Chapter 3, Mishna 14
The Living Dead
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
"Rabbi Dosa ben (son of) Horkenas said, sleep in the morning, wine in the
afternoon, the chatter of the youth, and sitting in the gathering places of
the ignorant -- drive a person out of the world."
The author of this mishna lists a number of time-wasting activities, all of
which are detrimental to productive living. For most of us, morning naps
are
unnecessary. Many of us know how heavy our eyelids become in the afternoon.
Evening may also be the home stretch of an exhausting day. But morning is
not the time to be going back to bed (at least not after overcoming the
initial few hurdles ;-). (Alternatively, the commentators Rashi and
Rabbeinu
Yonah understand this to refer to a person who oversleeps -- beyond the
prescribed time for morning prayers.)
Likewise, the afternoon is not the time to be inebriating oneself. I've
seen
some older synagogue members down more morning schnapps than this writer
could ever handle (believe me, I've tried ;-), but perhaps a morning shot
gives a livening little jolt to the senses. It might even serve alternately
as a stimulant or relaxant in the evening (see commentary of Tiferes
Yisrael). Afternoon beverages, however, drug the mind and body when there
are still many productive hours to go.
Finally, the coarse, empty talk of youths and the ignorant is time-wasting
at *best*, grossly unsuited for spirituality at worst. This stands in
contrast to scholars, even whose "light" talk is filled with wisdom and
value. There is certainly room for relaxed conversation and banter in most
everyone's life. Hardly anyone speaks nothing but prayer and Torah study
all
the time. (There have always been pious Jews who would speak only of sacred
matters on the Sabbath.) However, the speech of someone who lives with --
and lives for -- the Torah's values is never totally empty. If it involves
building relationships and sharing feelings and values it is not so
mundane.
The Talmud states that the light speech of the scholars of the Talmud is
considered words of Torah (Eiruvin 54b). Such speech can be a learning and
growing experience. My teacher R. Yochanan Zweig (www.talmudicu.edu) told
me
that it often happens to him that while having a "casual" conversation with
someone he is struck all of a sudden: "Now I know what the Sages meant when
they said X...." Our words have great potential for building and expressing
our humanness and our souls. We must ever be wary that they not be
cheapened
into a means of expressing our bodies. (See our discussion on 1:17
(www.torah.org/learning/pirkei-avos/chapter1-17.html).)
R. Dosa's language -- "drive a person out of the world" -- is surprisingly
strong. He's clearly saying more than just that these activities are wrong
or harmful. They are so counterproductive as to actively remove a person
from this world. And this requires some analysis. Say someone squanders his
time in one of these manners. Is it as bad as an *actual* sin -- murder,
adultery etc.? There is practically no evil so heinous that it precludes
repentance, yet here G-d seems to be so furious at this time-waster as to
actively take him out of this world, not granting him a second chance to
improve. But these faults are not even sins per se! Everyone talks and
sleeps at one time or the other, and wine has a place in our religious
ceremonies. These people are just excessive. Why do their misdeeds warrant
such vicious and condemnatory singling out?
The answer is that these actions all have one aspect in common. They are
not
committed out of a strong lust for evil. They are done primarily to "kill"
time. The average person does not need sleep in the morning, nor does he
have to drug himself in the afternoon. (We are, of course, not discussing
people with substance abuse disorders.) A person who engages in such
activities is *seeking* ways to pass the time -- even to the extent of
inventing pastimes -- ones his mind and body clearly do not require.
And there is a terrible evil implicit in such behavior. I've discussed this
from a slightly different perspective not long ago (2:15
(www.torah.org/learning/pirkei-avos/chapter2-15d.html)), but I feel it
deserves mention here as well -- and I think it's a message Pirkei Avos too
intended to repeat. If a person sins out of temptation -- or even out of
laziness or carelessness, he knows he's done something wrong. He knows G-d
demands better of him and that he has failed. Hopefully, such a person will
own up to his mistakes, pick himself up, and start anew. This is life. We
all make mistakes. Life is a constant challenge, and the fact that we all
fail here and there does not mean the game is over. So long as we recognize
G-d has something greater in mind for us and there is more to life, we can
suffer setbacks but continue in the game of life.
The people in our mishna are not even playing the game.
People who sit around *inventing* ways to kill time are refusing to face
life in its true sense -- or to even admit there is a life to live. They
are
perennially distracting themselves -- not allowing themselves to think
about
what life is all about. Read the paper, follow your ball team, go to work,
return from work, watch TV: the years will go by in mindless fogginess. And
that our mishna sees as tragic and unacceptable to an extreme. Sinning does
not "drive a person out of this world." Defeat and failure are a part of
all our lives. But there is no room for self-imposed senselessness. We
*must* take life seriously. Vacations? Great. A little R&R? Fine. But
devoting ourselves to idle gatherings, drugging ourselves senseless, or
sleeping off our lives in pathetic stupor? Such G-d and the Sages can
never countenance.
We note again that R. Dosa does not come down so hard on sinners. Yes, four
out of five rabbis agree that sinning is not good for your spiritual
health.
(Maybe even five out of five, but I can't speak for all denominations. ;-)
But you can be a sinner and know something greater is expected of you.
Idlers are committing an evil even more sinister than transgressing a
commandment. They are refusing so much as to think about and accept the
mission of life in the first place. And there is no room for such people in
the scheme of things, in G-d's plan for mankind. Such people are not truly
alive in the cosmic sense. If you're for G-d, fine. If you're against
Him... well, not so fine, but at least you're in the picture. There is
hope for you. But you must take a side or life *literally* has no meaning.
You *must* take a side!
Text Copyright © 2004 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.