Chapter 3, Mishna 11
Knowledge Without Fear
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
"Rabbi Chanina ben (son of) Dosa said, anyone whose fear of sin precedes
his wisdom, his wisdom will endure. And anyone whose wisdom precedes his
fear of sin, his wisdom will not endure."
The advice of this week's mishna, though perhaps not immediately evident,
is clear upon careful consideration. Only one who possesses "fear of sin" -
- a profound awe of G-d and His commandments, will study the Torah with the
proper frame of mind. He will study with reverence and take the Torah's
wisdom to heart -- and so, "his wisdom will endure." One, however, who does
not possess the requisite fear of G-d, will not take his study sufficiently
seriously. He might find the Torah intellectually stimulating or a
fascinating curiosity, but if it is not "life" to him, it will not fully be
internalized. And the Torah will not change his essence. We cannot expect
to study Torah and magically be transformed into more conscientious and
spiritual human beings. It is hardly so simple. It is true that the Torah
may very well work its magic on us -- far better to study without the
proper motivation than not to study at all -- but there is no guarantee.
We will certainly find insight and inspiration in the Torah's wise words,
but our knowledge will not truly "endure".
There are additional reasons why the Torah study of a person who fears sin
will stay with him. We are all familiar with the selective nature of our
memories. Information which we studied without any real motivation -- that
final we had to cram for the night before -- left us as quickly as it came.
Knowledge which we found interesting and relevant, however, does find a
place in our memory -- even if as convoluted as the average number of third
down conversions against team x in the third quarter of Monday nights home
games played in the last seven years. (I love how these sports announcers
rattle off the most obfuscated facts. ;-) We have to be interested in what
we study for it to stick with us. Likewise, a Torah lecture, no matter how
profound, inspiring, witty, engaging etc., will never make us into better
people unless we have some spark of self-motivation upon which the words
can build. The Talmud writes similarly: One learns only a Torah topic which
interests his heart (Avoda Zara 19a).
Here, however, R. Chanina asks for more than that we be interested in what
we study. We are told that we must fear sin before we study. We must
approach Torah study with an element of fear. It is not sufficient that we
find the Torah heartwarming, fascinating and inspiring -- that it gives us
that warm, fuzzy feeling. It, as well as Judaism as a whole, certainly
should and does, but there is far more to it. We must also approach Torah
study with a sense of awe -- and of dread. We must recognize the importance
of following G-d's word and the dire consequences of falling short,
misunderstanding or misrepresenting. We should be afraid to take matters of
Jewish law into our own hands or to render judgment on the Torah or the
words of the Sages. The Torah knowledge we have acquired should scare us:
will we live up to its standards? Yet we should be even more afraid of
*not* knowing, and certainly of forgetting.
This in the final analysis is the prime guarantor that we will study and
remember. A person cruising at an altitude of 33,000 feet will be rather
anxious that he understand the "how to fly a plane" manual in his trembling
hands. Interest and enjoyment are valuable tools for holding one's
attention, and as above, we should study what most interests us. However,
we should not wait for inspiration. Excitement will wax and wane; it will
not provide a steady source of commitment. Our daily devotion to Torah
study must stem from our sense of obligation -- of fear -- to know the
word of G-d. Only that will ensure that we study consistently and commit
to memory.
Likewise, King David was faulted by the Talmud for his ecstatic reference
to the Torah in: "Your statutes were music to me" (Psalms 119:54). For
this G-d was critical of David: How can you call My Torah *which is so
easily forgotten* (emphasis mine) "music"? (Sotah 35a). True, Torah study
is exhilarating and thrilling. It has provided joy and inspiration to
myriad generations of Jews who had little else. And King David perhaps had
the most difficult and tragic life of all. But if we think of Torah study
only in terms of the excitement -- and not in terms of the obligation --
we may well seek greener pastures as the euphoria fades.
Our mishna, however, is not simply discussing whether a person will
remember his Torah study. It is discussing whether his knowledge
will "endure" ("kayam" in Hebrew). Will his wisdom become a permanent part
of him? Will it shape who he is? And this is far more profound than simply
remembering facts. As we've discussed in past weeks, one can "know" all
sorts of great and profound things -- he can see G-d and all His wonders
close up -- and hardly become a spiritual person on that account. Knowing
too much might even scare him away -- or drive him to vehement denial. For
a person's wisdom will endure only if his "fear of sin" precedes it: if he
is sufficiently spiritually prepared to absorb it and grow into its
messages.
There is a midrash which states as follows: "If a person tells you there is
wisdom among the nations of the world, believe him. If a person tells you
there is Torah among the nations of the world, do not believe him" (Eicha
Rabba 2). The simple meaning of this is that as much as G-d has blessed
mankind with the gates of wisdom, the Torah is G-d's special gift to the
Jews. A Gentile may be able to master ancient Hebrew and Jewish texts, but
he will never *really* get it.
I have heard R. Beryl Wein explain this midrash homiletically: If someone
tells you there is wisdom among the nations, believe it. If someone tells
you there is *Torah* among the nations -- i.e., that that wisdom is making
them into more spiritual, G-dlike people -- do not believe it. Knowledge
alone does not make for "better" people. It only makes for smarter, perhaps
more cunning and devious people. Only spirituality -- the messages and
wisdom of G-d's Torah -- can profoundly change people. R. Wein proceeded to
illustrate this with a statistic provided by noted historian Martin Gilbert
in his masterpiece _The Holocaust_: Fully one third of the commandants of
the Nazi death camps were either MD's or PhD's. Intelligence and schooling
do not change people -- not their natures. Wisdom provides us with an
additional tool -- a two-edged sword -- which, as all other things in this
world, may be used for good or for evil. To grow in spirit as well as
wisdom requires a certain mindset, a sense of obligation to a Higher
Authority and an absolute code of ethics -- what our mishna here refers to
as "fear". For knowledge -- whether a little or a lot of it -- is a
dangerous thing. If we want it to endure we must well know why we are
pursuing it and just where we intend to go.
Text Copyright © 2004 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.