Chapter 3, Mishna 10 (a)
Does G-d Exist? Part I
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
"Rabbi Dostai ben (son of) Yannai said in the name of Rabbi Meir (mai-eer),
anyone who forgets anything from his Torah study, Scripture considers it as
if he bears the guilt for his own soul, as the verse says, 'Only take heed
and guard yourself well, lest you forget the things which your eyes saw'
(Deuteronomy 4:9). One might think this applies even if his studies were
too difficult for him? The verse therefore continues, 'and lest they be
removed from your heart all the days of your life.' Thus, one does not
bear the guilt for his soul unless he sits and removes them from his
heart."
This mishna warns us to be careful not to forget our Torah study, stating
it so strongly as that one who does so endangers his soul. R. Dostai bases
his statement on a verse in Deuteronomy, spoken by Moses: "Only take heed
and guard yourself well, lest you forget the things which your eyes saw."
This verse is actually referring to the experience of the Revelation at
Mount Sinai. In the next verse Moses proceeds to identify that which we
must not forget: "The day which you stood before the L-rd your G-d at
Horeb when the L-rd said to me, 'Gather the nation before Me and I will
make them hear My words....'" (Horeb is another name for Sinai.)
The Torah then proceeds to explain why it is so essential that we remember
the experience of Sinai: "...in order that they [Israel] will learn to fear
Me all the days that they are alive on the earth, and they will teach their
children." And the Torah warns us further (4:15-16): "And you shall be very
careful with your souls, for you did not see any image on the day G-d spoke
to you at Horeb from the fire. Lest you become corrupted and make for
yourselves a graven idol in the likeness of any image..." Never imagine in
any way, shape or form that G-d can be made corporeal or conceptualized by
the human mind. Creating a physical representation of G-d -- even for the
very understandable motive of wanting a god man can relate to -- cheapens
the notion of an infinite and omniscient G-d. All of a sudden god is no
longer an absolute, an infinite Deity demanding absolute standards of truth
and morality. Instead, god is physical and finite, with a flesh-and-blood
counterpart. We "understand" our god; we relate to him on our own terms and
fashion him in our own image. God conceptualized into a form the human mind
expects to comprehend can no longer be an absolute before whom man must
submit himself. He is finite and amorphous -- and absolute truth becomes
relativistic religion, held up to man's flawed and limited understanding.
The passages above state that the reason for the Revelation at Sinai was
primarily in order that we remember just who G-d is: that He exists, and
that He has no physical form. To banish all possible doubt from our minds
(just in case the ten plagues and the splitting of the sea were not
enough), G-d literally appeared before the entire nation at this one point
in our history -- and we were given some remote comprehension of His
reality. ("Seeing" G-d is a greater than life encounter, one which cannot
be "faked" or misunderstood. Being in the presence of G-d is a far "truer"
experience than our experiences in the physical world. Likewise, a
fundamental principle of Judaism is that one who experiences prophecy
knows it is genuine. And this, in a way, is precisely what happened to the
nation.)
When we consider this logically, this is really one of the most convincing
proofs of G-d's existence. G-d appeared before a nation of roughly three
million. Those three million people would -- and did -- tell their children
after of this earth-shattering event (as the Torah instructed them), and
the memory of G-d's reality would be perpetuated. And no other religion
has ever even attempted such a fantastic claim. All of them boil down to
believing in a single prophet who claimed to have experienced visions from
G-d, or a wonderworker who allegedly performed miracles before at most a
few disciples. And let's face it: You can invent a claim that one or ten or
twenty people witnessed a miraculous event. But you cannot concoct a story
that three million people saw something -- unless perhaps all three million
agree to go along with it. (And considering how difficult it is to get
*two* Jews to agree on anything, 3,000,000 is, shall we say, decidedly
unlikely. ;-)
The inescapable conclusion, then, is that all other religions ask for a
heavy dose of faith, of taking the words of a single prophet at face value.
Our G-d does not ask for that much faith -- and He would not be so naive as
to ask for it either -- certainly not of today's sophisticated man but not
even of our distant ancestors. If G-d really wanted us to believe in Him,
He would not hinge it all on our belief in a single prophet or well-
concealed miracle. ("Believe in me or you'll be damned to Hell, but I'm
only going to prove my existence to a select few.") Belief in G-d is too
fundamental to be left to faith, hearsay or a few magic tricks.
In fact, the Torah does not place very much weight on miracles: "If there
arises among you a prophet or a dreamer, and he gives you a sign or wonder,
and the sign or wonder comes true... saying let us go after other gods...
do not listen to the words of that prophet... For the L-rd is testing you
to know if you love the L-rd your G-d with all your hearts and all your
souls" (Deut. 13:2-4). Don't believe in wonderworkers and soothsayers.
Magicians have always been around; the natural world has a few nifty
tricks up its sleeve as well. There are all sorts of weird and
inexplicable experiences in this world, and all sorts of ways of going on
a perceived spiritual "high". Imagine a prophet of old employing
hallucinogenic plants to gain a following. Miracles are a very flimsy
proof of an all-knowing, all-powerful Creator of absolute standards of
morality. Keep in mind, for that matter, that G-d felt it necessary to
reveal Himself to us *after* we had witnessed the plagues in Egypt and the
splitting of the sea. Miracles are not the final answer. For true
adherence to Him, G-d could do nothing short of revealing Himself to the
entire nation -- and to quash agnosticism once and for all.
Another point to consider. Because of all the above, no one -- and I mean
no one -- denied most of the major aspects of Judaism for many centuries
after the Sinaitic event. The first record we have of formal schisms within
Judaism is close to the period of the Mishna (such as the Sadducees),
roughly 1000 years later! (See our class on 1:3
(www.torah.org/learning/pirkei-avos/chapter1-3.html).) Even then, the
doubters denied only the Oral Law - the explanation and elaboration of the
Scripture as handed down orally by Moses. For no one at that time could
have ever gotten away with the claim that the Written Torah was not
authentic. Such a claim would have been regarded as patently absurd; it
would have been laughed off the stage of history. We all *knew* there was
a Torah. All of us without exception were told it by our parents. (And
honestly, parents do not lie or make up stories when they talk to their
children about serious life issues.) Jews have literally been told by
their parents -- and their parents by *their* parents etc. -- in an
unbroken chain since the Revelation, over 3300 years ago. (And if you so
much as *know* you're Jewish today, chances are that chain lasted in your
family until at least the beginning of the 19th Century -- well over 3,000
years.)
Along these lines, even Christianity and Islam never attempted to deny the
basic facts of Jewish history. Sure, the forefathers existed. Just that G-d
chose *our* ancestor - Ishmael - over Isaac. Or: just that G-d made a *new*
covenant on top of the old one (one which quickly undid everything
the "old" one stood for. And likewise, those who denied the Oral Torah
were left with a written one full of inspiring and poetic -- but basically
content-free -- prose.) But to deny there ever *was* a nation which was
miraculously taken from bondage in Egypt? It is all an unfounded or a
wildly exaggerated story? To claim the Jews never even *were* G-d's chosen
people? To the take Scriptures themselves head on? It would take many
centuries for agnosticism to venture that far.
For better or worse, we are still at the tip of the iceberg on this one.
We'll continue this discussion G-d willing next week.
Text Copyright © 2004 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.