Chapter 1, Mishna 1(b)
The First Commandment: Know Thyself
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."
Last week we discussed the first few lines of our mishna, which outline
the history of the Torah's transmission from Moses until the period of
the Mishna. The introduction appears to authenticate the Mishna, as if
to say that although it was not put to writing until nearly 1500 years
after the Revelation at Sinai, it is as authentic as the Torah of Moses
itself.
To this we posed the question of the commentator R. Ovadiah of
Bartenura: Why was such an introduction placed at the start of Pirkei
Avos and not at the start of the entire work of the Mishna?
R. Ovadiah answered that Jews had little doubt as to the authenticity of
most of the Mishna. Virtually the entire Mishna describes technical
details of observance -- how does one refrain from labor on the Sabbath,
slaughter an animal, tithe his crops (or salary), etc. And no one
imagined such laws were just invented by domineering or power-hungry
rabbis. They were clearly part of our oral tradition passed down from
Sinai -- elucidating the mitzvos (commandments) of Scripture itself.
Such a large and intricate body of law hardly evolved out of thin air,
nor did it gain universal acceptance spontaneously. When our forefathers
transmitted them, asserting that they were handed down to us from Sinai,
there was little reason to doubt them. The Sages would have had little
to gain inventing such an intricate set of laws just for the heck of it;
from where else would it have come?
Pirkei Avos, however, is perhaps different. It is the only section of
the Mishna wholly dedicated to ethics and character development. It
provides advice: how to interact with others, what qualities to develop
within ourselves, and really how to live meaningful and fulfilling lives
-- all of which in honesty could be all but missed observing the
technical mitzvos of Judaism alone. Such "laws" one might think are
nothing more than good advice -- hardly different from the many hundreds
of self-help books which have been authored since (some perhaps more
up-to-date and relevant to our generation). What makes the wise words
and sayings of the Sages any more authentic -- any more "sacred" -- than
those of Ben Franklin or Dale Carnegie?
To this, our mishna begins: "Moses received the Torah from Sinai..." The
messages, aphorisms and advice of our Sages, collected in Pirkei Avos,
are the word of G-d. This is not the good advice of wise old men who
lived 2000 years ago. It is as much a part of our eternal Torah as the
most technical and intricate of laws. They are all a part of G-d's
infinite Torah; Pirkei Avos stems from a tradition every bit as ancient.
There is a deeper issue here, however. When giving advice, the Rabbis
often speak in generalities. Just looking at a few of the upcoming
mishnas, we are told: "serve G-d not for the sake of reward" (1:3),
"cleave to the Rabbis" (1:4, paraphrased), "acquire for yourself a
friend" (1:6), "love work" (1:10). The Sages don't really tell us very
much by way of detail of how we should act or go about following their
advice. We are given general directives and attitudes alone; the details
almost seem left up to us.
Even beyond this, how much does the Written Torah really tell us about
how to behave -- not which animals we may consume but truly what kind of
people we should be? Well, we have a handful of nice "Bible stories" --
how our forefathers interacted with their neighbors or reacted in times
of crisis. Some of these incidents are inspiring; others are more
critical. Beyond that, the Torah offers us only the most general of
directives: "...be holy for I am holy" (Leviticus 19:2); "Love your
neighbor" (ibid., v. 18); "...seek peace and pursue it" (Psalms 34:15).
These verses are perhaps "nice", but the Torah really does not tell us
very much about character development and interpersonal relationships.
Isn't that at least as important an aspect of religion -- if not more so
-- than the technical commandments? Is Judaism in fact more a religion
of form than spirit, of law and ritual than one which cultivates a
"kingdom of priests" (Exodus 19:6), and "light unto the nations" (Isaiah
42:6)?
And this too returns us to the issue we began with. The "advice" of the
Sages seems more informal and less authentic simply because it is not
very precise. The Torah *seems* to tell us: "Observe all sorts of
rigorous and detailed laws and rituals, but beyond that be nice guys,
and we'll leave that up to you." Did the Torah really just for the most
part ignore the areas of character development and personal growth? Did
the Torah really say so little about this that it has been relegated to
the "self-help" good advice of the Sages?
We now come to one of the true fundamentals of Judaism. (Over the years,
you will find I call a lot of very different things "one of the great
fundamentals of Judaism." Well, perhaps they all are...) How to behave
is really not something the Torah can dictate or spell out for us. No
two people are alike. We all possess different personalities,
inclinations, weaknesses, drives, and ambitions. And the Torah will
apply differently to each one of us; it carries a different message for
each and every Jew.
The Torah -- in particular the Scriptures -- is a book of absolute
truths. It makes statements which are correct in an absolute sense.
Sabbath observance is true and relevant to every Jew; so is eating
matzah on Passover and refraining from eating on Yom Kippur (leaving
aside life-threatening situations -- which the Torah itself excludes).
Character development, however, departs the realm of the absolute and
enters the realm of the relative. How does each of us realize his or her
potential, becoming the person he or she truly could be? How precisely
do we "cleave" to G-d (Deuteronomy 10:20) and become G-dlike
individuals? Such the Torah could never spell out for us. We are all
different. No two people are alike and how each of us is best fulfilled
depends on our own inner natures. One person may have a temper. The
Torah's message to him might be to use his energy and excitable nature
for worthy causes. Another may be a natural follower and people pleaser,
and the Torah's advice to him is to not be ashamed to stand up for his
convictions when necessary. One person is introspective and will grow
most from personal thought and reflection. Another is light and chatty
and best serves G-d by bringing warmth and good cheer to others.
When it comes to character development, there is quite simply no one way
-- and there are really very few ironclad absolutes the Torah can spell
out for us. In fact, there is no way a single work of any length could
write out how all possible types of individuals should act in all
possible types of situations (and of course, we would have to figure out
which "type" we are before we begin). Judaism was not intended to create
a one-size-fits-all religion. G-d has no interest in having us all
conform to a single standard -- that we all look, act and behave in
exactly the same manner. If He did, He would not have made each of us
different. Rather, G-d gave us the guidelines and the priorities, the
value system of the Torah. These are the absolutes with which we must
begin. But beyond that, the Torah leaves it to us. Only we can truly
fathom our inner natures and G-d's particular message for us.
Thus, when it comes to the really tough issues of life -- who should I
be, how should I act, how should I develop myself -- the Torah is
frustratingly silent. It can give no more than general directives. It
tells us what the Torah's priorities are -- what generally speaking are
good qualities and proper behavior patterns. But it really cannot choose
for us. We might like to fall back on some holy writings to lead us by
the hand -- never allowing us the discomfort of having to think for
ourselves, but life is just not that simple. How to act in any given
situation depends upon who we are and what we feel our mission in life
to be. And to direct us in that the Torah and the Sages can give little
more than sound advice -- helping us set our priorities in life and
providing us with the clues for true self-discovery. We must ask the
advice of rabbis and mentors, and we must study carefully what the Sages
say about values and character traits -- and we will no doubt discover
facts about ourselves we could have easily and blissfully lived a
lifetime never recognizing. Yet Judaism does not and cannot spell out
our lives and goals for us. Only we can fulfill that most basic and
fundamental commandment of all: Know thyself.
Text Copyright © 2007 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.