sin and punishment tells us that, much like families, each person has an internal life that we cannot see but that God knows and factors into that person’s punishment and reward.  When we see apparent evildoers prosper and vice verse, then, at least part of the puzzle is that we do not know their internal experience, and the acts/motives/intentions for which they are being rewarded or punished.

IS FEAR OF GOD GOOD OR BAD?

In the last section of the derasha that we will mention this week, Ran counterposes Talmudic statements that favor fear/awe as a very high form of religious attachment to those that denigrate it as a low form.  While he will continue the discussion in the rest of the derasha, his basic answer differentiates two types of fear of God.  The first involves fear of punishment, of what God can do to us if we fail to obey His commands (it is an accurate fear, just not a particularly elevated form of religious attachment). 

The second form, which Ran sees as of a level rivaling love of God, is more like awe than fear.   It is what happens when a person is fully aware of God’s greatness, and recoils in fear, not a fear of consequences but a fear of standing in the presence of such an august being.  Next week, we will see how Ran uses this dichotomy-- these two types of fear-- to bring this derasha to a conclusion.  Shabbat Shalom.

 

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