The 48 Ways - Introduction
Chapter 6, Mishna 6, Introduction
By Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld
"Torah is greater than priesthood and kingship, for kingship is acquired
with 30 qualities, priesthood is acquired with 24, whereas the Torah is
acquired with 48 ways...."
This mishna lists the 48 skills or qualities needed to "acquire" the Torah.
This list is commonly referred to as the "48 Ways" and serves as the basis
for a popular audiocassette lecture series given by R. Noach Weinberg
(www.aish.com). The tapes are replete with the wit, wisdom and profundity
of
Judaism, and may be appreciated by Jews of all backgrounds and levels.
I did not quote the mishna in its entirety because of its great length.
Rather, we will quote and discuss a couple of qualities each week. Each
quality is separate and distinct, and easily deserves a lecture of its own.
We will G-d willing spend a number of months on this mishna alone. This
week's lecture will serve primarily as an introduction to our series.
Our mishna considers Torah superior to both kingship and priesthood because
of the greater number of qualities of the Torah scholar. Our mishna does
not
list the qualities of the other positions, as they are not our mishna's
focus. Various such lists are found elsewhere in Jewish writings, though in
far more obscure places.
There is also a more general distinction between the qualities of the other
individuals and those of the Torah scholar. The qualities of kingship are
not particularly "religious" or ethical. Many stem from the respect and awe
we must have for a king. For example, the commentators list
such "qualities"
as: he may not be put on trial or forced to testify (the common and
often-resented policy of presidential immunity -- ideally, the king should
not be the sort who has behavior which requires defending); no one (save
another king) may marry his widow; none may sit on his throne, see him in
the bathhouse, etc. Some of his qualities relate to the public good and
reflect the nature of his position rather than his person. Thus, the king
may recruit citizens for public (or personal) service and may confiscate
land for his own use (right of eminent domain). Some of his qualities are
based on genealogical considerations: he must be a full-fledged Jew and not
a slave, bastard or convert. Only a few are religious in nature -- to
ensure
that his position not corrupt him: He may not accumulate unnecessary
riches,
and he must carry a Torah scroll wherever he goes.
Thus, for the most part, the defining qualities of a king are not
merit-based. This is not to say that a king is not meritorious -- or that
he
was not selected from Israel's finest citizens. (Throughout Scriptures,
kings, or at least dynasties, were appointed on Divine instruction.)
However, once appointed, the Torah's primary concern is that the king's
honor -- as well as the honor of his country -- be upheld.
Priesthood is not very different. The status is inherited and is the
irrevocable right as well as obligation of anyone descended from Aaron the
High Priest. The qualities listed are almost all physical or otherwise
superficial. They relate to the clothes he must wear, how he must groom
himself, whom he may marry, and the physical blemishes he must not have (to
serve in the Temple). Here the Torah's concern is more that the Temple
service be performed by individuals who are physically whole and
presentable -- rather than that it be performed by the most pious or
scholarly.
This concept is in itself intriguing, being that Judaism otherwise does not
place much stock on looks, strength or outward appearance (if the rest of
the world does). What difference does it make to G-d if a person is taller
or more handsome? Are shorter people somehow less important in G-d's eyes?
("For thus says the high and lofty One, ... I dwell on high... yet am with
the oppressed and lowly of spirit" (Isaiah 57:15).) Since when does Judaism
rate people based on physical features?
Furthermore, the Talmud reflects the type of values we would expect from a
religion of the spirit: "A bastard Torah scholar takes precedence over a
High Priest ignoramus" (Mishna Horiyos 3:8). Yet, then again, a bastard, no
matter how learned, cannot marry a full-fledged Jewess, whereas the High
Priest may only marry a Jewish virgin of established lineage. So why is it
that priests, whether learned or not, are accorded this superior status at
birth? Where is the room for this aristocracy or super class within the
Jewish hierarchy?
The answer is that priests are superior to other Jews in this one regard:
their bodies are sacred. This is again an unusual concept in Judaism. We
think of ourselves as a people of the spirit. But the Temple -- where the
priests serve -- reflects a sacred and special haven in Jewish thought, a
throwback to the Garden of Eden. It is a place in which we achieve
*physical* closeness to G-d. G-d's Divine Presence, so to speak, dwells in
the Temple. (Of course in a sense, G-d is everywhere, but His Presence is
"concentrated" and more readily apparent in the Temple.) Thus, the Temple
is
a place of closeness reminiscent of man's sojourn in the Garden of Eden.
And
it also resembles the ultimate closeness to G-d we will achieve at the time
of the Resurrection of the Dead. There is a level of sanctity not even
known
to the souls of the World to Come. It is the closeness to G-d we will
achieve with the sacred but physical bodies we will be granted at the time
of the Resurrection.
Anyway, without dwelling too heavily on such little known and poorly
understood topics, priests too must be physically perfect -- and worthy of
being physically close to G-d in the Temple. Their service is a more
physical one. They offer G-d animal sacrifices on the altar, somehow
creating a "sweet savor" unto the L-rd (Exodus 29:41). (Yet another
discussion we won't get into just now.) Similarly, the Talmud tells us that
the priests eat their portion of the sacrifices, and their physical
enjoyment effects atonement for the offerer (Pesachim 59b). The concept is
not fully understood to us, but to physically stand before G-d, one must be
physically whole -- i.e., his spiritual sanctity must be reflected in the
physical realm as well. And such close and intimate Divine service brings
pleasure to G-d -- and good will towards man -- in ways we accept more than
we understand.
Yet the Sages make it clear that this is only a part of the picture. When
they tell us that a bastard scholar is superior to a High Priest ignoramus,
they are in essence telling us that the human body can never stand on its
own. An unlearned priest, with his "sacred" body, has no intrinsic value.
If
he possesses a wise and understanding soul as well, he is holy through and
through. If his value is physical alone, it is worthless in the presence of
a sensitive and refined soul housed in a broken or defiled body. (Based in
part on a lecture heard from R. Yochanan Zweig (www.talmudicu.edu).)
This brings us to the 48 Ways of our mishna. Priests and kings are accorded
a special status in the Torah. They, by virtue of their birth or heritage,
relate to G-d in their own unique way -- and Jewish law reflects this. But
Torah study is different in kind. It is not a birthright or inheritance --
nor does it necessarily enhance the social standing of its bearer. It is
available to all and is entirely in the hands of each of us to acquire. It
doesn't matter how ignorant -- or learned -- your father was. No one else
can earn the crown of Torah for you, yet neither is it denied from anyone
who is willing to commit to it. Not one of the 48 Ways relates to lineage,
upbringing or personal history. Though the world has never been perfect,
rabbinics and scholarship has essentially been a meritocracy. R. Akiva,
great scholar of the Mishna, was unlearned until 40. Shemaya and Avtalyon
(earlier, 1:10) were descended from converts. Hillel (1:12-14) was dirt
poor
as a young man. And when we study this mishna with open and impartial eyes,
we will see that there is nothing in it that we cannot both understand and
apply to our lives. As the Talmud (paraphrased) puts it: The crown of
priesthood Aaron merited to take. The crown of kingship David merited to
take. The crown of Torah is still in its place. Whoever wants to take it,
let him come and take (Yoma 72b).
Text Copyright © 2006 by Rabbi Dovid Rosenfeld and Torah.org.