Chapter 2, Mishnas 10-11(c)
G-d's Immanent Presence
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
Mishna 10
"Rabban Yochanan ben (son of) Zakkai had five [primary] students. They
were: Rabbi Eliezer ben Hurkenos, Rabbi Yehoshua ben Chananya, Rabbi Yossi
the Priest, Rabbi Shimon ben Nesanel, and Rabbi Elazar ben Arach."
Mishna 11
"He used to enumerate their praises: R. Eliezer ben Hurkenos is a
cemented pit which never loses a drop; R. Yehoshua ben Chananya -
fortunate is she who bore him; R. Yossi the Priest is pious; R. Shimon ben
Nesanel fears sin; and R. Elazar ben Arach is as an increasing river."
In the previous class we discussed the trait of R. Yossi -- piety /
chassidus. As we saw, the chassid is one who goes beyond the letter of the
law in his service of G-d. He does not do only what he is told but looks
for ways to fulfill G-d's will. This requires intelligence and planning;
one must anticipate just what G-d wants of him and how he can
best use his talents and abilities in service of his Creator.
As we also saw, this stands in direct contrast to the mock-chassidus
prevalent at some points in Jewish history, consisting of fasting,
wailing, constant immersions, rolling in the snow, etc. G-d has no
interest in senseless service -- that we do things just because they're
hard (and get us a lot of notice). Piety is not doing things which hurt.
It is careful, planned and responsible service of G-d. We are not supposed
to sacrifice ourselves for G-d with self-destructive acts of devotion; we
are to live for Him -- as responsible, thinking beings who make
intelligent choices in our religious service. We are to maximize our
potential -- our health, our wealth, our brains and abilities -- and use
that potential in service of our Creator.
(As pointed out last week, by "chassidus" we are not referring to the
movement of Chassidus which began in the mid 18th Century. We are talking
about the spiritual quality -- whose name the movement adopted as a way of
defining its objective.)
There's a fascinating additional insight related to chassidus. It will
more fully introduce us to the true level of chassidus. It is in truth an
entirely new level of reality -- one one does not simply adopt but must
achieve.
The Talmud (Brachos 32-33) records two incidents which occurred to
chassidim. The first goes as follows: A chassid was standing by the
roadside in prayer. A Roman government official passed by and greeted him.
The chassid, engrossed in his prayers, did not respond. The Roman waited
until the chassid completed his prayers and then berated him: "Fool!
Doesn't your Torah state 'Be very careful with your lives' (Deut.
4:15)? [Author's note: In Talmudic times, wicked people always seemed to
be experts in Scripture. Either that, or that's just the way the Talmud
tells a story. :-)] If I would cut off your head right now who would have
any grounds to complain?"
The chassid requested a moment to explain himself. He calmly
responded: "If you were standing before the Emperor and your friend came
and greeted you, would you respond?" Roman: "No." Chassid: "And if you
would, what would result?" Roman: "They would cut my head off."
Chassid: "If this is so for a flesh-and-blood king, isn't it all the more
so for me who was standing before the King of kings, the Holy One blessed
be He?" The Roman went off appeased and they all lived happily ever after
(as traditional stories always end).
The second story involved Rabbi Chanina ben Dosa. There was a
venomous "aroad" (a snake-like creature) in the environs of R. Chanina
which was wreaking havoc. R. Chanina asked to be shown its lair. He came
to the hole and put his bare heel next to it. The aroad came out, bit him,
and died. The Rabbi put the dead creature on his shoulders and brought it
to the study hall. He announced: "See my children, it is not the aroad
that kills; it is sin that kills." From then on people used to say: "Woe
to the person who meets an aroad, and woe to the aroad who meets R.
Chanina ben Dosa!"
There is an obvious difficulty with both of the above stories. We know the
Torah does not allow us to unnecessarily endanger our lives (as the Roman
himself reminded the chassid). Therefore, from the standpoint of Jewish
law, it is not correct to ignore a Gentile official carrying a large
sword -- no matter how intently you are praying, and certainly to
purposely stick your ankle in front of a poisonous snake. If so, what gave
the heroes of our stories the right to act differently? They broke Jewish
law! Did they just assume they were so "pious" G-d would perform open
miracles for them?
