Chapter 1, Mishna 1(a)
Who Gave the Rabbis the Right..., Part I
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
"Moses received the Torah from Sinai and transmitted it Joshua. Joshua
transmitted it to the Elders, the Elders to the Prophets, and the Prophets
transmitted it to the Men of the Great Assembly. They [the Men of the
Great Assembly] said three things: Be deliberate in judgment, raise many
students, and make a protective fence for the Torah."
This is the first mishna of Pirkei Avos, the great ethical work of the
Sages of the Mishna. We will first provide a bit of background to Pirkei
Avos and the Mishna in general, and we'll then begin examining the text at
hand.
The Mishna is an early rabbinic composition outlining all of Jewish law.
It was edited and brought into its current form in the late 2nd Century
C.E. It is a compilation of the teachings of the greatest scholars of the
four centuries preceding that time -- from early in the period of the
Second Temple till about 120 years after its destruction. It was authored
in the Land of Israel; shortly after its completion Jewish settlement in
the Land experienced a slow but steady decline as a result of instability
and persecution. (The center of Jewish life would then shift to Babylonia -
- where hundreds of years later the Talmud would be composed.)
The Mishna is divided into six main volumes, each divided into smaller
sections (or tractates). These sections deal with virtually all areas of
Jewish law, such as holidays, Temple service, civil law, marriage and
divorce, and agricultural laws. Pirkei Avos is the only section of the
Mishna devoted entirely to ethics.
Pirkei Avos begins by charting the transmission of the Torah, in outline
form, from Moses to the "Men of the Great Assembly" (more on them below)
and the beginning of the period of the Mishna. Our mishna concludes with
the advice of the Men of the Great Assembly. Most of the first chapter of
Pirkei Avos introduces us to the great scholars of the early generations
of the Mishna, as well as the primary messages they conveyed to their and
to future generations.
The historical outline our mishna provides is hopelessly scant and was
clearly not intended to provide us with very much by way of historical
reference. Rather, it was meant to authenticate the Mishna, demonstrating
that its teachings span from an unbroken tradition originating at Sinai
itself.
Let us first briefly identify the eras mentioned. Joshua was the successor
to Moses. He and the Elders of his time led the nation into the Land of
Israel and oversaw the conquest and division of the Land among the Twelve
Tribes of Israel.
With the passing of the Elders began the period of the Prophets, the
spiritual leaders of the nation until the time of the Mishna,
approximately 1000 years later. G-d's hand was no longer openly revealed
to every member of Israel as it had been during the Exodus and the
miraculous conquest of the Land. Nevertheless, G-d still communicated
openly with the great men and women of Israel through prophecy and Divine
inspiration. The spiritual and often political leaders of Israel were
individuals whose authority rested directly upon the word of G-d.
Finally, as the last prophets died out at the beginning of the Second
Temple era, the period of the Great Assembly began. This was a religious
and primarily judicial body which consisted of 120 of Israel's greatest
scholars. It was headed by a Nasi, literally prince, who was assisted by
an Av Beis Din, or court head. Throughout this chapter, we will be
introduced to the leadership pairs of many generations of this council.
In two weeks, G-d willing, we will discuss the significance of the
transition from prophet to high court -- as well as the significance of
the periods described here altogether. As we will see, the Men of the
Great Assembly recognized the significance of this transition and in our
mishna advised the nation accordingly. This week, however, we address a
more basic issue: What is this introduction doing at the start of Pirkei
Avos -- rather than at the start of the entire Mishna?
This question is raised by R. Ovadiah of Bartenura, of 15th-16th Century
Italy and Israel, in his commentary to the Mishna. Our mishna's opening
statement appears to be a historical introduction to the Mishna in
general. (Note: When I write "Mishna" with a capital M, the intention is
the entire six-volume work, of which Pirkei Avos is a small part. The
term "mishna" in lowercase refers to a particular paragraph of the Mishna,
such as the weekly mishna we study.)
The purpose of this introduction is presumably to verify the Mishna's
authenticity. Although it was authored nearly 1500 years after the
Revelation at Sinai -- and much of its content was preserved only orally
until that time -- it followed a clear and uninterrupted transmission. It
is as authentic as the Torah of Moses itself.
There is, however, one obvious difficulty with this. The Mishna is a six-
volume work; Pirkei Avos appears towards the end of the fourth volume. Why
is this introduction at the start of Pirkei Avos rather than at the start
of the entire Mishna?
R. Ovadiah explains that the Rabbis felt it more necessary to place this
preface here than at the start of the Mishna. Virtually all the other
sections of the Mishna discuss Jewish law and custom. They are fairly
logical and precise -- how does one observe the Sabbath, slaughter an
animal, compose a marriage contract, bring a sin offering. For the most
part, the Mishna discusses the how-to's of Judaism. What are the many
details and fine points of Jewish law, when do and do they not apply, and
upon whom are they binding. Jews never really had very much doubt as to
the origins of such laws. These were practices and traditions every Jewish
child observed in his or her parents' home. An entire nation, often
spanning oceans and continents, was observing virtually the same law --
and had been doing so for the many centuries of their well-documented
history. There was very little doubt to the believing Jew as to the
origins of such laws; they were hardly self-imposed.
Further, Judaism bespoke an understanding of G-d and human nature which
could hardly have been humanly inspired. Israel was practicing a just,
merciful and rational religion far superior to any of the often savage
practices the pagans of their time had managed to concoct. Their beliefs
and practices were just and moral practically beyond the comprehension of
primitive man. The world's other great religions-to-be would merely mimic
and adopt Judaism's fundamental precepts; human beings on their own would
never devise anything even remotely approximating. (The only possible
exception is the religions of the Far East -- although there are those who
suggest they stem from the descendants of Abraham's concubine -- whom
Abraham sent to the East (Genesis 25:6).) Thus, Jews had no doubt as to
the Divine origin of their Torah. From where else could such wisdom and
beauty have originated?
This, however, was the case with Jewish law proper. Laws are definite and
unwavering. They possess an exactitude which clearly must have originated
somewhere. But what of the moral directives of the Sages? When the Sages
tell us to greet everyone favorably (later, 1:15
(www.torah.org/learning/pirkei-avos/chapter1-15c.html)) is that really a
*law*? Perhaps it is sound advice, but let's say you just got up on the
wrong side of the bed one morning. You don't *feel* like giving a
cheerful "good morning" to the attendant at the local 7-11 who hands you
your morning coffee or newspaper. Are you really *obligated* to do so
anyway? Does such a law stem from Sinai?
To this our Sages answer: "Moses received the Torah from Sinai..." The
laws we are about to state originated from Sinai -- just the same
as "There are 39 forbidden labors on the Sabbath" (Mishna Shabbos 7:2).
The Sages here speak with the same authority they do throughout the entire
Mishna. Their statements here may seem just plain old good advice -- the
same we may find in any other Dale Carnegie-type self-help book. But let
us not for a moment think that the Sages of the Mishna are no longer
bearers of a sacred tradition in this capacity. As we will see over the
years as we study their words in depth, they are not just offering
aphorisms or wise, pithy advice. They are speaking nothing less than the
word of G-d.
There is a deeper aspect to this introduction. The "good advice" of the
Sages is hardly as precise as most of what the Mishna concerns itself
with. Pirkei Avos deals with inexact and sometimes relative statements of
morality and proper behavior -- and this too makes it appear less
authentic then the real meat and potatoes of Judaism. We will discuss this
issue G-d willing next week.
Text Copyright © 2007 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.