Playing G-d
Chapter 4, Mishna 10
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
"He (Rabbi Yishmael) used to say, do not judge alone because there is no
solitary judge except One. Do not say, 'Accept my view,' for they are
permitted and not you."
This mishna continues the theme of the previous. Its message is that a
judge should not be so sure of his abilities as to render decisions on his
own or urge other judges to accept his position. A Jewish court ordinarily
consists of a minimum of three judges (Mishna Sanhedrin 1:1). The Talmud
writes, however, that judgments relating to monetary disputes may be
decided by a single judge if he is an "expert to the many" (i.e.,
generally known to be proficient) (Sanhedrin 5a). Maimonides and others
understand our mishna to mean that even though technically this is so,
ethically speaking a judge should not take it upon himself to judge
solitarily. Interpreting and applying G-d's law is a serious endeavor, one
which must be approached with awe and trepidation. There is only one true
Judge, of slow and patient justice -- which is never fully concluded in
the world we know. Any mortal effort to assume such a role -- to play G-d -
- is at best a faint approximation of the real thing.
The simplest reason for our mishna's advice is for fear of human error. No
one should be so certain of himself and his abilities as to consider
himself above error. It is a plain and simple fact of our humanity that we
are just not perfect. I imagine that G-d, in His great wisdom, *could*
have made us "better" -- with faultless memories, perfect IQ's, and
unerringly rational minds. But G-d -- in an even greater act of wisdom --
had no such intention. He made us all too "human" -- with our clouded and
often biased reasoning, memory lapses, mood swings, obstinacy, and
everything else that makes life so entertaining. (It's actually a much
more difficult engineering task to create beings which are randomly
forgetful and inconsistent in behavior rather than ones which act the same
way every time. It's not for nothing that the Talmud calls G-d a Master
Craftsman (Berachos 10a).)
It seems that G-d intended to create man in such a way. Had He created us
perfect there would be little left for us to do -- and little to humble us
before G-d. Instead, G-d created us quite human. We have failings, we make
mistakes, and we need one another. We have much work before us.
This being so, any person -- judge or otherwise -- who considers himself
above fault and reproach will inevitably fall and be forced to face his
very human shortcomings. We've all seen parents, teachers and others in
positions of authority refuse to back down and admit their mistakes --
sometimes under the flimsy pretext that it would somehow compromise their
authority or the dignity of their position. And the result -- as we also
know all too well -- is a blind and pig-headed superior and emotionally-
bruised children, students or employees.
In truth, the rare superior who owns up to and apologizes for his or her
mistakes gains much more respect than the one who attempts against all
rationality to cling to an absurd image of infallibility. G-d created us as
human beings for very good reason -- and for reason we must recognize and
live with. Acting like one is not a failing but an acceptance of the
reality of our purpose in this world.
There is a deeper reason why one should not judge alone. Let's say scholar
#1 is in fact the most learned judge. He is sharper, more experienced and
more well-versed than his colleagues. Does that automatically make him the
best-qualified judge? Does knowledge alone make one worthy of rendering
decisions in Jewish law?
The answer provides us yet another insight into the difficulty of the role
judges fulfill. We learned earlier (4:1
(www.torah.org/learning/pirkei-avos/chapter4-1a.html)) "Who is wise? He who
learns from all people." We asked there what is the importance of learning
from everyone? It's true that someone who truly seeks wisdom will inquire
it of every person and from every place it may be found. But why from
*everyone*? Don't some people just not have very much to offer? Wouldn't it
be far more productive to spend time studying ourselves and from our
teachers than trying to glean some bits of information from people who just
don't know all that much?
We answered there that what others have to offer is their own unique
perspective. The Torah is not a dry collection of facts which the scholar
must memorize. It is the application of knowledge -- of G-d's truths -- to
an infinite number of people and situations. The Torah -- in spite of
literally libraries of information -- applies differently to each one of
us. As much as one individual has studied, he can never fully understand
what the Torah means to a different person, be it a woman, foreigner,
teenager, or person of different background or temperament. The Torah may
begin with objective facts and information, but it ends -- it culminates --
with the subjective understanding of the world and of humankind. The
ultimate goal of the scholar is to see beyond his own way of viewing the
world and to understand the Torah in the bigger and grander picture --
from the perspective of others, and ultimately, from the perspective of G-
d.
This is in essence the role of the judge. He must take the L-rd's Torah and
instruct others in its ways -- telling them how they must apply it to their
lives. When two litigants appear before the court (if they were good enough
to come on their own accord in the first place), the judge is presented
with human interaction at its worst -- fights, dishonesty, breaches of
contract, misunderstandings, unfulfilled obligations. How does a judge
take rigid Torah law and apply it, bringing harmony where there was strife
and understanding where there was mistrust? The answer is that he must
possess something far more than simple book knowledge. He must know when
to press the law to the limits, when to show patience and sympathy, and
when to look the other way. (See our discussion about the role of
compromise in last week's shiur.) And this does not only require
scholarship. It requires the keen instinct of how to relate to others and
how to apply the eternal truths of the Torah to the vicissitudes of human
behavior.
This is perhaps the meaning of the passage we quoted above from the Talmud
that a judge who is "an expert *to the many*" may judge on his own. Why the
strange wording? What is an expert "to the many" that an ordinary expert is
not? The intent is that the scholar must understand not only what the Torah
means to himself, but what it means and how it applies to others -- to the
"many". And it is a rare judge whose perception is so penetrating. Justice
is much better served by a quorum of judges, whose combined wisdom might
just fulfill the impossible.
As black and white Jewish Law appears to be, it cannot be viewed as canon
or gospel. It takes an enormous amount of talent, intuition, creativity,
and understanding to recognize how it must be applied to real life people
and situations. As King Solomon wrote, there are times to speak out and
times to remain silent (Koheles 3:7). Any person entrusted by G-d to
oversee and foster the growth of others -- be it a judge, a teacher or a
humble parent -- is performing a G-dly task, one truly the domain of the
One Judge. It is a role which the wisest and noblest of us must sometimes
assume, but it is not inherently a human task. We do so as emissaries of
the infinite G-d of justice. There is no single set of instructions which
can guide us nor precedents which can be universally applied. Only with
such an awareness can we begin to approach the lofty mission of being
leaders and role models to those who follow us, and can the blessing of
Jethro to Moses, upon appointing judges, be fulfilled: "And this entire
nation shall come to its place in peace" (Exodus 18:23).
Text Copyright © 2005 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.