The answer is hinted in R. Chanina's very response. How could he so
blithely state that an aroad does not kill; sin does? What about the very
real chemical properties of snake venom? The answer is that R. Chanina's
remark was for him a statement of reality; it was not an act of faith. He
was on such a level of belief in the workings of G-d that he could have an
aroad stick its fangs into him, and he knew full well that since he had
done no sins its venom could not affect him. We might accept this on a
conceptual level -- that the dangers of this world harm only those
deserving -- but for us it is a matter of faith alone. We live in the
world of physical reality -- poison kills -- and only accept upon faith
that it is really G-d behind it all that wills the poison to kill. But for
someone on the level of chassid, G-d is the only true source of
punishment -- much more so than His physical messengers. And in that
universe, R. Chanina was not even endangering himself allowing the aroad
to bite him.
Similarly for the chassid of the first story. When we pray, we believe --
again, on the level of faith -- that G-d stands before us and hears our
prayers. Thus we have such laws as that we take three steps forward at the
start of the Shemoneh Esrei prayer and take three steps backwards at its
conclusion. We are -- at least in the eyes of Jewish law -- approaching
and standing before our Maker. But for us it is a theoretical and at best
a legal concept. Our thoughts would hardly wander the way they do if we
really felt we were standing before G-d. But the chassid was
standing before G-d -- no less so than had the Roman been standing before
the Emperor. And so, his interrupting his prayers would have been no
different than the Roman interrupting his conversation. And that he could
not do -- not because he felt he could ignore the Torah injunction not to
endanger his life, but because he really was standing in front of G-
d -- and so how could he interrupt?
There are two important lessons from the above stories. Firstly, it's nice
to know that there really are people on a higher level of reality -- who
live with G-d. And when one is there, he can run his life knowing that G-d
is with him. If a person recognizes G-d as an immanent Presence, he can
rely on that closeness -- not because he is relying on miracles, but
because he knows G-d really is there and cares for his every need.
(In the same vein, there were Jews at times great enough to receive the
revelation of prophecy. If G-d is entirely real to you even before the
revelation, an encounter with G-d will not really change your basic
perception of reality. For most of us, however, who believe in G-d on the
theoretical much more than the practical plane, seeing G-d would be a mind-
jolt from which we'd never recover.)
The second lesson for us is that chassidus is not a level one can simply
adopt at will. If a person has reached it, if after a lifetime of
dedication he has come to know G-d to the degree that G-d really dwells
with him, then he can act upon it. If, however, you are not there, you
cannot force it. If you're not really standing before G-d, you had
better interrupt for the Roman. If you feel your own efforts bring in your
paycheck rather than G-d's beneficence, you had better keep working. That
is the reality within which most of us live, and leaps of faith beyond
that are just leaps into the unknown.
Of course, there is very little practical for us from the above stories as
well as from R. Yossi's level. But it is important at times to get a
glimpse of the true depth of Judaism, of the levels of devotion the truly
great can achieve. Judaism is not only a religion of faith and belief. G-d
exists and can sometimes be sensed by us on the level of the practical. We
all have those moments in our lives in which we recognize that G-d had
really been working things out for us all along, that in spite of our best
efforts to the contrary, G-d was directing us where we needed to go, and
only G-d's guiding Hand could have been behind it all. (A good friend once
mentioned to me that years earlier, when he was searching for work, he
found a job only in city #1 while he was really trying to find work and
settle down in the much larger and more commercial city #2. The end result
was that he met his future wife shortly after moving to city #1 -- as well
as getting involved in a Jewish learning program there.) And so, we all
get our occasional glimpses of the level of chassidus. For some, G-d is
always there. But all of us can live with at least the knowledge that G-d
really is there -- and will pitch in for us when we really need Him.
Text Copyright © 2008 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.