Chapter 3, Mishna 21(a)
Why Not a Good Samaritan?
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
"Rabbi Elazar ben (son of) Azariah said: If there is no Torah [study] there
is no proper conduct; if there is no proper conduct there is no Torah
[study]. If there is no wisdom there is no fear of G-d; if there is no fear
of G-d there is no wisdom. If there is no knowledge there is no
understanding; if there is no understanding there is no knowledge. If there
is no flour (sustenance) there is no Torah; if there is no Torah there is
no flour."
This mishna introduces a number of what are basically circular-logic
dilemmas. Before we discuss the particular cases, let's take a look at the
structure: If there is no X, there is no Y, meaning, one cannot acquire Y
unless he has first acquired X. And now, continues our mishna, how does one
acquire X? With Y! (Gee, there's a hole in the bucket, dear Liza... ;-) We
are thus caught in a circle -- with neither beginning nor end. X and Y are
both necessary for one another; neither can be achieved on its own. If so,
how does one ever embark on the paths of X and Y (say of Torah study and of
proper conduct -- our mishna's first example)?
Evidently, R. Elazar intends more to impress upon us the challenge of
spiritual growth than to give us a quick-fix recipe to achieve it. To
achieve in Torah, wisdom or any of the great endeavors of life, one does
not advance in simple linear progression. There is no simple, easily
defined, step-by-step program. One must first make an effort in X -- say
Torah study, and then he will slowly begin to improve his personal
conduct. Having made himself a somewhat more decent and refined human
being, he will then begin to truly appreciate his Torah study -- and it
will impact upon him all the more. And as he becomes more caring and
sensitive a human being, he will *really* appreciate the depth and beauty
of the Torah's teachings -- and then they will *truly* impact on both him
and his understanding of Torah. Ad infinitum.
And this, of course, introduces us to the true dilemma of spiritual growth.
There is no simple cause-and-effect process. One has to work, to push
himself in the necessary directions without noticing any discernable gains.
(How does learning some obscure laws of leprous houses or of Temple meal
offerings make me a greater human being?) And eventually he will find that
he has become a different person. A old friend of mine once repeated to me
what his karate teacher told him: "For the longest time you will run drills
and practice moves feeling like it's just a bunch of forced motions. Then
one day you will wake up a karateka." When we advance spiritually, we're
attempting to penetrate something deeper than our bodies or minds. We are
trying to get in touch with our very souls, that hidden piece of G-dliness
within ourselves. And there is no direct route. When it comes to spiritual
growth, there is no start, finish, or clearly-defined course of action. We
latch onto a circle -- at one of its infinite points -- and begin to spiral
upwards.
Let us now move to our mishna's first statement -- "If there is no Torah
there is no proper conduct." The simple understanding is that the Torah and
the words of our Sages teach us the proper way to behave towards others.
Ourconsciences provide us with some guidance for distinguishing between
right and wrong, but they alone will not provide us with sufficient
direction for living. How much charity should we give, to whom should we
give, what is too little, what is too much, how do we honor our parents
and raise our children, what is fair advertising, invasion of privacy, a
meaningful relationship, etc., etc. The Torah fills in all of the blanks.
It not only tells us to love our neighbors (Levit. 19:18), but it defines
it with volumes of detail, without which "love your neighbor" is little
more than a poetic cliche.
But even more fundamentally, the Torah teaches us what *is* proper conduct
and what is not. Human wisdom alone can never be trusted to dictate moral
behavior -- as the past century's experiences can certainly testify.
Scripture provides us with an important case in point.
Early in our history, King Saul was instructed by Samuel the Prophet to
fulfill one of the commandments of the Torah -- that of wiping out the
wicked Nation of Amalek (I Samuel 15). He was to lead an army to kill every
member of that vile people -- the fighting men, the elderly, the women,
children, babies, livestock -- in order to "wipe out the memory of Amalek
from beneath the heavens" (Deut. 25:19). G-d in His infinite knowledge
knows that there is something irredeemably evil about Amalek, that, as the
Midrash states, both G-d's Name and His throne are not complete so long as
Amalek exists (Tanchuma Ki Saitsai 11). The Sages view Amalek as the force
of evil in this world which opposes the force of good Israel represents.
The world cannot reach its apex so long as Amalek exists.
I realize such a Heavenly command raises uncomfortable questions for many
of my readers. Could such a decree really be just? How could an all-
merciful G-d command such? Aren't all men basically good? Aren't children
innocent until proven guilty? I personally have no pretenses of
understanding G-d's inscrutable ways. I can accept that G-d's wisdom
penetrates far beyond puny man's. But people far greater than we have been
plagued by such issues -- and have failed.
And so, continues Scripture, Saul did the understandable but the
unthinkable: he defied G-d's will. He did not do so directly or
maliciously, but he did not stop the soldiers from sparing both the
Amaleki king and some of the livestock. Their sin, according to some, was
in substituting their own concept of mercy for G-d's. Why kill the
animals? Why not bring them as *sacrifices* -- to G-d! Samuel
responded: "Are offerings and sacrifices pleasing to G-d as listening to
His voice?!" (v. 22).
The result of Saul's act, according to the Sages, was that Agag, King of
Amalek, lived long enough to beget a son. Generations later his descendant
Haman nearly succeeded in wiping out that Jewish nation that had been so
"merciful" as to spare his ancestor. Who knows how much more evil and
corruption has since existed in this world because of Amalek's continued
existence? For that matter, take another famous hypothetical question: Go
back 110+ years and meet cute little toddler Adolf, darling child who has
never hurt a fly. (He was probably an obnoxious brat back then too, but
two-year-olds can get away with it. ;-) Should you kill him? To those of us
who -- like G-d -- know the future effect of all events, could there have
been a greater act of *mercy* in history?
Even more interesting -- and equally tragic -- were the ramifications for
King Saul himself. He later became a depressant who became as obsessed with
hunting and slaying the future King David -- who he knew would succeed
him -- as he once was with fighting Amalek. Interesting: Wasn't Saul
previously the kindhearted one -- to the extent that he was "more" merciful
than G-d? Now he is ruthlessly pursuing a fellow Jew and devoted servant?
Needless to say Saul was a great man. The Talmud writes that he committed
but one sin his entire life (Yoma 22b -- although as commentators explain,
his one fault manifested itself in multiple fashions). His faults cannot be
viewed by today's superficial standards. Yet what seems to have occurred is
that his mercy turned into something other than true mercy. He had not
acquired *G-d's* everlasting trait of compassion. He lived according to his
own definition of the trait, one even capable of defying G-d's definition.
The result for Saul was that his own compassion waned with his once-
sterling character. His trait was not a spiritual and eternal one, founded
upon G-d's infinite mercy. It was a human contrivance. And likewise,
Saul's battle against Amalek was no longer a spiritual act -- of Divine
service and ultimately of Divine mercy, but a physical act of war. And
Saul, was in a small way transformed into a man of violence rather than
compassion. The Midrash writes that one who shows mercy when cruelty is
appropriate will show cruelty when mercy is appropriate (Koheles Rabba
7:36). In the end, Saul's sense of right and wrong lost its divine
anchoring and direction. It became the unstable mercy of a troubled human
conscience, rather than the unbending, infinite compassion of an all-
merciful G-d.
(Based in part on ArtScroll Megillas Esther, pp. xxvii - xxxi, and on a
lecture heard from Rav Yisroel Riesman.)
Text Copyright © 2004 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.