[Avodah] Fwd: tora of convicts
Micha Berger via Avodah
avodah at lists.aishdas.org
Mon Jun 20 15:10:46 PDT 2016
On Mon, Jun 20, 2016 at 07:45:55PM +0000, Rich, Joel via Avodah wrote:
: "If the rabbi is as an angel of G-d, learn Torah from him; if he is
: not as an angel of G-d, do not learn Torah from him" (Chagiga 15b).
R' Shimon Shkop discusses this gemara near the end of the haqdamah
to Shaarei Yosher. Leshitaso, there is a difference between a rebbe
from whom "yevaqeish Torah mipihu" and learning from someone else,
who could even be an Acher.
But to my mind it is worth knowing and contemplating what our Sages
said on Chagiga folio 15b. How could Rabbi Meir receive Torah from
the mouth of Acheir [the former Rabbi Elisha ben Avuya, after he
became a heretic]. Doesn't Rabba bar bar Chana quote R' Yochanan
[in Chagiga as saying] "What does it mean when it says 'For the
kohein's lips should keep knowledge; they should see Torah from
his lips, for he is the angel of Hashem, L-rd of Hosts" (Malachi
2:7)? If the rav is similar to an angel of Hashem, L-rd of Hosts,
seek Torah from his mouth. And if not, do not seek Torah from his
mouth." And the Talmud concludes, "There is no question this [Rabbi
Meir studying under Acheir] is with someone great, this [the verse]
is of someone of smaller stature."
It is worth understanding according to this how Rabbi Yochanan spoke
without elaboration, since he speaks only of the smaller statured,
not the greats. One may say that we should be exacting in that
Rabbi Yochanan said, "seek Torah from his mouth" and not "learn from
him". For in truth, one who learns from his peer does not learn from
the mouth of the person who is teaching him, but listens and weighs
on the scales of his mind, and then he understands the concept. This
is not learning "from the mouth of" his teacher, but from the mind
of the teacher. "Torah from the mouth" is only considered accepting
the concepts as he heard them, with no criticism. And it was by this
idea that Rabbi Yochanan spoke about accepting Torah from the mouth
[i.e. uncritically] only if the rabbi is similar to an angel of
Hashem, L-rd of Hosts.
And according to this, in Rabbi Yochanan's words is hinted a
distinction between who is of smaller stature and who is great. The
one of smaller stature will learn Torah from the mouth, for he is
unable to decide what to draw near and want to keep away. Whereas a
person of great stature who has the ability to decide [critically]
does not learn Torah from [someone else's] mouth.
Similarly, it's appropriate to alert anyone who contemplates the books
of acharonim that they should not "learn Torah from their mouths",
they shouldn't make a fundamental out of everything said in their
words before they explore well those words.
Something similar to a reminder of this idea can be learned from
what the gemara says in Bava Metzia, chapter "One Who Hires Workers"
[85b]. Rabbi Chiya said, "I made it so that the Torah would not be
forgotten from Israel." It explains there that he would plant linen,
spread out nets [made of tat linen, thereby] hunt deer, made parchment
[of their hides], and wrote [on them] chumash texts. This hints that
whatever is in our power to prepare from the beginning of the Torah,
it is incumbent on us to do ourselves, according to the ability that
was inherited to us to explore and understand. And not to rely on
the words of the gedolim who preceded us.
Tir'u baTov!
-Micha
--
Micha Berger One doesn't learn mussar to be a tzaddik,
micha at aishdas.org but to become a tzaddik.
http://www.aishdas.org - Rav Yisrael Salanter
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