by Rabbi Ahron Lopiansky
A thousand years after Shavuot, the Jews willingly reaffirmed their
commitment to Torah. Why the need for two acceptances?
Revelation of the Torah at Mount Sinai is the cornerstone of faith upon
which all of Judaism rests. As Maimonides ("Foundations of the Torah"
8:1) points out, revelation is not simply a proof of faith but the
perception of the Divine in the most direct way possible. While other
miracles served to prove Divine existence, revelation was the
experience of the Divine itself. For one brief moment, the curtains of
concealment were parted, letting in the rays of the Divine in all its
brightness.
Yet, strangely enough, our Sages tell us that the experience of
revelation at Sinai was somehow not the ultimate in acceptance of God's
dominion. The Talmud (Shabbat 82) tells us that at Sinai "the mountain
was poised over the Jews like a barrel." The Jews were forced into
accepting the Torah.
It was not until the miracle of Purim, a thousand years later, that the
Jews willingly reaffirmed their commitment to Torah. It seems strange
that the Jews had to be forced to accept the Torah after they beheld
and experienced the Divine in all its glory; it seems even stranger
that the literal description of these events in the Torah does not
mention this tradition. The passages describing the giving of the Torah
make no mention of force, while prior to the original Purim, the Jews
were, indeed, threatened with extinction, until they repented and
returned to God.
SEARCHING TO FILL THE VOID
In two ways does one become cognizant of the sun. One can behold the
sun in its dazzling glory, or one can be locked into a pitch-dark room
wherein every minute of waiting for a crack of light makes one even
more aware of the joy of basking in the sun. Similarly, a father-son
relationship peaks with a warm embrace at the height of a moment of
joy. Yet it can be outranked by the feelings of yearning and pining
that accompany a prolonged absence from home. Many a son who has not
responded to a warm embrace has found the pangs of absence unbearably
strong.
This phenomenon is explained in the discussion by the Maharal on the
importance of the Four Questions in the Haggadah, and why someone who
conducts his Passover Seder in a monologue fashion, not following a
question-and-answer format, does not fulfill his obligation to tell the
story of the Exodus on Passover. He explains that when one merely hears
a statement, one does not incorporate into it one's personality. It is
just tagged onto one's awareness. This is not the case when one
receives an answer to a question. For, by having posed the question,
one opens a void, and the answer fills it, forming a unified entity
with the person rather than adding on a superfluity.
The Vilna Gaon's commentary on the "Song of Songs" makes a similar
observation. The pleasure a person derives from food is in direct
proportion to his hunger. A sated person can be presented with the
tastiest of dishes, and he will reject it in disinterest; should he
force the food in, it will not easily find its way down.
The Sefas Emes (in the Torah Portion of Vayetzei) also refers to this
principle in explaining why our forefather Jacob did not receive his
dream and prophecy until after he had left the yeshiva of Shem and
Ever. When a man is in an atmosphere of holiness, his thirst for
spirituality is not comparable to the thirst that wells up within a
person stumbling through the desert. The Sefas Emes bases this on a
Midrash: " My soul thirsts for you. Where? In a barren and arid land."
COMPULSION THROUGH CLARITY
Similarly, this is the difference between Shavuot and Purim -- between
the festival of receiving the Torah at Sinai and the holiday of its
reaffirmation in Shushan.
In the first instance, the Jewish nation was compelled to accept the
Torah, but not simply by a physical force. The impact of the enormity
of revelation was so immense that it was likened to the mountain poised
over their heads. The brilliant light of revelation left no room for
doubt, and under that circumstance it was impossible not to accept the
Torah.
At Purim, however, it was not the threat to life in itself that
inspired the Jewish people' s repentance and its return to pristine
purity. Rather, the hiddenness of God -- the feeling of abandonment --
bestirred powerful yearnings for a Sinai-like encounter with the Divine.
Our Sages (Megillah 15b) tell us that when Queen Esther was to confront
King Achashverosh, she cried, " My God, my God, why have You abandoned
me?" To this day, the designated Psalm of Purim (according to the Vilna
Gaon) is the one in which this outcry appears; and, as our Sages
explain, the Psalm refers to the darkest hour of the night. Thus, while
Shavuot marks the cognizance of God through revelation, Purim
celebrates the cognizance of God that follows a desperate search in the
darkness.
THE GIFT AND THE ACQUISITION
Torah itself consists of these two parts. One -- the Written Law --
which is "God's Torah," so to speak, was given to us as a revelation.
Yet, as it reads, it would remain closed to us. We must refer to the
second part of the Torah -- the Oral Law -- also given at Sinai, to
understand the written word. This encompasses the Divine
interpretations and expositions, which are accessible to human
comprehension; and it includes the rules of exegesis by which God
instructs man in how to delve more deeply into the law and teaches him
how to apply it to evolving circumstances.
Our Sages (Sanhedrin 24a) describe the long and tortuous system of
analyzing every word and nuance of the Torah recorded in the Babylonian
Talmud as "You restored me in the darkness," because struggling through
passages of Talmud is like "grappling in the dark." The Oral Torah,
therefore, has special properties: it introduces queries and leads the
student to conclusive answers, which become integrated into his
personality. The results are deeply satisfying -- not unlike the end
result of the Passover Seder, as described by the Maharal.
Thus, it has been pointed out, the Mishnah opens with a question: "When
does one begin reciting the Shema?" And it ends with the word "shalom"
(harmony). Understanding the Oral Law is not a matter of absorbing a
statement. It is an answer derived from a query, and that is why the
Oral Law (and not the Written Law) has been described as the human
portion of the Torah.
The same principle can be applied to explain the Maharal's statement
that while the Torah was given on Shavuot, "clinging to the Torah"
(deveikus beTorah) was the result of Purim. True enough, Torah can be
presented to people -- and it was, on Shavuot -- but it can only become
integrated within one's personality if one searches first.
REVELATION AGAIN
Search is deeper than revelation, and its findings more permanent. What
need, then, is there for revelation? To be sure, we must refer to the
Kuzari's answer, who teaches that not everyone at every time can
achieve a higher level of contact with God through personal search, nor
will God reveal Himself to every generation. Thus, God's original
revelation at Sinai gives all subsequent generations -- especially
those unable to reach spiritual heights on their own -- a tradition to
fall back on.
There is yet another profound thought involved, one that concerns our
discussion. The Jerusalem Talmud (Peah 1:1) explains the verse, "It is
not an empty thing from you," to mean that if a person finds any part
of the Torah "empty" -- without meaning -- it is "from you." That is,
Torah cannot be faulted as being meaningless. Rather, the vacuous
feeling in the student is an indication that somewhere within him he is
lacking receptivity to that part of Torah. When a work of art is
meaningless to a blind man, or a concert uninspiring to a deaf person,
the fault is in the viewer not the composition.
The revelation at Sinai created an indelible impression on the Jewish
personality, giving us, as a people, a point of reference for all
future searches for truth. Thus, all the individual souls of the Jewish
people had to be at Sinai -- even a proselyte had to be there (Shevuos
39a). Had we not the memory of Sinai deep within us to drive us in our
exhaustive search for meaning and understanding in Torah, we could not
persevere in mastering Torah; and we would not succeed. We would be
"empty" from ourselves.
It is for this same reason that (as the Talmud tells us) a person
learns the entire Torah when in his mother's womb, even though he is
destined to forget it prior to birth; for if he had not first learned
the Torah, he would not be able to relate to it later.
RETURN TO TORAH
Studying Torah, then, is always a return of sorts. This is expressed in
our daily prayers: "Return us ... to your Torah."
Indeed, parts of the Oral tradition -- such as Onkelos' Aramaic
translation of the Torah -- were forgotten and later rediscovered
(Megillah 3a). Human endeavor alone would have proven insufficient for
composing the translations, had it not been for the spark of Sinai
buried deep within the soul. This creative endeavor was not one of
initial discovery; it was a return.
There are other instances of creative recall. The Talmud (Menachos)
relates that when Moses saw Rabbi Akiva teaching his disciples, he
became envious of Rabbi Akiva' s vast knowledge. The Or HaChayim
explains that, to be sure, Moses knew all of the Oral Law that Rabbi
Akiva had mastered; but Rabbi Akiva's level of attainment was such that
he was able to discern how the Oral Law is derived from the Written Law.
It has been said that in his last years the Vilna Gaon studied the
Written Law. His encyclopedic grasp of the Oral Law was such that he
was able to deduce which of the myriad teachings of the Oral Law are
implicit in the Written Law. In a similar vein, the Gaon is reported to
have said, "There are three levels of understanding: simple explanation
(p'shat), depth (amikus), and again simple explanation (p'shat). There
is, however, an infinite difference between simple explanation before
depth and simple explanation after depth. The revelation one discovers
after a "search" is worlds apart from the revelation one starts with.
An emissary sent to strengthen Judaism in an outlying community later
reported to his rabbi that an estranged Jew had asked him to explain
his mission. He responded in a parable: "In the days of yore, scribes
would go from town to town filling in 'letters' that had been rubbed
out from Jewish souls."
After the emissary told the rabbi this parable, the rabbi shook his
head, "Heaven forbid that a letter of a Jewish soul becomes erased! It
is rather like an engraving that becomes filled with dust: blow the
dust away and the original letter appears."
We must think of our service as circular, not linear. We do, indeed,
start with revelation. But that which is not earned has no permanence.
We must toil on our own until we rediscover the revelation imbued
within each of us. For when we do arrive at our goal, it is not a new
enlightenment that awaits us; rather, we unearth that which has driven
us so relentlessly -- the eternal flame of Sinai.
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